2B - November 21, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4 Buckeyes bury 'M' in first sweep at Yost since 1986 Michigan coach Brady Hoke has the Wolverines ranked No.15 in the latest BCS standings after a 9-2 start. Signature win puts Blue back in spotligh When the Nebraska football team last visited Michigan Sta- dium, the year was 1962 and the Cornhuskers were Big 8 bottom feeders. They had had just three winning seasons in the previous two decades, posting an overall record { of 72-125. Under STEPHEN J. then-first- NESBITT year head coach Bob Devaney, Nebraska planned to resurrect its embarrassment of a football program. In the season opener against South Dakota, the Huskers rolled, 53-0. Even so, the Sept. 29 matchup with Michigan wasn't expected to be pretty. Nebraska fans liked the week-one shutout, but top- pling a football giant wasn't in the itinerary - even when facing a relatively weak Michigan team, the resurgence could wait. It didn't. Devaney and the Cornhuskerstrumped the Wol- verines, 25-13, at the Big House, en route to an 8-3 season. That game, a signature Devaney vic- tory, set the program on the fast track to national prominence. His 11-year resume featured a 47-8 record at the helm in Lincoln. The Cornhuskers' return to Michigan Stadium last Saturday was a welcomed trip down mem- ory lane for Nebraska, in its first season in the Big Ten. But the tides were turned for this go-round at the Big House: Michigan played the part of the rebuilding program with a first-year coach, while Nebraska has grown into a national pow- erhouse. On paper, it was a titan clash between the two win- ningest programs in college foot- ball history. In reality, the scales were tipped in the visitors' favor. It didn't take long for Michi- gan coach Brady Hoke to prove Michigan's turnaround. A 45-17 victory against No. 17 Nebraska doesn't need much of an explana- tion - the Wolverines proved dominant. After 50 minutes of play, a "Beat Ohio" chant circled the sta- dium. The fans had seen enough. They lauded Hoke by looking ahead to the season finale against Ohio State, a matchup he has anticipated since his arrival in January. But don't jump ahead too quickly. Try to put this victory in perspective before looking to next week. It was arguably the program's biggestcwinsince the Lloyd Carr era - fitting, since Carr was honored before the game. The resounding victory was a statement and a signature Hoke win. Hoke preaches three simple things to his team: Win the turn- over battle, plug the gaps to stop their running game and establish your ground game early and often. Check, check and check. Special teams players swarmed to the ball, forcing two turnovers on kickoffs and block- ing a punt. Michigan leads the nation in fumble recoveries with 19 recoveries in 11 games - under former coach Rich Rodriguez, the Wolverines had 23 recoveries in three full seasons. Michigan held Nebraska running back Rex Burkhead, the Big Ten's third- leading rusher, to a season-low 36 yards. The Wolverines' ground game dominated from start to finish. The backfield duo ofjunior quar- terback Denard Robinson and redshirt sophomore running back Fitzgerald Toussaint combined for 221 yards. Unlike last season, it hasn't been all Robinson. Hoke's fingerprints are all over this team. And it looks like the prints are going to stay there for a long time to come. Rolling into the lastweek of the season with a 9-2 record, Hoke has his team in a perfect position: a victory over the Buck- eyes could possibly earn Michi- gan an at-large invitation to a BCS bowl - think about it. After years of mediocrity and embarrassment, Brady Hoke has the Wolverines back on top. Ann Arbor is, no doubt, relevant again. No one wants to visit Michigan Stadium, where Hoke and Co. are 7-0, outscoring teams 267-65. Just like Bob Devaney in 1962, Hoke proved his worth with Michigan and Nebraska at the Big House. - Nesbitt can be reached at stnesbit@umich.edu or on Twitter: @stephenjnesbitt. By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor Michigan coach Red Berenson almost always opens his post- game press conference with some opening remarks, OHIO STATE 2 but then MICHIGAN 1 again, the Michi- OHIO STATE 6 gan hock- MICHIGAN 5 ey team almost never gets swept at Yost Ice Arena. So after a weekend in which No. 7 Michigan couldn't make a closing statement, Berenson didn't make an opening state- ment. No. 14 Ohio State buried the Wolverines for its first sweep at Yost Ice Arena since 1986. The sweep