TAMPA, FLA. - Twenty years ago, when he was a Gophers assistant coach, Bob Motzko recruited a highly skilled forward who made an immediate impact, leading Minnesota to an NCAA men's hockey championship.
Now, as Gophers head coach, Motzko might have the sequel.
Come Thursday at Amalie Arena, freshman Logan Cooley and the Gophers will try to take another step toward matching the feat freshman Thomas Vanek and his Minnesota teammates accomplished in 2003. The top-ranked Gophers open the Frozen Four with a semifinal game against Boston University, and the winner advances to Saturday's national championship game against either Quinnipiac or Michigan.
While the differences between Vanek and Cooley are clear — Vanek was a 6-2, 207-pound left winger from Austria, while Cooley is a 5-10, 180-pound center from Pittsburgh — Motzko sees a parallel that might be the most important of all.
"One thing with Thomas and Logan: When they get the puck, the whole rink freezes," Motzko said. "The other team, coaches, players and the fans — there's a pause and everyone waits to see what's going to happen when the great ones get it.
"And now being around Logan this year, it's the same thing. … There's a pause just for a second, and then you wait for it again. And that's just that 'it' factor players like that have."
Vanek played two years for the Gophers, became the No. 5 overall draft pick by the Buffalo Sabres in 2003 and enjoyed a 14-year NHL career. He shares Motzko's opinion when assessing Cooley, the No. 3 overall pick by the Arizona Coyotes in the 2022 NHL draft.
"He's something else," Vanek said. "There are things in the game of hockey that some people have and some people don't have, and the kid has it."