April
7, 2008
NCAA Tournament
Frozen Four Capsules | Second Semifinal
Thurs., April 10 • Denver, Colo. •
9
p.m. ET •
ESPN2
First
Semifinal Capsules
MICHIGAN
WOLVERINES | East Regional Champion
Location:
Ann Arbor, Mich.
Record: 33-5-4 (20-4-4 CCHA, first)
Qualified: CCHA tournament champions
NCAA Championships: Nine (1948, 1951, 1952,
1953, 1955, 1956, 1964, 1996, 1998)
NCAA Appearance: 30th (most recent, 2007)
Frozen Four Appearance: 23rd (most recent,
2003)
Head Coach: Gordon “Red” Berenson
Key Players: Kevin Porter, F, Sr. (42 GP,
33-29—62); Chad Kolarik, F, Sr. (38 GP, 28-26—54);
Mark Mitera, D, Jr. (42 GP, 2-21—23); Max Pacioretty,
F, Fr. (36 GP, 15-23—38); Billy Sauer, G, Jr. (30-4-3,
1.89, .927)
What You Need to Know: The
Wolverines have simply been the best team in the nation
all season long and enter this championship weekend as the
prohibitive favorite. It's been 10 years since the Wolverines
last won a national championship (1998 in Boston), which
was also the last time they won a game at the Frozen Four.
They were bounced in the semifinals of three straight Frozen
Fours in 2001, 2002, and 2003.
Gamebreaker: Chad Kolarik
is one of two senior leaders among the forwards for Michigan
and is a perfect sidekick for Kevin Porter on Michigan's
top line. He has big-game ability, evidenced by a pair of
four-goal performances this season at Western Michigan and
home against Lake Superior State. He started Michigan's
postseason run with a hat trick in the CCHA quarterfinals
against Nebraska-Omaha and then had five assists on five
Wolverine goals in the NCAA Regional win over Niagara.
Achilles Heel: An observation
uttered during the most recent INCH podcast was that "Michigan
is the only team in the tournament without an Achilles Heel"
and it's absolutely true. Skeptics at one point would have
pointed at inconsistent goaltending in big games through
the first two years of Billy Sauer's career but he's answered
all questions this season with 30 wins and a 10-3-2 record
in games against teams that qualified for the NCAA Tournament.
Overachiever: It's probably
not the traditional view, to name the nation's best player
as an overachiever, but it's meant as an absolutely huge
compliment to Kevin Porter. The likely Hobey Baker winner
gets the most out of his natural ability. He's not blessed
with blazing speed, intimidating size and strength, or drop-your-jaw
skill. He makes up for it with hockey sense, hard work,
and outstanding two-way play.
Secret Weapon: Michigan's
defense corps is led by junior Mark Mitera, an All-America
candidate and INCH's Defenseman of the Year. The rest of
the group is comprised of freshmen and sophomores and they
have done a nice job of limiting scoring chances against
and playing a simple game that includes moving the puck
out of its end quickly and clearing rebounds in front of
goalie Billy Sauer.
Speed: It's no longer a surprise
for Michigan to see some of its players leave the team for
a few weeks in the middle of the season to play at the World
Junior Championship tournament, but it is surprising when
a player laces up the skates for Sweden at that event. Left
wing Carl Hagelin was that player this season, and earned
a silver medal for that team at the event. In the college
ranks, the speedster has 20 points on 10 goals and 10 assists.
Skill: Aaron Palushaj is
one of Michigan's very talented freshman forwards and finds
himself on the top power-play unit. He's got great hands,
great vision, and makes the passes that set up great scoring
chances for the likes of Porter, Kolarik, and Max Pacioretty.
At even strength, he plays on an all-freshman line with
Matt Rust and Carl Hagelin. Pacioretty is another very skilled
player. Don't be fooled by his big frame and constant residence
in front of the net. His hands are excellent, and a big
reason for his 15 goals this year.
