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Brian

1/13/2017 – Michigan 2, Minnesota 5 – 1-4 Big Ten, 8-10-1 overall
1/14/2017 – Michigan 2, Minnesota 4 – 1-5 Big Ten, 8-11-1 overall

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[Patrick Barron]

Here are Michigan's shot margins since December started: –10, –19, –9, –16, –16, –20, –35, –19. The good news, such as it is, is that Michigan managed to win two of those games. One was against Michigan State in overtime. The other was a 2-1 win against Wisconsin before two ENGs. Michigan got outshot 35-19. This is not just bad. This is astoundingly bad.

If you prefer a grizzled hockey veteran offering up the eye test, color guys at both games this weekend were clearly upset—even depressed—about what was going on in front of their eyes. On the Minnesota-centric Fox Sports North broadcast, Ben Clymer said that "this just wasn't the same Michigan team" they're used to seeing. He was probably feeling the same way I was, having just seen the season's most exciting series—Michigan-Minnesota on the big ice—reduced to a methodical execution. I've felt that way about Michigan State, of late. It is not the same when Ryan Miller is a faint memory and the present day is all pratfalls.

I didn't catch who the BTN guy was on Friday, but I think it might have been alum Sean Ritchlin. If so his extended lament about Michigan's complete lack of a defensive system bites even deeper. No matter who it was, you don't often see that kind of pointed criticism from announcers. Usually they default to talking about how young a team is, which, yep, happened a bunch on Friday.

This is the wrong age-related malady to cite. It's inescapable now: Red Berenson's in the twilight of his career and has hung on too long.

The slide has been gradual but it's also been a long time coming. The last Michigan team that felt truly elite was the 2007-08 squad that made the Frozen Four and was downed by Nickelback and Creed in the semis. The 2010-11 team that made the national title game was driven by Sean Hunwick's absurd save percentage. The semi against North Dakota saw Michigan outshot 2 to 1; it felt worse than that. It felt like being hunted.

Hunwick barely got them to the tournament the next year and they broke the streak the year after; in the five-years post Hunwick their conference record is 44-41-8. Last year's incredible pile of talent got them to the second round of the tourney, where they were once again outshot 2 to 1 by North Dakota. Michigan hasn't played an even game against the artists formerly known as Sioux in over a decade. Now they can't play an even game against anybody.

It's never been this bad; the arrow has been pointing this direction for a long time.

----------------------------------------------

Now what? I don't know. I hope there are some tough conversations that take place and there's a new coach next year. I worry that won't happen because the narrative around the program often doesn't make any sense.

If you've paid close attention over the past few years you've seen Berenson throw Andrew Copp under the bus after his NHL departure. (Copp played 77 games his rookie year.) You've heard the rumor that Red stayed on another year because Warde Manuel asked him to. Even if this is true, Berenson could have said three words—"hire Mel, bye"—and resolved this impasse.

You'd think this would be the end of the road, but since the end of the road should have come a few years ago and did not there is a chance this will continue. You see it when a coach becomes synonymous with a program and nobody can tell him it's over. Joe Paterno and Bobby Bowden are the prime exemplars. Those regimes had upward blips that were just enough ammunition to say "he's still got it" amidst a steady long-term decline, and ending them was either a nasty fight (Bowden) or only triggered by something unthinkable (Paterno).

I think the hockey program is unlikely to dig out without a new coach; I think a nasty fight might be necessary despite Mel Pearson hanging around; I don't know if Manuel has the stomach for a nasty fight, especially at a program that doesn't drive the revenue bus. At some point a football coach has to go because of the financial imperatives. That is not the case in hockey.

Maybe this is just a one year thing, as they say it is, and a new era can start next year. But I've been hearing that a change is imminent for seven years now. I'm worried it won't happen, and that's the thing that sucks most of all: Red Berenson, the guy who created Michigan hockey out of whole cloth, might keep damaging his legacy by returning. Time makes beggars of us all.

