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Assistant Jutting Named Head Coach In Mankato

Don Brose wanted Troy Jutting to follow in his footsteps. On Monday, Brose got his wish.

Jutting, an assistant under Brose at Minnesota State University for the last 10 years, was named the school’s head hockey coach. He will replace Brose, who resigned after 30 years as coach of the Mavericks.

“I’m extremely excited and grateful for this opportunity,” Jutting said in a statement. “I have several goals for the program, not the least of which would be working towards becoming a consistently nationally competitive Division I program.”

Minnesota State athletic director Don Amiot said a number of factors contributed to Jutting’s hiring, but his reputation and dedication stood out.

“The selection committee was very pleased with what Troy has brought to the program as a major player in our present development,” Amiot said, “but was also impressed with his positive reputation among the collegiate hockey community and in the (Western Collegiate Hockey Association).

“He has also exhibited an overall committment to Mankato and MSU and I am confident Troy and his staff will continue to develop the program in the direction that is expected.”

Jutting, 36, was a forward for the Mavericks from 1982 to 1986, when they played in the Northern Collegiate Hockey Association as a Division II team. In his senior season, he earned all-conference honors.

He graduated from MSU with a business degree in 1987 and earned a master’s degree in sports administration from the school in 1996.

A Richfield, Minn., native, Jutting has spent the last few years as the Mavericks’ recruiting and academic coordinator.

One of Jutting’s challenges next season will be to maintain the momentum the Mavericks gained this season, their first as a member of the WCHA. MSU finished fourth in the league with a 15-10-3 mark (21-13-4 overall) and lost in the play-in game at the WCHA Final Five.

Waiting For A Legacy

They waited on Saturday while Michigan and Colgate battled into overtime for the right to face them. One day later, their well-laid plans began with a wakeup call at seven in the morning, leading up to an intended 3:30 afternoon game against the Wolverines.

The Maine Black Bears were looking to become the first team since Boston University in 1972 to win back-to-back national championships.

Walsh had laid the schedule out carefully.

7:00 a.m. Wakeup calls
7:15 a.m. Breakfast in hotel
7:45 a.m. Walk to rink
8:30 a.m. Practice
10:00 a.m. Return to hotel
11:00 a.m. Pre-game dinner in hotel
1:30 p.m. Depart to rink
2:00 p.m. Team meeting
3:30 p.m. NCAA East Regional Final
7:00 p.m. Depart Albany
3:00 a.m. Arrive Alfond Arena

However, the meticulously-laid plans, designed with the precision of a Swiss watch, turned into Swiss cheese when the early BU – St. Lawrence game set an NCAA record for length, going into four overtimes.

“They’re hungry now,” said one inactive Maine player during an overtime intermission. “They’re going to be starved by the third period.”

Walsh had planned the 11 a.m. meal with the memory of Maine’s 1995 triple-overtime game against Michigan still fresh in his mind.

“I wanted to get two meals into them just in case,” he said. “If you look at the history books, typically something wacky happens when Maine plays Michigan in a tournament.”

But as the early game turned into a marathon, even Walsh’s hedge against overtime evaporated. The team sent out for bagels and fruit. Powerbars became a snack while the Black Bears waited and waited.

And then waited some more.

As St. Lawrence scored its quadruple-overtime winner, some players were finally biting into something more substantial.

“Actually,” said Ben Guite after the game with a grin, “I feel the sandwich I ate about five minutes before the game coming out right now.”

More off-putting than the physical hunger, though, was the problem of attaining the proper mental outlook as the 3:30 game became 4:30 and then 5:30 and then 6:30 and finally a few minutes after 7:00.

“We just said, hey, this is nothing,” said Walsh. “We’re used to adversity. When you play in Orono, you’re used to long trips. You don’t get a lot of freebies. You just grind it out.

“A little adversity never hurt our guys. So we tried to turn it into a positive.”

Rather than trying to maintain a pre-game face for three and a half hours longer than usual, the Black Bears relaxed and told a few jokes.

“You don’t want to stay too uptight,” said Guite. “If you keep thinking and thinking and thinking about what you have to do, you just start thinking all crooked. We have a really young team, so we tried to stay relaxed.

“Most of the guys just sat down and were chatting or watching the game. It was just a relaxed atmosphere waiting. There’s not much you can do. You’ve got to go with what you have.”

Eventually, the casual relaxation ended.

“We re-reviewed the game plan,” said Walsh. “Doug Janik asked me to go over it again. So we kind of had a second meeting to bring it back into focus.”

The contest finally started at 7:05, a mere three and a half hours late. Maine trailed, 1-0, going into the third period and 2-1 with 13 minutes remaining. But the Black Bears took control soon after and won going away, 5-2.

The back-to-back dream was still alive.

“We’re three periods closer to a legacy,” said Walsh. “We’ve got six periods to go and it’s the same as tonight. If we don’t play three good periods, then it’ll be over. If we do, then we’ve got a chance to cut it to three periods.”

Maine’s chances took a broadside, however, when with little more than a minute left in the game referee Mike Schmidt assessed leading Black Bear scorer Cory Larose a game disqualification for a butt-end, putting him out of the semifinal game against North Dakota on Apr. 6. Ironically, Larose had been honored with Hockey East’s Len Ceglarski Sportsmanship Award just weeks earlier.

“We’ve already talked about it,” said Walsh. “One player does not make the Maine team. The Maine team is balance and depth. We’ll play the next game without him.

“He’s won some games for us. It’s our job to win that game so he gets to play in the final.”

Hopes of a back-to-back legacy were still alive.

It was worth the wait.

Mano A Mano

The fate of the longest game in NCAA tournament history was in their hands.

Freshmen goaltenders Rick DiPietro (Boston University) and Derek Gustafson (St. Lawrence) combined for 149 saves — shattering the old NCAA tourney record of 99 set in the 1995 Maine-Michigan triple-overtime semifinal — before Robin Carruthers scored the game-winner at 3:53 of quadruple overtime to put SLU into the Frozen Four.

Derek Gustafson

Derek Gustafson

Both netminders broke Chris Terreri’s mark for saves, 62, that dated back to the 1985 semifinal between Providence and Boston College. DiPietro finished with 77 stops and Gustafson 72, both spread in remarkably even fashion over the six-plus periods.

“It was maybe the greatest game I’ve ever been associated with,” said SLU coach Joe Marsh. “You saw two magnificent freshman goaltenders here tonight.”

Despite their youth, DiPietro and Gustafson both stood on their heads when their teams needed them most, making countless great stops in more than an entire game, 63:53, of overtime.

Rick DiPietro

Rick DiPietro

And it was anything but a fluke.

Gustafson set all-time school marks for a freshman this year and came into the NCAA tournament on pace to set SLU records for goals-against average, 2.16, and save percentage, .933. DiPietro’s statistics, 2.52 and .908 respectively, weren’t quite as gaudy, but placed him similarly within his league. Both earned Rookie of the Year honors as well as second-team all-league selections.

Both arrived on campus this fall looking to fill some very large shoes. DiPietro was replacing second-team All-American Michel Larocque; Gustafson hoped to do the same for first-teamer Eric Heffler.

The similarity, however, ends there.

