4E - Fall 2014 Sports The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com ICE HOCKEY All that's left is hope ERIN KIRKLAND/Daily Zach Nagelvoort saved 63 shots in the BigTen Tournament against Penn State, but his effort wasn't enough. Hockey falls short NCAA Touramen Loss to Penn State makes 'M' first team out By ERIN LENNON Daily Sports Writer MARCH 23, 2014 - Sitting at the podium Thursday evening in St. Paul, Minn., Michigan hockey coach Red Berenson answered questions from the media, his face illuminated by two spotlights, eyes glassy. With your resume as it stands right now, do you think you get into the NCAA Tournament? "Some people look at it right now and they'll say we've fallen down to wherever we've fallen," he said. "I'm not one of those." Instead, he said, the Wolver- ines had been focused on the one game they could have controlled, a first-round loss to Penn State in the Big Ten Tournament. But on Selection Sunday, Berenson didn't have to specu- late about the immediate future. Michigan finished 15th in the PairWise rankings, missing out on the NCAA Tournament for a second straight year and start- ing a new streak after snapping a 22-year-long one. "There was still a glimmer of hope, but we didn't deserve it," Berenson said Sunday. "I feel worse this year. Last year was the end of an era - Michigan had had a lot of momentum getting into the tournament and maybe being a regular in the tournament was taken for granted - but last year it wasn't even close ... This should have been a bounce-back year." Saturday, the Wolverines held their breath - some monitoring Twitter, the others streaming the game online - as Western Michi- gan took on North Dakota in the North Central Hockey Confer- ence consolation game. They rooted for the Broncos, who had bested them in the Great Lakes Invitational nearly four months prior, even if they didn't check the score until the bitter end. "Some guys watched the game, other guys couldn't watch the game," said senior defenseman Mac Bennett. "Eventually every- one looked on (the website) and realized what was happening. When (North Dakota) wins that game, that's it." The game was one of three Michigan needed to end in its favor in order to secure a spot in the NCAA Tournament. When the buzzer sounded and the scoreboard read 5-0 in favor of North Dakota, Michigan's season all but ended. Denver, which won the NCHC, took the 15th Pair- Wise slot from the Wolverines with its automatic bid. "That game was more impor- tant to North Dakota than West- ern Michigan," Berenson said. "I can't blame them. We're in our situation because of us." Michigan became the first team out. Sunday, Berenson held a glass mug of black coffee as he answered questions about the official end of the season, his pre- dictions for the next few weeks and the next year. He smiled when reporters asked if he would be back for another season. The could've, would've, should've of the weekend aside, he was certain of one thing. "Oh yeah, I'm back," Berenson said. "One year at a time." ARCH 21,2014 - ST. PAUL, Minn. - Zach Nagelvoort looked up in search of an explana- tion. Five other players remained on the ice of the Xcel Energy Center and GREG surveyed the GARNO stands. _______ Three members of the Penn State hockey team looked ahead at the locker room they were preparing to enter. Nearly 15 fans leaned over the railing to congratulate their team. Sophomore forward Andrew Copp looked into the near- empty stands while freshman forward Tyler Motte fixed his gaze on the ice. But Nagelvoort glanced up, first to the shot line from 92:47 of hockey that just played out. Flashed across the board, he read 65-53 in favor of the Nit- tany Lions. He looked up just a bit further, for a brief moment, to read the losing score: 2-1. Four minutes ago, Nagelvoort dropped to his knees and hung his head. He didn't turn to look for the puck. He hadn't seen it get past him anyhow. Within seconds, Nagelvoort was swarmed by his teammates around the net. Sophomore net- minder Steve Racine tapped him on the head and the 12th-ranked Wolverines huddled around him until he disappeared into a hypno wheel of maize and blue. For what could be the last time this season, Michigan shook hands before Nagelvoort went to his spot just five feet away from the exit to the locker room. The seats all but cleared, not even 10 minutes after the final horn. He looked up. Then to his left. He motione cross and bowed exited the ice. TI reset to zero. his mom to happe game -c - could have alt But it didn't. This is a team its own destinyv instead left itself that would eithe or break every la against an oppos conference wins The team that goal in the sudde time couldn't find it. Not even when Andrew Copp came from behind the net to find the loose puck and fired a backl bounced off the1 the red line. For 1.2 second tered around the and it spun with in one direction( 1.2 seconds, a set of pressure near 1.2 seconds, a set inconsistency re garded. But in 1.3 seco worth of pressur wouldn't fall wa from Penn State: Skoff to the boar "I mean, I gue gods had our bac Skoff would say. The team that find its identity,f knew what it wa mightily once m thing was preve. executing. If it really wer higher power, th d the sign of the his head as he he scoreboard ent didn't have n. Any one or one moment ered the course. that controlled weeks ago and have moved two inches and acrossthe line and the berth into the NCAA Tournament would have been all but secured. Because for 22 years, it was the case. Instead a new streak may be formed. Two years of watching, not playing, in the postseason. And the season will reset once more. f with a night e xpressionless, Nagel- r makea season, voort sits at the podium st part of it. All and looks up at the TV vent with three in front of him. Sophomore for- ward Boo Nieves answers ques- needed one tions while Nagelvoort watches n-death over- the replay of thefirst goal he allowed. He shakes a mhis head dur- "That game wasigterpy 1 ~ing the replay myfault." a nd doesn't *break his stare into the distance. It's handed shot that another reminder before his post and onto walk back to the locker room. The shocksets in now. s the puck flut- Senior defenseman Mac Ben- red goal line nett stands outside the locker out wavering room in the hallway. He has no or another. In words for how he's feeling. ason's worth He flashes back to that goal ly vanished. In that sent Nagelvoortto his knees ason's worth of - the moment that ended more ady to be disre- than 92 minutes of hockey. "That goal was my fault," nds, a season's Bennett says. "That game was e and stress that my fault.And this season might s kicked away be my fault. netminder Matt "It's out of our control now. 'ds. We've just got to sit and hope." ss the hockey Still outside the locker room, k on that play," senior forward Derek DeBlois lowers his voice. He doesn't struggled to stare up at reportersvery often. even when it "We don't know what the nted, struggled future holds at this point - it's ore. As if some- kind of out of our hands," he sting it from says. "We'll cross our fingers. Maybe say a couple prayers." re up to some It's all you can do whenf63 e puck would saves aren't enough. 144