Comments

lhglrkwg

January 16th, 2017 at 12:41 PM ^

I agree, we've been hearing Red was all but retired for at least five years now but can't Red even see now how bad it's gotten? I guess Bowden did the same thing where he rode out the vehicle he'd built until the wheels fell off

I've gotten past annoyed with the program and now it's just sad. I'm watching Red tarnish a tremendous legacy which he built from the ground floor

Wolverine Devotee

January 16th, 2017 at 12:47 PM ^

Let's get one thing straight: Vic Heyliger built Michigan Hockey.

Red brought it back. 

The silence here is defeaning. No game threads, no mentions of games. The casual fans have stopped caring and the attendance has reflected that and will continue to unless a change is made. 

It frankly feels like a chore to be watching these games, knowing what the outcome of them is going to be against teams not named MSU, the only team we're better than right now by virtue of their administration quitting on their hockey program.

Still gonna watch and go to the final Joe Louis games, but it's a sad, sad state of events when a program (PSU) that has existed for 5 years is already miles ahead of where we are right now.

Their building is also much better than the current Yost is. No one is intimidated playing at Yost anymore. 

The worst part is that Red isn't even the one coaching the team. Brian Wiseman is and Red is picking up all the Ls on his record. 

 

M Ascending

January 16th, 2017 at 12:58 PM ^

You are absolutely correct. Between 1948 and 1957, Heyliger's teams won six (6) NCs. Red won one, in '64, as a player, and we all know of the two he won in the '90s as coach. That amounts to 9 NCs, 2/3 of which came before Red ever set foot in Ann Arbor. He was a great player and coach, and he is a great Michigan Man; but he didn't invent great Michigan hockey, and his time, unfortunately, has long come and gone.

Wolverine Devotee

January 16th, 2017 at 1:08 PM ^

He left after 1962 so he didn't win one in 1964 as a player.

Point being. He should've retired many years ago. Just think of how much talent has been wasted on nothing seasons where we didn't even reach the Frozen Four much less win the thing.

Pepto Bismol

January 16th, 2017 at 1:07 PM ^

All I know from my sources is Berenson truly thought he had talent coming back.  He committed to returning at the banquet and CCM bolted shortly thereafter.  Not sure if he was misled, overly optimistic or somewhere in-between.

Regardless, whoever is currently running the team needs to stop and go away.  The lack of defensive organization is a perennial problem that this staff has proven incapable of fixing or even mitigating.  Without the upper-end offensive talent to regularly outgun opponents, they simply don't have a chance.

In reply to by Pepto Bismol

stephenrjking

January 16th, 2017 at 1:30 PM ^

Nobody could have expected Connor and Werenski to stay (Connor's performance regretably overshadowed Werenski, who from the World Juniors was scorching hot and who was not infrequently Michigan's best player on the ice, keying Michigan's offense with his incredible puck control). Compher and Motte, however, were surprising.

And they add to the list of guys that have left in the last few years that one wouldn't think really needed to. Copp was the stunner, to me. He seemed like a Jed Ortmeyer type from the moment he came to Michigan, a guts-and-glue type that would lead the team and contribute in a dozen different areas. He grew up in Ann Arbor, loved Michigan, and played like it mattered.

When he departed (also leaving, the more understandable Dylan Larkin) it was the siren telling anyone that paid attention that something wasn't right in the locker room. Compher and Motte getting out of dodge is more confirmation, to me. Either Michigan wasn't that pleasant to play for, or they just knew that without the top end talent around them they couldn't maintain their terrific production the way the team was coached. Either way, they knew it was time to go.

And Berenson wasn't prepared for it, and he's left with a team that is short on talent and short on coaching, who at three games below .500 is incredibly fortunate to even have the record that it does.