Before the season started, DiPietro was considered the bluest of blue chippers. A native of the greater Boston area, he had starred on the U.S. National Development Team in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Although BU coach Jack Parker has most often opted for a goaltending rotation, DiPietro appeared to be a strong bet to override that tendency.

“He was one of the most highly-recruited goalies in a long time,” said Parker at the time. “He’s a top-notch goalie in his age group and he brings plenty of skill.”

As a result, it was no surprise when DiPietro quickly moved into the number-one spot on the Terrier depth chart.

Gustafson, on the other hand, came in with less notoriety. A native of Oregon, not exactly a hockey development hotbed, he had become a first-team all-star in the British Columbia Hockey League but was still expected to battle juniors Jeremy Symington and Sean Coakley for the right to inherit Heffler’s mantle.

“We just felt that we needed a goalie in the [freshman] class,” said Marsh. “We’ve got two juniors that we were confident in, but we just figured for our third goalie we were just going to bring in the best guy possible.”

Gustafson, however, proved to be no third goalie who would merely bide his time until the two juniors graduated.

Basketball score?

Basketball score?

“I guess we didn’t realize that he was going to elevate his game to game to this point,” said Marsh in obvious understatement. “He just kept progressing.”

Marsh employed a three-man rotation for the first half of the season. While DiPietro quickly became a fixture in the BU nets, Gustafson played once every three games. Not until the stretch run, when he got 14 of 18 starts, did he become the Saints’ go-to guy.

“We’ve got three great goaltenders and I was lucky enough to win the battle,” he said modestly. “I’m very fortunate to be in this position.”

Arguably, Gustafson had the easier introduction into collegiate play. Not only did the three-man rotation defuse any pressure, he also had a veteran blue line corps in front of him led by eventual ECAC Best Defensive Defenseman Justin Harney. In addition to Harney, two other seniors, two juniors and a sophomore manned the veteran group that was a major reason behind St. Lawrence’s success.

BU’s defense, meanwhile, had been the team’s Achilles’ heel in 1998-99 and would eventually consist of a junior, two sophomores who had missed major parts of their rookie seasons with injury and three freshmen.

Even so, DiPietro made his mark early, especially with his flamboyant style. While Gustafson was stopping pucks the old-fashioned way — staying in his crease and playing the angles — DiPietro roamed far and wide, acting as a third defenseman and looking for the day when he’d put one in the opposing net himself.

“He’s talking about scoring a goal!” said Parker, shaking his head in bewilderment after one game.

The flamboyance was just an extension of DiPietro’s personality. While Gustafson was quiet and thoughtful, DiPietro was the proverbial life of the party.

“Ricky is a great kid,” said Parker. “He’s got a lot of enthusiasm. I thought when I recruited him that he was a little full of himself, but it turns out that he’s just a class clown. I don’t have to worry about him not being loose enough because two minutes before the game he’s still screwing around in the dressing room.”

After a televised Beanpot win, Parker kidded DiPietro in the postgame press conference for his Hollywood tendencies in flipping a puck to center ice while stumbling around outside the crease.

“Do you think the camera was on you then?” asked a grinning Parker.

DiPietro, never at a loss for words, shot back quickly.

“I’m just a squirrel trying to get a nut in your world, buddy,” he said.

BU fans responded to his flair. By the time of the East regionals, the two most visible Terrier signs proclaimed their affection for him in wrestling terms: “The Rick” and “The People’s Goalie,” referring to the WWF’s ever-popular “People’s Champion,” the Rock.

Gustafson, on the other hand, just stopped pucks, though without DiPietro’s flamboyance.

“They have very contrasting styles,” said Marsh. “Ricky is very athletic. He’s extremely aggressive on the shooter. He has tremendous confidence in his abilities and he’s another defenseman out there.

“That’s not really a component that’s very strong in Derek’s game. Derek is an outstanding position goaltender. He reads situations well, particularly if things break down. He’s got good reflexes obviously and he’s in good position to utilize those.

“But they both sure can stop the puck.”

And while DiPietro’s flair on the ice reflected his personality off it, the same held true, too, for Gustafson’s quieter approach.

“My oldest daughter lives in the dorm at St. Lawrence,” said Marsh. “She happens to live in his dorm. She wants us to win because of me, but she’s not exactly a hockey fan. She told me back at the beginning of the year, ‘Geez, Dad, Gustafson is the nicest kid in the dorm. He’s such a nice kid. He’s very humble.’

“I like that. He’s a hockey player when he comes to Appleton [Arena], but he’s a really good-natured guy. He’s a great kid. He brings a lot of the boy into the game, which is one of the big reasons why he plays so well.

“What [I hear] about Ricky, there’s probably a lot of that, too, [with him]. Both goaltenders are as contrasting styles as you could have, but the similarity is that you can be pretty certain that both love to play that position and they’re awfully good at it.”

Which they certainly were in this epic battle that lasted into a fourth overtime. With muscles cramping, a broken strap on Gustafson’s glove that couldn’t be repaired but was merely held together by tape symbolized the wear on the two goaltenders.

“I can’t wait to get on the bus and sleep,” said Gustafson after the game.

In the end, he came out on top. He earned tournament MVP honors, while sharing the goaltender berth on the all-tourney team with DiPietro.

The BU freshman set the saves record, but in defeat could take no pleasure in the achievement.

“I would give back all [77] saves if we had won the game,” he said. “I’d rather have had 10 stops and we won the game.”

Seldom has the old adage of it being a shame either side had to lose been more appropriate.

Out With The New, In With The Old

“We got caught up in the hoopla…. [BU is] supposed to come here. This is their destination just about every year.”
— St. Cloud senior captain Geno Parrish

“There’s a lot of pressure on us, not just from our own fans in Boston, but the college hockey world. They expect that BU is going to be in the national tournament and vying for the national championship every year.”
— BU junior Carl Corazzini

Sometimes new is better.

There are any number of diseases people no longer die of because of revolutionary treatments and vaccines. A state-of-the-art, MHz-screaming PC beats a TRS-80 any day of the week. And aluminum, graphite and composite hockey sticks perform better than their old-fashioned wooden predecessors.

But there are plenty of other cases where new is not improved. “New” Coke’s taste was no match for Coke Classic. The Backstreet Boys don’t belong in the same sentence with the Beatles. And whether it’s American Beauty or Cider House Rules that wins this year’s Oscar for Best Picture, both must bow in deference to Casablanca.

When it comes to the NCAA tournament, Boston University is its Casablanca. The Terriers have appeared in more tourneys, 25, than any other team. In the nineties, they reached the Frozen Four seven times, also a high-water mark in college hockey.

The youngblood looking to topple the establishment Terriers this year came in the form of St. Cloud State. The Huskies didn’t begin Division I play until the 1987-88 season and had previously appeared in only one prior NCAA tournament. Invited as an Independent in 1989, they lost a two-game series to Lake Superior State and never returned.

Until this year, that is. Would St. Cloud be like the vastly superior computers of today, where newer is in fact better? Or would the Huskies just be the hockey equivalent of the Backstreet Boys to BU’s Beatles?

The Terriers’ veteran NCAA status, after all, was perhaps a paper tiger. They went one-game-and-out in 1998 and failed to earn a bid last year. So only the four seniors who advanced to the title game in 1997 had ever won a national tournament game.