relegated Michigan to sev- enth place in the CCHA and put the Buckeyes in sole possession of first. "They're a good team, give them credit," Berenson said. "Of course, our players are embar- rassed. These are tough losses." Fifth-year senior goalie Shawn Hunwick endured his roughest series of the year. On Friday, Ohio State won, 2-1, on a shot from behind the cage that banked off of Hunwick's blocker and into the net. The Buckeyes bombarded Hunwick with shots on Satur- day. They dissected the Wolver- ines' defense and fired 37 shots on the cage, many of them from point-blank range or with little defensive resistance. "We've got a lot of work to do," said Michigan coach Red Berenson after Saturday's game. "I can't say we got exposed, but we definitely broke down in places tonight, and we gave up goals too easily." The last time Michigan scored five goals and lost was in the Western Regional of the NCAA Tournament in 2007 against North Dakota.. "You have no chance of win- ning when you give up six," Berenson said. "I can tell you (in practice) Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday next week will be defensive-zone coverage." Perhaps Friday's win- ning goal - which Berenson described as "fluky" - still lin- gered in Hunwick's mind the following night. Early on, he failed to cleanly cover up a puck, though he had ample time, and it almost led to a goal. After Ohio State's first goal on Saturday, Hunwick slung the puck down the ice in frustra- tion. Hunwick broke his stick against the post after the fifth goal, which put the Buckeyes up by two goals entering the third period. He could only look down at his skates and let his arms sag limply by his sides after the sixth and final goal. "When you leave a guy wide open in front of the net, your goalie can't make that save very often," Berenson said. "The winning goal (on Friday) was a bad goal, butI didn't see any bad goals out there (on Saturday). I thought the puck was going in because of good plays on their part, turnovers on our part and deflections." When Hunwick shattered his stick, he spoke for the whole team. "Shawn's an emotional kid," said senior forward Luke Glen- dening. "That's the way he plays, he plays with an edge. And that gets usrfired up. Obviously he's frustrated, we're all frustrated - that's fine." Every time the Wolverines grabbed the momentum on Saturday, the Buckeyes stole it back. Freshman forward Mike Chiasson scored the first goal of the game, but Ohio State (7-2-1 CCHA, 10-3-1 overall) coun- tered just three minutes later. After sophomore forward Luke Moffatt tied it in the sec- ond stanza, junior forward Chris Brown picked up a five- 0 6 JEDMOCH/Daily Ohio State goaltender Cal Heeter celebrates the Buckeyes' series sweep of Michigan on Saturday evening at Yost Ice Arena. minute major penalty for board- ing. Michigan killed off the first four minutes of the penalty, and the Yost crowd appeared ready to erupt. Then a turnover led to a goal, followed by another sec- onds later. The Wolverines showed life late, down two goals, when sophomore forward Derek DeB- lois converted on a shorthanded opportunity. Michigan gave it right back minutes later. "I really can't explain it," said a frustrated senior forward David Wohlberg. "It's just - it seems like things are going that way right now, and we need to turn it around. We need to get the bounces going our way." The top two forward lines didn't score a single goal over the weekend. Freshman for- ward Alex Guptill led the third and fourth lines with two goals on Saturday. On Friday, only sophomore defenseman Mac Bennett scored. Michigan led early in that one too, but couldn't capi- talize on a five-minute power play of its own. Michigan is winless in its last four games, its longest winless streak in two years. By the middle of the third period inthe finale as Ohio State led by two goals, the band's newest instruments - a pair of bagpipes - sounded funeral. "We're really frustrated," Glendening said. "We got one point out of the last 12. No one likes to lose, and it's not expect- ed of Michigan. We're expected to win." S 6 0 MEN'S to fpu Wolverines to face elite competition at Maui Invitational By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily SportsEditor Monday morning usually isn't the highlight of anyone's week. But the No. 17 Michigan bas- ketball team gets to spend it in Hawaii,taking on No.10 Memphis in the first round of the Maui Invi- tational. The last time the Wolverines played the Tigers, the setting was