The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, March 19, 2013 - 7 w , The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, March 19, 2013 - 7 Recipe for CCHA run: defense, with hint of confidence RUYVALLA Uiy Freshman forward Kelsey Mitchell fills out her bracket on Selection Monday, which ended with Michigan landing its second consecutive NCAA Tournament berth. earns its best A seed ever and wi meet illanova By LIZ VUKELICH Daily Sports Editor The Michigan hockey team's current miracle run through the CCHA Tournament might appear like it has come out of nowhere, but Michigan coach Red Berenson has seen the Wol- verines' resurgence coming for a while. It all goes back to Michigan's series against Notre Dame in February in which the Wol- verines were outscored 13-8. Though the Fighting Irish blew Michigan out of the water, that was the moment Berenson real- ized the then-floundering squad was finallyturningit around. "We scored eight (goals) and our power play scored three," Berenson said. "We did a lot of good things. I could see our team playing better but not good enough. I think there was some- thing going on. We weren't that far off. We just needed to put a full game together." Michigan has gone undefeated since that weekend, riding high on momentum to its 24th con- secutive trip to Joe Louis Arena for the CCHA semifinals. Junior forward Luke Moffatt saw the turnaround coming long before the Notre Dame weekend - he says it goes all the wayback to a Dec. 15 victory over West- ern Michigan. But even though that 2-0 shutout was the best the Wolverines had played up to that point, team chemistry wasn't quite where it needed to be to translate into more wins. "It really just took us longer than usual this year to come together," Moffatt said. "We're just playing more as a team, as a unit now. Everyone's buying into the system." It's certainly easier to main- tain a positive mentality with a winningstreak. At this point, there aren't many on-ice aspects of the game that Michigan needs to perfect. Goaltending is no longer a ques- tion mark now that freshman Steve Racine has stepped up and the defense is finally block- ing pucks to protect the crease. All that remains is carrying the heightened confidence through Joe Louis Arena - a mentality that is perhaps the keyto success. "The big part of the game, every player will tell you, is men- tal," Berenson said. "So, what has changed? It's obviously on the ice. Part of it might be off-the- ice determination, frustration or motivation. That's sports." All season long, Berenson has looked to the upperclassmen - such as senior captains A.J. Treais or Lee Moffie - to guide the Wolverines through their rough patches. But that proved difficult considering the seniors themselves were also struggling to improve individually. Now, though, Michigan's lead- ership has worked outthe blipsin its game and it has started setting better examples on the ice. That work ethic has quickly become contagious. "You've got to do (work) on the ice before you're going to get legitimate confidence," Berenson said. "Sometimes if you're not doing it, you see someone else doing it and that gets you going. That's what leadership is all about." Berenson said he's coached teams that he never thought would win another game into squads he never thought could lose another game. Right now, he believes this year's edition of the Wolverines might shape out the same way. The players are starting to see that, too. "We're really having a ton more fun now," Moffatt said. "Not just because of the success, but because of the way we're playing. We're playing for each other and for the team." Committee seeds Wolverines eighth in Spokane Region 0 along with Stanford By ALEXA DETTELBACH Daily Sports Writer Whatadifference ayear makes. Last year, the Michigan wom- en's basketball team entered Selection Monday unsure of its fate. This year, the Wolverines knew they were a lock to dance - the only uncertainty was whom they would face. They didn't have to wait long to find out. Less than three minutes into the ESPN telecast, Michigan (9-7 Big Ten, 21-10 overall) learned its fate and was awarded an eight seed in the Spokane Region, tying a record for the highest seed in program history. The Wolverines will face ninth-seeded Villanova (9-7 Big East, 21-10 overall) on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. EDT in Palo Alto, Calif. "I think that's the earliest I've ever had a call going to the NCAA Tournament," said Michigan coach Kim Barnes Arico. "But now we know, and we are ready to face (Villanova)." The Wildcats finished sixth in the Big East, a conference Barnes Arico knows well from her time at St. John's - she led the Red Storm to the Sweet Sixteen last season. In addition, Barnes Arico's St. John's team beat Villanova three times in a row, and her last loss to the Wildcats came in 2009. "I know a lot about (Villa- nova)," Barnes Arico said. "Actu- ally, I just saw a tweet that coach Beilein was talking more about the women's game than the men's game because he's really good friends with (Villanova coach) Harry Perretta, too." Added senior forward Kate Thompson: "I think Coach com- ing from the Big East will be an advantage. She knows how they play (and) she knows all their styles. Definitely having coach Barnes Arico is going to have us prepared." But the Wolverines haven't seen the court in 10 days and still have five days to go until they play again. This time off will either be a blessing or a curse for Michigan, whose longest gap in games this season was seven days. In its game against Wiscon- sin after the bye week, Michigan looked sluggish, letting the Bad- gers rush out to an early 9-0 lead. The Wolverines were able to claw back at the end but probably can- not afford to start slowly in the tournament. Michigan has had a season of streaks this year, but with more than two weeks off, the Wolver- ines have the opportunity to start fresh in the best place to get hot - the NCAA Tournament. The time might be a blessing for a team that has found most of its success from its starting lineup but has received little bench production. "I think the time off actually benefits us because we play such a limitedbench," Barnes Arico said. "I think it gives the kids that play RUBY WALLAU/Daily Michigan coach Kim Barnes Arico has led Michigan to new heights in her first year. a lot of time to rest and recover. (Senior guard) Jenny (Ryan) played a tremendous amount of minutes all season long. It gives her a chance to rest and regroup and refocus for the tournament. It's a whole other season for us." Ryan, who earned third-team All-Big Ten honors for the first time in her career, led the team in minutes, averaging36.9 per game. Toward the end of the season, she was often on the court for all 40 minutes, and her fatigue began to show. "I think having some time off is not the worst thing in the world," Ryan said. "It gives us a chance to recuperate, get (our) legs back under (us) and (time to) work on ourselves, because during the sea- son you go from team to team, so I think it will be good for us espe- cially offensively. "I think we'll be fresh. Have fresh bodies (and) fresh legs. We look at (the tournament) as a new season, and I think we'll be ready to go from there." A potential second-round matchup with No. 1 seed Stanford looms, so a well-rested Michigan can't get ahead of itself. "The next couple days is going to be all Villanova," said senior center Rachel Sheffer. "Just like the Big Ten tournament, you play back-to-back games, so all that really matters is the next game, and that's Villanova." PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Junior forward Luke Moffatt had three points in a sweep of Western Michigan. (1) Stanford (16) Tulsa (8) Michigan (9) Villanova (5) Iowa State (12) Gonzaga (4) Georgia (13) Montana (6) LSU (11) Green Bay (3) Penn State *(14) CalIPoly (7) Texas Tech (10) South Florida (2) California (15) Fresno State 2013 NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament Spokane Region S.A For More Information Call (734) 615-6449