The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I February 13,2012 :2 :3 (OT) Michigan State: 3 ] Y1 j. J7 P Michigan State: 2 Lynch avoids benching, Wolverines salvage . stars as overtime hero split with OT thriller By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor DETROIT - The man who almostgot benched in overtime shook off missing the goal he should have scored, collected the puck that never should have reached him, and shot it into the Spartan goal for the game winner. Michigan 3, Michigan State 2. Kevin Lynch might have played just five seconds of good hockey on Saturday, but he did it in the final five seconds, and that's what matters. But the junior forward almost didn't get the chance. "I can tell you, there were times in the third period I thought about not putting him out in the overtime," said Michigan coach Red Beren- son. "That line got caught in W their own zone and they got in trouble. And I thought, I don't know if I can trust them in the overtime. "I know that Kevin's had a good record against Michi- gan State. I know he's had a good record at Joe Louis. They got one shift in overtime, and bingo. So you never know." Here's how Lynch's roller- coaster weekend went: On Friday, he scored a goal in Michigan's losing effort in East Lansing, his first since the finals of the Great Lakes Invi- tational in December. Against Michigan State. Before that, Lynch hadn't scored since Dec. 9. Against Michigan State. Notice a pattern? Four of Lynch's six goals this season have come against the Spar- tans. The other two also came against in-state teams: Western Michigan and Northern Michi- gan. Call it the Kevin Lynch State Stimulus Package. "I've been fortunate to get points when I play (Michigan State)," said Lynch, a native of Grosse Pointe, Mich. "It's just that rivalry thatgets me going." On Saturday, Lynch slashed his finger open in warm-ups while trying to clear snow off his skates. The night got pro- gressively worse from there. Turnovers, poor defense and an inability to get the puck out of Michigan's zone plagued Lynch's line in regulation. The line, completed by soph- omore forward Derek DeBlois and the other Lynch - Travis, a freshman forward --typically creates few goal-scoringchanc- es but plays a scrappy defensive style. Saturday's game was uncharacteristically sloppy, and Berenson nearly sidelined them for the overtime period. Only Kevin Lynch's track record stopped him. Lynch's history in clutch situations belies his role on the team. He was expected to be a scorer when he arrived at Michigan, but has struggled to consistently findthe back of the net. Berenson said he has kept his spot in the lineup because he is a hard worker who, because of his defensive effort, remains a plus player. "He knows it hasn't been the See LYNCH, Page 3B By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Writer DETROIT - There had to be a sense of deja vu for the No. 4 Michigan hockey team. Overtime against Michigan State in Joe Louis Arena? Check. Goal by a relatively quiet player - in this case, junior forward Kevin Lynch - to clinch the game? Double check. The Wolverines' 3-2 win over the Spartans on Saturday was a mirror image of the Great Lakes Invitational back in December. Luckily for the squad, it didn't replicate too much from past games against the Spartans - notably, an abysmal penalty kill that led Michigan (12-8-4 CCHA, 18-10-4 overall) to drop a 3-2 decision in East Lansing on Fri- day night. "I'd say the best thing about our game was that we didn't have to kill six penalties," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "The game was well-officiated, the players played within them- selves." Michigan struck first on Sat- urday, when junior forward A.J. Treais scored his fifth goal in as many games. His initial shot on Spartan netminder Will Yanakeff rebounded off of the goalie's pads, but Treais collected the puck and fired a backhand to find the back of the net. After Michigan State (11-10-3, 16-12-4) found the equalizer early in the second frame, the Wolver- ines' penalty-kill unit found itself in trouble again. When freshman forward Zach Hyman took a hooking penalty, the Spartans capitalized on their man advantage in less than a min- ute. Working the puck around the crease, Brett Perlini fired a wris- ter on fifth-year senior goalten- der Shawn Hunwick's glove side and