8A - Monday, November 28, 2011 4 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Ford talks Hardaway Jr. r I JED MOCH/Daily Senior forward David Wohlberg, who tallied a goal, hadn't registered a point since an Oct. 28 matchup with Ferris State. Union pelts Mchigan in inaugural meeti ngat Yost By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Writer Chris Brown believes that adversity reveals character, it doesn't define it. UNION (NY) 6 This may MICHIGAN 3 be the case. But the junior forward for the No. 11 Michigan hockey team would surely rather not play with so much adversity. Michigan (3-5-2 CCHA, 7-7-2 overall) dropped its sixth con- secutive game Sunday afternoon to No. 13 Union, 6-3, following Fri- day night's 4-1 defeat at the hands of Northeastern. "We've got to work harder," Brown said. "We can't do any- thing different. It's not our goalie, (defense), forwards (or) coaching. It's just the will to win a game and right now we don't have it." Brown didn't blame Michigan's recent struggles on one particu- lar unit, but this weekend shone a spotlight on a struggling defen- sive corps. Union came into the matchup boasting the fifth-best power play in the country. So "when Michigan took a slashing penalty eight minutes into the first period, it only took 11 seconds for the Dutchmen to find the back of the net. The Wolverines' defense just stood by idly. "Our defense was getting trapped," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "When you're play- ing well, the mistakes get over- looked and somebody makes up for you. Right now, every mistake we make shows up on the score- board." Defensive mistakes kept com- ing. Two minutes after Union's first goal, freshman defenseman Brennan Serville lost control of the puck when he tried to clear it away from Michigan's net. A Dutch- man recovered it and whizzed a slapshot past fifth-year senior goaltender Shawn Hunwick. Breakaways - like the ones that caused two Union goals - meant that Hunwick was the only Wolverine standing between the Dutchmen and the net. It's a tough situation for Berenson, who knows that Hunwick won't be able to block every shot. "I think there's the odd save (Hunwick) can make," Berenson said. "Right now, Hunwick's in sync with our team (but) it's just not working." Michigan only responded to the Dutchmen with three goals. Some of the goals were smart, like soph- omore defenseman Mac Bennett's long dish across the ice to fresh- man forward Alex Guptill. Others were luck, like when senior forward David Wohlberg found the loose puck among a pile of skaters in front of Union's net. But the offensive plays were overshadowed each time the Dutchmen scored. The defensive woes were almost exact replicas to the ones the Wolverines saw Friday night against Northeastern (3-7-2 HEA, 4-7-2), and it's not easy for the players to see the same mistakes being made every game. "You could say it's kind of a snowball effect," Brown said. "One thing happens and then another, and that's why they're scoringgoals." The defensive problems are frustrating for senior defensemen Greg Pateryn. As the leader of the defensive unit, Pateryn is charged with get- ting the rest of the corps motivat- ed every game. "Guys are only giving a full 60 minutes every five minutes or so," Pateryn said. "(As a captain) you have to go out there every single shift and show them what you have to do." Added Brown: "It's time to grow up. Time to play like a man and (play) Michigan hockey. This is not Michigan hockey." By BEN ESTES Daily Sports Editor Most basketball fans know that Michigan sophomore guard Tim Hardaway Jr.'s father is a former NBA star - having played professionally for 14 years, most of which with the Golden State Warriors and Miami Heat. And ever since Hardaway Jr. broke out during the second half of last season and helped lead the Michigan basketball team to a surprise NCAA Tournament berth, he's seemed destined to become the second in his family to play in the NBA. Based on past high school rankings, this would be a sur- prise - Hardaway Jr. was not considered an elite recruit, and he didn't pick up offers from top- 25 programs until long after he had already committed to the Wolverines. But the Miami, Fla. native was the team's leading scorer in Big Ten play last season, averaging 14.9 points per game. Hardaway Jr. is averaging 17.3 points this season, and in an exclusive interview with The Michigan Daily at the Maui Invi- tational, ESPN NBA Draft ana- lyst Chad Ford said he's noticed improvements in the guard's game. "I think Hardaway Jr. has improved from when I saw him as a freshman," Ford said. "Main- ly that goes with shot selection, which is natural. You're used to being the man in high school, and then making that jump is a pretty big jump. ... You clearly saw last year he was talented, but you cringed at some of the shots he would take." Last summer, Hardaway Jr. - in preparation for a new role as Michigan's go-to scorer in the wake of point guard Darius Mor- ris's early departure to the NBA - worked on the areas of the game he felt were lacking, specifi- cally ball handling and mid-range shooting. The goal was to become more well-rounded, improving in areas other than his already- established ability to knock down the 3-pointer. It also would make Hardaway Jr. more of a weapon on the ball screens that are so critical to Michigan coach John Beilein's offense and that Morris thrived on as the team's leading scorer a year ago. So far, the work seems to have paid off. Just 26.2 percent of Hardaway Jr.'s points have come from 3-pointers, whereas last season that figure was 47 percent. And Ford said that it isn't a huge issue that Hardaway Jr. is a bit of a tweener between the "two" and "three" positions, since in the NBA the difference between the positions is largely inconsequen- tial. Hardaway Jr. also played in the FIBA U19 World Champion- ships last July, scoring 21 points in the final game against Austra- lia and clinching fifth place for Team USA. "I think the Team USA expe- rience has helped him as well," Ford said. "I feel like he's a lot more poised." But the analystsays the sopho- more still has more to work on. "He's got good size for his posi- tion, he's athletic, he can shoot the basketball, and he can put the ball on the floor, get to the bas- ket," Ford said. "He's got a lot of the tools that you sort of look for in a wing. If he was a better ball- handler - and it's ironic, because his dad was amazing - that's probably his biggest weakness. I think he (also) needs to get a lit- tle more consistent from 3-point