“I think it hurts us more than it helps us,” said Corazzini, whose goal just 2:35 into the game gave BU a great start. “We have that great tradition at Boston University…. There’s a lot of pressure on us, not just from our own fans in Boston, but the college hockey world. They expect that BU is going to be in the national tournament and vying for the national championship every year.

“We [have to] go out there and play our own game and not worry about those things. Last year we were so worried about teams in the past and what they had done and what players like Tony Amonte and Keith Tkachuk would think about us when we were 14-20.

“So Coach told us to go out there and forget about those guys. Those guys aren’t playing. We’re our own team and hopefully we can live up to that tradition this year.”

In contrast to those high expectations and inherent pressure, St. Cloud players could perhaps enjoy the experience more while also fighting the just-happy-to-be-here feelings.

“Growing up, everybody loved to go to tournaments,” said Parrish. “Regular season games were kind of blah. You got to a tourney and you’d play little-stick hockey in the halls. We can’t do that anymore, but it’s just fun. It’s really exciting.”

Pressure and fun notwithstanding, it looked like BU’s comfort with the NCAAs and St. Cloud’s jitters helped contribute to BU’s decisive 3-0 first-period lead that led to a 5-3 win.

“When [BU] got rolling, our guys were a little too timid,” said St. Cloud coach Craig Dahl. “This is a game that you’ve got to play with intensity and focus. You can’t be timid or doubt yourself. They scored first and we got some self-doubt.”

“It was a rough start for us, obviously,” added Parrish. “We came into the tournament and there was lots of excitement. We got caught up in the hoopla.”

BU coach Jack Parker, however, looked at his freshman- and sophomore-laden roster and saw a much different explanation than tournament experience for the 3-0 outburst the essentially won the game.

“I don’t think there’s any [experience] advantage,” he said. “I wouldn’t relate that to a 3-0 lead. I would say more so that we played poorly in our last outing [a 4-2 loss to Maine in the Hockey East semifinal]. Sometimes when you get slapped upside of the head it gets you a little more alert.

“We’re both fairly young. I think chronologically we’re younger than St. Cloud. I don’t think it was a matter of a senior-laden club or an older club having a little more poise…. I don’t think it had anything to do with, ‘Aw jeez, St. Cloud is the new guy.'”

Perhaps Parker is right, and BU’s 25 appearances versus St. Cloud’s two had nothing to do with how the teams performed. Either way, St. Cloud’s Parrish saw the experience of this NCAA tournament as a building block.

“[BU is] supposed to come here,” he said. “This is their destination just about every year. That’s what we want to build at St. Cloud State. We’ve laid the roots down quite well. Now we’ve just got to let it grow.”

Balance Of Power

“Hey, buddy, you’re outta here!”

ECAC partisans were dying to say that after Saturday’s Michigan-Colgate clash. Passions run high in any postseason, but even more so in this CCHA-ECAC tilt. Michigan coach Red Berenson and his colleague at Michigan State, Ron Mason, created a stir this past week, complaining about their seeding in the NCAA tournament. The two teams, the only ones selected from the CCHA, both received No. 5 seeds, the Wolverines in the East and the Spartans in the West.

“When Niagara and Quinnipiac finish ahead of Michigan and Michigan State, something needs to be redefined,” said MSU coach Ron Mason. “There has to be something in the numbers that better recognizes strength of schedule, that recognizes league strength.”

Niagara and Quinnipiac, however, amount to nothing more than a red herring. Everyone acknowledges that the five criteria used don’t collectively handle college hockey’s “expansion” teams well at all. As a result, the NCAA selection committee reserved the right to factor in the strength of two new conferences, the MAAC and CHA, in awarding bids. They did exactly that by denying Quinnipiac’s quest and dropping Niagara to a No. 6 West seed. When both teams were re-routed to below the two CCHA entrants, they became irrelevant to its seeding complaints.

The facts are that even after Niagara and Quinnipiac were dropped, Michigan was only the number 10 team in the Pairwise Rankings, and Michigan State was ninth. Hence the No. 5 seeds hardly seemed inappropriate.

The committee probably figured that if it walks like a duck (a five seed) and quacks like a duck (a five seed), it’s probably a duck (a five seed).

Of course, Michigan would have received not only a higher position, but a bye if it had combined its regular-season championship with a win in the CCHA tourney. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, they lost in the semifinal game to Nebraska-Omaha, a team that finished 16-19-7.

And Michigan State’s performance all season long left it vulnerable to no bid at all if it had lost to Nebraska-Omaha and if Rensselaer had defeated St. Lawrence in the ECAC final.

Yet the kvetching over the number-five bids escalated.

“It’s hard to imagine that a team that did not finish in first place or took a conference title finished ahead of Michigan and Michigan State,” said Berenson. “The thing that seemed to kill us this year was our Pairwise.”

The latter is certainly true. The Pairwise placed the Wolverines as a five seed. However, Michigan and Michigan State’s rankings in the RPI as well as in the USCHO poll were little better. In the RPI, the two teams flip-flopped their relative positions, but remained ninth and tenth. And if the numbers lied, the poll placed them at eight (MSU) and nine (UM).

Everything except the league itself pointed to nothing more than a down year for the CCHA. A down year for a league used to placing powerhouses in high seedings, but a down year nonetheless.

“Our bottom teams were good,” said Berenson. “We lost games to Bowling Green, Ferris State, Alaska-Fairbanks, Omaha — all good teams.”

Well, maybe. The harsh reality, though, is that seven of the CCHA’s 12 teams finished the season with losing records.

“They [the NCAA] may have to reconsider the formula,” said Berenson.

Of course, there were no requests to reconsider the formula last year when the CCHA received four bids to the tournament. Nor were there complaints about Michigan’s seeding when it took number-one or -two seeds, and therefore byes, for six straight years from 1992-97.

But then again, Michigan got its byes those years the old-fashioned way. It earned them.

This year, the CCHA seemed to be asking for special dispensation. The numbers and the polls don’t say that we’re that strong, but we’re sure that we are. Because we always have been, we must be once again this year.

Well, maybe.

So what did all this have to do with the ECAC? A CCHA press release played up the league’s undeniable past successes and then listed conference records in the NCAA tournament since 1988 and 1992. Since the league only ranked third among the four major conferences in the first list and second in the other one, the primary point — nudge, nudge, wink, wink — seemed to be to highlight the ECAC’s poor record.

“We have won in the past,” said Mason, referring to the league as a whole. “Teams in our league have won on a national level.”

Nudge, nudge. Wink, wink.

This was then taken to more inflammatory levels in this week’s USCHO CCHA column, which used the the word “embarrassing” and finished by questioning why the ECAC continues to have two automatic bids.

How’s that for a slap?

All of which caught the attention of ECAC observers and raised the ante in the Colgate-Michigan game. So when Boston College, the number-four West seed, bounced Michigan State and then the Red Raiders rallied to send their game against Michigan into overtime, ECAC Nation held its collective breath.

And when the puck went into the Wolverine net and the red light went on four minutes into OT, they broke into euphoria.

For a very short time.

