2B - November 18, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam 28 - November18, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wolverines cruise past UW-Milwaukee in opening round of NCAA Tournament M' bests Detroit By JAKE LOURIM Daily Sports Writer In the first round of her final go-round in the NCAA Tour- nament, senior forward Nkem Ezurike wasn't ready to hold anythingback.. Ezurike scored twice in the first half to lead UW-MILWAUKEE 0 Michigan MICHIGAN 4 to a 4-0 rout of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in the first round of the NCAA Tournament on Saturday at U-M Soccer Stadium. The senior forward wasted no time getting the Wolverines on the board early, taking a pass from freshman forward Madis- son Lewis on the left flank - her fourth assist to ma Ezurike Stra"' ( 1V"S,,, 2ia this Ds eo geo season Gogtw - and W ham- _MnOat W e F mering erh 4en it past ( goalie (3)0555.. Nata- "()Mkh g" lie Fet- "*'s"" I I' Sn tinger. "It's Noea a match - este,,Mc made in (2)5ruet heav- en," said Michigan coach Greg Ryan. "I mean, you've got Madi Lewis, who's faster than a rocket ship and can run past defenders at will. And then you've got Nkem, who loves to sit in front of the goal and knock them into the back of the net." Michigan (9-1-1 Big Ten, 16-3- 1 overall) almost gave away the lead three minutes later, though, when the Panthers tipped a shot toward the goal. The ball appeared to cross the goal line, but play continued and the Wol- verines cleared it away. J Freshman goalie Taylor Buck- lin needed only one save on the night, a point-blank stop after fifth-year senior defender Holly Hein gave the ball away in the box. The Michigan defense set- tled down from there, securing its sixth shutout in eight games. Besides the early near-goal, the Wolverines were strong from the outset, recovering from a first-round Big Ten Tournament loss last week. "We weren't satisfied, weren't happy with what happened at the Big Ten Tournament," Hein said. "We wanted to come out hard against Milwaukee, and I think that showed in our performance that we scored in the first five minutes and kept going at them." Wisconsin-Milwaukee turned up the NCAAWomn's aggres- 013 sion, push- Soccer Tournament log players forward and allow- ing Michi- gan plenty of space to operate in the final third of the field. By half- Michigan's time, the Region game was out of reach. "Just from the start of the game, when we were preparing, we wanted to get forward and get after them in the first couple minutes of the game," Ezurike said. "I think we did a very good job of that, getting behind the defense." Shots were even at nine in the first half, but the Wolverines' three goals came in and around the box, while the Panthers fired shots from outside the box. Michigan started to play back in the second half, limiting Wis- consin-Milwaukee (6-1-0 Hori- Senior forward Nkem Ezurike scored twice in the first half in Michigan's 4-0 win. DE Merc gotth guard Michi the fir But next I that their to an lead never failed cantc laugh tory. Th arsen in the ing to beyon gan c on its Mi Madis the 11 3-poin ' guard forwa ued it for sc of go media comm Th like D thani tinue every littler "w ball r assist said i Arico solidp Mi fromt prod& ingun the h in th ines. saw pl seven By MAX COHEN The 3-point line was also a Daily Sports Writer friend to Michigan in the half Ristovski, Smith and freshman TROIT -The Detroit guard Paige Rakers combined y women's basketball team to go five-of-six from beyond the e first laugh Saturday when arc, inflating the Wolverine lead Senee Shearer slashed to to 47-29bythe half.Smith ledthe gan's hoop and scored in way for Michigan with 12 first- st minute of the game. half points. the Wolverines got the The second half started off augh, and a few more after similarly for the Wolverines. on Goree opened the half with way MICHIGAN 83 a bucket near the basket, and 11-2 DETROIT 63 Smith followed it with another they 3-pointer. Detroit failed once relinquished. The Titans again to make a significant run, to muster a single signifi- ebbing slightly into Michigan's comeback, and Michigan lead. Still, the Titansweren't able ed its way to an 83-63 vic- to cut the lead fewer than 15. Smith's offensive fireworks e Wolverines' offensive persisted in the second half. She al worked on all cylinders finished the game with 32 points first