B +!!!B -..U -~ They broke the streak but went down swinging DETROIT - Jeff Jackson woke up the morning of March 10 and exhaled. The Notre Dame coach checked the score of the previous night's game between Michigan State and Alaska, saw that the Spartans had survived, and let out one massive sigh of relief. M 'ATT Michigan SLOVIN State's win, stretching into the wee hours of Monday morning, meant that his Fighting Irish would avoid playing Michigan in the CCHA quarterfinals. Jackson was relived then. He's relieved now. Nobody wanted to play Michigan - not in the quarterfinals, not in the finals, not in the NCAA Tournament, where the Wolverines would have landed with a win in Sunday's title game. The Fighting Irish dodged a bullet in Fairbanks. They dodged a more dangerous one on Sunday. Jacob Trouba stopped the puck, tantalizingly close to crossing the goal line for Miami (Ohio) fans, gravely near it for Michigan fans, calmly with his stick. That puck would've crossed a few short months ago. And had Trouba arrived to the puck a split-second later in the first period of Saturday's CCHA semifinal against the RedHawks, Michigan might not have reached Sunday's stage where the Wolver- ines faced an all-or-nothing game for the ages. Win, or the 22-year NCAA Tournament appearance streak - the one that predates the birth of all but two of Michigan's players - would be over. After one shaky, how-did-that- not-go-in first period, the Wol- verines came out in the second period and took the pressures that come with manning a program so accustomed to postseason success and shoved them down the Red- Hawks' throats. Somewhere along the way, Michigan redeemed itself, Coach Red Berenson said he began to see a change in early February, when the Wolverines played at Notre Dame. The signs of improvement were there, but the results weren't - Michigan gave up 13 goals on the weekend and was swept. This weekend, the Wolverines held two of the best offenses in the CCHA to two goals apiece, minus an empty-netter. This hockey-loving university didn't yet forgive them after that February series for a season that was, more often than not, misera- ble. Perhaps for some, that forgive- ness didn't come until Trouba's play, an overwhelming display of grit that signified just how far the Wolverines have truly come. Notre Dame was clearly the better team Sunday. This time, there was no way around it for the Fighting Irish - they were playing Michigan. And they couldn't have made things harder on the Wol- verines, controlling play for much of the afternoon. Inevitably, this team will be known as the one that broke the streak. When the pride and joy of the program expired after Sunday's 3-1 heartbreaker, that became reality. But because of the turnaround that nobody saw coming, nobody will blame them for that. After all, Michigan won't be gone from the NCAA Tournament for long. And teams out there would give up anything for 22 out of 23. Lee Moffie broke off from the line of his teammates. They had been tortured far too long by then, straddling the blue line at Joe Louis Arena, watching as their now-former conference rivals accepted the Mason Cup. Before the playoff trophy could disappear, bound for Toronto, the Hockey Hall of Fame and poster- ity with a quick detour in South Bend along the way, Michigan dipped into the tunnel. But not before Moffie said goodbye to the Wolverine faithful, who hoped to see ateam that was once 10-18 punch its ticket to the NCAA Tournament. That would signal that the group Berenson repeatedly called "vulnerable," and once, a "train wreck" mid- way through the season was now magical. Moffie skated a quick circle, waving his stick to the Michigan fans who remained in Joe Louis Arena, while the rest of the team quickly stepped off the ice. All of their last-ditch efforts, like goalie Steve Racine turning on a dime on his way to the bench and diving back toward the crease to stop the empty-net goal that sealed the Wolverines' fate, had fallen short. Moffie's goodbye as he stepped off the ice for the last time in maize and blue might as well have been a white flag, but he didn't do it until after the game. Most everyone else, besides the players and coaches, had waved one in surrender months ago. Everybody except for the peo- ple in the locker room gave up on this team. Don't feel bad for them. Beren- son said all year that this team was going to earn its fate. If the Wolverines didn't make the NCAA Tournament, they'd have nobody to blame but themselves. But how can we blame them? Because for the last month and a half of this season, when Michi- gan's unbeaten streak that ended at nine games began, the Wolver- ines had everybody believing they were going to catch lightning in