U The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I December 5, 2011 New Orleans January 3rd, 2012 Michigan vs. Virginia Tech Virginia Tech unfamiliar foe for Wolverines Sugar Bowl berth pushes Michigan back into spotlight By KEVIN RAFTERY Daily SportsEditor It's not often that a team gets spanked on the first Saturday of December but still gets a taste of sugar a day later. But that's the case for No. 11 Virginia Tech, the Michigan football team's opponent in the Allstate Sugar Bowl on Jan. 3. On Saturday, No. 15 Clemson smoked the Hokies, 38-10. It was the second time this season the Tigers have easily handled Vir- ginia Tech - on Oct. 1, Clemson rolled them, 23-3, in Blacksburg, Va. Yet, despite only beating one ranked team all season in then-No. 20 Georgia Tech on Nov. 10, Virginia Tech (7-1 ACC, 11-2 overall) is on its way to the See VIRGINIA TECH, Page 3B The Big Easy beckons. The lights are bright, Bourbon Street is bus- tling. And here come the Wolver- ines, who earned a spot in the Sugar Bowl in New TIM Orleans and ROHAN return to col-- lege football's grand stage - playing in a BCS bowl for the first time in five seasons. "It'll just show everybody that Michigan's back and we're seri- ous," said fifth-year senior tight end Kevin Koger. Beating Ohio State was the most important thing, but all it did was make knocking off No. 11 Virginia Tech the next impor- tant thing. There will only be one college football game that night. At 8:30 p.m. on Jan. 3, Mich- igan-Virginia Tech will take center stage. Opinions across the nation will be formed. Expecta- tions will rise. Win and it was no big deal. Lose and it's a catas- trophe. People like to associate a certain phrase when discussing Hoke: "What you see is what you get." With the spotlight shining as bright as it has all season - and maybe as bright as it will for a few years to come - Hoke has one last chance to leave an indelible mark on this magical season. What will the nation see? Like he did with the Ohio State game, Hoke will treat this opportunity like a business trip. He said he wouldn't mess with a formula that produced a 10-2 season. Why should he change who he is when the lights get brighter? The nation will be introduced to the coach with the goofy smile and a coaching style to match. The man who was grin- ning ear to ear when he walked off the field after beating Ohio State - his emotions on his sleeves - still drenched by his See SPOTLIGHT, Page 3B Guptill's OT goal ends Blue's skid, nets series split By MATT SLOVIN a Nanook defenseman. After Daily Sports Writer Michigan coach Red Berenson freshman forward Zach Hyman F O let out a long sigh of relief that he dumped the puck into the attack- 0 FAIRBANKS - Regulation ended in Saturday night's game against Alaska Fairbanks and the No. 19 Michigan MICHIGAN 3 hockeyteam ALASKA 4 had yet to snap its lon- MICHIGAN 1 gest winless ALASKA 0 streak of the new millennium. The Wolverines battled through three scoreless periods, having to hold their collective breath throughout as the Nanooks (4-8-2-0 CCHA, 7-9-2 overall) fired shot after shot at fifth-year senior goaltender Shawn Hun- wick. But the hero, freshman for- ward Alex Guptill, capitalized on a failed Nanook pass to clinch the game in the early stages of over- time, giving Michigan a 1-0 win. had been holding in since Nov. 5, when his team last won against Western Michigan. "It's about time," Berenson said. "We had a lot of pressure on us and a little bit of self-doubt. Sooner or later we were going to get out of it, but the sooner part is better." With the game winner, Gup- till tied fellow freshman forward Phil Di Giuseppe for the team lead with eight goals. But the biggest tally of his young collegiate career came with its fair share of what Berenson calls "puck luck." "I didn't even know it went in," Guptill said. "I saw everyone else celebrating, so I figured it went in." That's probably because it wasn't supposed to go in - at least until it was re-directed by ing zone, Guptill was there to col- lect. He weighed his options and fired a shot. Alaska's Adam Hen- derson frantically tried to clear it, but a bad bounce sent it off his skate and into the net. "Obviously, it's nice to be able to win a game on the road," Hunwick said. "We had a bad stretch going there. But at the same time, it's only one win." With the losing streak snapped, the long plane ride home seemed far less daunting. And the mood in the locker room mirrored Berenson's. Hun- wick, too, mentioned just how "relieving" the win was. After all, it was the team's first true road victory. Sure, the Wol- verines picked up a couple points from its shootout win at Northern See GUPTILL, Page 3B COURTESY OF ALASKA FAIRBANKS ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT Fifth-year senior goaltender Shawn Hunwick recorded his first-career shutout on the road to ensure Saturday's win. RUNNIN'N' GUNNIN Led by Tim Hardaway Jr.'s 19 points, Michigan downed Iowa State on Saturday. The Wolverines used 21-5 second-half run to coast to a 76-66 win. Page 2B CYCLONE DETHRONED * Michigan rebounded from its loss against Maryland with a strong seven- point win over Iowa State, improving the Wolverines record to 8-1. Page 2B