half. Whether scyth- on 10-of-14 shooting, including the basket or posting up going five-of-six from 3-point d the 3-point line, Michi- range. Smith provided thepro- ontinued to pile up points gram its first 30-point game way to a big lead. since 2005, when Ta'Shia Walker chigan sophomore guard scored 32 against St. Bonaven- son Ristovski started ture. 1-0 Wolverine run with a "It was good to shoot well," nter from the corner. Junior Smith said. "It's just a thing of 1 Shannon Smith and junior consistency. My coaches talk rd Cyesha Goree contin- about that all the time." t by driving to the basket Before the game, Smith set ores that were the result goals with Barnes Arico of gath- od positioning. By the first ering in eight rebounds and a timeout, Michigan had a going to the free-throw line sanding 13-4 lead. seven times. Smith accomplished e final score made it seem both goals, meeting her target of etroit had more of a chance eight rebounds and exceeding it did. The Wolverines con- her free-throw goal by going to d to score baskets from the line nine times. where on the court with "Shannon made shots today, resistance from the Titans. but it really is those other things re shared the basket- that really made a difference," eally well, we had a lot of Barnes Arico said. s, we made extra passes," As a. team, the Wolverines Michigan coach Kim Barnes shot 52.6 percent from beyond . "I thought overall it was a the 3-point line in the rout, a vast performance." improvement from its 17.6 per- chigan shot 53.8 percent cent mark in their previous game the field in the first half, the against Xavier. uct of its sturdy position- "I think sometimes we're nder the basket for much of going to make shots, sometimes alf. Everyone got involved we're not," Barnes Arico said. e scoring for the Wolver- "That's why it's important for us Of the nine players who to be able to get to the free-throw laying time in the first half, line and be able to do different scored at least four points. things." zon League, 10-8-1 overall) to only five shots. From there, it was all Michi- gan. Senior midfielder Meghan Toohey added an insurance goal in the 17th iinute from just out- side the 18-yard box off a pass from senior midfielder Tori McCombs. In the 28th minute, Lewis tapped in a cross, but she was called offside. Two minutes later, Ezurike added her second goal, cutting across the middle of the field and taking a pass from sophomore midfielder Corinne Harris. Ezurike, who also scored the overtime game winner in Michi- gan's first-round NCAA Tourna- ment win last year, pulled within one point of Michigan's all-time points record. She did set the school record with four NCAA Tournament goals, however. "We were so fast in the coun- ter and so quick with Madi Lewis and Nkem and Toohey and then Corinne at the end," Ryan said. "If you look at the quality of chances, we created chances that would be difficult to miss." Harris added the exclamation point in the 85th minute, redi- recting a cross from Lewis in the box. The goal-line call wasn't the only break the Wolverines got. Illinois State upset Louisville, meaning Michigan will play the Redbirds on Friday. Then, West- ern Michigan (9-5-5) stunned No. 2 seed Marquette (18-3), the equivalent of a No. 15 seed beat- ing a No. 2 seed in the first round of the NCAA Basketball Tourna- ment. That means that Michigan's next two games would be at home against unranked teams. "We were just glad we weren't the third upset," Ryan said. "It's fantastic - stay at home, kids get to sleep in their own beds, prepare here. Everybody else is traveling." 5 Things We Learned: UNO Is two good goalies really a good problem ? By JEREMY SUMMITT Daily Sports Editor 1. The power play is emerging as one of the nation's best. Just two weeks ago in Michi- gan's series against Michigan Tech, the power play was doing just fine. The Wolverines had converted 25 percent of their power-play chances heading into Nebraska-Omaha but had netted only one goal on the man advan- tage since Oct.18. That all took a turn for the bet- ter when Michigan capitalized on three of its eight power-play opportunities this weekend, good for a 38-percent success rate. "It's funny because a lot of them were broken plays," said senior ; forward Andrew Copp. "But the two (Friday), we ended up hitting Moffatt in the middle for a good play." Boasting the fourth-best power play in the nation - con- verting on 11-of-40 opportunities this season - the Wolverines' offense now has something to build off of after a slow start to the season. 