 

Yinka Double Dare

January 16th, 2017 at 2:13 PM ^

Motte leaving wasn't really that surprising if you knew how the Blackhawks felt about him, and that was before he had his monster year on the CCM line. I fully expected him to leave, given the number of slots available with the Hawks this year due to guys they had to let go due to the cap or performance. His NHL team wanted him to come out. 

And he indeed started the season on the NHL roster and was playing. Getting hurt in November kinda derailed him and he (and Schmaltz from North Dakota, who likewise left college after last year before his eligibility was up) is with the minor league squad for now to get ice time, but he'll probably be back again this year.  

stephenrjking

January 16th, 2017 at 1:10 PM ^

Ugh. I think it's worth pointing out that despite shot disparities the 2011 run to the final featured much more responsible defensive play and a team that maximized what it had on the roster. And, importantly, that Mel Pearson was on the staff of that team. A young team that lost almost all of its offensive talent should adjust its style of play, slow down the game, avoid mistakes, and try to pounce on its occasional advantages. This team appears to be playing as if Brendan Morrison and Kyle Connor are still on the roster. It's interesting that the Hunwick run began with an injury to Bryan Hogan that many thought was the end of Michigan's tournament streak. After all, Hogan was often peppered with good shots and Hunwick was just a guy we signed to be a career backup. Instead, Michigan transformed its play style in front of Hunwick, won the CCHA tourney, and went on a solid 2.25 year run. I wonder if Hogan's injury gave Mel the ability to tell Red that they needed to adapt.

lhglrkwg

January 16th, 2017 at 2:39 PM ^

IIRC the Michigan defense in 2011 was rough and constantly left Hogan out to dry. When Hunwick came in (I wanna say they beat Notre Dame 4-0 that night), it was like the defense finally figured out they couldn't just leave their goalie out to dry. They played in spired defense and Hunwick did Hunwick things. The pinnacle of that change was the feverish defensive stand against the Invincible Fighting Sioux - which is and will remain one of my all-time Michigan victories

BlueMan80

January 16th, 2017 at 1:14 PM ^

I've stopped following M Hockey this season.  Too painful to watch.

Red Berenson is a true Michigan man.  He's an ambassador for Michigan.  He's built a scholarship endowment for the hockey program so everyone can get a full ride on tuition.  He's a champion of college hockey as a path to the NHL.   It's sad things are coming to an end with a whimper instead of a bang.   I can only hope the best for him, but he needs to take a hard look at things and decide if he wants to hang around for one more year to bring back the echoes.

JWG Wolverine

January 16th, 2017 at 1:40 PM ^

My Michigan Hockey season has really come to an end. Which is painful because I am more of a Michigan Hockey fan than a Michigan Basketball fan. Basketball isn't that great of a backup, may have to wait until Softball season.....



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big john lives on 67

January 16th, 2017 at 1:45 PM ^

So M is about excellence in name only now?

Serious concerns about Manuel right now. He is mailing it in. He needs to step up. Just letting Berenson go like this is an abdication.

As was his ridiculous statement after the officiating debacle in Columbus.



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stephenrjking

January 16th, 2017 at 2:10 PM ^

"Mailing it in" because a program legend has continued to coach for a year when Manuel came in a couple of months before he had to decide to re-up?

The Manuel hate is absolutely absurd at this point. He's been on the job for a year and people are expecting him to set the world on fire. Most of the stuff he has continued to do has been the stuff that Hackett did. 

Wait for him to actually do something that's bad. 

trueblueintexas

January 16th, 2017 at 2:54 PM ^

Tired of waiting for what? And what should he be doing that he is not doing? I'm legitimately asking.

I hear and read plently of people saying he should be doing something, but I have yet to read or hear of an actual example or specific thing. Please share what it is Warde could do today or tomorrow which would ease your concern and make you no longer feel like you would be waiting for something.

big john lives on 67

January 16th, 2017 at 3:33 PM ^

Fix hockey
Fix men'a basketball
Fix soccer
Fix our unbalanced football schedule
Back up your football coach and take any kind of action to prevent the Columbus debacle
At least trying to do something to improve any one thing above.

