mri 8A - Wednesday, February 20, 2013 SprS The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 40 By MICHAEL LAURILA Daily Sports Editor As of Wednesday, senior for- ward Kevin Lynch has appeared in 158 games for the Michigan hockey team. How many has he missed? Two. He sat out the Wolverines' first series last year against Bentley because of back spasms. He said that he'd been struggling with back spasms for the entirety of the preseason, and the pain was to the point where he knew his back wouldn't recover if he didn't take any games off. Though senior forward A.J. Treais has littered the stat sheet more than Lynch the past two years, he hasn't matched Lynch's stability and consistency over the four-year period. The youth- ful struggles that affect most freshmen transitioning to col- lege hockey, the injuries that are constantly a problem in a physi- cal, grueling sport like hockey or even the rare one-game sus- pension that can result from a game misconduct never resulted Lync in Lynch regularly watching the game from the stands. It's neither his goal-scoring prowess nor his good fortune to avoid bad injuries that have sepa- rated Lynch from his classmates. Berenson attributes Lynch's suc- cess to his hard work, physical play and bigbody. "I think he's a mentally tough kid and he's mature physically," he said. "He's one of our stronger kids, too, so he not only plays and has been a bit of an iron man, but he's strong." How lucky has Lynch been in avoiding a serious injury? This season, for example, four of the seven Michigan defensemen have missed multiple games due to an injury. That number might be higher than average, but it shows how difficult it can be during the long college hockey season - the Wolverines' first exhibition game against Windsor came on Oct. 9 and their last regular-season game will be played on March 2 - to stay healthy. And Berenson, who not only played three seasons at Michigan but also went onto have a20-year NHL career, relates to t and tribulations these face every day of the sea "When you're a hocke if you're a good player, th a day in the season thaty wake up and somethini hurt," he said. "It might finger, it might be your might be your knee. "There's always so that hurts and you don't get over that " until you're a coach - that's all the good thing about coach- - ing. You wake up and you realize nothing hurts anymore." :he trials expected to continue for the players Wolverines, but he - along with son. Treais, who played alongside y player, Lynch in the NTDP - struggled ere's not early on in their careers to find an you don't identity in Wolverines' offense. g doesn't "I think he's a different person be your now," Berenson said. "He came in ankle, it and it was all about him and his stats and his goals and his points, mething and now I think it's all about what kind of player he is and how Vhen he's on hard he works I every night. he has to do If you would have talked s hit guys." to somebody when he was a freshman, you wouldn't have rsironman currently ranks last in the CCHA in goals allowed per game, and third worst in the NCAA. And it's not that Lynch is physical to the point of being too aggressive. Though he ranks second on the team in penalty minutes with 34, he has just four more than senior defenseman Lee Moffie and 36 fewer than freshman defenseman Jacob Trouba. Not only does Lynch's physicality force turnovers and give Michigan a necessary pres- ence deep in the other team's zone, but it also helps him create offensively. "When he's on, all he has to do is hit guys," said junior defense- man Mac Bennett. "If he hits guys, people give him more space, and if you get that space, he's able to make plays. He doesn't put himself in a position to get hit awkwardly, and I think that kind of attributes to him always being in a position where he can hit you instead of you hitting him." And Lynch didn't become the physical player that he is today overnight. He says that his physi- cal mindset came from when he was a freshman, struggling to find the back of the net. Instead of just working o'n honing his offensive skills, he worked on other intangibles that a good for- ward should have - transform- ing into the physical player that bangs bodies every night. Even after Lynch upped his physicality, offensive production didn't always come effortlessly. - or at all. His freshman cam- paign endured a 13-game point- less streak, and a year later he experienced an even more bru- tal 18-game pointless streak. But during this time, his physical- ity and defensive presence were constants. It's these attributes, not his line on the stat sheet, that have made him the consistent player Berenson has seen for so long. "Lynch has gone through some slumps of all slumps," Beren- son said. "But I can tell you that he never gave up and never quit working. He never quit check- ing, never