9 R" w S GL\ V 9 B Friday, October 17, 2014 FACEOFF 2014 3 Friday, October 17, 2014 // The Face-Off Position by position: M' loaded at forward COURTESY OFTHE COMPHER FAMILY JT Compher, second to right, is pictured here with teammates from his youth hockey days. Compher progressed thorugh hockey faster than most kids his age before he arrived at Michigan. COMPHER From Page 5B he would stay home. He couldn't leave his family. But Valerie held firm. "We would've never let him stay home and pass on this oppor- tunity," she said. So Compher went to Ann Arbor and, looking back, he thinks going to Ann Arbor was the best his parents could have made him do given the circumstance. The first week of U.S. NDPT camp is widely known as the toughest week. Compher said they put him through "the ringer." The players skate twice a day, condition twice a day and try to adjust to their new home in Ann Arbor. Still, despite the business and distrac- tions, his father's cancer still remained forefront in his head. It stayed that way throughout the week. Days were long, Com- pher admitted. But he never thought his Dad would lose his battle. Why? Because Compher said his competi- tive nature stems from his father and the constant sup- 0 port from his billet family, the Karibians. Bob agreed. "You want to show your family you're going to do what you got to do to get it done," he said. And Bob did just that. Soon after, doctor's success- fully removed Bob's cancer and the first person on the phone with Bob was JT. After the call, Compher said he "took a deep breath" and could focus on what he originally planned to do it Ann Arbor: grow as a hock- ey player. He could go back normal - competing harder than anyone else because if he doesn't, he feels out of place and he has no room for regrets. Not only did Compher excel in the first year the NTDP program - notching 50 points in 49 games - but his mastery earned him a spot on the U-18 team for IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. Despite being one of the youngest players in the tour- nament, the challenge was never too great. Compher tallied four goals in nine games and scored a goal in the Gold-Medal game against Sweden, a game the U.S. won. In his second year, Com- pher registered 57 points in 59 games, garnering serious interest from NHL teams. So on Compher went to New York City, home of the 2013 NHL draft. It was given he'd be drafted so his nerves should've been tamer. But when the Buffalo Sabres drafted Compher with the 35th pick, shock ran through his body. "When you hear your name called, you're like 'oh shit, this happened,' " Com- pher recalled. "You give your mom a hug, dad a hug, then you're gone for an hour." Compher finally felt vali- dated for his endless hours of practice, travel to far away rinks and all the off-the-ice conditioning. And to Com- pher, there was no better way to spend the draft than with Bob and his entire fam- ily. But Compher knew he couldn't get complacent. He knew he had bigger goals in mind, namely a NCAA Championship. He knew the grind was only going to get tougher. JT Compher is a pest on the ice. He knows it. Every teammate he's had knows it. But they don't complain; they understand his motive. "I'm one of the more annoying guys to play against in practice; I hear it everyday," Compher said. "I do like to try to get under guys' skins because some guys need a little bit of fire to get their practice going. If they're mad at me and it helps them to work harder, it's good for me, it's good for them, good for the team." Jack Eichel, a teammate of Compher's on the NTDP team in 2012-13 and cur- rent Boston University forward, certainly noticed. Eichel's projected to be a top-five pick in the 2015 NHL draft. "He is just so good wher- ever he is," Eichel told NHL. com. "He's a role model to me and I really look up to him. He's a great kid and a great leader. Everyone else tries to match him. A guy like that on your team, it's really good. "Everyone tries to work as hard as him, and if every- one works as hard as JT, you know you have a good team." Junior forward Andrew Copp echoed Eichel's senti- ment. And Copp knows JT's intensity as well as anyone after he played victim to Compher's antics last season. "He'll hack you, slash you, hit you late," Copp recalled. "He'll do anything it takes to get under your skin. "I hate going against him in practice, but I'd rather have him on my team than anyone else's team." Copp said it best. No mat- ter how annoying Compher is to play against, players wish they could channel the same work level as him. Now on the same line as Compher, Copp no longer has to deal with the slashes or late hits, but he knows just because Compher's lost one of his targets, his grittiness won't stop. Copp said Compher has "crossed the line" several times - something Copp said he never did while a freshman - and that the current freshman are well aware of Compher's practice intensity. And that doesn't bother Berenson. "That's his DNA: If there's a loose puck, he's going to win the battle for it," Beren- son said. "No matter how hard you try, he's going to try and try harder. He's got a compete level that doesn't stop. "And you know, JT has been exceptional player ever since he was young, but he doesn't act that way. He doesn't wear that mantle." What shows is his disgust with losing and it's no secret that Michigan's last two seasons have ended early in disappointment. Michi- gan hockey is a program that qualifies to the NCAA Tournament every year. It's a team that opposing schools circle in red prior to the sea- son. Michigan hockey is not last year's team - a team that Compher played for. He knows that, and he uses his grittiness in practice to show others what it means to wear the block 'M'. Compher has every inten- tion ofchangingthe program