The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 8, 2012 - 7A The ichgan ail - mchiandaly~om WdnedayFebuary8, 012 : 7 DeBlois leads scrappy penalty kill By EVERETT COOK Daily Sports Editor The Michigan hockey team wouldn't be successful if it was littered with flashy offensive playmakers that cared about defense as much as Wes Welker cares for Gisele Bundchen. The Michigan hockey program is built of scrappy, two-way for- wards that enjoy the dirty work as much as the offensive glory. Michigan coach Red Berenson stresses the importance of these two-way forwards perhaps more than any other type of player on the roster, and he has no qualms about rewarding those players. Senior forward Luke Glendening is the captain, and he has never scored more than eight goals in a season. And against Miami (Ohio) last weekend, Derek DeBlois showed why the two-way forward is so important. For the casual observer, it might have seemed that DeBlois didn't do much. The sophomore forward didn't appear on the stat sheet and was an even zero in the plus/minus category in both games. But DeBlois was a lynchpin ° on a stellar penalty-kill unit that scored a shorthanded goal and didn't allow a goal on 12 power plays. DeBlois was all over the ice, breaking up shots and leaving his impact on the boards. "I thought he was a stud, one of the best guys on the ice," said sophomore defenseman Mac Bennett. "We had to kill a lot of penalties and that's one of his strong points, so he really got a * chance to shine. The penalty kill speaks for itself, and he's a big part of that." A lot of credit for the unit's turnaround has been given to sophomore defenseman Jon Mer- rill, rightfully so. But the penalty-kill unit is composed of guys like DeBlois, who sacrifice the glory of being an offensive stalwart in order to help the team on the defensive end. He has scored just five goals on the season - and only one in Behind Enemy Lines wivth Brandon Ube By LUKE PASCH go there. But it won't be too dif- Daily Sports Editor ferent because we're going in and just trying to get a win. It will be The Big Ten hasn't been very business as usual, I think. welcoming to coach Doc Sadler's TMD: Do you know anything Cornhuskers this season. about Michigan's style of basket- In Nebraska's inaugural season ball yet? in the conference, the program BU: I watched (Michigan last has garnered just three wins and year) on TV a couple times, when sits one notch above bottom- they played Kansas and a couple dwelling Penn State. That said, other times. Watching them last the Cornhuskers aren't pushovers year, they've got some pretty tal- at home, having knocked off a ented guards, and good big men, very talented Indiana team last too. And I know they bring basi- month in the friendly confines of cally everybody back except for Bob Devaney Sports Center. (Darius) Morris. So they're obvi- When Big Ten coaches say that ously going to be a really talented wins in this league never come team, especially outside. I think easy, they're not blowing smoke. that'll be a tough game for us, And Michigan coach John Beilein just trying to match up with not knows his Wolverines have to only the talent level outside, but bring their A-game ifthey want to also their size inside. They've got pick up their second road win of some bigger guards who are pret- the season in Lincoln on Wednes- ty good rebounders. day night. TMD: What do you know about At Big Ten Media Day in Octo- the Big Ten brand of basketball, ber, Nebraska forward. Bran- generally speaking, and how does don Ubel - the team's leading Nebraska fit into that mold? rebounder - sat down with the BU: What I've heard is that Daily to discuss the upcoming the Big Ten is a bigger league season. - it's stronger. And most of the ' The Michigan Daily: So, what's teams like to slow it down a lit- itlike havingto scout up on a com- tie bit, really make you grind on pletely new set of teams this sea- defense and execute on offense. son? Is it exciting or is ita pain? That's something our coach Brandon Ubel: I think it's pret- really stresses a lot. And we're a ty cool. I'm a junior this year, so team, that I think if you look at the fact that I got to play in the some of the scores last year and Big 12 for two years, go to all some of the games last year, we those places - go to KU, play at like to lower possessions, make Allen Field House; go to K-State, you work on offense, and we play play there; going down to Texas. some really good defense. I think But this year, I'll get to go to the comparatively, we're a lot like likes of Illinois, Wisconsin and Wisconsin. Michigan State. So I think defi- TMD: Where do you think nitely it's exciting for me because your team will stand at season's I'll get to play in two conferences, end? play in those venues and not have BU: We're coming in think- to transfer at all. ing we've got the talent level at TMD: What are you most excit- least to be a contender, top-five, ed about? Big Ten-type team. As coach has BU: I think it'll be cool to go been telling us, we've got to start to some of the venues. You hear believing that we're that good. about how loud Illinois, Michi- And until we start believing that gan State, Wisconsin; Ohio State we're that good, it can't happen. are. You hear about some of those SoIthink we're starting to unde'- venues. So I think it'll be cool to stand how good we can be. JEO MOCH/[ Michigan sophomore forward Derek DeBlois has just five goals this season, but he's been a force on the penalty kill. 2012 - but Berenson mentions player defense than offense, DeBlois as a player he can't keep because defense is all about hus- off the ice. tle and grit. There is little glory in "He's got a good work ethic, defense. he values defense, and he accepts DeBlois, rather, has flourished a role that into a valuable maybe isn't but unflashy as glamorous nothing role. Berenson as other roles I have often mentions. on the team," L Thow important Berenson said. baduI can say specific roles "He's just get- about Derekj are for his ting better and jb u ere. team, because better." Nothi " not everyone Before he 1 can lead the got to Michi- . team in scor- gan, DeBlois ing. led his