8.- Friday, February 7, 2014 . L ti The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 8 - Friday, February 7, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom with Daily Collegian hockey writer Darian Somers ByGREGGARNO Daily Sports Editor The No. 10 Michigan hockey team will travel to State College and the recently opened Pegula Ice Arena for the first time in program history this weekend. In its first year as a varsity program, Penn State hasn't managed a conference win, but will aim to take advantage of two sold- out crowds againstcthe Wolverines. The Daily caught up with Daily Collegian sophomore hockey beat writer Darian Somers to talk about goaltending, the atmosphere in State College and the winner of a fightbetween Michigan coach Red Berenson and Penn State coach Guy Gadowsky. The Daily Collegian's answers can be found here. Michigan will ride the hot hand of goaltender Zach Nagelvoort into Pegula this weekend. How can Penn State's offense find a way to beat one of the nation's best? That's kind of been the question all season long. "How can Penn State score?" The Nittany Lions are No. 1 in the nation in shots per game at 35.55, but rank second-to-last in goals per shots on goal. They need to just keep firing them, but they1 need to crash the net as well. They haven't had too many gar- bage goals from in close this year. They need to jam one in. Michigan's defense doesn't have a great deal of depth. Who are some of the Nittany Lions on the third and fourth lines who could capitalize on that? There are two guys on this roster that could make an impact and seem like they are on the cusp of doing that - Zach Saar, a big power forward, and (forward) Ricky DeRosa, your typical Mark Rec- chi-style player. Saar is a physical force. Off the ice, he's a shy guy, but when he steps on the ice, I've actu- ally seen people move out of the way of his shot. He's also a little bit annoying in front of the net because of that size. Guy Gadowsky has been using him for that exact reason on the power play, and he's bound to have a big game sometime soon. Then you've got Ricky DeRosa. This guy doesn't do flashy things, but he gets the job done and he gets it done well. When he's on, he plays some of the best, unnoticed hockey in the nation. He's not fast, and he's not the shiftiest, but he's solid all around. He really takes pride in his game.2 But Michigan does have depth at the forward position in guys like JT Compher and Andrew Copp. Who has to step up to prevent an onslaught? This may sound like a generic answer, but it's going to take everyone on Penn State's bench. They were able to slow down Boston College's Johnny Gaudreau and Kevin Hayes, plus they were able to shut down Hudson Fashing and Kyle Rau from Minnesota. The issue, though, is those teams are so deep they have guys equally as good spread throughout their rosters. If Penn State can shut down Copp and Compher, they need to not forget about the rest of the Wolverines. Does Penn State have the goaltending to bail out its defense or special teams? If you asked me this question the week before last weekend's games with Ohio State, I would have happily said yes, but I don't know anymore. Both Matt Skoff and Eamon McAdam struggled. We've seen them play some great hockey this year, espe- cially McAdam of late, but this might have been a big setback after losing both to a beatable Ohio State team. McAdam has played really strong at home as of late and he's probably going to see one start this weekend. Both Skoff and McAdam give4 Penn State a chance to win and keep the Lions in the game, but the offensive production doesn't always return the favor. If the goalies can keep Penn State in the game and the offense is working, Michigan could be in for a rough trip to Happy Valley. But that hasn't happened often.... Wait, am I allowed to say Ohio State to a Michigan man? Has Pegula Arena played a role in home games before this weekend and will it make a difference this weekend againat a team that has never been to State College? It has some weekends and it hasn't others. When Pegula is packed, especially the Roar Zone, the student section, you can tell teams are rattled by it. I've never been in an indoor building that loud. (Beaver Stadium is the loudest place I've ever been to.) It's like a sound wave that hits you right in the