ai Ali s 4 a ;= a ', hx x The Michigan Daily michiganclaily.com January 13,2014 WHIPPED IN WISCONSI N By ERIN LENNON Daily Sports Writer WHAT HAPPENED FRI- DAY: For the fourth time the No. 8 Michigan hockey team flung shot after shot at the net - 56 in total - but managed to find twine just twice, this time against No. 14 Wisconsin. Wisconsin [RI)AY (4-2 Big- Ten, 13-6- MICHIGAN 2 1 overall) WISCONSIN 5 jumped out to an early lead MICHIGAN 1 with two WISCONSIN 3 goals in the first period. Though Michigan players were quick to call most of the Badgers' five goals "fluky," the early deficit was too steep for the Wolverines (2-2, 10-6-2) to overcome, despite their two late goals in the third period, as they fell, 5-2. SLOW START: The Wolver- ines rode a 125-minute scoreless streak dating back to Dec. 27 at the Great Lakes Invitational all the way into the third peri- od before sophomore forward Andrew Copp buried his team- leading 15th goal of the season. Berenson has said a good start has been trademark of all prolific Michigan teams. So two periods without a score was uncharacteristic for a team that outscored opponents 17-6 in the first frame through the first half of the season. BIG ICE, BIG PROBLEM: Seven feet wider than Yost Ice Arena, the Kohl Center may have had no effecton Michigan's performance this weekend, but the team has certainly had problems adjusting to different ice conditions. On a larger rink in New Hampshire, the then-rolling Wolverines narrowly escaped two overtime defeats. And outside at Comerica Park in December, the Wolverines were shut out for the first time. Michigan will likely see big- ger ice on more than one occa- sion the rest of the season. WHAT HAPPENED SATURDAY: Though Michigan got off to a better start than it had Friday, the same problems that plagued the Wolverines in Friday'sloss were far fro eliminated. Against a strong Wisconsin penalty kill and lights- out goaltending by Joel Rumpel for a second time, the Wolverines struggled to find success. Though the shot selection was slightly improved, Michigan scored only once. With the score 2-1 in Wisconsin'sfavorafter18minutes of back-and forth-hockey in the third period, Michigan's hopes of escaping the weekend with a split were put to rest when Badgers forward Joseph Labate netted a breakaway attempt to push his team's lead to two. With 41 seconds remaining, an apparent goal from freshman forward JT Compher was overturned, and the clock ran down. NAGELVOORT NEEDS HELP: Freshman goaltender Zach Nagelvoort - who allowed four goals on Friday, tying a sea- son high - got the nod for the second matchup. And again, Nagelvoort did his job. He com- pleted 33 saves on Saturday to keep Michigan in the game, allowing just two goals despite many more scoring chances from a potent Wisconsin offense that ranks in the top 10 nationally. What's more, the defense began to let up in the second period. The unit allowed 23 shots through two frames and turned the puck over several times. THE BRAWL: Beginning when sophomore forward Andrew Copp skated up behind a Wisconsin player and shoved him into the boards and onto his back. As he skated away, the Badgers on ice swarmed Copp, and punches were thrownbetweenboth teams as helmets went flying. The scrambles resulted in four ejections, including Copp, senior forward Derek DeBlois and junior forward Alex Guptill for Michigan. However, they are eli- gible for their next game, accord- ing to NCAA rules. Minus Copp, M' falters offensivl This isn't a rivalry series, not yet at least' Wolverines score three goals in two games, lose fourth in a row By JEREMY SUMMITT Daily Sports Editor MADISON - Andrew Copp returned to Ann Arbor this past Sunday, tired and jet-lagged after competing with the USA World Junior team in Sweden since Dec. 27. His arrival came nearly two weeks after the rest of the team was on campus after the holiday season, and at practice Wednesday, he said he was still trying to get back into the swing of things. But the sophomore for- ward didn't show many signs of fatigue throughout No. 9 Michigan's two-game series at No. 14 Wisconsin this weekend. As he has for much of the season, Copp remained the lone bright spot for an offensive unit that's been lulled into a sleep for the past month. Dating back to Dec. 11, Michigan has scored seven goals in five games, all of them resultinginlosses. Itnarrowly escaped being shutout in con- secutive outings for the first time since the 1942-43 sea- son, thanks only to Copp's late power play goal in the third period of Friday's 5-2 loss. Senior forward Luke Moffatt added the second tally min- utes later, but it was too little for a team that needed pro- duction 58 minutes earlier. The Wolverines' potential to score a few goals every night is high on paper, but the talent hasn't materialized into "W's" on the ice. "(Copp's) playing hard, and he's establishing himself again in the second half as one of our top players," said Michigan coach Red Beren- son. "We just need more play- ers getting into that groove." Michigan possesses already-proven goal scorers in junior forwards Alex Gup- till and Phil Di Giuseppe, but they've been streaky at best See OFFENSE, Page 3B ADISON - The crowd of over 14,000 fans roared, hollered and called for the heads of the No. 9 Michigan hockey team. The officiating crew, outnum- bered and outmuscled, separat- ed the two teams into their own penalty boxes while they sorted out the last minute of brawling like parents separating children. And when the com- motion had ended, the Wolver- sues' penalty box looked even more crammed than Score- GREG keepers Bar GARNO and Grill on a Tuesday night. In it, stood six of Michigan's best scorers, and arguably best players off all classes - seniors Derek DeBlois and Mac Ben- nett, juniors Phil Di Giuseppe and Alex Guptill, sophomore Andrew Copp and freshman JT Compher. Each one had been on the ice after freshman goaltender Zach Nagelvoort had been pulled and all of whom were quiet and motionless with the exception of the chatty Guptill. They col- lectively looked up at the screen after a matter of seconds for a replay and then turned to the officials to learn their fate. Six men in the box at once! It symbolized everything about the weekend for the Wolver- ines. The offense was bottled up, with little room to push the puck around. The defense was trapped in its own zone early and often. With 33 seconds to go, trail- ing 3-1, Michigan faced a series sweep and its fourth consecu- tive loss as the massive penal- ties were handed down. In the penalty box, the Wolverines presented as much of a threat to win off the ice as they did on the ice. In its first Big Ten series since See RIVALRY, Page 3B FIVE-STAR FALLACY For the Michigan football team, recruit- ing alone won't save the program from a 7-6 season, but winning will. Page 2B OH SO CLOSE The Michigan women's basketball team came minutes away from moving into first in the Big Ten. Page 4B