2B - March 18, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com For Michigan hockey team, night and day KALAMAZOO - t's on to Detroit. With the NCAA men's basketball bracket announced, the Michigan fan- base will descend en masse on the Motor City this week to watch both the men's basketball and hockey teams duel in their respective last-chance, single- elimination games. Somehow the scripts have been reversed, though, as these two teams travel to Detroit on com- pletely opposite trajectories. One team captivated the nation, then limped to the finish line; the other found new ways to reach rock bottom all season, then caught fire at the last minute. A downward spiral; a pre- cipitous climb. Stock up, stock down. Welcome to the madness of March,my friends. Go Blue. It's a verb now, appar- ently. As he started down the hall- way after Michigan's 4-3 victory over Western Michigan on Friday night, senior alternate captain Lee Moffie, sporting a goatee like the rest of the defensemen, turned back to a pack of report- ers and gave a rousing "Go Blue." Then, he made a confession. "Our team is going blue a little too hard right now," Moffie said. Now, do remember that this is coming from the man that Michi- gan coach Red Berenson earlier this season called "gregarious and outrageous." But maybe there's something to this "going blue" business. True, it really doesn't make sense. But if we're here to judge rallying cries, I'd take the hockey team's new motto over the men's basketball team's "WE ON" any day. Come on, people. A little Elmer's glue, some binder twine and a new twist on a well-worn motto were the recipe that patched together this upstart Michigan hockey team. A month ago, facingthe harsh reality that the Wolverines would miss the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1989-90, Michigan readjusted its season goal: Reach the Joe. It's been night and day since then. Before, it was a broken team playing selfish hockey. Now, the Wolverines have won eight consecutive games, and, with a dominant road sweep of Western Michigan in the CCHA quarter- finals over the weekend, they've punched their ticket to the semi- finals at Joe Louis Arena. "It's always been Michigan," Berenson said. "Our stock's been going up and down like General Motors." Good man, that Red Berenson, and still quick - with a clever Detroit reference to boot, as Michigan will be facing off with Miami on Saturday night at the Joe, less than a mile from the General Motors headquarters. I reckon he's been going blue longer than most of us have been alive. Don't bet against his red- hot icers. An EMS worker watched the Michigan-Western Michigan. from the behind the glass of the Zamboni entrance at Lawson Ice shirt. He was proud now. He, too, was going blue. Well, this was the plan all along for Beilein and Co., wasn't it? Buzz through the regular sea- son; take a swipe at the regular- season Big Ten title; never drop out of the top-10 in the national rankings. Sounds likea down- right delicious season. But here's the thing. The Mich- igan men's basketball team isn't spanking teams anymore. The highlight slams and alley-oops are intermixed with sloppy turn- overs and missed threes. The Big Ten is a man's league, and Michigan got worked over pretty good a few times. That 21-1 record slipped to26-7 pretty quickly, and painfully. But the NCAA Tournament is a different animal. And now it's time for the Wolverines and Jack- rabbits to tangle in Michigan's backyard - The Palace at Auburn Hills. The hometownboys are already 11-point favorites, but that means little, especially during the Big Dance. Michigan is a team with Final Four expectations, but the ceiling for this team appears far lower ' than it did a month or two ago. A four seed in the South Divi- sion, Michigan is facing an uphill battle, fighting the odds for just about the first time all season. If you've been following Michi- gan sportstfor a while, this seems to be life as usual: Michigan hock- ey is on fire, Michigan men's bas- ketball is tumbling and fumbling its way into the postseason. That's not really the case, of course. The hockey team still has to sweep the semifinals and finals at the Joe to avoid posting its first sub-.500 record since 1986- 87. But here's another history lesson: just three years ago, the Wolverines had to win the CCHA Tournament to earn an NCAA Tournament berth, and they did it - knocking off Miami (Ohio) in the semifinals, no less. The history of the men's bas- ketball team