Referee Jim Fitzgerald waved the goal off, contending that he had blown the whistle before it went in. Fitzgerald did not have to go to video replay and chose not to, despite Colgate requests. One media member who did see the replay contended that the puck was in by a foot and the whistle wasn’t heard until after the puck crossed the line.

When Michigan’s Geoff Koch scored at 12:44, ECAC fans were denied the opportunity to say to the CCHA, “Hey, buddy, you’re outta here!”

Even so, there was at least some consolation that some respect might be en route.

“A lot of people probably were wondering who we were and how we got here,” said Colgate coach Don Vaughan. “I think we proved that we deserved to be part of this tournament. I couldn’t be prouder of our team.

“We’re often defending ourselves, but if you take the top four teams in all the conferences, I don’t think there’s a lot of difference between those teams. We didn’t really focus on it much this week in practice.

“I think the guys are aware that [the disrespect] is out there, but our focus, like most of the teams in our conference, tends to be on what we’re doing at the time and trying to play our game. Go out and do the best you can and let the dust settle where it may at the end of the night. I thought we proved tonight that we can skate alongside anybody.”

As for Berenson, he reiterated his contention that teams finishing first in the regular season or tournament should be ranked higher, and then added, “I think from year to year there are a lot of coaches who feel that we should tweak the criteria. Not to give anyone an advantage, but certainly not to handicap anyone.”

The Maine Black Bears, a team which earned a bye and number-one seeding, waits in the wings for Michigan.

And ECAC Nation waits for one more day, hoping to say, “Hey, buddy, you’re outta here!”

A dream deferred.

Clarkson’s Cole To Forego Senior Year

Erik Cole, a top forward for Clarkson the past three seasons, has decided to forego his final year with the Golden Knights after signing a professional contract with the Carolina Hurricanes of the National Hockey League.

Clarkson’s leading scorer the past two seasons, Cole signed a three-year deal with the Carolina organization and is expected to play the final games of the regular season and in the playoffs for the Cincinnati Cyclones of the International Hockey League.

A native of Oswego, N.Y., Cole completed his junior campaign by helping to lead Clarkson to a 17-15-3 overall record and a fourth-place tie in the ECAC with a 9-8-3 league mark. Through 33 games he scored 30 points, including a team-high 19 goals. A top specialty-teams player, he netted five power-play markers, two shorthanded tallies and two game-winning goals, and was named a second-team ECAC all-star.

Cole completed his three-year Clarkson career with 103 points on 52 goals and 51 assists through 103 games. A 1998 third-round NHL Draft choice of Carolina (71st overall), Cole was named ECAC co-Rookie of the Year in 1998. As an All-America in his sophomore season, Cole helped to lead the Golden Knights to the ECAC regular-season and tournament titles with a team-high 42 points on 22 goals and 20 assists.

“We’re really happy for Erik,” stated Clarkson head coach Mark Morris. “Obviously he has a huge upside. Where he goes from here will be determined by the breaks he gets …. For him not to come back in his senior year is a tough thing to swallow, but at the same time to see your guys move on and have a career is something that in the long haul is positive for the program. He has worked hard to get to where he is at right now and we wish him all the best in the future.”

Brewer Wins Third Annual Kazmaier Award

Netminder Ali Brewer, who led the ECAC with 1.33 goals-against average while compiling a 21-3-3 record for top-ranked Brown, has been named the 2000 winner of the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award.

The award, given annually to the outstanding player in women’s college hockey, was presented at the Boston Marriott Copley Place Thursday. Brewer was selected from a group of four finalists by the Kazmaier Award’s 11-member committee.

“Ali Brewer has turned in an outstanding senior season for Brown University, and recognizing her with this honor is part of a fitting end to a remarkable collegiate career,” said USA Hockey Foundation President Walter L. Bush, Jr. “Her achievements truly reflect the qualities and accomplishments that the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award represents.”

Said Polly Rua, senior manager of sponsorships for Texaco, the award’s presenting sponsor, “We congratulate all the candidates, especially Ali Brewer, who through their passion, hard work, dedication and continuous pursuit of excellence, have demonstrated world-class performance.”

Brewer is tied for first in the nation in overall wins with 24, second in save percentage and third in GAA. She was named the ECAC goaltender of the week three times this year.

Her Bears squad faces ECAC rival Dartmouth this weekend in the AWCHA national semifinals.

His Time To Shine

After Shawn Horcoff picked up conference honors in an unprecedented five categories, Billy Jaffe quipped, “Thank you for coming to the 2000 Shawn Horcoff Awards–I mean, CCHA Awards Banquet.”

Horcoff could be a household name around the CCHA, but the rest of the nation may be asking: Shawn who?

Horcoff, the Spartan senior captain from Castlegar, B.C., spent three years in the shadow of another Michigan State great and current New York Ranger, Mike York.

But you won’t hear the centerman complain. It’s not in his nature.

“For the last three years, I’ve played behind him and learned a lot, and I knew the whole time I was here that I was just waiting for my opportunity. I knew that in my senior year I’d be a player who would play in the same situations as Mike York.

“I wanted to prove to myself, to my teammates, and to the rest of the league that I could play at the high level I was expected to when I came in as a freshman.”

And prove himself he did. Horcoff ended the regular season with the league scoring title (44 points in 28 conference games), was named the CCHA’s Player of the Year, had a hand in 45.6% of Michigan State’s goals (the highest percentage in the nation), earned 48 assists (another nation-leading stat), and led the Spartans in plus-minus (+23), earning him the league’s award for Best Defensive Forward.

And his GPA is 3.41.

Too good to be true? How about this?

“I just want to finish with as good grades as I possibly can,” says Horcoff. “Both my parents are teachers, and they instilled a strong premise of education in me, and that’s something I take a lot of pride in.”

Not surprisingly, Spartan head coach Ron Mason can’t say enough about both Horcoff, the player, and Shawn, the nice, articulate kid from British Columbia.

“Shawn’s had to earn his way here. He’s gotten better each year,” says Mason. “I think he was overshadowed last year by Mike York, but was a great player himself, too. This year he’s had a chance to be in the limelight, and I think he’s looked up to in a big way.

“He’s the kind of player who’s easy to respect. He plays the game hard, and takes what the game gives him. He’s not the kind of player who’s moaning and groaning. He’s a hard-working kid.

“I appreciate him because he’s a 3.4 student. He’s the hardest worker on our team, both on and off the ice. He leads by example. He’s not afraid to say things. He’s a good spokesman for college hockey and for Michigan State hockey.”

Horcoff himself is a human handbook for hockey players who want to break the stereotype of the dumb jock, cement-head, or goon. After a tough game against Ferris State in October, Horcoff said, “We got a taste of what it’s like to play against us tonight. It’s very frustrating.”

And he takes the attention he’s receiving as a Hobey Baker Finalist in stride.

“My teammates make sure it never gets to my head, too, because they are always kidding me about things like the website,” he said. The Spartan athletic department has a page devoted solely to Horcoff.

“Having spent three years here with guys like Mike York, Chad Alban, Sean Berens, and Tyler Harlton, I learned how to deal with success. We have done so well as a team that every year some individuals are rewarded.

“One constant has been that team success leads to individual awards.”

York, Alban, Berens, Harlton. Heady company, and four more names on the list of well-respected former Spartans.

