Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

More than a title to skate for

Badgers seek payback against Michigan State

- Mark Stewart

MADISON – The buildup to this week has been immense everywhere but where you’d expect it most.

The Wisconsin men’s hockey team is all about its dailies, as coach Mike Hastings likes to say, so he did his best to keep the thoughts of a worstto-first turnaround that have simmered for his team the past few weeks on the backburner as long as possible.

It wasn’t until Monday that he brought up the prospect of winning a Big Ten championsh­ip.

“I know it’s boring hearing it from us, but it is true: The group has kind of stayed present,” he said. “That is why I think they’re in the situation they are.”

Fourth-ranked Wisconsin (24-8-2, 15-6-1 – 47 points Big Ten) faces No. 6 Michigan State (21-8-3, 15-5-2 – 49) at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the Kohl Center. Two wins in regulation or one win in regulation and one in overtime would give the Badgers the championsh­ip outright, the first league title for the program since 2021. Two overtime wins would give them at least a share of the title.

Michigan State needs only one more win to wrap up its first conference title since winning the CCHA championsh­ip in 2001.

In November, Michigan State swept Wisconsin when the Badgers were fresh off a three-week run of six straight wins over ranked teams that included Big Ten favorites Minnesota and Michigan.

The chance for redemption has been more than three months in the making.

“We marked this one on our calendar and early on I think we were hoping it would come down to this weekend,” Badgers senior David Silye said. “It’s something you wish for and kind of fun playing as a player. We’re excited. We learned a lot, but the base thing for us is that we owe them one.”

Here’s what the Badgers need to do to win the Big Ten title.

Handle the pressure, control the puck

Michigan State defeated then topranked UW, 4-2, on Nov. 17 and 3-2 on Nov. 18. If you take away an empty-net goal by the Spartans in Game 1, the contests were one-goal affairs.

The Spartans, however, scored first in both games, never allowed Wisconsin to hold the lead and had a plus-eight advantage in shots on goal in the second game.

Hastings admitted the Spartans set the tone for the series with their pressure on both ends of the ice. That can’t happen again.

“It was one of the first teams that kind of put it to us a bit and we learned and we grew from that,” Hastings said.

The offense continues to show its depth

In addition to simply bouncing back from a sweep by Ohio State, the positive developmen­t for UW last week at Penn State was the depth of its scoring. The Badgers dressed 20 skaters for the series. Fourteen scored at least one point. Six had a multi-point series.

The Badgers power play also converted on three of 11 chances (27%), a promising developmen­t considerin­g UW was 0 for 8 on the power play at Michigan State.

Leading the way was the No. 1 line of Silye, sophomore Cruz Lucius and senior Mathieu De St. Phalle. The three combined for five goals and six assists at Penn State.

On Saturday, sophomore Christian Fitzgerald snapped a three-game stretch without a point with one goal and one assist in a 3-2 overtime win over the Nittany Lions.

“Those are guys that we were looking forward to being leaders for us offensivel­y and defensivel­y,” Hastings said in regard to his top line and Fitzgerald. “They play in every situation, top-six role, power play, penalty kill. And when those guys are going and you supplement that with Carson Bantle and some of the others … when that happens we’re a much better team and we can have depth scoring.”

Make home ice a true advantage

Wisconsin is 18-1-2 in games when it scores first. That mark is 5-0-1 when scoring first against ranked teams. The challenge for UW has been making that happen consistent­ly. There have been 10 other occasions versus ranked teams when the Badgers gave up the first goal.

With a sellout or near-sellout crowd on hand, the situation is ripe for Wisconsin to take advantage of being at home provided it gives the crowd something to be excited about.

 ?? DAVE KALLMANN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? David Silye and his linemates accounted for five goals and six assists in Wisconsin's two-game sweep of Penn State last weekend.
DAVE KALLMANN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL David Silye and his linemates accounted for five goals and six assists in Wisconsin's two-game sweep of Penn State last weekend.

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