Grit: Freshman forward
Matt Rust plays an in-your-face style and is one of the
toughest players on the ice for the Wolverines. His 69 penalty
minutes leads Michigan, but that's not what makes him gritty.
He broke a bone in his leg late in the season and only missed
one weekend, the CCHA quarterfinal series versus Nebraska-Omaha.
| Most
Recent Michigan Line Chart |
| Left
Wing |
Center |
Right
Wing |
Notes |
| 39-M.
Pacioretty |
11-K.
Porter |
24-C.
Kolarik |
Pacioretty, Porter, and Kolarik
combined for 16 points in the regional wins over Niagara
and Clarkson. |
| 12-C.
Hagelin |
19-M.
Rust |
8-A.
Palushaj |
| 16-B.
Winnett |
29-L.
Caporusso |
9-T.
Turnbull |
| 26-D.
Fardig |
18-T.
Miler |
22-B.
Naurato |
| Defense |
Defense |
Goalies |
| 17-M.
Mitera |
3-S.
Vaughan |
36-B.
Sauer |
Scooter
Vaughan missed the win over Niagara, but returned for
the Clarkson game. |
| 4-C.
Summers |
24-T.
Llewellyn |
35-B.
Hogan |
| 7-C.
Langlais |
5-S.
Kampfer |
31-S.
Hunwick |
NOTRE
DAME FIGHTING IRISH | West Regional Champion
Location:
Notre Dame, Ind.
Record: 26-15-4 (15-9-4 CCHA, fourth)
Qualified: At-large bid
NCAA Championships: None
NCAA Appearance: Third (most recent, 2007)
Frozen Four Appearance: First
Head Coach: Jeff Jackson
Key Players: Ryan Thang, F, So. (45 GP,
13-17—30, 7 PPG, 5 GWG); Mark Van Guilder, F, Sr.
(45 GP, 12-17—29, 7 PPG); Kyle Lawson, D, So. (43
GP, 5-20—25); Jordan Pearce, G, Jr. (22-14-4, 1.95
GAA, .917 sv. pct.)
What You Need To Know: By
now, you all know the Fighting Irish are the new kids on
the Frozen Four block. How new? Well, this is Notre Dame's
first Frozen Four appearance ever. By comparison, the three
other teams in this year's field — Boston College,
Michigan, and North Dakota — have combined for 62
trips to the Frozen Four. And 2008 marked the school's third
NCAA tournament appearance, compared to a combined 82 national
playoff appearances for the Eagles, Wolverines, and Fighting
Sioux.
Gamebreaker: Would you believe
the Fighting Irish player who may make the biggest impact
is a senior defenseman who’s scored 32 points in 159
career games? You should, because whenever the opposition
rolls its top line out for a shift, there's a strong chance
they’ll have to deal with Brock Sheahan. The Lethbridge,
Alberta native wasn’t among the three finalists for
CCHA Defensive Defenseman of the Year, but he should’ve
been. Plus-minus numbers have to be taken with a grain of
salt, for sure, but Sheahan leads the Irish at plus-23;
he was plus-14 in conference games. He was named to the
All-NCAA West Regional team for his efforts in Colorado
Springs, including an assist and a plus-3 showing against
New Hampshire.
Achilles Heel: Perhaps that
heading should read Achilles Knee, because a knee injury
is what's kept junior forward Erik Condra, Notre Dame's
leading scorer in each of the last three seasons, on the
shelf since a 2-1 win over Ferris State in the rubber match
of the Fighting Irish's best-of-three CCHA quarterfinal
series March 16. Though Notre Dame emerged from its scoring
slump in the NCAA West Regional two weekends ago, Condra's
playmaking skill — as the right wing on a line with
sophomores Kevin Deeth and Ryan Thang, he racked up a team-high
23 assists — and power-play prowess will be missed.