That kind of reputation, says Mason, is no accident.

“I think you go through spells in your program where you’re able for one reason or another to have a great group. Sometimes that sustains itself because of leadership. Juniors and seniors act and do things in a certain way, so the freshmen and sophomores follow. If you can keep that going, it’s a lot easier for me as a coach.

“We’ve had teams where we’ve had our individuals who weren’t players that I like to work with, but in the last three or four years here, it’s been really good. We’ve had the right leadership and the kind of players you want for your team.

“I try to teach them to respect the game, respect themselves and their peers, people they deal with every day. If they do that, they’ll get it back in return.”

Horcoff is certainly among those who perpetuate the cycle of leadership at Michigan State.

“When I came down here, I knew this was the place for me. I never felt like a rookie here. I was never on the outs, I was always on the in. That something, as a senior captain, I’ve really tried to instill and build upon.”

Another quality that Mason tries to instill in his players is common courtesy. He’s fond of saying, “It’s nice to be important, but it’s more important to be nice.”

Niceness is another attribute Horcoff possesses, evidenced by his praise for his linemates Adam Hall and Brian Maloney for the success of his own senior season.

“I can’t think of anyone in this league better than Adam Hall in front of the net. For Brian Maloney to come in as a freshman and contribute the way he has is very impressive. I know I wouldn’t be where I am right now if it wasn’t for those guys.”

While Horcoff praises his linemates, he’s not above talking about his own progress this season and the satisfaction that it has brought him.

“We’re a team that really prides itself in his defense. As a player, I’ve had to learn that good offensive chances come from defense. I think that showed in my game this year. A lot of chances for my line started at the defensive end.

Many times this year [offense] has been a struggle. We’re a team that doesn’t really score that many goals. To be there at the end with the scoring title–that’s something I’m really proud of.”

Offense, defense, brains, courtesy…all of this begs the question: Is this kid real?

He dominates the game, excels at academics, personifies leadership, but for all of Horcoff’s public persona, he can sound like any typical 21-year-old college student.

“I’m a big movie buff. I like to hang out with my friends and my girlfriend. I like to play ball–things any normal guy likes to do. I definitely do like older movies, like from the ’80s and ’70s.”

That’s the 1980s, 1970s. “Older.”

Well, nobody’s perfect.

UMD Tabs Finalists For Coaching Job

The University of Minnesota-Duluth has identified five finalists for its vacant head coaching position, the school announced Tuesday.

The list, compiled by the university’s search committee, includes two current collegiate head coaches and two current assistants. All are expected to make visits to the Duluth campus during the next two weeks, with a successor to Mike Sertich, who resigned after 18 years behind the UMD bench, to be named by April 5.

The five finalists, listed in alphabetical order, are:

Tim Bothwell, head coach, University of Calgary. Bothwell was an All-American at Brown and played in the NHL for 11 seasons before accepting coaching positions in the AHL, IHL and the NHL. He has led Calgary for six seasons. He was a finalist for the coaching opening at Brown in 1997.

John Harrington, head coach, St. John’s University. A 1979 Duluth alum, Harrington skated for the U.S. in the 1980 and 1984 Olympics, and recently completed his seventh year guiding St. John’s after stints as an assistant at St. Cloud and Denver. During Harrington’s tenure, the Johnnies have won two MIAC championships.

Norm MacIver, assistant coach, Minnesota-Duluth. MacIver joined the Bulldog staff this season after a 12-year NHL career. A two-time All-American at UMD, MacIver holds the school’s career assist record, and is a member of the university’s athletic Hall of Fame.

Scott Sandelin, associate head coach, North Dakota. A 1996 graduate of North Dakota, where he was an All-American his senior year, Sandelin played six years of professional hockey before assuming head coaching positions in the AHL and the Minnesota Elite league. He rejoined North Dakota as an assistant coach at UND in 1994, and has been associate head coach of the Sioux for the past three seasons.

Troy Ward, former assistant coach, Pittsburgh Penguins. Ward played collegiately at Wisconsin-Eau Claire, where he remained as assistant coach, then as head coach until 1990, when he became an assistant at Denver. Ward has also been a head coach in the United States Hockey League and an assistant in the IHL.

Lesteberg Named First Women’s Coach At UWSP

Jason Lesteberg, a former All-America performer at Gustavus Adolphus College (Minn.), has been named Wisconsin-Stevens Point’s first women’s ice hockey coach, the school announced.

The program will make its debut as a varsity sport at UWSP in the fall of 2000 after spending the past several years as a club sport.

“I’m very excited about the opportunity,” said Lesteberg, who spent the past two seasons as an assistant coach with the men’s squad at his alma mater after working one season as an assistant with the Gusties’ women’s program. “The commitment UW-Stevens Point has toward athletics is phenomenal. The community, the athletic department and the school are very
committed to hockey and it’s a place I really want to be.”

Lesteberg, 28, played at Gustavus Adolphus from 1993-96 and ranks seventh on the school’s all-time scoring list with 71 goals and 103 assists for 174 points.

“This is a key hire for us as this is the inaugural year of our varsity women’s ice hockey program,” UW-Stevens Point Director of Athletics Frank O’Brien said. “We are very pleased and excited, after a national search, to have the opportunity to have Jason join us as a Pointer.”

The Pointers have had one of the nation’s most successful NCAA Division III men’s ice hockey programs, making a record six national championship game appearances and winning four national titles — all since 1989. This past season, the men’s squad captured its fifth Northern Collegiate Hockey Association regular-season crown.

This past season, 26 Division III schools sponsored women’s ice hockey, including seven Minnesota schools. The sport also was offered by 25 Division I programs and two Division II schools.

Niagara Dominates Inaugural CHA Postseason Awards

Regular-season and tournament champion Niagara dominated the inaugural College Hockey America postseason awards, as selected by the league’s head coaches, assistant coaches and sports information directors. The Purple Eagles boast the Player of the Year, Coach of the Year and four members of the CHA all-league first team.

Niagara senior goaltender Greg Gardner was named CHA Player of the Year after compiling a 28-7-4 record, 1.49 goals-against average and .936 save percentage while leading the CHA in all major statistical categories. The 6-0, 190-pound native of Mississauga, Ont., started every game but one for the Purple Eagles this season.

Likewise, Niagara head coach Blaise MacDonald was honored as Coach of the Year after leading his charges to the CHA regular-season and tournament titles, and into the NCAA tournament in just Niagara’s fourth season of varsity hockey.

Rookie of the Year laurels went to Air Force forward Andy Berg, who totaled 11-21–32 in 35 games for the Falcons, and Alabama-Huntsville’s Jay Woodcroft was named CHA Student-Athlete of the Year.

The CHA’s two all-league teams feature three members of tournament runner-up Alabama-Huntsville, in addition to the five Purple Eagles selected overall.

