When one loss feels like more Outside the press room in Pegula Ice Arena, a media director stops Mac Bennett's walk to the bus with a tug on his suit jacket to come speak with reporters. Inside, Penn State coach Guy Gadowsky begins to praise his team for coming together in Saturday's game. He's commending GREG his team for GARNO bouncing back from Friday night's game to earn a win. But outside, Bennett, the senior defenseman, stands with his lips pursed shut and his face drawn. He wants to hide in his red headphones and forget Saturday night's 4-0 loss to the Nittany Lions. Inside, Penn State goaltender Matt Skoff calls the game something "he will remember for a long time." He smiles, and his coach smiles, and for the first time since December all feels right in Hockey Valley. But outside, Bennett, a normally talkative, optimistic player who spent 15 minutes talking to reporters earlier in the week, takes just one minute and one second to answer questions. "It's frustrating," Bennett says, looking up from his downward glance. "How would you feel?" Above the hallway the cleaning crew clears the seats after 6,100 fans stood on their feet and roared when the Nittany Lions celebrated near their own bench like they had just won the Stanley Cup. The workers cleaned up the popcorn remnants and thrown pom-poms after the horn blared louder and longer than any point in the game at the end of regulation to celebrate Penn State's first-ever win in the Big Ten Conference. Earlier that week, Bennett talked about not being "that team" that gives Penn State its first conference win, like a baseball team becomes "that team" that was no-hit. Just one night earlier, Bennett, along with Michigan coach Red Berenson, said the 7-3 score of the game prior wasn't indicative of how his team played. They needed to shore up defensive-zone coverage, Bennett added. Even after the first period Saturday, he told ESPNU reporters that he felt like his team could comeback from a three-goal deficit that energized an already loud Penn State fan base. "We let up too many goals and we didn't score any," he said frankly. It wasn't the fact that Penn State scored more goals and barely upset the Wolverines, it's that the Nittany Lions scored four goals and dominated them. Penn State was there with a constant forecheck and pressure in the neutral zone. The Nittany Lions pushed the puck forward where multiple forwards waited around the crease to throw pucks in the net. There was Penn State forward David Glen's first goal, for example, which found its way in off an awkward angle, or the second goal five minutes later that Zach Saar banked off freshman netminder Zach Nagelvoort. Without agoal, Michigan never really inspired hope that a comeback could happen. Some shots, like sophomore forward Boo Nieves' attempt that rang off the post, came close, but others never even threatened. It wasn't just a loss, it was an emphatic loss. "I think everyone's mature enough on this team to put this in the past," Bennett said. But it's tough to remember much from Friday's game after playing through Saturday. After the third goal, while fans hugged one another, the music over the speakers filled the arena and students hit the glass and hollered at the goaltender. Penn State snapped Michigan's five- game unbeaten streak on Saturday and ruined its chance to move back into second place in the Big Ten standings. See HOCKEY, Page 3B Michigan offenseflails with Stauskas silenced By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily Sports Editor IOWA CITY - Nik Stauskas isn't much for expressing frustration. If he's not playing well, he maintains an even keel and keeps from voicing displeasure. He's not willing to show that he's been defeated, even if the team has been. So on days like Saturday at Carver- Hawkeye Arena with Michigan getting pummeled on the road, 85-67, you wouldn't know from looking at the sophomore guard that things weren't going his way. It wasn't that Stauskas was having an off day, but rather that Iowa wasn't even giving him a chance to have an off day. For 35 minutes, Iowa guards Roy Devyn Marble and Josh Oglesby marked him closely. They denied the ball when he'd make a cut toward the ball, and they'd body him when he tried to cut backdoor. Just looking at Stauskas' stat line - 10 points on 50-percent shooting, you wouldn't think it was a case of a star player having an off game. More like a role player playing a role-player game. But make no mistake, the Hawkeyes knew how important it was to make No. 11 in the blue jersey look like a role player. "We were pretty much locked into collectively going after Stauskas," said Iowa coach Fran McCaffery. Sixteen days after Stauskas battered Iowa for a career-high 26 points, he was unrecognizable Saturday with a new man guarding him and a new game plan from McCaffery. Rather than sticking the big-bodied Aaron White on Stauskas, Iowa would follow Indiana and Michigan State's lead and put its best athlete on the star sophomore. "What we did was we decided to put Marble on him," McCaffery said. "We thought that would be a better match, and he was really good." Marble limited Stauskas to six field-goal attempts, zero assists and four turnovers. "I wasn't about to let him have another 26-point effort against us," Marble said. Just as Yogi Ferrell did last week and Gary Harris the week before, Marble guarded Stauskas tightly throughout, but also had the game of his season offensively. He scored 26 points with six 3-pointers, while 22 of those points came in the first half with the game still in doubt. "You've got to play both ends of the court in order to be a great player," Marble said. "And I take pride in my defense and trying to shut or contain whoever the best player on the other team is." When he got his hands on the ball, the tight defense, or maybe just the bottled- up frustration forced Stauskas into turnovers. His shake-and-bake dribble that had turned Iowa into rubber a few weeks ago had betrayed him. Twice he dribbled off his foot and twice he tried to makea pass to a Wolverine that wasn't where he was expected to be. "They made a lot of adjustments," Stauskas said. "They did some switches on our ball screens and handoffs, which made things difficult. They denied me theball, andthenwhen Ididtryto drive, all their guys were in the gaps. They were trying to clog up the lane, which made it tough for me to penetrate." It's the third straight game that Stauskas was held to 10 or fewer points after having scored at least 12 in the previous 12 games. Just as he was emerging on the scene as a Big Ten Player of the Year frontrunner, the increased attention from opponents has seemed to stymie his groove. "I think all teams are starting to play me like that," Stauskas said. "So it's something I'm gonna get used to." If this game was played at the beginning of the season, the blame for offensive woes wouldn't fall on Stauskas. But as he has emerged as the top offensive option, the team's success in tough games appears to be strongly correlated to Stauskas's performance. In November, it seemed that Robinson would bear a heavy responsibility in the Wolverine attack, but his inconsistent play has rendered him an enigma - a player with explosiveness, but who can't be relied on from game to game. That point was supported with his two- point performance Saturday on 1-for- 7 shooting on the heels of a 23-point game in Wednesday's blowout victory over Nebraska. Saturday, it was a pair of guards, sophomore Caris LeVert and freshman Zak Irvin, filling the offensive void. Michigan finished with 67 points, though even that figure was inflated by late-game apathy from the Hawkeyes. LeVert was successful at dribble-driving his way to 11 free-throw attempts and 22 points, while Irvin sustained his lights-out shooting. He made seven of his 12 shots for 19 points. But to compete with Marble and the high-octane Iowa attack, Michigan was going to need more from its star player. "I blame myself for that," Stauskas said. "I think I haven't done my part offensively. I know Caris and Zak, the last couple games, they've done a great job of stepping up and doing their fair share. I think it just falls on me right now. I've just got to be more aggressive in finding ways to make it happen." DROPPED AGAIN The Michigan women's basketball team allowed a late run and fell to Purdue on Sunday afternoon. Page 2B JUST A BREATHER The Michigan women's swimming and diving team earned its 27th straight win over Michigan State. Page 4B