similar. In 1996, the teams played in the Rainbow Classic in Hono- lulu, Hawaii. But this time, they'll be 150 miles to the northwest, and Michigan won't be on probation. The game will be the first of the eight-team Maui Invitational, which features some of the big- Memphis vs. gest basketball Michigan brands in the country. Matchup: No. 6 Duke, Memphis 1-0; No. 12 Kansas, Michigan 3-0 Georgetown, When: Mon- UCLA and Ten- day 3 P.M. EST nessee will all be Where: Lahai- part of the big- na Civic Center gest early-sea- TV/Radio: son tournament ESPN3 in college bas- ketball. If Michigan wins Monday, it will play the winner of Duke and Tennessee on Tuesday at 7 p.m. EST. The championship game will be on Wednesday at 10 p.m. "I think this is one of the best basketball tournaments there is anywhere, at any level," said senior guard Zack Novak. "It's fun to be here. You look at the programs that will be here - 21 national championships between all of us - so that's special. It's a good opportunity and I'm just looking forward to getting in and playing in it." Led by Glen Rice, the Wolver- ines won the tournament in 1988 and they last played in it in 1998. "It's an early measuring stick in the season that you're going to really see where you are against teams that are going to be in the NCAA Tournament," said Michi- gan coach John Beilein on Sunday. "So we'll find out very soon where we are in regards to that and what we have to work on going for- ward." Michigan (3-0) has techni- cally already played its first Maui Invitational game. It beat Towson 64-47 last Monday as part of the "Maui on the Mainland" portion of the tournament. These games consisted of the big-name teams hosting smaller schools on the continental United States. The games in Hawaii are known as the Championship Round. The win over Towson marked the middle of the Wolverines' pre-Hawaii schedule. Michigan routed Ferris State 59-33 in its first game of the season and nar- rowly escaped an upset threat from Western Illinois, 59-55, on Thursday. "You've been with (the team) for five weeks," Beilein said. "But you're discovering how they're going to react on a national stage." Memphis (1-0) will present the Wolverines with their big- gest challenge of the season. The Tigers are a fast, athletic offen- sive juggernaut that scored 97 points in its season-opening win over Belmont. Memphis shot 59 percent in the game, which ranks first in Division-I. The Tigers' roster features three sophomores who were highly touted recruits a year ago. Guard Will Barton led the team in scoring last year and poured in 23 points in his first game. The others - Joe Jackson and Tarik Black - were the second and third-leading scorers from last season. "I see a really long, athletic team that is going to try to speed us up," Beilein said. "They're going to try to have us play at a pace that we're out of control. We don't mind being sped up as long as we're in control of the tempo. What we can't do is, they speed us up and then we get wild." In its first three games, Michi- gan has shown flashes of bril- liance, but inconsistency has plagued the team. Hot-and-cold shooting, poor post play and a sometimes stagnant offense have kept the games closer than they should have been. The week will also provide a test for freshman point guard Trey Burke, who will be facing the first high-class com- petition of his career. He has been effective so far, showing the abili- ty to create in transition and shoot the 3-pointer reliably. But facing the longer, faster teams will pres- ent a look he hasn't seen yet. "This will be such a great expe- rience for Trey to just continue to mature as one of the young- est point guards in the country," Beilein said of his starting point guard who has scored 10 points per game and is shooting 43 per- cent on 3-pointers. As a team on the rise that is looking to enter the elite of college basketball, Michigan will use this week to see how it stacks up to the best national competition. Still, the tournament means very little in terms of the Wolverines' bigger goals for the season. "I don't think we will take the results of these tournaments too much either way because it's November," Beilein said. "It's so different than football where games like this early in the season will determine where you are in the BCS. "For us, it's good and it can be very positive but if we played incredibly the whole weekend, it wouldn't mean anything as far as our chances in February and March if we don't improve." 0 6 0 0 4