. The Michigan Daily I michigandailycom I February 6,2012 Spartans snap Michigan win streak Gre reb w en matches 'M's Before Sunday afternoon, Michigan guard Zack Novak and ounding output Michigan State forward Dray- mond Green were tied 3-3 in the ith 16 boards in-state rivalry over their careers. But after losingthe last three con- By LUKE PASCH tests in the series, Green salvaged Daily Sports Editor his final regular-season game against the Wolverines, with his T LANSING - The battle Spartans winning handily at the senior captains has official- Breslin Center, 64-54. e Green. The Michigan State defense smothered Michigan's offense all game long, holding the Wolver- ines to under 40-percentshooting from the field and their second- lowest scoring total of the season. Ultimately, it was Green's day. The Spartan captain could not be stopped in the second half, and he finished the game with a double- double on 14 points and 16 boards, matching Michigan's rebounding total by himself. Any questions about the health of his left knee, which he sprained late in the sec- ond half at Illinois on Tuesday, were completely erased. "I couldn't even tell he was hurt," said freshman point guard Trey Burke. "He hit some big shots down there. He got to the rim a lot, got to the line a lot. He looked better than he usually does." "He has a huge desire," added senior guard Stu Douglass. "A lot of rebounding is just a lot of want. You can tell he's hungry for the boards, he's hungry to get extra possessions on the offensive end and get offensive boards. You really just gotto match that inten- sity." The atmosphere inside the Breslin Center at tip-off was elec- tric, but neither offense was able to feed off it early on. The first bucket of the contest didn't come for two-and-a-half minutes, a layup from Michigan State guard Branden Dawson. Michigan didn't get on the scoreboard until a little over five minutes in, when Burke hita running floater in the lane to tie the game at 2-2. After the first media timeout, Michigan State (7-3 Big Ten, 18-5 overall) settled into a groove on See SPARTANS; Page 3B O EAS of the ly gone No second-half heroics 'Hobey' Hunwick beaches Miami in crucial series By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - Sunday wasn't the first time sophomore forward Tim Hardaway Jr. was held scoreless in the opening 20 minutes of a game against Michigan State. So when he missed his only two field goals and was limited to one assist and no rebounds, the Wolverines weren't overly concerned about Hardaway's ability to charge back with a strong second-half perfor- mance. After all, in a win over the Spartans last season, Hard- away led Michigan to a win by scoring 20 second-half points after being held scoreless in the first half. But this time, Hardaway mustered just four points -two of which came via meaning- less free throws in the garbage time. The guard shot just 1-of- 10 from the field, as the Wolver- ines fell, 64-54. Not even Hardaway could explain why he was stifled all day long. "I can't even answer that question," Hardaway said. "I just give them all the credit - they deserve it. They came out with a good game plan and executed." Michigan State coach Tom Izzo had answers, though. Izzo lauded Hardaway's tal- ent and athleticism. So, instead of focusing on shutting down Hardaway, the Spartans game- planned to take away the methods Michigan uses to get Hardaway the ball. That centered on containing freshman Trey Burke, the key to the Wolverines' victory in Ann Arbor three weeks ago. "What we did is we shut down Burke's penetration," See HARDAWAY, Page 3B By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Editor After the Michigan hockey team scored three first-period goals on Friday, Miami (Ohio) coach Enrico Blasi pulled starting goaltender Cody Reichard in favor of Connor Knapp. The two seniors look nothing alike. Reichard is under six-feet tall. Knapp stands at 6-foot-6. So why, in the post-game press conference, did Michigan junior forward A.J. Treais incredulously ask, "They changed goalies?" Probably because it didn't mat- ter who was in net for Miami dur- ing the Wolverines' series sweep. It only mattered who stood at the opposite end of the ice - fifth-year seniornetminder Shawn Hunwick. Hunwick turned in another near-perfect weekend, the latest in a string of impressive performanc- es. In the last three weekends, he's cruised to two shutouts and twice held opponents to one-goal games. This weekend, the Yost Ice Arena crowd showered Hunwick with chants of "Hobey Baker," the annual award given to college hockey's best player. He was noth- ing short of a rock, as his coach Red Berenson likes to say, risingto the occasion as RedHawk skaters intruded into his crease all week- end long. Miami knocked him down time after time, but that didn't stop Hunwick from making plays when See HUNWICK, Page 3B REDHAWKS ROCKED Michigan blasted a physical Miami (Ohio) team, sweeping the series at Yost Ice Arena. Page 4B STATE OF THE STATE The tides of the Michigan-Michigan State rivalry have shifted, but the balance is a good thing. Page 2B