offers no such com- fort. Fact is, Michigan hasn't seen a team engineered to win like this in decades. As announcer Gus Johnson said earlier this season, Michigan has an embarrassment of riches. I'd hate to see thatgo to waste in the Big Dance. Circle this Saturday on your calendar. It could mark the historic col- lapse or it could signal the begin- ning of these Michigan teams' second seasons. One day, one night: the end or the beginning? We'll have to wait and see - plus, the basketball team has to get through South Dakota State first. It'sbeen night and day of late for these two programs. And now they've got only the guaran- tee of one more game. It's on to Detroit. - Nesbitt can be reached at stnesbit@umich.edu and on Twitter: @stephenjnesbitt. PAUL SHERMAN/Dai Jacob Trouba (top) wan Id too popular at Lawson Ice Arena Evn junior for- ward Derek Deblois, typically a defensive forward, added a goal Saturday. 9 Arena in Kalamazoo. After the Wolverines poured in four unan- swered goals in the second period on Saturday, he gave a smile. He turned to his left and looked up into the stands, where a group of students were waving a massive Michigan flag in enemy territory. "Do you go to Michigan?" he asked. They nodded. He pulled back his black EMS vest to reveal a large, gold 'M' pin on his under- In surprise CCHA run, a reminder of 2009-10 By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Editor KALAMAZOO - Amid all the excitement surrounding the Michigan hockey team's impend- ing trip to Joe Louis Arena for its 24th-consecutive appearance in the CCHA Tournament semi- finals, the seniors had a chance to reflect on how their Michigan careers have come full circle. This season is eerily similar to the Wolver- ines' 2009-10 NOTEBOOK campaign when this year's seniors were freshmen. Michigan went on a miracle run through the playoffs to keep its postseason hopes alive after bare- ly breaking even on the season. "It feels a lot similar," said senior forward Kevin Lynch. "It feels like right now we're on a streak and can't lose. We know what's nt stakeW We've eai two games to finish this off and we're ready." This weekend marks Michi- gan's fourth consecutive sweep and Lynch chirped at the media and fans that doubted Michigan would be standing where it is today. "A month ago we told (every- one) we were a team to be reck- oned with and that's because guys in that locker room believed," Lynch said. "We showed that we could play as a team, play with passion and overcome adversity any time throughout the year." Michigan coach Red Berenson agreed, saying guiding this strug- gling team has been one of the most rewarding experiences in his coaching career. "I'm really proud," he said. "I've always said you never give up on a player and you never give up on ateam. I'm glad they never wave um and Iknow t'mLneladlI never gave up." PERFECT PENAlTY KILL: The Wolverines won every battle against Western Michigan, but perhaps no victory was as impres- sive as Michigan's penalty-kill performance. Going into the weekend, West- ern Michigan boasted the third- best power play in the CCHA, and prior to the weekend, Berenson expressed concern that special teams performance could harm the Wolverines. Turns out he had nothing to worry about - the Michigan penalty kill had another flawless weekend, leading Berenson to assert that it was the best series the unit has had all season. "The (penalty kill) was ter- rific," Berenson said. "(Western Michigan) got some good looks, but nevertheless, we got through with it, whether it was our goalie, our defense blocking shots or our forwards." The Broncos managed to reg- ister just two shots on net during the course of their six power plays. Michigan's penalty kill has killed off its last 25 penalties, turning it into the Wplverines' biggest asset. And most of that has to do with the do-or-die attitude the team has adopted moving forward. "It's the playoffs," said fresh- man defenseman Jacob Trouba on Friday. "Our season's going to be over if we don't win. We know that, and we know we're playing the hardest hockey now when it counts." SHOTS, SHOTS, SHOTS, EVERYBODY: Though both teams were knotted at one by the time the first period ended, the game wasn't as even-matched as it appeared. By the time the 20-min- ute mark had passed, Michigan had woefully outshot Western Michigan, 15-3. But it was still a game of inches - the Broncos had been able to capitalize on their shots when in counted, leading the Wolverines to believe