[1] The team was convened for the first time after returning from the winter break and the initial practice was conducted by assistant athletic director George Little while the school searched for a full-time head coach.
Eddie Kahn teamed with MacDuff to hold back the Badgers' attack and also ended up scoring the first goal in the history of the program at the 10-minute mark of the opening period.
Play picked up during the pair of 5-minute overtime periods and near the end of the first extra session, Michigan found itself down to just 2 skaters when MacDuff, Kahn and Anderson were all serving penalties.
That trend continued in the fourth and final game with Wisconsin and ended up costing the Wolverines, who were shutout for the first time in their history.
Switching Beresford and Kahn to give the forwards some needed speed didn't help and the long goal given up by Comb was enough to end their winning streak but still left Michigan as the victors in the season series.
[11] During the exam break, the team played one game against a very strong Notre Dame outfit and finally saw the offense show some signs of life.
Kahn and Henderson both scored to give the Wolverines a pair of 1-goal leads but Michigan was unable to hold onto either and fell to the Irish 2–3.
With Lindstrom out of the lineup, MacDuff did his best to give them a show by opening the scoring but it was the Gopher captain, Frank Pond, who was the star of the game.
After returning from the break in play, Michigan seemed to find a second wind and charged out of the gate, attacking the Minnesota cage mercilessly.
Early on, things looked good as Michigan opened the scoring while Kahn and MacDuff held back the Irish in the first period.