Finally... the Great Lakes Invitational is right around the corner. And what a great holiday tradition it is. Hopefully this year will turn out a bit differently than in recent years past, and I have a feeling that it just might.
To jump right into the overview of the games and the teams...
Friday, December 29th, GLI will kick off with the Michigan State Spartans taking on the Harvard Crimson. The fun will start at 4:05. What makes this interesting is that usually Michigan Tech will take the first game on Friday, as Coach Russell likes to give his guys a lot of time to rest before their game the next day. For whatever reason though, this year MSU and the fourth team, Harvard, will be taking the early Friday game.

Leading the Crimson is scoring is freshman forward Doug Rogers, 3-7--10. The offense is pretty well scattered about, with no one Harvard player standing out too far from the rest. Other point getters for the Crimson include senior center Kevin Du (2-8--10), freshman defenseman Alex Biega (4-5--9), junior forward Jon Pelle (3-6--9), and senior right wing Ryan Maki (5-3--8).
For crease duty, we will likely be seeing senior Justin Tobe. He has played in 9 games this season and has a .893 save percentage. Tobe has only had one shutout in his career, which came last year. One thing that is interesting to note is that he played 7 games as a freshman for the Spartans in the 2002-2003 season. After Tobe is lit up, enter freshman Kyle Richter, who already has posted one shut out this season and has a .891 save percentage in 6 games.

And for Friday's evening game at 8:05 EST, we'll see Michigan Tech and Michigan going at it. Michigan, who is 12-7-0 overall (8-5-0 CCHA) is looking to win their first GLI championship in quite some time. Dangerous players to watch: senior forward TJ Hensick (7-26--33), junior forward Kevin Porter (14-17--31), and junior forward Chad Kolarik (12-13--25). UM will be losing two of their top players, Cogliano and Johnson, to World Juniors. Aw, darn.

Michigan Tech (8-8-2 overall, 5-7-2 WCHA) is not looking like much of a threat on their power plays. They have only scored on 6 of 98 power play opportunities this season, good for 59th place out of 59 Division I hockey teams, at 6.1%. A brighter spot for discussion however is the Huskies' penalty kill, which is at an impressive 88.1%, 6th in the nation.

It appears that MTU will be starting with sophomore goaltender Robby Nolan on Friday. The starter on Saturday will depend largely upon Robby's Friday performance.
GLI is usually the time of year where the Huskies start to bring their A game, though they don't normally get results until later on in the season. However, for this year, they started bringing their A game from day 1. Hopefully this year we'll get the GLI results that us Tech fans have been longing for... for many years now. If we want those results though, we're going to need the Huskies to get something together for their power play. Scoring 6 times out of 98 power plays is not going to cut it.
The losers of the two Friday games will meet during the consolation game at 4:35 on Saturday, while the championship game is at 8:05.
1 comment:
It is time for the black and gold banner to hover over the Joe. If not this year, for sure within the next 1-3 years with the recruits that Tech is bringing in. I like their chances as long as they stop the Michigan wrap around play.
Fear the wraparound.
Go Tech....
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