chest. When it's not packed, you can tell Penn State plays with less energy. It doesn't have an atmosphere and it's like a completely different building. A lot of it depends on the weather this weekend. Who wins in a bare fist fight? Red Berenson (mind you, he's 74 years old) or (Penn State coach) Guy Gadowsky? The real question is who wins in a bare fist fight: Red Berenson or Chuck Norris. I'd bet Floyd Mayweather- money on Red. Who Wins? Michigan and Michigan. Other than Minnesota, I don't think there is a team hotter in the Big Ten right now. (A40 . * ~ . . m " , . Freshman goaltenderZach Nagelvoort (LEFT) and Michigan coach Red Berenson (RIGHT) look forward to facing ne Bige q fqe PeniSta It IoIll Penn State awaits Wolverines M gel fir Th has n State verin State So tion and o they' Th sensu Lions can b all, N of the time' "I the senio Ad Berer ichigan looks to this weekend:ho beneath theirs t tWo Wins in its the locker room or how noticeabl 'st trip this year will be. But if the: Michigan does k ) State College the Nittany Lions Ten, 4-17-1 overall By GREG GARNO a win in the Big Te Daily Sports Editor this year and they perate than ever t e Michigan hockey team "I think for ever faced off against Penn desperate," said ju . In fact, most of the Wol- Zach Hyman. "A .es have never even been to plays Michigan v College. me are unaware of its loca- on a map of Pennsylvania Michigan at 'thers aren't sure what rink Penn State 11 be playing at. :ere's also no general con- Matchup: as as to what the Nittany 13-6-3;Penn s do well and where they State 4-17-1 e exploited on the ice. After W lichigan just watched film Whoa: Ftiday e Nittany Lions for the first Saturday Wednesday afternoon. at 5 P.M. think (State College) is in Where' Pegula middle of the state," said Ice Arena r forward Luke Moffatt. Ided Michigan coach Red TV: nson: "They're the new kid ESPNU (Sat) w the ice feels Draft compared to the 12 that skates, what Michigan boasts. will look like The Wolverines (5-2-1-1, le the crowd 13-6-3) are also the winner re's one thing of four straight games and sit now, it's that alone at second place in the Big (0-8-0-0 Big Ten standings. ) are without And Michigan's lines have -n Conference clicked as of late, averaging just "re more des- over three goals a game dur- o change that. ing its four-game win streak. sure, they're The Nittany Lions, on the other nior forward hand, have averaged just over ny team that one goal in its last four confer- 'ants to win. ence games. They're To be specific, Penn State is going to put scoring 2.18 goals per game this their best season while the Wolverines are foot for- allowing 2.23 goals per game. ward and Considering that the Nittany we can't Lions allow 3.91 goals per game, take any- the weekend could be remem- thing for bered more for the Subway and granted. Auntie Anne's pretzels served "We're in the concession stands than just taking the game itself. it one game But what the stats don't show at a time, is how close Penn State's recent focusing games have been. The Nittany on what we Lions played top-5 teams Min- need to do nesota and Boston College close and not so enough to lose by only one goal. much what "I think they're going to be ." the real deal," Berenson said. oks like alop- "They really work hard. We per. The Wol- know we're going to get every- h a long and thing they've got. I told our y, including team we've got to be better es, 11 confer- this weekend than we were last ips, and two weekend." ard winners. What's more, Penn State will ne of that. It have to figure out how to beat yers selected a goaltender that held one of ockey League the nation's top-10 offenses in Wisconsin to just three goals last weekend, making three big saves ina shootout on Saturday. The momentum has never been hotter for Nagelvoort, despite not being named the starter by Berenson. That deci- sion willbe made Thursday eve- ning. But there's one thing the Nit- tany Lions can boast that Michi- gan cannot: Pegula Ice Arena. Thanks to an $88 million dona- tion, Penn State's newly-coined "Hockey Valley" has attracted crowds of more than 6,000 on average in its first year as a var- sity program. In contrast, the Michigan hockey team played in front of close to a hundred fans in its first years before moving to Yost Field House - which cost just $563,168 to build. Nearly 