The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com March 26, 2012 - 3B The ichgan ail - ichiandilycm Mrch26, 012- 3 Blue takes rubber match vs. JPFW = By STEVEN BRAID Daily Sports Writer Entering the weekend, the last time the Michigan baseball team won consecutive contests was during a four-game IPFW 6 winning MICHIGAN 8 streak in late Febru- I PF W 2 ary. But if MICHIGAN 4 this week- end's series MIC HIGAN 11 against Indiana- Purdue Fort Wayne was any indication, winning consecutive games might become a regular occurrence for the Wolverines. Behind a dominant pitching performance from junior left- hander Bobby Brosnahan and an offensive outbreak, Michigan (11- 12) took the rubber match of the series, 11-2, after a 8-6 loss on Fri- day and a 4-2 victory on Saturday. "It's good to have (Brosnahan) back after he missed one start last week," said Michigan coach Rich Maloney. "He was throwing three pitches for strikes, and he was outstanding. The good thing is that we got to limit his pitches." Brosnahan stifled IPFW's offense all game. He retired the first 10 batters he faced and didn't allow a hit until the fifth inning, when Mastodon third baseman Kristian Gayday led off the frame with a single. But it was the only trouble that Brosnahan encoun- tered while on the mound. He then recorded six consecutive outs before Maloney pulled him to keep his arm fresh. In six innings of work, Brosna- han gave up only one hit, struck out four batters and allowed just two baserunners. "I just (tried) to mix my pitch- es," Brosnahan said. "They're not really an offensive powerhouse, so if you throw strikes, you're going to get a good result." Brosnahan's performance coin- cided with the Wolverines' best day at the plate in three weeks, as eight different batters recorded at least one RBI. Sparked by junior centerfielder Patrick Biondi, Michigan scored runs in four of the first five innings, including four-run frames in the fourth and fifth innings. Senior catcher Coley Crank and senior third baseman John Lorenz smacked back-to- back solo home runs to start off the bottom of the fifth inning. But Biondi set the tone for the Wolverines. The junior - who went 4-for-5 with two runs, two RBIs and one stolen base - was a constant threat on the basepaths. The leadoff hitter went 7-for-11 during the series and reached base four more times on walks. "I've been able to get on base to lead off a couple of games lately, which is good, and it helped out our team today," Biondi said. "I'm glad that our whole team kind of woke up, because we hadn't been playing as well as we wanted. It was nice to come out today and get a lot of hits and score some runs." Brosnahan wasn't the only starting pitcher to one-hit the Mastodons this weekend. On Sat- urday, senior right-hander Bran- don Sinnery earned his first win of the season when he befuddled IPFW's lineup. The Mastodons managed only one hit and an unearned run against Sinnery in PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Junior Bobby Brosnahan retired the first 10 batters he faced on the weekend. seven innings. IPFW didn't fare much bet- ter against the Wolverines' bull- pen. Freshman Trent Szkutnik, fifth-year senior Travis Smith and freshman James Bourque fin- ished off the one-hitter, as Michi- gan won, 4-2. Crank batted in two runs in the first inning, and the Wolverinesscored insurance runs late to secure the victory. Michigan didn't have as much early success at the plate in its thrilling home opener. On Friday, the Wolverines were unable to find any sort of rhythm on offense against IPFW's Charles Weaver until the ninth inning. Weaver, who entered the series with a 5.06 ERA, allowed only one earned run and struck out out nine batters through the first eight frames. But in the ninth inning, his con- trol deserted him. ]He walked two and hit a batter before being yanked with the bases loaded and one out. The Wolverines took advan- tage of the opportunity. With the crowd cheering, sophomore catcher Cole Martin walked to bring in a run to cut the deficit to 5-2. Freshman left fielder Will Drake then knocked in two more runs with a two-out single before O'Neill singled home the tying run. The two teams traded runs in the tenth inning before the Mast- odons' left fielder Carter DeBoe, who was 0-for-5 up to that point, smacked a two-run homerun off junior Kyle Clark, giving IPFW an 8-6 victory. Junior right-hander Ben Ballantine, who started the game, struck out a career-high seven batters in five innings of work. Though a sweep was expected, Maloney was encouraged by how Michigan bounced back. "In the first game, they took it to us," Maloney said. "But give our kids credit for fighting back. It's good to see our guys respond." Somehow, Cinderella stayed at the ball for three mesmeriz- ingyears. The kid who was too small to geta chance in goal, got a chance in goal. The goalie who wasn't good enough to start, started. The starter who wouldn't possibly win, won. He led Michigan on its miracle run to clinch an NCAA Tournament berth in 2010, and then willed it into the National