range. "ButI think he's a pro." Ford said Hardaway Jr. isn't currently considered afirst-round prospect, but if he and Michigan have a big year and he returns for his junior season, his draft stock could rise to that status. But Ford said that his ceiling isn'tcthatchigh and thatcbeing alottery pick prob- ably isn't in the cards, saying that most scouts and general manag- ers don't see Hardaway Jr. as a "superstar." In trying to find a player with a similar game, Ford compared Hardaway Jr. to another tweener in Chicago Bulls guard/forward Jimmy Butler, a Marquette prod- uct who was picked with the last pick in the first round in June. Of course, all this analysis is overshadowed by the larger ques- tion - will Hardaway Jr. leave the Wolverines after this season? It would be the third consecutive year with an early departure for Michigan, after Morris surprised many by leaving school after his sophomore season and Manny Harris left the year before. "He won't need the money, and a lotof times that's a big issue for players," Ford said. "He's got his dad, (so) he's going to have access to more NBA guys giving him their opinions, which means he probably won't get bad info. I probably say he stays, but I'm always surprised." For Michigan, the primary concern is how Hardaway Jr. plays this season. After a Maui Invitational in which the guard averaged 20 points per game against top competition, the Wol- verines hope his play continues at the rate that so impresses their opponents. 4 4 TODD NEEDLE/Daily Sophomore Tim HardawayJr. would likely be drafted if he left for the NBA. THE GAME From Page 1A Mike Martin stayed. The team's best defensive play- er on asfew of Michigan's worst defenses finally was a part of a true Michigan defense. Martin, Van Bergen and fifth- year enior cPensivetackle Will Hei ngeaped back from the mob that started to -ush the field. "We just kind of stood out there and soaked it in - what this team had done," Martin said. David Molk stayed. He anchored the offensive line Robinson turned to in the fourth quarter when the Wolverines needed to ice the game. "We're going to ride you guys," Robinson told them. "You're going to win this for us." Molk, the center with a mean streak, became the lifeline of Hoke's offense, protecting Rob- inson and guiding a powerful run game. The injuries that plagued Great Products at Great Prices Wednesday, November 23rd to day, December23rd http://showcase.itc.umich.edu Information and Technology Services U5 his career became an after- thought. When it was done, the usually even-keeled Molk laughed the loudest. "It's been a long time," Molk said. "I've been through a lot of stuff. But then again, in the end, you truly realize what this place means. "I love Michigan, there's no, doubt about it. I don't care what we had to go through. I love this school. I love this university. I love this team. I love my team- mates. I love my coaches. This is great. This is what college foot- ball is. (I'll) never forget it." Senior receivers Kevin Koger, Junior Hemingway and Martavi- ous Odoms all stayed, and they all caught touchdown passes against the Buckeyes. Those who stayed were around long enough to see Hoke's countdown clocks be reset - on Sunday, one of them read "zero" days since Michigan last beat "Ohio," the other read "364 days" until the next edition of The Game. Many seniors watched the finale unfold from the sidelines, their reward for staying being a kiss on the cheek from Hoke and a personalized Michigan football from the pregame senior day fes- tivities. Still, those who stayed will forever be known as Brady Hoke's first team - Team 132, as he calls them - immortalized just like Bo Schembechler's first team in 1969. When Schembechler told that team, "Those who stay will be champions," he didn't inherit the 110th-ranked defense. His quar- terback wasn't an enigma. We've learned that sometimes those who stay will have to endure. They will be ridiculed. They will be embarrassed, playing through the worst three years in the history of Michigan football. They will represent a dark age, one unknown to anyone before their time. They will be consid- ered the children of a prestigious program that just don't fit in. If Team 132 has taught us any- thing, it's that there won't always be championships for those who stay, but there will be glory. Those who stay will knock off Notre Dame under the lights at Michigan Stadium. They'll demol- ish Nebraska, welcoming Big Red to the Big Ten the way Michigan teams of old would. And, above all, those who stay will beat Ohio State, completing their journey from forgettable to legendary. Those who stay will bring back Michigan football. They immediately bought into a magical coach and didn't look back. Hoke taught them how to play "Michigan football," when they admittedly didn't know the meaning of the phrase. He made sure the Ohio State game would be the most impor- tant of their lives. Molk said The Game was emphasized "a thou- sand times" more than during the three-year Rich Rodriguez era, and they'll remember this win - the one that ended Ohio State's seven-year win streak - forever. Those who stay will love Brady Hoke and all he stands for. They'll play for him because he loved them first. "He is us; we are him," Molk said. "I love him. I love how he coaches. I love his leadership ability and how he does it. I'd do anything for him. "If I ever (come) back, 20 years from now, the first guy I would find, I would call coach Hoke. That's who he is." When the fans rushed the field, the seniors who stayed thought, "finally," as Van Bergen did, and the win over Ohio State brought them to tears. They drenched Hoke in water, then hugged him. One student in the stands stayed. She held a sign that read: "Brady, thanks for making our senior year." Eventually, Team 132 left the Michigan fa lily on the field and gathered in the locker room. An emotional Hoke told them how he's "proud of them and what they've done for Michigan." "Just to see them happy, that's the neat part," Hoke said. "I mean, the investment and com- mitment they've made as ateam. It's special. It's special. It's one of those good days." Those who stayed huddled together one last time in the Big House. Van Bergen shouted, "Team 132 'til the death." For having stayed, they gotto sing "The Victors." And it will never again sound so sweet. -Rohan can be reached at trohan@umich.edu or on Twitter @TimRohan Pay this much with them. Save this much with us. Lower your interest rate by 2% A.PR. Refinance with us today. 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