: The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I January4, 2012 ERIN KIRKLAND/Daily Junior forward Chris Brown hoists junior forward Luke Moffatt in celebration after Michigan's overtime victory over Michigan State to claim its second consecutive Great Lakes Invitational championship at Joe Louis Arena on Friday. By MATT SLOVIN in sudden-death overtime when Daily Sports Editor a miscalculation or wrong guess would've sent the MacInnes Cup DE'hIT -=n a hockey game to Eastawing.Instead, it will for the ages, there are bound to remain at Yost Ice Arena for the be valiant efforts that get bur- fourth time in five years. ied in a pile of game changers. There was senior defenseman The Michigan hockey team's 3-2 Greg Pateryn's dominating per- overtime thriller against Michi- formance from the point, rifling gan State was no exception. shots in at Spartan netminder There was fifth-year senior Drew Palmisano. For much of the goaltender Shawn Hunwick and game, it appeared the Wolverines his 23 saves, four of them coming would fall victim to a hot goalie, as the Joe Louis Arena score- board showed a goose egg for the "visitors" until midway through the final frame. "Palmisano played great tonight," said junior forward A.J. Treais. "The game could've went either way." Pateryn also blocked four shots at the other end, each one from a more threatening position on the ice than the last. But one play won't soon be forgotten by any of the 17,242 spectators who filled the arena and grew louder by the minute, realizing they were witnessing something special. Just over halfway through the overtime period - and with the way each goaltender rose to the occasion, it looked like there may be multiple - junior defenseman Lee Moffie found himself inside of the circle with the puck. Palmisano's eyes fixated on Moffie, the same focus he dis- played throughout the tourna- ment. But he was screened on thefar post. Palmisano didn't see sophomore defenseman Kevin Clare sneaking toward the net. Moffie did. The pass he sent goal- ward allowed Clare to tap in the winner with ease. "Moffie made a great play," Clare said Friday. "Thank God it got to me, because if that got poked, it's an odd-man rush down. Thankfully, he got the puck to me and - open net." In a span of just a few seconds, Clare Lent frog unsung defense- man to instant hero and tourna- ment MVP, buried under a dog pile of maize and blue bodies. The game-winning goal was just his second-career tally. Michigan coach Red Beren- son thought the up-tempo pace in overtime with few stoppages See CLARE, Page 3B Burke's stellar performance puts 'M' past Golden Gophers Freshman forward Travis Lynch smiles after a goal in the championship game of the Great Lakes Invitational. Playing Berenson's brand of hockey at the Joe TODD NEEDLE/Daily Freshman guard Trey Burke's career-high 27 points lifted Michigan to its second conference victory. By NEAL ROTHSCHILD DailySportsEditor The Michigan men's basketball team's first few minutes of the 2012 season went much like MINNESOTA 56 the Mayans MICHIGAN 61 predicted for the year - a catastrophe. But Trey Burke made sure the game didn't continue inthatdirection. The freshman point guard scored a career-high 27 points as the Wolverines took down visiting Minnesota, 61-56 Sunday after- noon. Burke scored 16 of those points in the second half, find- ing success by penetrating on the pick-and-roll against a slow Golden Gopher defense. "Everybody on our team is look- ing for what is their best shot," said Michigan coach JohnBeilein. "And (Trey) tooksomegreatones, andhe took the ball to the basket and fin- ished very well. His explosion, off a ball screen ... it's tough for anybody to catch him." But even Burke's best perfor- mance yet couldn't stop Minnesota (0-2 BigTen, 12-3 overall) fromgiv- ing Michigan a scare in the final minute. Down59-56with 35seconds left, Minnesota forward Rodney Wil- liams put up a 3-pointer but found iron. Michigan redshirt sophomore center Jordan Morgan grabbed the rebound and senior guard Zack Novak made two free throws to ice See BURKE, Page 3B By MATT SLOVIN Daily Sports Editor DETROIT- Michigan coach Red Berenson said this year's Great Lakes Invitational field was possibly the deepest he could remember, with the other three teams coming in a com- bined 31-21-3. And his team needed to win the tournament in order to even begin thinking about a bigger one. Wins haven'tcome easysofar this season for the Wolverines. They've faced trials and tribula- tions that have left even the most optimistic of fans wondering if that 21-year NCAA Tourna- ment streak might be in jeopardy. The infamous Upper Peninsula brawl in the game against MATT Northern SLOVIN Michigan bruised goaltender Shawn Hunwick and company's egos en route to earn- ing just one point in the team's first CCHA series of the season. Against Miami (Ohio), the Wolverines had an equally hid- eous weekend. When Michigan needed its senior leaders the most, they were conspicuously absent, shelving the Wolverines further down the conference standings. That weekend was followed by a five-game losing streak that took a trip to Alaska to snap. And even there, the Wolver- ines dropped the opener. It took See SLOVIN, Page 3B A