a bottle. Even Jeff Jackson. It was just a little too late. - Slovin can be reached at mislovin@umich.edu Dream run ends inches short of title By MICHAEL LAURILA Daily Sports Editor DETROIT - When the Michigan hockey team squared off against NO. 9 Notre Dame in the CCHA Championship on Sunday, 22 years ofhistory were on the line. The Wolverines would either win and make a 23rd-consecutive NCAA Tournament, or lose and go home. And the CCHA's final Champi- onship game at Joe Louis Arena didn't disappoint. It was either tied or a one-goal game until the final minute. But _ Michigan (11- MICHIGAN 1 15-3 CCHA, NOTRE DAME 3 18-18-3 over- all) couldn't overcome the Fight- ing Irish's constant pressure and its own inability to get shots on net, falling 3-1. For the first time since 1990, the Wolverines will not be playing in the NCAA Tournament. The Wolverines started out Sunday's game like it ended a day earlier, when it bombarded No. 3 2C I The Streak, March 25, 2013 Miami (Ohio), 6-2, by dominating the play and controlling the puck in Notre Dame territory. But after the first shift was over, the Wolverines rarely controlled the puck again. The Fighting Irish (17-8-3, 24-12-3) used a strong forecheck to keep the play deep in Michigan's zone, and dominated the first period with 18 shots compared to the Wolverines' 6 - a trend that would plague them all game. Freshman goaltender Steve Racine bailed out the Michigan defensemen on more than one occa- sion, and just when it seemed like Notre Dame might finally get on the board during a late power play, the game decided to take a different path. The Wolverines got a steal at their own blue line, going on a 3-on- 2 rush. After freshman defense- man Jacob Trouba, senior forward Kevin Lynch and sophomore for- ward Derek DeBlois bounced the puck around the crease, DeBlois knocked it home. This was the sec- ond-straight game that Michigan opened up the game's scoring with a short-handed goal. Despite being outplayed and out- hustled for almost the entirety of the first 20 minutes, the Wolverines managed to take a 1-0 lead into the first intermission. "We knew we could play better than we played in the first and we escaped the first period and we just had to play better in the second," said Michigan coach Red Berenson. "I thought penalties really kept us on our heels in the second period, but we were fine." The momentum wasn't enough, though. The combination of Notre Dame's constant'offensive pressure and Michigan's inability to stay out of the penalty box - it spent six of the period's 20 minutes in the box - allowed the Fighting Irish to even up the score at one on an Anders Lee goal, who has had a lot of suc- cess against the Wolverines this year. When Michigan was swept by Notre Dame on Feb. 8 and 9, Lee fin- ished the weekend with three goals and two assists. And the trio of Jeff Costello, Lee, and Bryan Rust have been one of the most prolific lines in the entire CCHA, finishing the sea- son with a combined 98 points. After two periods, the Fighting Irish had tallied an impressive 28 shots, compared to Michigan's 10. Notre Dame led the CCHA in scor- ing with 3.21 goals per game this season, and the constant peppering of Racine showed why. The Fight- ing Irish finished the game with 33 shots on net, which is the highest total the Wolverines have given up throughout their tournament run. "They had a good cycle going against us (on offense)," said senior defenseman Lee Moffie. "They're a physical team and they're a big team, and they really pushed us in our zone and that was the big issue. We were having a hardtime d'ingup on them and stopping their cycle." But 21 seconds into the third period, the Wolverines luck ran out. Racine let a rebound get away from him, and Notre Dame's T.J. Tynan buried it, giving the Fighting Irish a one-goal advantage. Though Michigan picked up the intensity following the Notre Dame's go-ahead goal, the Wolver- ines couldn't find that last-minute tally. With 1:07 left, Racine was headed towards the bench for a six- on-five, and Notre Dame turned a turnover at mid-ice into an easy empty-net goal to secure the vic- tory. "I thought our team would bounce back in the third and they tried," Berenson said. "Goals were precious tonight and you knew there wouldn't be many of them, and giving up that early (third-peri- od) goal was a tough one and we just couldn't get that back." The NCAA Tournament Selec- tion Show is Sunday night, and though Michigan finished the sea- son with an impressive nine-game unbeaten streak, the loss' to Notre Dame all but eliminated it from one of the few at-large bids. Now, on Sunday, the Wolverines Cinderella run through an impres- sive CCHA has ended. 3C The Streak, March 25, 2013