Championship game the follow- ing year. He was the team's best player all season, but he was more than that. "What can you say to Hun- wick?" said senior forward Luke Glendening. "He's been the rock of this team for three years now. Words can't describe what you say to him." Three years' worth of memo- ries came tumbling toward Hunwick eight minutes into the overtime period against Cornell on Friday. Three years of chance injuries and breaks, three years of saves, three years of improb- able wins, burst past Derek DeB- lois and Kevin Lynch. A lifetime of those who told him he would never make a save for Michigan stared Hunwick in the face and dared him to save a Greg Miller wrister. And, with an outstretched pad save, he did. If this really were Cinderella, if this were a fairy tale, that would be that. Michigan would ride the momentum of that great save to a season-saving overtime win. But this isn't a fairy tale and there are no happily ever afters, even for Shawn Hunwick. This is college hockey, and this is single-elimination, and the play- ers? Humans. So that wasn't that, Michigan didn't go down and score, and Hunwick didn't get the ring. "Shawn Hunwick here has had a Cinderella year," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "I wish he could've had abetter ending." And the ending? All-too-human: Hunwick couldn't control the rebound, Rodger Craig put the puck into the open net, and at 10:56 on a rainy night in Green Bay, Wisc., the career of the most improb- able goalie in Michigan hockey history ended. Losing the battle against tears, Shawn Hunwick passes Cornell coach Mike Schafer at 12:23 a.m. Schafer was walking to the podium to speak to the media. Hunwick was walking out. "One of the classiest things I've seen in 25 years of coach- ing," Schafer would say of Hun- wick's gesture to Cornell after the game. Outside, ina concrete hall- way, a man whose Cornell tie matches Hunwick's eyes taps the former Michigan goalie on the shoulder and shakes his hand. Hunwick turns to his right toward his locker room. He stops, then turns back and calls out: "Good luck tomorrow." You too, Shawn. SWEEP From Page 1B Amy Knapp crushed her second home run of the season to deep right field. The hit landed half- way up the right-field bleachers and traveled an estimated 260 feet, according to Michigan coach Carol Hutchins. Hutchins was impressed by the perseverance displayed by Knapp, who was replaced but reinserted into the game due to the rule allowing one starter per team to re-enter the game. "I pinch hit for her, and she didn't hold her head," Hutchins said. Perseverance is a trait that Hutchins believes the team pos- sesses. "It's tough to play a team three times and beat them all three," Hutchins said. "We had to perse- vere and we persevered through- out this game." Freshman pitcher Haylie Wag- ner progressed as the weekend series progressed. After going the distance in Michigan's first game, which was shortened to five innings due to the mercy rule, Wagner relieved freshman pitcher Sara Driesenga after three innings in Saturday's sec- ond game. Hutchins said Driesenga "threw a couple fat pitches that (Penn State) hit well," and as a result, she was yanked after three innings. Driesenga started the inning by giving up a leadoff walk to the Nittany Lions. After junior sec- ond baseman Ashley Lane made an error, pitching coach Bonnie Tholl, freshman catcher Lauren Sweet and Driesenga met at the mound in an attempt to calm the pitcher down. The aftermath of the meeting was not what Hutchins wanted. Driesenga went on to walk the next batter to load the bases and then gave up a two-run double to sophomore catcher Kasie Hatfield, making the score 5-2. Hutchins had to pull the plug. "When the bullpen comes in the game, it's their job to stop the bleeding," Hutchins said. This was exactly what Wagner did. Though Wagner was able to get out of the jam and earn the win in the mercy-rule-shortened game, she did not appear as sharp as she has been. However, her per- formance on Sunday was at that level. "She seemed a little bit more relaxed," Hutchins said. "Haylie really came back." The Wolverines' patience at the plate was key for Michigan over the weekend. In the three-game set, the Wolverine hitters drew 20 walks, including 10 in one of Saturday's games. "Quality at-bats are the reason we get runs," Hutchins said. "We are trying to gain momentum in quality at-bats." The Wolverines' play this weekend showed the potential the team has. "We're approaching it like we should have been approaching it the whole year," said senior cen- terfielder Bree Evans. Something that Hutchins was reminded of this weekend was the 2005 championship team's motto: "When the bottom of the order comes through, champion- ships are won." Hutchins knows her team is a very capable one. She envisions a three-tool team - good pitching, good defense and hitting hittable pitches. "You have to be consistent in all those categories to have a chance to achieve any of our goals," Hutchins said. SARAH SQUIRE Junior shortstop Amy Knapp launched