2. .T. Compher is finding his groove. The highly touted freshman forward hadn't scored in any games leading up to the weekend series in Omaha but hit twine twice to silence the critics. To be clear, there wasn't much skepticism about Compher's abil- ities as a first-line center to begin with. But this week after prac- tice, some of his teammates jok- ingly told him to talk to the media about how he hasn't gotten his first goal ina Michigan sweater. Compher's first tally came off a one-timer from the left circle late in the second period in Friday's loss. He had been working from that spot in practice all week and watched the puck fly into the top corner tobreak his drought. Compher is now second on the team in points, tied with junior forward Phil Di Giuseppe with eight. 3. The defense was exposed for the first time all season. You could say Nebraska- Omaha's explosive, speed-laden offense was the reason Michi- '4$ & gan's defense didn't look like a3 unit that's allowing just two goals per game. Boasting one of the nation's top scorers in forward Josh Archibald, the Mavericks were never going to be easy to, contain. But with just one final tune- up game before the Big Ten season gets rolling, the Wolver- PATRICK BARRON/Daiy ines have to be concerned about Freshman goaltender Zach Nagel- allowing six goals in two nights. On Nebraska-Omaha's game- saves in his first start since sus- winning goal Friday, Archibald taining a groin injury on Oct.18. blazed by the defense and fooled Having two starting goalten- freshman goaltender Zach Nagel- ders shouldn't stir up any contro- voort for an easy breakaway tally. versy for the Wolverines, though. It wasn't just that the Mav- Multiple players have expressed ericks were faster than some of full confidence in both netmind- Michigan's defensemen. Guys ers, and the rare luxury provides were caught flat-footed, even a slight advantage against other once on a 4-on-4 where you can't conference foes. afford such a mental lapse. "That's just a little detail mis- 5. The line shuffling doesn't look take on us," said senior forward like it will subside. Luke Moffatt. "They're a fast team, and we're a fast team. It's Berenson has shuffled his just a positioning mistake." lines, both offensive and defen- To be fair, Michigan coach Red sive, nearly every game this sea-, Berenson had little to work with son. In hopes to find the right in terms of blue-line pairings, combinations before Big Ten play as freshman Kevin Lohan and starts, he made changes to every junior Mike Szuma were unable offensive trio heading into Friday. to travel with the team this week- The most noticeable change end. Lohan will be sidelined for came with splitting up the fresh- three months with a knee injury, man line that had accumulated 11 though Szuma isn't expected to points together. Some good did miss much time after suffering come from disbanding the team's an undisclosed injury in practice second-most productive line, as Wednesday. the Wolverines posted more than three goals for just the second 4. No one knows if there will be time all year. a true No.1 goaltender anytime Berenson did a bit more of soon. his experimenting in Saturday's game when he decided to place Berenson decided to play both junior forward Andrew Sinelli in Nagelvoort and sophomore Steve place of sharpshooting freshman Racine in between the pipes this Evan Allen on the fourth line. weekend on Friday and Saturday, The offensive combinations respectively. Both performed to were arguably the most effec- Berenson's liking, despite allow- tive they've been all season. ing three goals each. The defensive pairings simply Nagelvoort made 25 saves and weren't, and the possibility of staved off several 2-on-I opportu- more shuffling seems inevitable nities, while Racine recorded 40 for the coming weeks. T F I l f 1 t L L f 1 1 f L i OMAHA, Neb. - T he members of the Michigan hockey team are doing what any good teammates would do after split- ting their series against Nebras- ka-Omaha this weekend. When the second-ranked Wol- verines (7-2-1) were prompted to weigh in on Michigan coach Red Berenson's decision to start fresh- man goal- tender Zach Nagelvoort on Friday night - a 3-2 loss - and sopho- more Steve Racine on Sat- urday - a 4-3 DAILY win - their answers were WRITER somewhere between that of a broken record and a prere- corded answering machine. "We're definitely confident in both of those guys, and I defi- nitely think it's a huge bonus for us to be confident in two guys," said sophomore forward Andrew Copp. Added senior forward Derek DeBlois, "We know we have two' great goalies that can come in and win us games. It's a great situa- tion to be in." Earlier in the week, associate head coach Billy Powers added: "If the goalies can make it hard on you, then that's a good prob- lem." But there's no need for it to be a problem in the first place. When Nagelvoort filled in admirably after Racine suffered a groin injury on Oct. 18 at New Hampshire, the problem was solved. It wasn't until almost a month later, the week leading up to the series against Nebraska- Omaha, that Racine said he was 100-percent healthy. . And now, Nagelvoort should continue to start this season until he gives his coaches a reason to replace him. He may not be the better of the two goalies, but he does have the hotter hand, and at this point in the season, it's neces- sary to find consistency. After all, the Wolverines have almost always been a one-goalie team - it's a strategy that worked well enough to qualify for 22 consecutive NCAA Tourna- ment appearances. It helps that Michigan has had standouts like Josh Blackburn, Marty Turco, Al Montoya and Shawn Hunwick in net, but they all had the spot to themselves. The Wolverines used a two- goalie system three years ago, when Berenson and the rest of the coaching staff alternated Hun- wick and Bryan Hogan between the pipes until the Big Chill at the Big House, when Berenson opted to start Hogan. If anything, the decision proved to be more stressful than effective for Hunwick. A junior at the time, Hunwick felt the pres- sure to win when he lost or keep looking over his shoulder when he did win. "I've never really done well when we are splitting like that," Hunwick said in an interview two years ago during his senior season. "I get a little bit too wor- ried about the other guy, and all that other stuff before worrying about myself. I definitely was way too nervous and worried about Hogan way too much, how the team was playing in front of him and how they were playing in front of me. It was hard for me just to concentrate on the game at hand." But Hogan injured himself before the game, so Hunwick stepped in as a result. From that game on, Hunwick continued to play extremely well, even after Hogan recovered. Michigan rode Hunwick all the way to a runner-up finish in the NCAA Tournament later that season. Last season, the Wolverines played three goalies throughout the season. Michigan got off to one of its worst starts in recent program history and never recov- ered until, you guessed it, it found consistent goaltending. If the system has worked so well for so long, why change it up? Nagelvoort allowed three goals in Friday's loss, and Racine allowed three goals the next night ina win. Who's to say the Wolverines couldn't have done the same on Saturday in front of Nagelvoort? Berenson wanted to see his original starter tested after his absence, which of course makes sense. But it helps when the offense steps up, and the defense prevents open looks. It's not quite fair to replace one goalie after a subpar perfor- mance, especially after he has posted a 1.47 goals-against aver- age, a .947 save percentage and a 4-1-1 record prior to the weekend. His performance would earn him a starting job in almost any other program. Even after his worst performance statistically, Nagelvoort still sits sixth nation- ally among goaltenders in goals allowed and save percentage. Starting Nagelvoort allows him to be more comfortable and find consistency in arguablythe most important position in hockey, on top of helping his teammates do the same. Berenson can switch up the two all he wants since both have proved they're capable. But when the season comes down to a do- or-die game, and one needs to stand out above the rest, Beren- son will have to choose. If it didn't work for one of the best goalies in Michigan history, why would it work for a true freshman? -Daily Sports Editor Everett Cook contributed reporting. - Garno can be reached at ggarno@umich.edu or on Twitter: @GGarno 0 I a