48 - March 12, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom f ICE HOCKEY Seniors relish final game at Yost ERIN KIRKLAND, Michigan junior forward Chris Brown scored the game-winning goal on Friday, snapping a wrist shot into the net early in the second overtime period. Deep in the heart of overtime, Chris Brown emerges as Michigan's hero By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor About three and a half hours after Friday's marathon game began, the hero sat in a cold tub. At least that's how senior cap- tain Luke Glendening put it after he emerged from a victorious Michigan locker room. And the hero, junior forward Chris Brown, could barely pick himself off the ice and into the ice bath after his game-winning goal in double overtime. "I jumped," said Brown, describing his celebration. "And then Jeff (Rohrkemper) just bur- ied me, and Ijust lay on the ice. (I) let the other guys come pick me up." Regular-season overtime lasts just five minutes before the game goes to a shootout, but in the play- offs, overtime continues until someone scores. As Friday's game entered the second extra frame, both No. 4 Michigan and No. 17 Notre Dame neared utter exhaus- tion. At one timeout, Brown stood by the bench, hands on the dasher, head down, hunched over from fatigue. Earlier, in the first overtime, Brown raced down the entire length of the ice, beat both Notre Dame defenders along the boards and made a cross to freshman forward Alex Guptill, who nearly converted for the win. He didn't have much time to recover. In the second overtime period, the fourth forward line fought alongthe boards for a loose puck in the Notre Dame zone. That gave freshman forward Zach Hyman enough time to skate to the bench for a line change. Brown snuck on, unnoticed by the Notre Dame defense. The loose puck bounced to sophomore defenseman Mac Bennett, who moved it to an open Brown. The Texan buried a wrister from the slot to give Michigan an emotional 2-1 victory deep in the heart of overtime. "(I was) really tired coming off the bench going out for our next shift," Brown said. "Mac totally sold it, the guy thought that he was going to shoot, he slid it right over to me, and I just tried to put it on net." Brown's goal came three min- utes into the second overtime period, but it was months in the making. Before the season, Michigan coach Red Berenson put the team through grueling workouts up and down the steps of Michigan Stadium. As part of a Berenson tradition, generations of teams have raced up all 95 rows of the Big House in all ways imagin- able. Running, bounding, hopping - with two legs and with one - even carrying teammates. Those workouts, Brown said, decided the game. "Our team has worked as hard as anyteam in the spring, summer and fall off the ice," Berenson said. "And that's when it shows up, ina weekend like this." Added Brown: "It's that sta- dium run that always gets to us. We always remember that going into overtimes. No other team does the stadium like we do, so if we can get through that, we can pretty much get through every- thing." And so far, Michigan has. The Wolverines improved to 5-0 in games decided in overtime. That fifth victory didn't come easy on Friday. After Glenden- ing scored one minute into the contest, Michigan suffered an 82-minute scoring drought. Notre Dame evened the score in the third and dominated the rest of the period. Both fifth-year senior goal- ie Shawn Hunwick and Notre Dame goalie Steven Summerhays bailed out their team on several occasions in a frenetic overtime period, what Berenson called "heart-attack hockey." Brown's goal put an end to Michigan's longest CCHA playoff game since 1989, when Bowling Green defeated the Wolverines in three overtimes. That season was the last time Michigan failed to reach the CCHA semifinals, and the Wolverines have now made them 23 straight years with their series-clinching win on Saturday night. None of that was on Brown's mind on Friday night. What was? "(Making) sure we could end the game and I could just go to bed," Brown said. By EVERETT COOK Daily Sports Editor The Michigan hockey team was tiptoeing a fine line on Sat- urday night with two minutes remain- ing against NOTEBOOK Notre Dame. The Wolverines were up 3-1, but sophomore defenseman Jon Merrill was whistled for high- sticking just seconds after the Fighting Irish pulled their goal- tender, Steven Summerhays. No. 4 Michigan was going to be down two men for the last two minutes of the game, trying to hold on for a CCHA quarterfinal sweep of Notre Dame. This came after the teams played more than 83 minutes of hockey in a double-overtime thriller the night before - both squads were breathing a little heavier than usual. Then in a perfect microcosm of this senior class - and really the last three months - Michigan killed it. There were Wolverines flying all over the ice, diving and sprinting to the very end. "(Goaltender Shawn) Hun- wick had to be a penalty killer, (defenseman Greg) Pateryn had to block shots like a goalie, (for- ward) Luke Glendening did," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "I thought our seniors really, really stepped up this weekend." Senior forward David Wohl- berg was the difference on offense, scoring a goal in both the first and second periods on Sat- urday. But the lynchpin, as usual, was Hunwick. He had 37 saves on Friday and 25 on Saturday, cap- ping his brilliant career at Yost. "I was hoping I could get a sixth year, maybe a gray year," Hunwick joked. "It's sad. ... I thought I was going to play one minute of one game, hopefully on senior night, when I came here. "To play this many games at Yost, I can't be too upset about the career I've had here." Hunwick, the former walk- on, picked slap shots out of the air and threw back one-on-noune situations with ease both nights. "He's a warrior," said Beren' son. "He's done everything he can for this team and this pro- gram." Both Hunwick and Wohlberg mentioned how loud the crowd was in the last period - prob- ably the rowdiest the fans and the student section, the Children of Yost, have been all season. In their last game at Yost, the seniors got reflective. "The fans here are great and they helped us out alot tonight," Wohlberg said. "It's one of those things that you don't forget about when you look back and see which games you won." FIVE OR SIX, OR MAYBE FIVE: During Friday's 2-1 victory, Michigan went with five defen- seman instead of the usual six for most of both overtime peri- ods, leaving freshman Brennan Serville next to Berenson on the bench.