Overachiever: As the team
captain with 97 career points to his credit, Mark Van Guilder
has done more than find his way into the lineup, his goal
upon joining the Fighting Irish program as a walk-on in
2004-05. After a serviceable three-goal, eight-point effort
in 38 games as a freshman, Van Guilder blossomed, scoring
26 points as a sophomore and 34 points (including 18 goals)
as a junior. His output has dipped to 29 points this season,
but the Roseville, Minn., product had arguably the best
weekend of his college career in Colorado Springs two weekends
ago, earning NCAA West Regional Most Outstanding Player
honors after scoring a goal and three assists in wins against
New Hampshire and Michigan State. Rarely, if ever, is Van
Guilder the most talented player on the ice, but also rare
are the occasions in which he's outworked or outsmarted.
Secret Weapon: It's hard
to think of a guy who ranks sixth in the nation with a 1.95
goals against average and someone who's just the fourth
goaltender in school history to record 20 wins in a season
as a secret weapon. But while you've heard chatter about
the veteran (Lamoureux), the rookie (Muse), and the breakout
goalie (Sauer), you don't hear many people talking about
junior Jordan Pearce. His statistics in his first season
as starter are indeed impressive — he's 22-14-4 with
a .917 save percentage — but it's his play over the
last two months that is even more remarkable. In 17 straight
starts since Jan. 25, the Anchorage native is 8-6-3 with
a 1.86 goals against average and a .925 save percentage.
The Fighting Irish averaged a shade better than two goals
per contest during that span.
Speed: The Fighting Irish
aren’t known for their wheels, but they do boast a
roster full of quick learners, namely freshman forward Ben
Ryan and rookie blueliner Ian Cole. Ryan, who grew up about
15 minutes from Ann Arbor in Brighton, Mich., has been Notre
Dame’s steadiest offensive performer as of late, scoring
at least one point in seven of the team’s last eight
games. Cole, an Ann Arbor native, leads Fighting Irish defensemen
with eight goals. He’s scored 12 of his 18 points
in Notre Dame’s last 16 games.
Skill: After enduring a mid-season
slump during which he scored just one goal and two points
in 13 games between Dec. 8-Feb. 9, sophomore defenseman
Kyle Lawson has played the style of hockey lately that makes
him one of the most versatile rearguards in the nation and
Notre Dame’s most dangerous scoring threat from the
blue line. Lawson, an assistant captain on the U.S. team
that won a bronze medal at the 2007 World Junior Championship,
is finishing the year in much the same way he started —
he scored 14 points in his first 19 games, and has nine
points in his last 11 appearances.
Grit: Is it possible for
a tandem from a Catholic university to be considered gritty
if one of the guys is named Christian? That question aside,
the point is that going up against forwards Garrett Regan
and Christian Hanson is like climbing a barbed-wire fence
— you might make it to the other side, but you’ll
have a few souvenirs to remember the trip. Hanson is a behemoth
at 6-foot-4 and 225 pounds who’s good in the tight
spaces around the cage as evidenced by his 13 goals, four
of which have come in Notre Dame’s last three games.
Regan, who scored 26 points last season but has just 13
points this year, is a feisty, 5-foot-11, 200-pound fireplug.
| Most
Recent Notre Dame Line Chart |
| Left
Wing |
Center |
Right
Wing |
Notes |
| 33-G.
Regan |
25-C.
Hanson |
9-R.
Thang |
Of
the 19 skaters who played in the two wins in Colorado
Springs, 15 of them earned at least one point on the
weekend. |
| 16-D.
Kissel |
21-K.
Deeth |
18-E.
Rankin |
| 22-C.
Ridderwall |
10-J.
White |
27-R.
Guentzel |
| 15-C.
Minella |
19-B.
Ryan |
23.
M. Van Guilder |
| Defense |
Defense |
Goalies |
| 28-I.
Cole |
2-K.
Lawson |
1-J.
Pearce |
The
Fighting Irish have scored a total of 18 goals in their
15 losses this season. |
| 14-B.
Sheahan |
5-T.
Ruth |
30-B.
Phillips |
| 3-B.
Blatchford |
4-D.
VeNard |
31-T.
O'Brien |