The Michigan Daily I michigandaily com I December12, 2011 T TT T 7 7 0 PAUL SHERMAN/DAILY Senior forward David Wohlberg emerged from a one-month point slump to tally four points in Michigan's win and tie against Michigan State. Michigan coach Red Berenson predicted the breakout weekend for his alternate captain Wohlberg. By EVERETT COOK Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - One of the biggest issues for the Michigan hockey team this season has been a lack of scoring production from its veteran players. The Wolver- ines have been relying on rook- ies and unheralded players to score, leaving the offense mired in inconsistency and question marks. But against Michigan State this weekend, upperclassmen stepped up and delivered Michigan's best hockey of the year. The Wolverines won on Friday, 4-3, and tied, 3-3, before losing in a shootout on Saturday. Michigan played a home-and-home - so Fri- day's game was at Yost Ice Arena and Saturday's game was in East. Lansing. The biggest veteran catalyst for the four-out-of-six-point week- end? Senior forward David Wohl- berg. The alternate captain went almost a month without a point, but a switch from wing to center two weeks ago has had a revital- izing effect. He also switched to a line with junior Chris Brown and freshman sensation Alex Gup- till on what Michigan coach Red Berenson has called his "power line." Before this weekend, Berenson said Michigan fans would see the "real David Wohlberg" against the Spartans, and his hunch was spot on. Wohlberg scored the first goal of the game for the Wolverines on Friday, wristing a beauty of a shot into the top right shelf to give Michigan (5-6-3 CCHA, 9-8-3 overall) the early lead. "I think the guys we needed to stepup tonightsteppedup,"Wohl- berg said Friday. "We knew what needed to be done." Wohlberg wasn't the only upperclassman to step up on Fri- day, though. After junior forward Chris Brown left the box follow- ing his team-leading 13th penalty, he bolted up the left side of the ice and gave Michigan a lead it wouldn't relinquish. Brown used his size and lower- body strength to box out a Michi- gan State defender in front of the net, then slid the puck right between the legs of netminder Will Yanakeff to take a 2-1llead. Even junior forward Kevin Lynch, somewhat of a forgotten comrade, got in on the action. Lynch had had just three points entering the weekend but had two on Friday, including a goal that turned out to be the deciding tally. That power line - whose aver- age height is 6-foot-2 - has not only helped the two veterans, but also the youngster. Guptill scored his team-leading ninth goal on Friday, and that line has sparked the inconsistent Michigan offense. "You never know what two or three guys are going to play well together," Berenson said. "From See MSU, Page 3B ICE HOCKEY Michigan icers have been ' missing hunger, dri EAST LANSING - Judging by the faces of the Michigan hockey team's players and coaches fol- lowing Saturday night's thriller against Michigan State, you would've thought the Wolverines had justbeen swept. Senior defenseman Greg Pateryn dejectedly iced his shoul- der, wincing when asked to recall the waning moments of regula- tion when Michigan surrendered its late 3-2 advantage. Michigan coach Red Berenson said "it's too bad" a shoot- out had to determine the game, which along with Friday night's contest in Ann Arbor MATT resembled, SLOVIN the rivalry's hard-hitting of yore. Referees igno -: eir whistles and, for the mo rt, allowed the teams to Ot out without interruption But despite the long faces and bruised egos that darkened the visitors' locker room at Munn Ice Arena, it wasn't all bad for the Wolverines. In fact, they won the series. Michigan clinched the series See HUNGER, Page 3B MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily Junior quarterback Denard Robinson wore a wrap on his right arm in a 58-0 win over Minnesota this season. Robinson reveals he played through staph infection during 2011 season MEN'S BASKETBALL 'M' pulls away late at the Palace By TIM ROHAN hand. Daily Sports Editor When Robinson wore a wrap on his right forearm before Evidently, a "boo-boo" is Michigan's game against Min- another term for staph infec- nesota in October, Hoke and tion. Robinson dismissed it asa "boo- Michigan coach Brady Hoke boo." In reality, it was a staph revealed Friday - while defend- infection that lingered for two ing Denard Robinson's up-and- to three weeks. down season - that his starting "Turns out you didn't have quarterbackhad battled through a boo-boo," a reporter asked a midseason staph infection in Robinson on Friday. "You had a addition to an abdominal injury staph infection?" and issues with his elbow and Robinson threw his head back and laughed. "It was a deal," Robinson said, repeating another popular Hoke-speak phrase. "I was a little sick - had a staph infection. But I went out there and still played. I did it for my team." Then the details started to emerge. It was diagnosed sometime soon after the season opener, possibly after the Notre Dame game. Robinson and Hoke See ROBINSON, Page 3B By BEN ESTES Daily Sports Editor AUBURN HILLS, Mich. - Having lost his balance after getting bumped by a defender, freshman point guard Trey Burke went hur- tling to the MICHIGAN 90 ground OAKLAND 80 underneath Oakland's basket, chucking the ball in desperation toward the left corner. But Burke's pass managed to find a wide-open Tim Hardaway Jr. And his shot found the net. Hardaway Jr.'s 3-pointer with 3:40 left in the game extended the Michigan men's basketball team's lead back to double digits, and an emphatic fast-break dunk by senior guard Stu Douglass after a Golden Grizzly turnover on the next possession effectively iced it. The Wolverines rode it out the rest of the way en route to a 90-80 win over Oakland (6-4) at the Palace Auburn Hills. "(Douglass) has pretty go< lift, (and) I think he's had acour- (dunks) in his career here, but jt score the two points," joked Mic igan coach John Beilein. "I'm jt happy we scored the two points. Douglass came alive in ti game's final minutes. Shooti just 27.8 percent from long ran. coming into Saturday, the co-ca tain followed his breakaway jam See OAKLAND, Page 1 EAGLE ATTACK U For the second time in two seasons, Easte ri Midhigan upset the Wolverines, * this time paced by Tavelyn James's 38 points. Page 4B HEISMAN HOPEFUL E If Denard Robinson is going to boost himself into the 2012 Heisman Trophy race, he'd be smart to take lessons from dual-threat RGIII. Page 2B