1999-2000 College Hockey America First Team

F Kyle Martin, Niagara, Sr., 5-10, 170, Pickering, ONT
F Mike Isherwood, Niagara, Sr., 5-10, 185, Niagara Falls, ONT
F Nathan Bowen, Ala.-Huntsville, Sr., 6-1, 200, London, ONT
D Chris MacKenzie, Niagara, Sr., 6-0, 180, Niagara Falls, ONT
D Stefan Bjork, Bemidji State, So., 6-0, 190, Stockholm, Sweden
G Greg Gardner, Niagara, Sr., 6-0, 190, Mississauga, ONT

1999-2000 College Hockey America Second Team

F Brian Gornick, Air Force, So., 6-4, 200, St. Paul, MN
F Calvin Chartrand, Bemidji State, Sr., 5-7, 175, Winnipeg, MAN
F Mikko Sivonen, Niagara, Sr., 5-10, 195, Tampere, Finland
D Shane Stewart, Ala.-Huntsville, Sr., 6-1, 180, New Liskeard, ONT
D Brant Somerville, Findlay, So., 5-10, 185, Toronto, ONT
G Steve Briere, Ala.-Huntsville, Sr., 5-8, 160, Winnipeg, MAN

1999-2000 College Hockey America All-Rookie Team

F Andy Berg, Air Force, Fr., 5-11, 175, Stillwater, MN
F Mike Funk, Ala.-Huntsville, Fr., 6-0, 195, Newton, MAN
F Brad Johnson, Bemidji State, Fr., 5-10, 185, Bemidji, MN
F Daryl Bat, Bemidji State, Fr., 5-7, 155, Orillia, ONT
D Rico Fatticci, Bemidji State, Fr., 5-11, 190, Hibbing, MN
D Clay Simmons, Bemidji State, Fr., 6-0, 195, Princeton, BC
G Bob Tallarico, Bemidji State, Fr., 5-8, 175, St. Paul, MN

Classen Signs With NHL’s Predators

Merrimack center Greg Classen has signed a contract with the NHL’s
Nashville Predators, foregoing the final two years of his collegiate
career, according to the Lawrence (Mass.) Eagle-Tribune. Classen
was an undrafted free agent.

Classen, 22, led Merrimack in scoring this season with 14-16–30,
following a solid freshman year that landed him on the Hockey East
All-Rookie Team. In his two years, he totalled 28 goals and 55 points.

According to the Eagle-Tribune, Merrimack coach Chris Serino said
that the 6-1, 190-pound Classen will leave school immediately and report
to the Predators’ IHL affiliate in Milwaukee. Terms of the deal were
unknown.

Comley Resigns AD Post At NMU To Concentrate On Hockey

After 13 years as both athletic director and head hockey coach for Northern Michigan University, Rick Comley will dispense with the AD role effective July 1 and concentrate on running the Division I hockey program he established at Northern in 1976.

Comley and NMU President Judi Bailey announced the change at a press conference Thursday morning.

“This is what I want to do. I wouldn’t trade the experience, but the truth is, holding down both jobs has become too much for one person,” Comley said. “It’s time to return to coaching and do the best job I can with the sport I love most.”

Comley said that during his tenure as AD, there has been continual growth in regulations and reporting requirements instituted by government agencies, the NCAA and the athletic conferences with which Northern is affiliated.

His term was punctuated by extensive efforts to ensure compliance with Title IX, the law calling for gender equity in intercollegiate athletics, as well as the planning and construction of the Superior Dome, Berry Events Center and Izzo-Mariucci Academic Center.

“Add the obligation to serve on national committees and the inescapable management, planning, supervision and problem-solving responsibilities, and there’s simply too little time for coaching,” said Comley.

Progress during his term would have been impossible, Comley said, had it not been for the support of past and present colleagues. He particularly cited the work of NMU retirees Barb Patrick (assistant AD) and Tom Peters (assistant to the president).

“Barb was instrumental in elevating women’s sports to a proper place of prominence. It’s been a great pleasure witnessing the growth of community respect for all of our women’s squads.”

“Rick Comley has made an outstanding contribution as athletic director,” Bailey said. “Northern is definitely a better place today because Rick excelled in the job.”

A national search for a full-time athletic director will begin immediately, said Bailey. The AD is responsible for eight women’s and five men’s sports involving 250 student-athletes and 37 coaches and support staff.

During Comley’s AD tenure, Northern won national championships in hockey (1991) and volleyball (1993 and 1994). He is the only head coach in the 24-year history of NMU hockey and has compiled a 553-451-62 career record.

Comley is a two-time winner of the Spencer Penrose Memorial Trophy as college hockey’s national coach of the year (1980 and 1991) and has twice been named CCHA Coach of the Year (1979-80 and 1980-81) and WCHA Coach of the Year (1988-89 and 1990-91).

The Stratford, Ont., native played hockey at Lake Superior State University and coached at his alma mater for three years before coming to NMU.

AHCA Division III All-Americans Named

The American Hockey Coaches Association, in conjunction with Jofa, has announced the 1999-2000 College Division (Division III) All-American teams, and forward Steve Aronson of St. Thomas led the squad as a first-team All-American for the third straight year. RIT forward Pat Staerker made one of the teams for the third straight season; he was second-team two seasons ago and a first-team member last season.

David Haimson of Williams and Marc Bellemare of Division III champion Norwich repeat as first-team members.

AHCA/Jofa Division III All-American Teams

First Team – West
Bryan Howard, Concordia, Jr. Goaltender
Tommy Cianflone, St. Norbert, Jr. Defense
Rob Gramer, Concordia, Sr. Defense
Kevin Adam, Bethel, Sr. Forward
Steve Aronson, St. Thomas, Sr. Forward
Ryan Maxson, UW-Stevens Point, Jr. Forward

First Team – East
David Haimson, Williams, Sr. Goaltender
Ben Barnett, Middlebury, Sr. Defense
Mike Ludwar, Norwich, Sr. Defense
Keith Aucoin, Norwich, Jr. Forward
Marc Bellemare, Norwich, Sr. Forward
Curt Goldman, Middlebury, Sr. Forward

Second Team – West
Bobby Gould, UW-Stevens Point, So. Goaltender
Jared Gustafson, Bethel, Jr. Defense
Mike McMahon, St. Thomas, Jr. Defense
Brian Bolf, St. Thomas, Sr. Forward
Jeff Glowa, UW-Superior, Jr. Forward
Adam Sedgwick, St. Norbert, Jr. Forward

Second Team – East
Lou Mastromarino, Salem State, Sr. Goaltender
Brian Collom, Southern Maine, Sr. Defense
Bryan Murray, Plattsburgh, Jr. Defense
John Giannacopoulos, Middlebury, Sr. Forward
Jeff Paluseo, Plattsburgh, Sr. Forward
Pat Staerker, RIT, Sr. Forward

Between the Lines: Tournament Special

Once again this year, the NCAA used an objective selection process (the decision regarding Niagara notwithstanding) to pick the national tournament field. And once again, U.S. College Hockey Online’s Pairwise Rankings (PWR) correctly predicted the field that was selected, for the fourth straight year.

Why is this so accurate? Well, it’s not because anyone at USCHO is brilliant or clairvoyant, but because PWR is essentially the same system the men’s ice hockey selection committee uses.

I’m still not sure enough people understand this point, and this continues to frustrate me. Mind you, there are plenty of people who do, more and more each year, both among hockey insiders and fans. But too often, I hear misconceptions about the process, from not only fans, but media members and even some hockey people.

The misconceptions fall into two camps.

