U The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com ( February 20,2012 . Michigan knocks off No. 6 Ohio State ' OVe fir By Mic woke u day and In t. Beilein to the attende Day, took hi throug archrivs M' triumphs In front of a packed Crisler Center and a nationwide TV .r Buckeyes for audience on Saturday night, the Wolverines led throughout and st time in last stormed to a perfect 15-0 home record with a 56-51 victory. seven tries "To walk into that arena today was a bit moving," Beilein said. "I NEAL ROTHSCHILD felt it wasn't just a rivalry game Daily Sports Editor - it was contending for a Big Ten championship. I thought it was higan coach John Beilein special." p at about 5 a.m. on Satur- Freshman guard Trey Burke d stayed up well past 1 a.m. overcame stingy defense from he intervening 20 hours, Buckeye guard Aaron Craft to passed out doughnuts put up one of his most spectacu- Maize Rage at sunrise, lar performances yet, scoring 17 ed ESPN's College Game- points and adding five assists. dispensed interviews, Though Craft limited Burke in is team through its walk- the half-court, the freshman h, and for dessert, beat found other ways to lift the Wol- al Ohio State. verines. Burke's electrifying assists, back attempt fell short. layups in transition and clutch Sophomore guard Tim Hard- basket with 11 seconds to go away Jr. continued his emer- helped Michigan overcome the gence down the stretch of the team that pounded the Wol- Big Ten season, after bricking his verines by way through 15 in Burke's the opening hometown of two-thirds of Columbus just "To w alk the conference three weeks schedule. He ago. into that arena made four of His child- five shots and hood best today was a bit swished both friend, Jared of his 3-point Sullinger, moving. tries, finishing along with for- with 13 points. ward Deshaun In the first Thomas, did half, Ohio what they could to bring Ohio State didn't make a 3-pointer, State back. The pair of forwards and when the team tried to take accounted for almost all of the it to the basket, it often found Buckeyes' offense, but the come- itself called for an offensive foul. The Buckeyes finished the game 3-for-16 from behind the arc and were called for five charges. "Weknewthatacoupleoftheir playersgo to the rack hard, attack the rack really hard," Burke said. "We knew that if we could step over and take a charge, then the game would go in our favor." Craft picked up one of the charging fouls and was forced to sit for the last four minutes of the half. Meanwhile, Burke found Buckeye freshman Shan- non Scott guarding him and took advantage. He penetrated and kicked it out to senior guard Stu Douglass for a3-pointer, he drove the baseline and drew a foul on Scott, and he buried a step-back jumper from the free-throw line two possessions later. Thatfieldgoalgave Michigang 25-18 lead, buta layup just before the buzzer from Thomas cut the Wolverine lead to five at the half. It was Ohio State's lowest-scor- ing first half of the season. Michigan emerged from the locker room with some flash. On a fast break early in the second half, Burke completed a smooth, one-handed bounce pass to a streaking Jordan Morgan, who finished with the left-hand- ed flush. Two possessions later, Burke spiked another bounce pass to Morgan, the redshirt sophomore center, in transition. Craft tried to kick out his leg to stop the ball and the Michigan scorebut Mor- gan picked up the ball and cre- See UPSET, Page 3B Morgan thwarts Sullinger, collects first double-double ICE HOCKEY Wolverines sweep Wildcats with OT senior-night win By BEN ESTES Daily Sports Editor It was a battle of wills, a game between two rivals, with noth- ing but pure heart deciding the outcome. It was a contest to see if Mich- igan was tough enough to take the next step, to truly contend for a Big Ten title. It was a physical clash, with Ohio State - the king of the con- ference - and its star big man Jared Sullinger determined to wear down the Wolverines, determined to make them buckle on a home floor they've protect- ed all season long. Through it all, Jordan Morgan stood tall. "We said before the game, 'It's going to be ugly,' " the redshirt sophomore forward said. "(We wanted to) make it ugly. We wanted to bring the hammer." At 6-foot-8 and a chiseled 250 pounds, Morgan is, without question, the biggest and stron- gest member of the No.17 Michi- gan men's basketball team. That means he's also the player that Michigan coach John Beilein must depend on to bring physi- cality to the court every single game - Beilein doesn't have any- one else, especially with injured sophomore forward Jon Horford relegated to the bench. And Morgan was especially needed against No. 6 Ohio State. Most Big Ten matchups are physical affairs, but it was evi- dent early on Saturday night that the game would be especially rough-and-tumble. But it also became clear early on that the Wolverines, so often criticized for being weak in the paint and on the boards, were ready to bring the fight to the bigger, longer and more ath- letic Buckeyes. Morgan led the charge. "That's the Jordan Morgan sI we've seen flashes of." __rfrdJdar nscdpoERns KIRKLdgD/Daiy Senior forward Jordan Morgan stated 11 points and gathered 11 rebounds. By EVERETT COOK Daily SportsEditor On Friday night, the No. 5 Michigan hockey team relied on its freshmen from the get-go to carry the scoring load. Forward Phil Di Giuseppe scored a goal for the first time since NMU 1 Dc2,ad MICHIGAN 4 Dec. 2, and forward NMU 2 Alex Gup- MICHIGAN 3 till gave the Wolverines the lead for good later on in the first period. Those two goals would be the difference for Michigan in a 4-1 victory over Northern Michigan. But on Saturday, the upper- classmen played like they had something to prove to the crowd on senior night at Yost Ice Arena. The game had a different vibe to it. Michigan and Northern Mich- igan (11-6-3 CCHA, 14-12-6 over- all) needed an overtime period to settle the last regular-season game at Yost, trading punches for the first 60 minutes to a 2-2 dead- lock. Junior forward A.J. Treais made quick work of the extra time. He needed just 1:20 of over- time to score on a wrister to the left side of the net, tying Guptill for the team lead with 15 goals. Michigan is 9-2-1 in 2012, and Saturday's win guaranteed it a bye in the first round the CCHA Tournament. Treais has seven goals in as many games, but the biggest one of that stretch sent Michigan (14- 8-4,20-10-4) home with a 3-2 vic- tory. "It's pretty fitting," said senior captain Luke Glendening. "The way he's been playing has been unbelievable." But Michigan doesn't come close to winning that game with- out its seniors. Senior defenseman Greg Pateryn was on a mission, deliv- ering bone-jarring hits every chance he got. There were a handful of instances on Saturday where Pateryn and a Wildcat had an open-ice collision. Pateryn won every time. "I saw my opportunities and I tried to step up," Pateryn said. "If I can get a few big hits like that, it kind of gets everyone going as well. That's kind of what I was See WILDCATS, Page 3B The Detroit native served notice in the game's opening possession. Ohio State immedi- ately dumped the ball down low to Sullinger, a Big Ten Player of the Year candidate at forward. Sullinger has had his way with Michigan in the past, but this time, Morgan was ready, holding tough in that initial matchup and forcing a missed shot. That was the story most of the night. Sullinger had his most ineffective performance against Michigan to date, converting on just six of 14 field-goal attempts. And much of the time, it was Morgan and Morgan alone defending the Buckeye, work- ing feverishly to deny him the ball and holding his ground when Sullinger tried to back him down. The Wolverines doubled him and gave help on a few occa- sions, especially in the second half. But Beilein said he was See MORGAN, Page 3B GAMEDAY GONE WILD # Michigan's Saturday took a turn for the legendary, from football to basketball to hockey. Page 2B DEFENDING YOST The Michigan hockey team swept Northern Michigan, giving it a shot at the CCHA regular-season title. Page 4B