that Western Michigan could counter with a strong sec- ond period, asit did with the night before. "We knew that it was the score that counted, it wasn't the shots," Berenson said. "We knew we were playing well (and) we had to build on that. We came here to play Michigan hockey on the road, and that's what we tried to do the whole game." 0 Oi PAUL SHERMAN/Daily The Michigan hockey team celebrates during a sweep of Western Michigan, the tearn's fourth consecutive sweep. Moffie and Merrill peaking at right time By MATT SLOVIN defensemen begin to look as for- ManagingEditor midable as any other quartet in the country. - KALAMAZOO - Enter- Friday night, Moffie held down ing this season, the strength of the defensive zone, making the the Michigan, hockey team was safe passes around freshman expected tobe its defense. goalie Steve Racine that have Back then, junior defenseman eluded the alternate captain this Jon Merrill hadn't been injured, season. He was also noticeably and freshman defenseman Jacob more physical. On one particular Trouba was ready to arrive on play, he bumped Western Michi- campus and bolster the unit. gan's Chase Balisy off the puck, Well, it wasn't the strength preventing the Broncos from it had the potential to be. And potentially tying the game late in as recently as a few weeks ago, the third period. the team ranked third to last in Moffie said that Friday was the country in goals allowed per one of his best all-around defen- game, ahead of only Alabama- sive efforts of the season. Huntsville and then-winless "I knew it had to be," he said. Sacred Heart. "We have enough scoring on Though some of that can cer- our team right now, and I think tainly be attributed to previously the focus of our team has to be poor goaltending, there's been an defense. All our defensemen have undeniable turnaround by the kind of taken that role." defense. The blue liners played According to Michigan coach one of their best games yet in Sat- Red Berenson, it's notonly Moffie urday's series-clinching 5-1 win who's playing the best hockey of over Western Michigan. his season - it's all of the team's Friday nightbelonged to Jacob seniors. Trouba, who has been the most "That's what you need," Beren- consistent piece to the blue line son said. "Moffie's had a tough all year. season, but he's really come on The freshman defenseman strong recently." rocketed two shots past usually Though Moffie's efforts didn't trusty Western Michigan net- show up in the box score, they minder Frank Slubowski, but an contributed to an impressive, interesting sideshow has devel- Michigan checkinggame. oped outside of Trouba's spot- On Saturday, it was Merrill's light. turn to contribute on both ends. Not only has the top defensive He set the tone for the comfort- pair of Trouba and junior Mac able Wolverines' victory with Bennett been performing up to his perfect up-ice pass to senior the high preseason expectations, forward Kevin Lynch, who pro- but senior Lee Moffie and Merrill ceeded to score the game's first have made Michigan's top-four goal. After missing the first half of the season for the second straight year - last year due to suspension and this year because of injury - Merrill has caught fire at the right time and matches the inherent physicality of Trou- ba at times, like Saturday. "I thought Jonny played really well," said senior captain A.J. Treais. "He made some really smart plays, took hits to make plays. He's been doing that all year, but I thought he had an extra -special game today." Merrill finished with the assist on Lynch's goal, a plus-one rat- ing, three shots on goal and two blocked shots. He embodied a new mindset for the defense, one that was absent in the playoff opener against Northern Michi- gan on March 8, but has been on display ever since. To Berenson, the difference is desperation. For Moffie, it's about doing whatever it takes to continue eliminating the miscues that proved costly earlier in the sea- son. Those mistakes were put under a microscope because of the poor play of the goalies. Now that Racine is playing well between the pipes, the defense seems more willing to absorb shots and protect the goalie. "We're absolutely willing to do whatever it takes not to let in a goal," said senior defen- seman Lee Moffie about the defense holding a late one-goal lead. "You're getting in front of every shot, you're diving, you're desperate. More importantly, you're playing sound defense." 0 DIJLSAFor More Information Call (734) 615-6449 v