Page 8-- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 5, 1989 6 M' icers take GLI after 5-goal spree BY MIKE GILL SPECIAL TO THE DAILY DETROIT - Sources close to the the Hollywood scene report that veteran actor Karl Malden has been contacted to again portray a hockey coach as he did when he played Herb Brooks of the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team. This time he would play Michigan coach Red Berenson in the sequel, "Miracle on Ice II: the GLI Experience." The Wolverines won the Great Lakes Invitational, held at the Joe Louis Arena Dec. 29 and 30, as Todd Brost led a furious and frentic come- from-behind victory over North Dakota, 6-5, in double overtime of the championship game. With 5:57 remaining in the second overtime session, junior forward Mike Moes gained control of the puck, crossed center ice, and moved into the Fighting Sioux's zone. Faking wide, Moes sent the puck between the legs of defensman Russ Parent, before burying it past goaltender Chris Dixon for the win. "I was going to go wide with it nd wait for someone to come in," Moes said. "But the defenseman stood right in front of me. I was like 'Oh, man.' I had nothing else to do but fake outside and go inside. He went for the outside move, and I just stepped around him and went in. I just let it rip, and it had all kinds of open room." IT WAS Michigan's first GLI championship since 1975 and the first physical proof that Berenson has to point to as a sign of the program's turnaround since he took over five years ago. "We just quit skating," North Dakota coach John Gasparini said. "I guess we can't handle prosperity." Michigan reached the final by Michigan's Mike Moes, shown here against Michigan State, championship game of the Great Lakes Invitational. ROBIN LOZNAK/Daily scored the game-winning goal against North Dakota in the defeating Michigan Tech, 7-3, the night before. Fourteenth-ranked North Dakota solidified its slot in the final by upending the nation's top team, Michigan State, by the same score. The Wolverines fell behind, 5-1, after two periods thanks in part to Lee Davidson's hat trick. The score stayed that way for six minutes into the third period. Then the comeback began. "This game is hard to believe," Berenson said. "You never know what's gonna happen, you never really know. It's 5-1, there's no chance that anybody should really come back and win a game like this." BUT THE Wolverines did. Kent Brothers started the comeback with his fifth goal of the year and second of the tournament at the 6:38 mark of the third period. He tapped in a rebound in front of the net from the right side. Todd Brost and Jeff Urban assisted. "Give the barrell a kick and everybody just wanted to win," Brothers said of the goal. Myles O'Connor added, "We knew once we got that first one, we'd get a little momentum, and we got it early enough that we were able to build on it." Eighteen seconds after North Dakota was penalized for too many men on the ice, Rob Brown scored from Todd Copeland and Mike Moes to make it a 5-3 game at the 9:05 mark. "The power-play goal was a big goal, and then we got something going and then we got another one and then there was some hope," the somewhat rambling, excited Berenson said afterwards. "The third goal really put us over the hump," Brost said, who was named tournament MVP. "If they would get it it's a four goal game. If we get it it's a two goal game. That was the big one." What was left of the 19,763 who paid to see the action now started to rally behind Michigan, as the Wolverines continued to apply the pressure. WITH 4:04 remaining Brost scored off Urban's rebound to cut the lead to one and 10 seconds later he scored again, this time whacking in a Denny Felsner rebound. The Michigan bench was in bedlam along with the rest of Joe Louis Arena. "When Brosty scored our fourth goal, I thought, 'Now we are right there,"' Berenson said. "The momentum had changed. I had a feeling they couldn't score because Warren (Sharples) wasn't going to let them score." Sharples, who was extremely susceptible in the second period, when Dakota scored three times in 61 seconds, came up big time and time again the rest of the third period and two extra sessions, finishing with 28 saves. "We got a little angry with ourselves between the second and third period and decided we were just gonna come out and work our butts off come hell or high water, and look up at the clock at the end of the game and see where we stood," Sharples said. "I'm just darn glad that I was able to help out and everyone contributed." And when they looked up, they had accomplished the unexpected, the so-called miracle on ice. Higgins Continued from Page 1 Frieder sees the suspension of his oft-troubled sophomore as being a lesson to Higgins to straighten out his priorities. "Any great organization has discipline. We've always had that," Frieder said. Frieder's teams in the past have often been criticized for their lack of discipline. "Sometimes you have to let the kids know their priorities are important. If they sway from those, they have to suffer the consequences," Frieder continued. "We may lose a game or two because of it, but in the long run the suspension is the best for the team." In addition to, missing the Big Ten opener, Higgins sat out against Holy Cross and Alaska-Anchorage last week in the Utah Basketball Classic. Alaska-Anchorage, last year's Division II runner-up, handed the Wolverines their first loss of the year, 70-66, as Michigan was unable to score down the stretch. "We would have won the game with Sean playing because he would have scored some points for us," Frieder said. Higgins' suspension came on the heels of two-game suspensions of sophomores Kirk Taylor and Demetrius Calip. The two were suspended by Frieder for games against Northern Michigan and Youngstown State because they had not completed all of their coursework. "We suspended Calip and Taylor even though they didn't do anything wrong. They just didn't get their assignments in when I told them to, and I didn't want to wait until the last minute to see if they would be eligible," Frieder said. "I just wanted them to be able to concentrate on their academics, which they did." Blue Banter - The Wolverines enter the Big Ten season resembling a M*A*S*H unit more than a basketball team. Rumeal Robinson has a bruised knee, Terry Mills strained his rib muscles, and Rob Pelinka chipped one tooth and had a second one knocked out. - Frieder is unsure as to who he will start Saturday against Northwestern. Mills, Glen Rice, and Mark Hughes will start up front, with the other two spots still in the air. Hughes earned a starting spot after scoring a career-high 23 points against Holy Cross in Utah. - Michigan had a 3-1 record over vacation ht fell to eventh in the * 01