Some people have the impression that the Pairwise is the process. So, let’s be clear: The selection committee does not take USCHO’s PWR and use that to determine the field, and I don’t want to foster that misimpression. PWR is the opposite; it takes what the committee does and represents their process in an empirical way, for all to see.

The goal of PWR is not to drive the process. The process drives PWR. USCHO trying to take credit for picking the field would be like printing the NHL standings in the newspaper, then gloating that they accurately predicted who would be in the Stanley Cup playoffs. We’re glad PWR works, but, in theory, it’s simply standings.

But, just as there is a mistaken impression by some that the committee uses PWR directly, there is also a misimpression by others that PWR is irrelevant — that it is merely USCHO’s own self-created “Power Rankings” system.

This is equally incorrect. PWR is relevant because it is a representation of the process … it is the “standings,” so to speak. And it is accurate.

Unfortunately, for some reason, some hockey people have a reluctance to acknowledge that PWR is, in the end, an accurate representation of the same system the committee uses. I’m not sure why that is. Is it because they are afraid that admitting so makes them look bad — which it doesn’t at all — or are they just unaware of what PWR is really doing?

Either way, distancing themselves from the PWR and failing to acknowledge what it does, is a disservice to the process and those trying to understand it. It only clouds the issue for those perhaps already confused about the often complicated and arcane objective criteria that lie beneath the selection process.

Unlike other sports, men’s ice hockey has preferred a completely objective process for picking its NCAA Tournament field. Obviously, if something is done by a logical step-by-step progression, there must be a method of clearly defining that process.

A number of years ago, a fellow by the name of Keith Instone, who worked at Bowling Green, urged the NCAA to shed some light on the objective selection process it created. By doing so, he figured he could help educate fans, many of whom still believed that conspiracy theories or backroom deals determined who made the tournament. In exchange for this openness, Instone offered to create a computer program for the selection committee that would sort all of the data and quickly spit it out in a format that was easier to comprehend.

When USCHO came along, it took this one step further, quantifying the process with something it called the “Pairwise Rankings,” allowing everyone to see what was happening. Thus, PWR is simply a “crack” or “reverse engineer” (to use cyber-geek terms) of a process that already existed.

That this information was now out in the open was tremendous for college hockey fans, coaches and players alike. But the NCAA did nothing to publicize the fact, and despite a lot of education, the misconceptions remain.

For one, there are those who don’t understand the selection process at all and still believe the committee makes subjective decisions. Three years ago, after Vermont lost in the ECAC quarterfinals, it took a week to convince school officials, media and fans that Vermont was still a lock to make the tournament. Some still didn’t believe, as selection day came, that the criteria had Vermont way in front of most teams and that the committee wouldn’t care that Vermont lost early in its playoffs.

We’re slowly educating these people, as even ESPN2 correctly identified the five selection criteria this year.

But then there are those who understand the PWR process and the criteria used, but either think that PWR is the process, or that PWR is irrelevant to the process.

One hockey person recently knocked the PWR, saying it was the RPI that decided the teams. Yet, it is a fact that the committee uses five criteria as a whole, not just RPI, to create a “comparison” between two teams. Sure, the RPI may enable the committee to quickly see those teams who are clearly in. But when it comes down to that “bubble,” the committee will start looking at those individual “comparisons.”

If there’s an objective process, what’s wrong with acknowledging it’s an entirely objective process? And if there’s nothing wrong with acknowledging that, then there’s nothing wrong with acknowledging that PWR is accurately representing that process. That acknowledgment doesn’t make college hockey look bad, any more than acknowledging that the Boston Globe’s NHL standings are accurate makes the NHL look bad.

USCHO realizes that PWR isn’t exactly what the committee does. The committee doesn’t actually total all of the “comparison wins” and come up with a final number, as PWR does, and then take the Top 12 and presto, there’s the field. We know that. But, when everything is all said and done, the same 12 teams are picked.

For those still confused or unconvinced, we can see that by breaking down the process. After the various conference tournaments ended this season, seven teams — Boston University, St. Lawrence, Michigan, Wisconsin, Maine, Michigan State and North Dakota — had earned automatic bids.

Then, the committee can usually identify some at-large teams from a cursory glance at the comparison numbers.

For example, this year — if we leave Niagara out of the discussion for the moment — Colgate, New Hampshire and Boston College won their comparisons with every other at-large team, making them obvious picks no matter what system you used to identify the “bubble” teams. That brings us to 10 teams already in the tournament, and leaves one sure at-large bid remaining.

The committee then takes the remaining Teams Under Consideration, and makes the same kind of evaluative decision — i.e., there are a number of teams clearly losing comparisons to all the teams “above” them. The teams you are left with form the bubble. In this year’s case, that was Rensselaer, St. Cloud and Mankato.

On the basis of the total set of criteria — what we call the individual “comparisons” — those three teams beat everyone below them; hence, these are the same three teams committee chair Bill Wilkinson identified as “the bubble” on ESPN2’s selection show. Specifically, when comparing those three teams to each other, St. Cloud defeats both other teams in head-to-head comparisons, making the Huskies the final team.

This is the objective, criteria-based process that all of the coaches have wanted, and that the committee adheres to.

Where the committee and PWR diverge is that PWR totals these comparison wins from the beginning, for all teams as a whole. But when you total the amount of comparison wins, via PWR, you get the same result. If you step through the process, you’ll realize that PWR does in one step, what the committee does in a number of steps. The end result, however, is the same thing, not by chance, but because PWR is designed to mimic the process. That’s the goal. It’s like saying 4*6=24 or 4+4+4+4+4+4=24. Same thing.

Media members who ask about the selection process and PWR are sometimes told by hockey people that there is no connection between the two — that PWR doesn’t truly represent what happens. This helps no one because it makes the committee look bad to people who know, makes USCHO look bad to people who think we’re making false claims, and only confuses people further.

So there is still a strong need, I believe, for everyone to get on the same page. There is no need to give the PWR too much credit, and there’s no need to disregard it either. Once everyone can come to the same understanding, we can all do much better justice to the process.

(I’ve been told it’s possible to devise a complex and rare scenario whereby the PWR process and the committee process don’t exactly mesh, but it’s impossible to know because it’s never happened and, while we’re 99.9 percent sure, no one is 100 percent sure exactly what the committee does behind closed doors.)

As a side issue, my wish is that the committee would just take the total Comparison Wins — as PWR does — take the top 12, and use that to pick the field. Not because it would change the end result, but because it would make everyone’s life easier. Since the end result is the same, why not just take the numbers, list them as PWR does, and pick the teams that way? That would eliminate the mystery and save the committee a lot of time.

The seeding process is still a bit complicated, because of the desire to avoid intraconference matchups, and potential crowd maximization issues, but you’d be able to pick the field in about 10 seconds — and you could finally, once and for all, assure coaches around the country that what they are seeing on that “gosh-darn Internet” in the weeks leading up to selection day are accurate figures, giving everyone a sense of just what they have to do to get in.

The committee created this process so that there would be no more subjectivity. This is what the coaches wanted, so they must all know there is no subjectivity, whether or not they know the mechanisms it takes to get to that point. Some people, of course, do get it, as evidenced by those coaches, officials and fans who come to USCHO throughout the season for information on where their teams stand.