Orientation is over. Let's go. Thank goodness Hackett didn't take this long to react.



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Bando Calrissian

January 16th, 2017 at 3:35 PM ^

Fix hockey is an offseason project

Fix basketball is an offseason project

Fix soccer, well, whatever

Fix football schedule is probably impossible for a while

Preventing bad officiating is not something an Athletic Director can do, nor was there anything tangible that would have come out of "backing up" Harbaugh. It happened, M lost. That's sports.

So, OK.

trueblueintexas

January 16th, 2017 at 4:12 PM ^

Let's just focus on "Fix Hockey" out of your list of tasks for Manuel.

Fix Hockey - I'm assuming this means getting a new coach other than himself. 

Is your preference for Manuel to fire Berenson today?

Should Manuel make Red coach harder?

Should he offer Pearson so much money he is willing to quit coaching Michigan Tech mid-season and report to Ann Arbor immediately before this weekends games? Would you want a coach that quits on his team because another team offers a lot of money in the middle of a season?

Should Warde make a public statement that Red is not living up to Michigan standards so he will no longer be coaching Michigan next year? What goal and purpose would making this statement make?

Please, provide details as to what you want Warde to do that you know he is not doing when it comes to fixing Michigan Hockey.

trueblueintexas

January 16th, 2017 at 5:25 PM ^

The majority of fans (especially with the retrospective of this current season) would agree Red should have been let go at the end of last season.  But the reality is, Red is the coach this season. Again, I ask, is there a specific action you want Warde to do now that he is not currently doing? Or is this really about being upset it wasn't done last season?

big john lives on 67

January 16th, 2017 at 8:03 PM ^

Should have made the move last year. As I said before, season is over. Sit him down and announce the retirement now. Start compiling the options for replacement. That way all possible candidates know now.

Warde has found the cafeteria and knows the way to the restroom. Time to get something done.



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trueblueintexas

January 16th, 2017 at 8:53 PM ^

If the rumors are true, Red was ready to retire last year, then Manuel and Red probably have already talked before the season started. Red has publicaly stated he does not want a farewell tour to collect rocking chairs. Making a public statement would turn the rest of the season into exactly that. The team is probably aware also. So what gain does making a public announcement bring when it would go against the coach's request and take the focus off of the team? Regarding the list, no one outside of the AD's office knows if a list is made or not. But many coaches (like Harbaugh) ask not to be contacted until after the season is over. So Warde very well may have to wait until April to have serious discussions with Mel Pearson or any other college coach. He certainly couldn't make his intentions public without upsetting the coach he is trying to hire.

big john lives on 67

January 16th, 2017 at 9:47 PM ^

The most important thing is what is best for the program. A retirement announcement sends the message to all available that the job will be open with no question. Also sends the message to recruits that action will be taken to right the ship. If he was asked to stay on, that is an even bigger mistake on the part of the AD. We should not have done that to the poor guy. Kicking the can down the road while the players and the program suffer. Not good. Not in keeping with the pursuit of excellence that our great university supposedly always pursues.



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Wolverine Devotee

January 16th, 2017 at 9:53 PM ^

Well, whatever?

This is not MSU.

We care about all of our sports and want to win championships in EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THEM.

And we have for the most part. He was hired to do this job for all sports, not just the ones you watch. 

Men's Lax is another he'll have the make a hire in. The hires are piling up so he should've manned up and got Hockey and M Soccer done already. Because he failed to do so, Hockey is going through what's going to be the worst season in over 30 years and M Soccer has to suffer another season playing in ashes of what was burned down.

