4B - January 4, 2012s d The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com In Rewind: A look back at Michigan athletics in 2011 By STEPHEN NESBITT Daily Sports Editor NEW ORLEANS - It was November 26, the date Jim Tres- sel emphasized when he was dis- missed at Ohio State five months earlier. "Don't forget: on November 26th we're going to kick (Michi- gan's) ass!" the embattled Tressel told a roaring crowd outside his home in mid-June. He was wrong. As the errant fourth-down pass hovered a few feet above the ground, Courtney Avery dove over a downed receiver and snatched the ball out of the air. Fans flooded over the brick retaining wall and onto the Michigan Stadium turf. Brady Hoke and Greg Mattison embraced. 40-34. For the first time in eight tries, Michigan had beaten Ohio State. Roy Roundtree spied Mike Martin standing by the tun- nel. The lanky receiver pushed through the droves of students separating the two players and stopped a few feet short. "Mike," Roundtree yelled, spreading his arms wide. "Mike. We finally did it, brother." Martin pulled out of a photo- graph pose with a student to greet Roundtree. "We did it," he screamed back. Martin - all 6-foot-2, 304 pounds of him - grabbed the out- side of Roundtree's shoulder pads and lifted him straight into the air. Roundtree saluted the crowd behind the tunnel. At long last, Roundtree and the Wolverineswere really, truly, back on top. It was the culmination of four years on campus forthe duo. What began as three years of misery ended in magical fashion - a vic- tory over the Buckeyes, a 10-2 record and a BCS bowl berth. It was also the lasting highlight in a memorable 2011 for Michigan athletics. But it wasn't the only one. Here are some more memo- ries, in reverse chronological order: DECEMBER 30 - DETROIT Little-used sophomore defen- seman Kevin Clare couldn't have found a better time to score his second career goal. Clare's goal midway through overtime gave the Michigan hockey team a 3-2 victory over Michigan State and the Great Lakes Invitational title for the second consecutive season. DECEMBER3 - PALO ALTO, CALIF. In a season defined by valleys and peaks, the Michigan volley- ball team hit its high at just the right time. The same team that was ranked No. 18 at the open- ing of conference play - yet went on to lose eight of its next 10 Big Ten games - displayed a familiar dominance in a four-set upset of No. 6 Stanford to advance into the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA Tour- nament. NOVEMBER 19 - ANN ARBOR The Nebraska football team vis- ited Michigan Stadium for the first time since 1962 and left husked, shucked and defeated. Michigan welcomed the 17th-ranked Corn- huskers to the Big Ten with a 45-17 drubbing. The win marked a reemergence of classic Michigan football and set the Wolverines up for The Game the following Satur- day. NOVEMBER3 - WOLFE- BORO, N.H. One of the biggest highlights for the Michigan basketball team had nothing to do with anyone on the roster. This was the date that Mitch McGary, a high school senior at Brewster Academy and a consensus No. 2 prospect in the nation, bypassed perennial pow- ers Duke and Florida to commit to coach John Beilein and the Wolverines. The true effect of McGary's decision won't be felt for another season, but it certainly sent ripples down the traditional hierarchy ofcollege basketball. SEPTEMBER 10 - ANN ARBOR Nobody left their seat early at the Michigan football team's Under the Lights matchup with Notre Dame - the firstnightgame in Michigan Stadium's storied his- tory. Viewed by 114,804 pairs of eyes, junior quarterback Denard Robinson and the offense drove 80 yards in 28 seconds, capped by a 16-yard touchdown pass to Roundtree in the corner of the end zone, to defeat the Fighting Irish, 35-31. May 30 - Columbus Tressel is dismissed by Ohio State. If you think this doesn't belong in Michigan's year in review, you're wrong. Nov. 26 may not have happened the way it did without May 30. After 10 sea- sons, six conference titles and a 9-1 record against the Wolverines at the helm in Columbus, Tres- sel was replaced by intirim coach Luke Fickell amid a memorabilia- selling scandal and cover up. A week later, star quarterback Ter- relle Pryor left the Buckeyes. MAY 25 - ANN ARBOR In what Athletic Director Dave Brandon called "the worst-kept secret in America," the club men's and women's lacrosse teams were promoted to varsity status. Michi- gan is the first FBS school to add men's lacrosse since Notre Dame did it in 1981. The nation's fastest- growing sport has a new hub in Ann Arbor, and it's here to stay. APRIL 15 - COLUMBUS/, CLEVELAND In one' night, the Michigan men's and women's gymnastics teams made history - twice. Senior Kylee Botterman won the NCAA all-around title at the NCAA Semifinals in Cleveland, becoming the latest Wolverine gymnast to win the national title since Elise Ray won a split title in 2001. Botterman later won the AAI Award as the nation's best gymnast. A few hours away in Columbus, freshman Sam Miku- lak captured the all-around title at the NCAA Championships for the men's team, becoming the first freshman to ever win the NCAA title. With the duo winning the NCAA all-around titles, Michigan became the firstschool ever to win Michigan fans stormed the field at Michigan Stadium after the Wolverines' first victory over Ohio St both the men's and women's titles in the same season. APRIL 9 - ST. PAUL, MINN. In a span of two days, the Mich- igan hockeyteam