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Western shootout: Last-minute goal gives 'M' a sweep

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By: Ian Herbert
Daily Sports Writer
Published January 10th, 2005

“That’s a tough way to lose a game.” — Vince Bellissimo, Western Michigan forward

Ice Hockey
Junior Jeff Tambellini scored the game-winning goal against Western Michigan Friday. (MIKE HULSEBUS/Daily)
Ice Hockey
Michigan junior Brandon Kalenieki (14) netted a hat trick for the Wolverines on Saturday, including the game-winning goal with 53 seconds left to play. (JEFF LEHNERT/Daily)

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KALAMAZOO — At one point in the second period of Saturday night’s game, the Michigan hockey team was up 5-2 and seemed to have the game under wraps. But three straight goals by Western Michigan tied the two teams at five and brought the thunder-stick-laden, sell-out crowd to a new level of excitement. Both the players and the fans were anticipating the second comeback win against Michigan in the last three years.

But with 53 seconds left in the game and the score still tied, Michigan junior Brandon Kaleniecki quieted the crowd. On a power play, sophomore T.J. Hensick controlled the puck and skated around the zone. When he got to the high slot, he dumped a pass into senior forward Milan Gajic at the bottom of the left circle. Gajic’s shot attempt was stuffed by Broncos goalie Daniel Bellissimo, but the rebound slid behind Bellissimo to a waiting Kaleniecki, who slapped the puck home. The goal gave Michigan a 6-5 win and a series sweep of Western Michigan, following Friday’s 6-4 win.

“I was actually just swinging my stick,” Kaleniecki said of the game-winning goal. “I kind of was on the outside of the net.”

But the “tough way to lose” that junior Vince Bellissimo, the older of the Bellissimo brothers, was referencing was not the goal scored with less than a minute to play. It was the call by the officials to set up the goal that angered the Broncos. With the game tied and only minutes left to play, the referee, Mark Wilkins, called an obstruction-tripping penalty on Western Michigan senior defenseman Mat Ponto. Western Michigan coach Jim Culhane had no comment about the officiating, saying only that he couldn’t have been prouder of his team.

Kaleniecki’s game-winner was the final third of a hat trick for the junior. He also scored two goals in a three-minute stretch in the second period --— during which Michigan tallied four goals and took a 5-2 lead.

Kaleniecki started the scoring burst with a slap shot from the top of the right circle halfway through the period, taking a pass from senior David Moss and one-timing it passed Bellissimo. Forty seconds later, Al Montoya defended a 3-on-1 with a great save. After the long rebound, defenseman Eric Werner dished the puck up the ice to Jeff Tambellini. Tambellini brought it into the zone and sent a pass across the goal to freshman Chad Kolarik, who tipped it and then hit the puck out of the air to give Michigan its first lead of the night, 3-2.

It then took Michigan over a minute and a half to make it 4-2 — on Kaleniecki’s second goal of the night — but just another 30 seconds after that to push it to 5-2. Tambellini tallied Michigan’s fifth goal of the night off a faceoff at 14:06 in the second. Kolarik won the faceoff in the Western Michigan zone. Senior Nick Martens gathered the puck and gave it to Tambellini at the high point. Tambellini’s powerful slap shot beat Bellissimo high, glove side.

“That stretch in the second period, the opportunities were something like 32-9 and we scored four goals,” Michigan coach Red Berenson said. “It was just one of those games. We took advantage of our chances. Al gave us the big saves when we needed them, and we came out on top.”

Western Michigan out-shot the Wolverines 35-27 for the night, but Michigan was kept in the game by its ability to score at a blistering pace and the clutch play of Montoya down the stretch. The goalie let five goals into the twine but might have had his best game of the season. He made 30 saves, including one sprawling save where Montoya jumped from one end of the net to the other with 1.5 seconds left to preserve the win for Michigan.

“I was playing the angle,” Montoya said. “I saw it go wide. I just gave a last effort and came away with it.”

Montoya almost made another spectacular save on the game-tying goal, 12 minutes into the final period. He was caught out of position and Broncos forward Brent Walton slipped a nice pass through the crease. Western Michigan senior Jim McNamara — a defenseman with just two career goals coming into the weekend — delayed the shot. Montoya dove across the net and was on his stomach when McNamara netted the game-tying goal. He reached up with his glove and narrowly missed the puck.

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