around. He knows he will do everything in his power to reverse the trend even if he makes his teammates feel uncomfortable - he doesn't care. He only cares about raising another banner in Yost Ice Arena. And for the rest, it's reassuring knowing they have a hockey player in Compher, who will fight his best friends over a game of PlayStation, to help turn the program around. By ERIN LENNON Daily Sports Writer Most of its early stats are unofficial, but two exhibition contests and a single regular season game have shown the No. 10 Michigan hockey team to be deep on both sides of the puck. In front of two start-worthy goaltenders, the Wolverines have the potential to have a breakout offensive season, if they can stay healthy. Forwards: After only one non-conference game and two exhibitions, the Michigan hockey team's forward lines are clicking, already. The offense has scored 16 goals in three contests, an average of more than five goals per game. Michigan coach Red Berenson has pointed to the second line, one featuring freshman center Dylan Larkin, sophomore forward Alex Kile and senior Zach Hyman, as one he expects to stick together when the Wolverines enter the thick of their nonconference schedule. Unofficially, Larkin is leading the Wolverines in scoring. The Detroit Red Wings prospect has already shown flashes of the speed that made him a first-round draft pick, following up a two- goal performance against the U.S. Under-18 National Development Program with three assists and a goal against Wilfrid Laurier. Larkin's presence at center may be the reason Kile has emerged as an offensive threat early on. In two games on the line, Kile has tallied a goal and three assists, matching Hyman's four points over that period. All told, the trio combined for 15 points in exhibition play, making it Michigan's most productive line. This offense has also matured. JT Compher, the reigning Michigan and Big Ten Freshman of the Year, is now a sophomore, and an alternate captain at that. Before the season, the forward made the switch to wing, flanking junior center Andrew Copp. Though the duo sat out against Wilfrid Laurier last week, last season's top-two scorers are expected to be lethal on Michigan's top line. Production from the fourth JAMES COLLAR/Daily Junior forward Andrew Copp leads a loaded group of forwards, pairing with JT Coompher on the top line to bring together Michigan's top scorers from last year. ,:.. , .. - }... ': line, too, proves the offense is Michigan's deepest unit. Senior Travis Lynch may be the Wolverines most improved player, tallying two key third- period goals (one official) after scoring just twice in 29 games last year. Lynch has been praised for late-game face-off victories. Junior forward Justin Selman also added a goal and an assist in three contests. Selman is out indefinitely, though, after fracturing his wrist during the second period last Thursday. It is unclear who will take his place. The Wolverines have options, though, especially once players like freshman forward Tony Calderone recover from preseason injuries, which is expected to be soon. Michigan's early offensive success is a product of a strong presence in front of goal, somethingtheunitstruggledwith last season. Combine that with a set of defensemen with the talent to shoot from the blue line on the power play, and the Wolverines should be able to capitalize when goals are at a premium. Defensemen: The late addition of freshman Zach Werenski has changed this unit from Michigan's biggest question mark to one of its strengths. In last Thursday's exhibition, Werenski - a 17-year-old who completed his high school degree over the summer - tallied two goals in four minutes. And he made it look easy. He might not be the next Jacob Trouba, but for a team that lacked a legitimate scoring threat on defense last season, Werenski's presence on the power play will be key. The Wolverines are also aided by the full return of sophomore Kevin Lohan, who missed the majority of last season due to a torn anterior circulate ligament. A 6-foot-5, 220-pound defenseman, Lohan brings both, physical presence and offensive potential. On a line with Werenski, Lohan added a goal and an assist in two exhibition games. Should he remain healthy, Lohan - who did not play the third period against Wilfrid Laurier due to a "tweaked" knee, according to Berenson - will be an impact player for Michigan on defense. Like the offense, this unit has had a year to mature. Though the defense is without former starters Mac, Bennett and Kevin Clare, players like sophomores Michael Iowning and Nolan De Jong are a year wiser on the blue line. Meanwhile, senior Andrew Sinelli enters as a defenseman by trade after a junior season in which he split time between units. Goaltending: Though goaltender Zach Nagelvoort's freshman campaign was impressive enough to earn him a fourth-round selection to the Edmonton Oilers in the 2014 NHL Draft, it did not secure him a starting job as Michigan's goaltender. That's because junior Steve Racine hasn't regressed, despite his time on the bench last season. Berenson has said he's not going to name a starter in the near future, and that having two goalies he's comfortable playing is a good problem. That's a compliment, given that Nagelvoort set a program record for saves in a single game. In the first three contests, both netminders have shown signs of early-season jitters. Against Ferris State, Nagelvoort allowed two goals in the opening minutes of play and four goals total. He was beaten early again against the U.S. NTDP, while Racine allowed a goal just seconds into his third-period appearance. Still, Nagelvoort has gotten the nod in all three contests so far, and is expected to be in net Friday, when the Wolverines take on New Hampshire at Yost Ice Arena. Freshmen 4 Juniors