felt the extremes of elation and devastation in the NCAA Frozen Four at Xcel Energy Center. First came the toppling of No. 1 North Dakota in the semifi- nal, a 2-0 shutout for senior goalie Shawn Hunwick and the Wolver- ines. Hunwick made 40 saves to catapult Michigan into the NCAA title game. It was the Wolverines' first appearance in the NCAA final since Michigan coach Red Beren- son's team won the program's ninth championship in 1998. But then the agony of defeat hit. The Wolverines took No. 3 Minneso- ta-Duluth into overtime in the finale before Bulldogforward Kyle Schmidt took a feed in front of the net and flipped the puck past Hun- wick for the 3-2 win. APRIL 4 - AUGUSTA, GA. At the ripe age of 22 years old, Michigan golfer Lion Kim found himself paired with PGA veterans Jose Maria Olazabal and Davis Love III at the 2011 Masters. Kim became the first Michigan student to earn a Masters bid. On his third stroke of the tournament, Kim secured his first career birdie at the Masters after sticking a seven iron to eight feet and draining the putt. Kim missed the cut by just three strokes after shooting a 148 (+4) over two rounds, tying for 64th overall. MARCH 20 - CHARLOTTE, N.C. Darius Morris's last shot in a Michigan uniform won't soon be forgotten. After a 75-45 beat down of Tennessee in the NCAA Tour- nament round of 64, the Wolver- ines trailed No. 3 Duke, 73-71, in the round of 32. With three sec- onds remaining, Morris elevated to sent up a floater from just inside the free-throw line. The ball lofted over the outstretched arms of Blue Devil forward Ryan Kelly, hung above the hoop and finally clanged off the back of the rim. The senior- less team was mere inches away from doing the unthinkable. Two months later, Morris announced his decision to forgo his junior and senior seasons to enter the NBA draft. MARCH 19 - PHILADELPHIA Michigan redshirt junior wres- tler Kellen Russell captured the first national title of the year for Michigan by posting a 5-0 record at the NCAA Championships. Russell fought off an ankle inju- ry to defeat third-ranked Boris Novachokov (Cal Poly) in the final of the 141-pound weight class. He finished the season with the best individual season record in Michi- gan wrestling history, a perfect 38-0. Russell was later named Michigan Athlete of the Year with Mikulak and Botterman. MARCH 5-- ANN ARBOR If The Game was the top regu- lar-season highl4:ht in 2011, sec- ond place would have to go to the Michigan basketball team's sweep of Michigan State - the first sweep since the 1996-97 season. Freshman guard Tim Hardaway Jr. exploded for 20 second-half points in the season finale against the Spartans at Crisler Arena, leading Michiganto a 70-63 win. JANUARY 11- ANN ARBOR You can't have the end of the year without the beginning. On this date, Brandon announced the hiring of Hoke, a relatively unknown head coach from San Diego State, to replace outgoing head coach Rich Rodriguez. Hoke had just a 47-50 record in stints at Ball State and San Diego State, but he represented a return to the Michigan football of old. He worked under Michigan coach Lloyd Carr in the 1990s. It took no time for Hoke to endear himself to a Wolverine nation thirsting for a new face for the program. His opening press conference set his plan in stone: Win with the current team, win the Big Ten Championship and beat "Ohio." And when asked if the Michigan coaching job is as prestigious as it once was, Hoke coined a phrase now immortalized within the pro- gram: "This is Michigan, fergod- sakes." On Tuesday, Jan. 3 - 357 days since his hiring - Hoke led Michi- gan into its first BCS bowl victory since 2000. But that's for another year. Hockey report card: First-half grades OFFENSE EVERETT COOK// DAILY SPORTS EDITOR DEFENSE SPECIAL TEAMS GOALIES INTANGIBLES COACHING * -~ I.n Before the season, concerns about youth and inexperience surrounded the offense of the Michigan hockey team. Coach Red Berenson said that he didn't know which of his freshmen were going to step up, statingthat it might take a while for the teamto figure it out. He was right about that, but for different reasons than expected. The veterans, rather than the freshmen, have been the inconsis- tent players. Freshman Alex Gup- till leads the team in goals with nine, and fellow freshman Phil Di Giuseppe is right behind him with eight. Guptill has seemingly come out of nowhere after his last two seasons in junior hockey ended with injuries. David Wohlberg has been one of the most confounding veterans. The senior captain has picked up his offensive production recently, but he started the season with just three goals in the Wolverines' first 15 games . His play in the second half will have a massive impact on theoffense'sefficiency. Michigan (5-6-3 CCHA, 9-8-3 overall) leads the CCHA in scor- ing offense with 78 goals, but that number would be alot lower with- out some early-season blowouts. Thanks to the line of Chris Brown, Guptill and Wohlberg, the offense has been solid and has given the Wolverines a chance in most games. Still, Michigan continues to look for offensive consistencyin2012. GRADE: B Everything changed with the suspension of sophomore Jon Merrill. Last season's fresh- man sensation hasn't played a game this season, challenging the depth of a group that hasn't played up to expectations yet. The defense is seventh in the CCHA, allowing 2.59 goals a game, but that doesn't tell the whole story. While the offense might be inconsistent, the defense