quit hitting so you still wanted him in the lineup even though he might not have been at his best." Before arriving at Michigan, Lynch played two seasons with the National Team Development Program in Ann Arbor where he was one of the best goal scorers - he compiled 24 goals and 24 assists for a total of 48 points in 63 games during his last year. Lynch's consistency and pro- ductivity for the U-18 team was said he was one of our most phys- ical players, but he is now." It's this physicality that has made Lynch a regular name on the Michigan line chart over the years. Listed at 6-foot-1 and 210 pounds, he uses his big body to play a physical type of hockey. Especially this year, his physical presence has been something of a bright spot for a defense that Beilein hopes week off will do wonders for Michigan By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Editor Beginning with a Jan. 24 win >aver Purdue and culminating With an embarrassing road loss toMichigan State on Feb. 12, the Michigan men's basketball team flayed a stretch of seven games in 20 days.. The Wolverines won the first three games comfortably, but lost hree of the final four contests. By - The time the gantlet had ended, they'd played four road games, four teams in the current Top-25 -poll (includingtwo of the nation's top;four teams), and two over- times but held just one practice that wasn't devoted to a specific- ame preparation in the three week period. After a few days to get over the loss to the Spartans and prepare for Sunday's win over Penn State, Michigan now finds itself at the beginning of a 20-day stretch with just four games before the regu- lar-season finale at home against No.1 Indiana. Michigan coach John Beilein, who said after Tuesday's loss in East Lansing that the time off will be a "great time to get back to the basics that we were doing earlier in the year," was relieved to finally be done with the toughest portion of the schedule. Beilein gave his players Mon- day off in hopes they'd come back fresh on Tuesday. The Wolverines don't have a game until Illinois visits Ann Arbor on Sunday. "We don't usually take (a day off) the day after a game," Beilein said Sunday. "We like to watch the film, video, and take the following day off, but the way I looked at it during this week is get healthy Tuesday and Wednesday andhave another day off Thursday for most. of our guys. That way we get guys two days of rest this week." The regular wear and tear of a season can slow down anyone - perhaps an explanation for why, Penn State was able to score 10 points more than its season aver- age on Sunday - but. the Wol- verines are facing more pressing injury issues. Redshirt junior for- ward Jordan Morgan has been severelylimitedbyan ankle sprain he suffered on Jan. 27 at Illinois. Since then, he's missed two games and has yet to play double-digit minutes in the other four contests. "We had no idea that Jordan Morgan would take this long," Beilein said. "He wants to play, he's insisting on playing, he's insisting on coming to practice, so you've got to trust him. But when you watch him move outthere, it's not happening. He's delayed. "He's rehabbing all day long.... He's very slow. Until he gets bet- ter, that really affects us." Freshman guard Caris LeVert is also dealing with a sprained ankle sustained on Sunday, pro- viding more evidence that this time off couldn't have come at a better time for the Wolverines. But even ' with the injuries, Michigan has several issues to correct, mainly on defense. The Wolverines allow an average of 61.4 points per game, but they have given up 70-plus points in five of their last seven games. Some of that has to do with the nature of the opponent, but Michi- gan's defense has also committed numerous defensive breakdowns, such as slow rotations or failure to box out, which Beilein hopes he can correct in practice. "We're going to get back and guard some people, play defense," Beilein said of this week's plans. With the postseason less than a month away, this week off is crucial for Michigan to get back ontrack. But with so many young, inexperienced players, Beilein cautioned of the difficul- teachers, but there were some ties between allowing for slower learning curves and trying to get his messages to stick. "It's a sweet spot that we real- ly have to be very careful with," Beilein said. "If this is the 80th practice and you're still not talk- ing on defense, then you have to get after them. "We pride ourselves on being moments these last couple weeks that we just say, 'Enough is enough. We're going to do this because you won't do that' It's that area where you don't want to get them to where they lose their confidence, but at the same time, gettingtougher right now through all these things is important for us." 6 6 Redshirt junior forward Jordan Morgan will use the off week to nurse his ankle. n a j.,