into the goal. Not the kind of thing Berenson wanted to see. "In the games we've lost this season, penalties have been the cause of that," said junior for- ward Kevin Lynch. "(Berenson) said, 'Limit the penalties tonight, we'll win the game.'" Michigan listened. Treais went on to knot the game with a wrister from the top of the circle, and both teams went 30 minutes without sending a player to the sin bin. But with six minutes left in the final stanza, sophomore forward Luke Moffatt went to the box for hooking, giving the Spartans a critical power play. Just minutes before, Michigan struggled to clear the puck from its zone. On this penalty, though, the penalty-kill unit played much more aggressively - senior for- ward Luke Glendening cleared the puck on rebound shots off of Hunwick and junior forward Kevin Lynch fought hard around the point. Hunwick is at the heart of every penalty kill, and though he held his own on Saturday, he was on the receiving end of some very lucky breaks. Shots hit the pipes or just bounced the right way in his favor. Berenson still sang Hunwick's praises after the game. See SPLIT, Page 3B MEN'S BASKETBALL * Struggling Smotrycz, Hardaway Jr. come alive at Crisler By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily Sports Editor Evan Smotrycz was filling up the stat sheet, Tim Hardaway Jr. was in rhythm on offense and the No. 22 Michigan men's basketball team won consecutive games. It's been weeks since I LLINOIS 61 any of those MICHIGAN 70 things were the case, but Sunday's matchup with Illinois switched things around for the Wolverines. The sophomore pair emerged from their prolonged struggles in the first half to give Michigan (9-4 Big Ten, 19-7 overall) a 70-61 victory and a winning streak - its first since early January. When redshirt sophomore center Jordan Morgan fled for the bench after picking up two early fouls, Smotrycz stepped in and saw a rare stretch of extend- ed minutes. Smotrycz made the most of those first-half minutes, putting up 12 points on 3-for-4 shooting and converting each of his four free throw attempts. "It was good to see some shots go down finally," Smotrycz said. "Guys had confidence in me." With 7-foot-1 Fighting Illini center Meyers Leonard also on the bench due to first-half foul trouble, Smotrycz saw little resis- tance, caught fire and buried two 3-pointers to help Michigan to a 37-31 halftime lead. "He's a big guy inside, takes up a lot of space," Smotrycz said of Leonard. "We had trouble reboundingwith him in the game, so it definitely helped - him get- ting in foul trouble. At the same time, I thought we did a fairly good job when he was on the floor of limiting his touches." Hardaway also experienced a 180-degree turnabout from his recent performances. His ten first-half points matched his out- put from the last two games com- bined. Though he was quiet in the second half, he wasn't forcing shots like he had been in recent weeks. He finished with a team- high 15 points and was one of four Wolverines to score in double dig- its. "I didn't show emotion, but I was very happy inside," Hard- away said about making his first 3-pointer since a Feb. 1 victory against Indiana. "Just seeing that one go in, I made sure on the second one I tried to do the same thing as I did when I shot the first one and not rush anything." Added Illinois coach Bruce Weber: "When your two worst 3-point shooters go 4-for-4 - Hardaway and Smotrycz - in the first half, it's a killer. They have so many other weapons, they spread you out, but good teams make plays." After Leonard scored four points out of the gate to give the Illini an early lead, the Wolver- ines held the sophomore in check. They pushed him out of the post and hounded him with double teams to force Illinois out on the perimeter. Leonard was held to a single point in the last 38 minutes of play on 0-for-3 shooting. The Illini (5-7, 16-9) led in the early minutes and took a brief 20-19 lead midway through the first half, but a 13-3 run put Mich- igan in the driver's seat, a position it would not relinquish the rest See ILLINOIS, Page 3B MEETING TEAM ONE Tim Rohan chronicles the Michigan * lacrosse team's humble beginning as a varsity sport. Page 2B ILLINI ANNIHILATED Michigan protected home court at Crisler Center, cruising to a nine-point win over Illinois. 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