He's being paid big dollars to make big decisions. He should actually, you know, start making them. I've never heard of a job having a year long orientation.

bronxblue

January 16th, 2017 at 5:48 PM ^

But the argument put forth is to fix it now, as if firing coaches in the middle of the year, fixing soccer in some indeterminate way, and convincing the B1G to tell two other schools to screw off and change scheduling are simple. If UM was willing to eat two rood games in a row, I'm guessing MSU would be fine switching schedules. But I don't hear anyone hear calling for that. Instead, we expect rivals to say "oh yeah, your AD, who was an asshole, screwed up. Let's help your pompous asses set it right."

Alton

January 17th, 2017 at 11:07 AM ^

The "cadence" doesn't really matter in a 2-game series. 

In 2018, Michigan had 6 home and 4 road games on the schedule.

In 2019, Michigan had 4 home and 5 road games on the schedule.

It's pretty obvious that if you're scheduling a home-and-home for 2018 & 2019, you would want the road game in 2018 and the home game in 2019.  And that's what he did.

pescadero

January 17th, 2017 at 8:12 AM ^

"And what should he be doing that he is not doing?"


Should not have brought Red back this year.

Should have commented publicly on OSU officiating.

Should be fighting B1G about football scheduling issues.

Shouldn't have made stupid comments about night games.

 

He hasn't been horrible, but he has been rather meh.

Blue Balls Afire

January 16th, 2017 at 1:53 PM ^

Yeah, I saw one of the MN games, and . . . ouch.  It looked like five guys were thrown on the ice together for the first time in front of a backup goalie.  The team does nothing well and looked confused most of the time.  I'm no hockey expert so this is just my untrained eye, but they don't look like they've been coached!

big john lives on 67

January 16th, 2017 at 1:59 PM ^

Spent over $100 for my family to see the Tech game in the GLI. My daughter goes to Tech now so we have a little hockey rivalry. After the game my daughter felt so bad she tried to comfort me instead of talk trash. It was like watching an ant who lost all but one of his legs try to escape an ant lion.



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taut

January 16th, 2017 at 2:10 PM ^

I caught some of the second Minnesota game on TV, watching with my son who plays on a not-so-good JV hockey team in high school. Even he noticed that on one of the Minnesota goals there were three Michigan players standing around the crease as Minnesota scored. His HS coach is always yelling "Body!" when the opponent is right in front of the net, but he's coaching kids who were playing low level travel or even house hockey a year or two ago. To see Michigan players committing the same error is jarring.

Bando Calrissian

January 16th, 2017 at 2:22 PM ^

With all this time letting Red tank the program out of loyalty, it just means less time for Mel to fix it.

Mel's already 57. Could have locked him down at 50-52 and had five more years, instead of bringing him on when he's pushing 60 and has maybe 10 years left before things approach Red II territory.

Alton

January 17th, 2017 at 11:20 AM ^

Red at least deserves a successor whom he won't consider a personal slap in the face, not to mention that Rico either is a decidedly unpleasant individual, or at least he pretends that he is while behind the bench.  I think the game has kind of passed Rico by, as well.

My dark-horse candidate would be Danton Cole, coach of the U-17 USNDTP team.  I would have no idea if he would be interested, but he obviously has experience coaching NHL-bound players and would have some incredibly good recruiting contacts all over the nation, including in the less-targeted warm weather states.

Yes, I know he's a Sparty, but I think Michigan can make a good case to him.  If he had been hanging on waiting for Anastos to leave Munn, I think the writing's on the wall that they aren't doing anything about that situation any time soon.

 

Save Us Mel

January 19th, 2017 at 10:26 AM ^

You lost me at "Yes, I know he's a Sparty."  If we were a lower level program that had to take a risk or if someone like Mel isn't interested, maybe I could get past the Sparty thing.  We can attract candidates on the same level as Cole, so being a Sparty is a disqualifier for me.

UMProud

January 16th, 2017 at 2:22 PM ^

Why is this okay with the hockey team but would be unacceptable for football? Warde needs a strategy of excellence for all the programs. Red has done a good job in the past but everyone needs to move on at some point. Ridiculous we keep seeing the same shit the past few years it's like ground hog day.