prep "For a team team in scoring, soit's not like he to be successful, you have to have doesn't know his way around the everybody understanding what offensive side of the ice. their role is on the team, and It's much harder to teach a accepting it, and embracing it," Berenson said. "Some coaches would say make that role the most impor- tant part of your game - be a star in that role." Michigan's penalty-kill unit has turned from a weakness to a strength, partially because of Merrill, but partially because players are accepting their roles. The scrappy DeBlois is an exemplar of this mindset.. "He's gritty and really hard to play against," Bennett said. "I hate practicing against him because he doesn't quit. Every time he goes out there, he wants to get something going or hit somebody or make a play. He's a great guy to have on your team. "I have nothing bad I can say about Derek. Nothing." WOMENx 5AmKiEht foAhv Examining the next step for Borseth and the Wolverines ive years ago, Kevin Bors- eth came to Ann Arbor to jL become the eighth head coach of the Michigan women's basketball program. He inherited a program that dwelled near the bottom of the Big Ten for a half decade and hadn't made an NCAA Tourna- ment appear- ance since COLLEEN 2001. His THOMAS teams showed promise in On Women's each of his Basketball first four years, but slow finishes hindered any shot at a tournament berth. This season, the team hopes to change that story. After posting a program-best 12-2 record to open this season, the Wolverines appeared to be a contender for the Big Ten title and finally earn a spot in the tournament. But in conference play, it's looked like the same old story for Borseth's squad. Michigan has dropped games to good teams in Penn State and Michigan State - the Wolver- ines haven't beaten the Spartans since 2008 - and sub-par Wis- consin in the last three weeks, and it began to look like the Wolverines were going to have another breakdown near the end of the season. But there still is time to turn the season back in the right direction. If they want to take that next step and earn a tour- nament bid, the remaining five games will be the most impor- tant of the season. If you compare last season's and this season's conference records, this year's squad is behind last year's. Michigan is currently 6-5 in the Big Ten, whereas last year at this point, Wolverines were one game better. Michigan will have to go 4-1 over the next five games in order to have the same conference record as last year - and matching last year's effort may not even be enough. With opponents such as Nebraska and Purdue still loom- ing, the Wolverines have to take their game to the next level by beating the best teams in the Big Ten. And that starts with beat- ing the Huskers on Thursday. They also have a home-and- home series against Iowa that can help them gain momentum for the postseason. The Hawkeyes maybe just 14-10 overall, but they're tied with the Wolverines in the Big Ten standings at 6th, just below Michigan State. Iowa has beaten Purdue on the road, and the Huskers beat the Boilermakers in triple overtime last week. The Big Ten may be a mess right now, but the Wolverines can straighten it all out by simply winning these games. There are a few stipulations, though. Senior guard Courtney Boylan has cooled off after a hot start in nonconference play, and senior guard Carmen Reynolds has been unpredictable all sea- son.: Those two were two of the team's leading scorers last year, but they haven't produced this season, which has been a problem for Michigan. Instead, junior forward Rachel Shef- fer has taken the reigns of the offense and is now the Wolver- ines' leading scorer. Sheffer has come up big in some of Michigan's games, but one player doesn't constitute a team. There are five players on the floor, and all five need to con- tribute for the team to be suc- cessful. Boylan and Reynolds are two pieces to that puzzle. As seniors, they have the leadership capabilities and the experience to know what needs to be done down the stretch. They know what it's like to hit a low - they lost to the worst team in the Big Ten last year in the conference tournament. In order to make this season differ- ent than the rest, they have to take control. The senior duo has shown its potential. Boylan tallied a career-high 22 points in Sun- day's loss to Michigan State, and Reynolds has gotten back in stride after setting the pro- gram's 3-point record. That offensive production needs to continue. Sheffer, Boylan, and Reynolds make three. There are two more pieces in junior guard Jenny Ryan and the Wolverines' bench, but those aren't a problem for Michigan. Ryan has consistently contributed around the board all season, especially on defense, and the bench - whether it be juniors Kate Thompson or Sam Arnold - can step up in any situation. So it all comes down to the seniors. Leadership and expe- rience are two things a coach can't teach, but they are things Boylan and Reynolds possess and have to use in order to finish strong in the last five games. Right now, ESPN's Bracketol- ogy has Michigan as a 10-seed. Earlier in the season, they were as high as a seven. It's gener- ous listing, though, as the same bracket has both Michigan State and Iowa as two of the First Four Out. The Spartans swept the Wolverines already and are higher in the conference stand- ings. The Wolverines' nonconfer- ence play was one of the best of any team in the Big Ten. But that has passed, and it again comes down to the last push for the team to gain a spot in the 64-team field. The seniors have been here before, and it's their job to make this season different. Borseth understands all of this. "Everything is at stake right now," he said. "(The difference between missing the tourna- ment) last year, two wins. The year before, two wins. The year before that, one win. That's what-it comes down to, getting your win total up. "You have to do well at the end of the season - that's what you're judged on. We've laid the groundwork in the nonconfer- ence, and now we need to be able to clos.e the deal here in our conference play." 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