20 years ago, Berenson had to give away tickets to students on Fri- day evenings in the Diag to get them to come to games. But Penn State is the reason the Big Ten, and this weekend's matchup, even exists because when it became the sixth Big Ten school with a hockey pro- gram, it gave the conference enough members to start the sport. "Wedon'twanttobethatteam," said senior defenseman Mac Ben- nett. "But at the same time, that doesn't mean we aren't taking it seriously. This is a big weekend for us - there's six points available. When we leave there, we want to makesure wehaveallofthem." on the block. Their rink is new. Their players are new. We've never seen their uniforms. I've never been to Penn State." "I've seen a lot of pictures of this rink," said freshman goaltender Zach Nagelvoort. "I don't even know how to pro- nounce it." There are a lot of unknowns for the 10th-ranked Wolver- ines as they travel to Penn State they're going to do The weekend lo sided affair on pal verines enter wit successful histor nine national titl ence Championsh Hobey Baker Aw Penn State has no has just two pla in the National He Michigan rolls into Iowa The Wolverines eye season sweep over Hawkeyes in Iowa City By SIMON KAUFMAN Daily Sports Writer Two and a half weeks ago, the Michigan men's basket- ball team took care of Iowa at home - its second consecutive win as part of a three-game sweep of top-10 teams, which included Wisconsin and Mich- igan State. Saturday, the Wolverines will head to Iowa City for the rematch against the 17th- ranked Hawkeyes in hopes of securing a conference-best 10th win. Michigan (9-1 Big Ten, 17-5 overall) is coming off a 29-point clobbering of Nebraska, bounc- ing back from its first Big Ten loss to Indiana earlier in the week. Saturday's matchup fea- tures a more talented Wolver- ine team against a Hawkeye team that has been dominant at home. Iowa (6-4, 17-6) has dropped just two games at Carv- er-Hawkeye Arena this season - an overtime loss to Michigan State and aseven-point defeat to Ohio State on Tuesday. When Michigan and Iowa met earlier this season, for- wards Aaron White and Mel- sahn Basabe kept the Hawkeyes in the game, each contributing 17 points. The two average 13.3 and 7.8 points per game, respec- tively, to complement an aver- age of more than six rebounds apiece. But Iowa's biggest offensive threat this year has been guard Roy Devyn Marble. The 6-foot- 6 senior is averaging 16 points per game this season on 41-per- cent shooting from the field. At Crisler Center though, he was held to just 13 points. Sopho- more guard Caris LeVert played tough defense on him, forcing him to shoot just 3-for-9 from the field. "Iowa's one of the top teams in our league," LeVert said. "To go in there and get a road win would be huge for us." The Wolverines will count doesn't just shoot - he's also been able to get points in the paint, something he didn't do with consistency a season ago. Wednesday night he showed he could contribute in other ways. The 6-foot-6 guard dished a career-best eight assists, setting up teammates while he opted out of shooting, attempting just three shots. On Saturday though, Stauskas will likely be a bigger part of the scoring in what should be a much more competitive game. And Michigan coach John Beilein knows it will be a tough matchup. Despite coming off of a big win, Beilein knows there's no such thing as an easy game in the Big Ten. "Where are the games on the schedule where you can say 'W'?" Beilein said. "Where are they? I don't see them. I see there's another game that we're gonna have to compete like crazy." Michigan at Iowa Matchup: Michigan 17-5; Iowa 17-6 When: Saturday 2 P.M. Where: Carver- Hawkeye Arena TV/RADIO: ESPN/950 AM on their sharp shoot- ing from Wednes- day night's win over Nebras- ka to carry over against the Hawk- eyes. Michi- gan shot 46.6 per- The Center for World Performance Studies is delighted to present OfNDO A H C IEEI '.AI4L AND PANDIT SAMIR CHATTEREE (TABLAI cent in their previous contest against Iowa, including eight 3-pointers. Sophomore guard Nik Stauskas led the charge in the first matchup. Stauskas tied a career-high with 26 points taking advantage of extra space to shoot when Hawk- eye defenders laid off, and attacking the rim when they overplayed him. This season, Stauskas has been touted as a player that