has been downright unreliable. During the Wolver- ines' seven-game winless streak - they didn't win a game in November - the defense became as unpredictable as a dinner in MoJo. On Nov. 18 against Ohio State, the defense gave Michigan a chance to win by allowing just two goals. The next night, the Wolverines allowed six. There are nights when the defense looks impenetrable, but then there are nights when every- thing turns sour after one goal. The top pairing of senior Greg Pateryn and sophomore Mac Bennett has been the bright spot for this defensive corps. The duo uses different approaches to complement each other, as Ben- nett attacks the offensive zone while Pateryn stays back and shoots from the point. The predicted return of Mer- rill should do wonders for the defense - one of Michigan's cur- rent weak links. GRADE:C Berenson has tinkered with his penalty kill and power play units from day one but still hasn't found a successful com- bination. With an inexperi- enced special teams corps, he'll continue to tinker for the rest of the season - and for good rea- son. The power play hasn't been bad, but it also hasn't been very good. Michigan is convert- ing a little over 16 percent of its power plays, which is good for seventh in the CCHA. Not horrible, but nothing to tweet about. Experience is the name of the game for the power play, so look for a bump in production in the second half of the season. The penalty kill is a differ- ent story - Michigan is dead last in the CCHA in penalty kill percentage at 80 percent. The frustrating part for Michigan is when those man-down goals are coming. Often, the penalty- kill unit will hold strong for the first 90 seconds, then give up a goal with 30 seconds or less left on the penalty. The depth is simply not there. A reduction of needless pen- alties will certainly improve the penalty kill - Brown might as well get his mail delivered to the box - and Merrill will be a big contributor, but as of right now, the unit needs to improve. GRADE: C- Let's be honest - this section should read "Goalie." Backup sophomore netminder Adam Janecyk has played significant minutes only once this sea- son, and that was just because starter Shawn Hunwick went all Manny Pacquiao on a North- ern Michigan player and got ejected. Though Hunwick hasn't been perfect, he continues to make Berenson look like the smartest recruiter in the land. The former walk-on is the sole starter for the first time in his career, and so far he is the indisputable MVP of the Wol- verines. His .917 save percent- age is sixth in the CCHA, but that number is skewed consid- ering the erratic defense that plays in front of him. He went through a rough patch when the defense was struggling, but Berenson declared him "back" after the series in Alaska. Nobody Michigan has played this season has had a goalie left out to dry as much as Hunwick, who makes one-on-one plays look easy, night in and night out. He will rank up there with the best goalies in Michigan history when his career ends in a couple months. Just hope Hunwick doesn't get hurt. GRADE: A- During that November los- ing streak, not a single Wolver- ine had an answer as to why the team was in such a funk. A whole lot of"I don't know" and "we just have to keep working" answers were doled out, skirting over the underlying, potentially very seri- ous issue. This is a team that looked lethargic, lazy and even disinter- ested for most of November. One negative play, and things would just snowball. This young team didn't have the mental fortitude and "want-to" to keep any sort of momentum together, an issue that is a lot harder to fix than defense or special teams. But over the last month, they seemingly fixed the problem. Michigan looks more confident and poised on the ice, getting to the promised land of match- ing its physical abilities with its mental fortitude. Maybe it was more experience, or perhaps it was the Wolverines finally buy- ing into Berenson's specific style of hockey. Whatever the reason, the team from a month ago would not have gotten anywhere close to winning the Great Lakes Invi- tational, as it did last week. For a young team, confidence is every- thing, and the Wolverines are seemingly growing up before our very eyes. GRADE: B- Berenson had one ofhis top two defensemen suspended before the year. He has had to manage an inexperienced roster that consists of almost one-third freshmen. And he dealt with losing his top assistant coach for 23 years, Mel Pearson, to Michigan Tech after last season. Yet Michigan is right in the thick of things. It is eighth in the CCHA - but is just eight points outofsecond place- andwould be in the hunt for the NCAA Tourna- mentfor the22rd consecutive year if the season endedtoday.Amid all the expectations that come with Michigan hockey, the old coach has mostly kept the ship righted. It has rocked a little - actually, a lot - but there have been no cast- aways yet. The schedule in 2012 is much tougher than 2011, but if there is anyone who knows how to handle it, it's Berenson. The most impressive part of Berenson's work this season has been how he has dealt with the Merrill situation, Some coaches would have brought back a star player as soon as possible to try and halt a month-long losing streak, but Berenson stuck to his guns. He will bring Merrill back when his pupil has improved not as a hockey player, but as a person. Some things are bigger than hock- ey, and Berenson has a pretty good grasp on that. GRADE: A I