- Notre Dame's only goal came on a playwhere Serville got caught out of position and basi- cally screened Hunwick in front of the net. What the goalie can't see, the goalie probably can't save. That sixth defenseman spot has been in flux ever since the return of Merrill in January from a suspension. Serville manned it this weekend, but freshman Mike Chiasson has also been starting in that spot. As the. games continue to become more crucial, it might not matter who is playing the sixth defenseman spot. Berensono might stick with five veterans, at risk of fatigue, rather than plug- ging in a freshman with no play- off experience on the ice. ST. PATTY'S AT THE JOE: The last seed in the CCHA Tourna- ment, Bowling Green, played the spoiler role this weekend, send- ing No. 1 seed Ferris State home early. That means Michigan is the highest-remaining seed in the Tournament, and will play Bowl- ing Green on Friday. Western Michigan and red- hot Miami (Ohio) will play in the other semifinal game. The winner of Friday's games will play in the COCHA final un Saturday. Michigan embraces 'Burn the Boats' mentality vs. ND ByMATT SLOVIN DailySportsEditor The No. 4 Michigan hockey team emerged from its locker room before Saturday's game against Notre Dame wearing shirts with the team motto, "Burn the Boats," prominently displayed. "(Sophomore forward Luke) Moffatt brought it up this year," said sophomore forward Derek DeBlois last month. "It has to do with the Vikings. When they would go to fight, they would burn their boats. No retreat, you just kind of lay all your chips on the table and fight until you win." If any unit took those words especially to heart during the sweep of the Fighting Irish, it was the Wolverine penalty killers and fifth-year senior netminder Shawn Hunwick. Beginning with Michigan's January split in South Bend, the Wolverines successfully killed all 15 of Notre Dame's power plays they faced this season. "It just shows how good our coaching staff is and how bad people want to work on the ice for us," said senior forward David Wohlberg. "The penalty killers out there were getting in front of shots and doing everything they can to help out the team - that's what makes teams go far." And the Fighting Irish man advantage is no slouch - Notre Dame takes few penalties and usually capitalizes on those of its opponents, but its power play became frustrated this weekend. Instead of paying for any of Michi- gao's five penalties, the Wolver- ine penalty kill made a statement on each, throwing bodies in front of pucks and forcing the Fighting Irish out of the attacking third. "It's not surprising that they had a good power play," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "You look at their personnel and there is a team with two of the five or six top scorers in the league." Hunwick led the penalty kill's dominating performance. Beren- son consistently stresses that as Hunwick goes, so goes the rest of the penalty-kill unit. Despite a death in the family last week that caused him to miss a day of practice, Hunwick's focus never wavered as he snatched pucks out of the air, allowing just two goals on the entire weekend. He admitted it was a "tough week" for him and his family, but he kept his emotions in check, thwarting several Notre Dame breakaway attempts. And Hun- wick rose to the occasion when his team needed him most - when the Fighting Irish had the person- nel advantage. But Hunwick was hardly the only Wolverine that caused Notre Dame's power play to leave empty handed. Michigan racked up the blocked shots, sending puck after puck out of its defensive zone - much to Hunwick's delight, as he received much needed rests. Saturday, Michigan's leader in blocked shots came as a bit of a surprise - senior forward Luke crowd rose to its feet to applaud the penalty kill's efforts as Notre Dame was forced into a late time- out to regroup. "It was still anyone's game," Berenson said. "We did that, whether it was blocking shots or winning faceoffs or getting the puck out." When the clock reached triple zeros, Michigan had blocked a total of 16 shots en route to earn- ing its 23rd-consecutive appear- ance at Joe Louis Arena for the CCHA semifinals. Though Berenson hopes the Wolverines will be conscien- tious of the penalties they take there, if they are forced to play a man down, all that's left to do is burn the boats - no surrender, no retreat. 0 ERIN KIRKLAND/Daily Senior forward David Wohlberg battles for the puck after a faceoff in the offensive zone against Notre Dame on Saturday. Glendening. Usually, senior defen- seman Greg Pateryn glides into the most flying pucks. This time, however, it was a total team effort. That didn't stop Berenson from saying Pateryn "blocked shots like a goalie." "Coming into the weekend, they were one of the better power plays in our league and our (pen- alty kill) did a great job," Berenson said. "I thought our seniors really stepped up." The four members of the senior class, playing their last game at Yost Ice Arena, were instrumen- Refinanc lowerour interest rate by 2 A tal in the penalty kill's defining moments of the weekend. Cling- ing to a two-goal lead late in the game, the Wolverines took a cou-- ple of potentially disastrous penal- ties, including a rare one assessed to sophomore defenseman Jon Merrill. It was just his second of the s*eason.Tiofer is not valid on wdsingUMW WmOff.0er subject to c redit and colaW raa . Not valiwith y other offsr.Minimum hyerest rat of 12 t the season. nul i teM a lpNmC e etand sdWnmar a ud Oter mshrbnsmay -- Instead of folding, Michigan looked invincible, and the Yost