her second home run of the season. OVERTURNED From Page 1B press conference by mentioning it. "The goal that was disallowed was obviously a factor in the game," Berenson said. It became more than a factor. The game's entire complexion was changed. The Big Red played like a team with absolutely noth- ing to lose. And why shouldn't they have? The nightmarish start proved to be nothing more than a bad dream. "The g Instead of buckling to the was disc second-ranked Wolverines, was ob Cornell proved resilient. And a fac it caught the Wolverines off guard, no mat- ter how highly they thought of the Big Red. "When I popped one in, emo- tions were running high," Lynch said. "We're astrongenough team where we could come back (from the disappointment of the no goal). ... Obviously, we would've liked to have had that goal. Going up 2-0 would've been huge." Though the Wolverines couldn't hang on to the lead that eventually disappeared, they never let the game out of their reach. In fact, when Lynch did finally score - a blue-collar goal late in the third period off of a grade-A chance in front of the net - his disallowed goal became all the more important. But when Schafer called time- out just over a minute into the game, his counterpart Berenson didn't even think that the tally could be taken off of the board. Then, when the call came for a review, he was confused. "I was wondering why it was being reviewed," Berenson said. "I thought they called a timeout because of the momentum. ... If I were their coach, I probably would've called a timeout, too. "When a player goes through the crease, typically - and I'mnot questioning the officials - but, typically, they'll blow the whis- tie. If he's out of the crease, you'll probably oal that let itgo." The time- allowed out did end up being about ViouSly momentum, but not in the :tor let's-stop- the-bleeding manner Scha- fer probably intended. Rather, when the refer- ee crossed his arms to signal the disallowed goal, the momentum swungtoward Cornell. The Wolverines felt helpless when the officials changed the call. "Goals are precious this time of year," Berenson said. "If you score (one), you'd like to know they're sure. "And I'm sure they were sure.... We had something going (before the review)." Berenson couldn't have asked for a more promising opening two minutes from his team. But the disappointment of the stripped goal made the Wolverines look like the ones with an uphill climb, not the Cornell team that then trailed. CORNELL From Page 1B their penalty kill weathered the onslaught, penalty after penalty. "Our penalty killers tonight were just unbelievable," Iles said. "Those guys are the ones who really stole the show in the sec- ond period and they did a great job. We were really able to build off that momentum going into the third." The Wolverines came out flat in the third period, managing just two shots through the first 16 minutes of the final frame, high- lighted by the only power play of the period. That man-advantage got exactly zero shots on goal. The season was slipping out of hand, a sloppy performance to send off the senior class in Green Bay. Then Lynch, so often the example of a Wolverine skater that plays his best when the lights are the brightest, pulled Michigan out from its deep slumber. He made sure this goal counted, sliding the puck past Iles, who was out of position after a rebound, with just over four minutes remaining. The game almost ended with 12 seconds left, as the puck sat a couple feet away from send- ing the Wolverines to a second- round matchup against Ferris State. But Isles and a swarm of defensemen flew over to sit on the puck. After a third intermission, Cornell took over in overtime and ended Michigan's season. An overtime defeat wasn't how it was supposed to end for the one-seed Wolverines. They drew what was considered the easiest regional bracket, play- ing a Cornell team that won five fewer games than Michigan. Hunwick, a former walk-on, was supposed to continue his brilliant career to the Frozen Four in Tampa Bay, Fla., where he would be flanked by one of the most heroic and unlikely senior classes in recent Michigan hock- ey history. "It's a tough pill to swallow because we've had some real good efforts from our team this year, particularly with Shawn Hunwick, who has had a Cinder- ella career here," Berenson said. "I wish he could have had a bet- ter ending." This team played through the CCHA gauntlet, coming back from the dead in November and losing just four games in the first three months of 2012, working through the ups and downs that came with having eight fresh- man and four seniors. Hunwick, Glendening, defen- seman Greg Pateryn and for- ward David Wohlberg pulled off their Michigan jerseys for the last time on Friday night, with a plane waiting to fly them back to Ann Arbor. This wasn't expect- ed. This wasn't how it was sup- posed to end. Applications are now being accepted for the Undergraduate Program in C ) Philosophy, Politics & Economics PPE 0 Deadline is March 30. Visit www.lsa.umich.edu/ppe for more information ';,