The PWR is merely trying to bring that process out of the closet. If the committee were to take the next logical step, and quantify the data in the same way PWR does, I believe that would be the final step in opening up the process for everyone to see once and for all. The NCAA could officially publish the data, and run them each week, just like they do for the Bowl Championship Series standings in football.

If the NCAA decides tomorrow to publish the criteria data, just like PWR does, I’ll be the first to applaud them and make believe this article never existed.

On a related issue, the committee’s process — and, consequently PWR — may be seeing its final days. As I wrote in last week’s BTL, the current set of criteria was a fair and just way of picking the tournament field when there were just four relatively equal conferences. But it is unable to handle the influx of minor conferences with wildly divergent strengths of schedule, making it necessary to create subjective exceptions to the rules — like the one this year that admitted Niagara while barring Quinnipiac. The problem will only get worse as hockey expands.

As a result, if the committee wishes to maintain its current goal of an objective system, it may be time to devise an algorithm that is able to handle all of the teams.

Such a system can be created: in fact, there are plenty of them out there, but I’ll leave that up to the math Ph.Ds.

Step By Step

Dave Poulin is fond of talking about little steps. When his Fighting Irish took Michigan to three games in Yost during the first round of the CCHA playoffs to cap the 1997-98 season, that was a significant little step.

When the Irish captured home ice at the end of the 1998-99 season and lost in three games to a powerful Northern Michigan squad, that was another.

But when Notre Dame beat Ferris State in three games in South Bend to earn a trip to the CCHA semifinals this year, “little” wasn’t the word that came to mind.

“That series was a big one, especially for me as a freshman,” says defender Evan Nielsen. “I wasn’t there the year before when they had a similar situation, losing big on Saturday, and I think everybody decided [this year]…that to let that happen again would be horrible.”

After being spanked 6-1 by the Bulldogs in the second game of the first-round series, the Irish responded with a hard-fought 4-2 win to step up to Detroit for the first time in nearly 20 years. In fact, the last time Notre Dame participated in the CCHA championship tournament, young Mr. Nielsen wasn’t yet one year old.

Poulin, on the other hand, was the senior captain for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in 1981-82, when Michigan State beat them for the league crown, 4-1.

“It’s a pleasure to be going back to Joe Louis,” said Poulin. “I’ve talked to my team about this from the day I arrived on campus.”

The CCHA title game is a goal for every team in the league, but for some programs, the road to The Joe is a bit longer, or takes a more winding path. With the incredible success of Nebraska-Omaha in its first year as a league affiliate to contrast, the journey of the Fighting Irish during Poulin’s tenure seems unremarkable.

Don’t be fooled. In a city where football is king, on a campus over which “Touchdown Jesus” keeps watch, where the rink is an afterthought that occupies half of a circular multi-purpose facility, with a program that has seen just five winning seasons since Poulin captained the Irish to Detroit, what the Notre Dame coach has done to rebuild the Irish hockey program is remarkable, especially since he’s been forced to take those steps one at a time.

Nine wins his first season. Nine his second, 18 his third, and 19 his fourth. Sixteen wins this season, with a squad that he can finally call all his own.

And, finally this season, enough scholarship money to make the CCHA recruiting field a bit more level.

Make no mistake about it; Poulin is the reason for the Irish turnaround.

“I love him. He does a great job of relating to players,” says freshman goalie Tony Zasowski. “He’s not that far removed [from us] and he’s been through it all, basically everything we have.”

“He’s a good hockey guy, loves the sport. I’ve been happy with the choice [of schools],” says Nielsen.

Says David Inman, one of three Irish players to participate in this year’s World Juniors, “I remember coming down and the rink was a big deal, but it isn’t in the same way. It’s more of the program, the coach that matters. I think as far as Coach Poulin…he’s a great coach, a great mentor, a good guy to point you in the direction that you need to go to make it to the NHL.”

Poulin, of course, can draw on his own experiences in the NHL to guide his current players. All told, Poulin played in 724 NHL games, registering 205 goals and 325 assists. Poulin donned jerseys for the Philadelphia Flyers (1983-90), the Boston Bruins (1990-93), and the Washington Capitals (1993-95). He helped lead three teams to the Stanley Cup finals (Philly in ’85 and ’87, and Boston in ’90). Poulin was twice selected to play in the NHL All-Star game (’86 and ’88), and in 1987 won the Selke Trophy as the league’s best defensive forward.

Anyone who knows Poulin knows he’s a fierce competitor, which is something that made the start of this season difficult to take.

“We had an interesting year, to say the least,” says Poulin. “We started extremely slow [due to] a combination of factors, the primary one being we just played poorly.”

After flying out of the gate at the start of the 1998-99 season with a six-game win streak and going 9-3-2 in October and November of that campaign, and then not making the NCAA playoffs, this year’s 2-5-1 beginning appeared to be a step backwards.

“We had a pretty strong upward curve over the four years preceding [this season], and I think a number of players and possibly the coaches as well just thought it was going to continue to go up,” says Poulin.

“In this league, it gets tougher every day; it doesn’t get easier. Our expectations were very high, and we were disappointed in our play early on.”

So what did the Irish coach do with that disappointing start? Just what anyone who knows Dave Poulin would do; he turned it into a positive.

In early November, 1999, Poulin tried to put the slow start into context. “We went through a slump last season but it was midseason. At that point, you say, ‘Hey, every team goes through this every year. We go through this every year.’

“But, at the beginning of the season, when you don’t have many wins behind you, you can lose perspective.” Poulin also said that the Irish’s humbling October gave them a new opportunity for growth.

“When we started as fast as we did last year, we didn’t really get the chance to address what we needed to address,” he noted.

With those early-season lessons learned, Notre Dame’s season improved bit by bit. While the Irish were not known for their scoring prowess this year, Notre Dame did have a solid defensive corps, led by four seniors: Nathan Borega, Tyson Fraser, Sean Molina, and Sean Seyferth.

The Irish underclassmen know how difficult it will be to fill those skates and continue to build on what Poulin has begun.

“Borega and Molina–nobody gave them any credit all season long because they’re stay-home defensemen, but I knew when they were out there I didn’t have too much to worry about it,” says Zasowski.

“Then we had Sean Seyferth and [Tyson] Fraser. Sean really stepped up this year and did real well…made himself a part of the regular lineup. I knew who was in front of me every night. It’s going to be a lot harder to come back [without those four], and it will make my job a lot harder.”

“It’s been great playing with all of those guys,” says Neilsen. “I had a chance to learn, and they made it a lot easier for me coming in. Those are some big shoes to fill back there. I don’t know if we’ll have a Nathan Borega coming in, but hopefully we’ll get some good new guys and we’ll do our best to fill those spots.

“I’ve learned a lot from the older guys. Hopefully we’ll stay on that upward slope. There’s more to come.”

The remaining Irish are optimistic not just for the future of the team, but also about building a hockey tradition in a school best known for other sports.

“The biggest way to do that at any school is win,” says Zasowski. “The only way to get the students behind you and the people in town is to win. You really have to play for that. The football team has won, the basketball team as well. Hopefully people will take notice of us being here for the first time in twenty years, and take note that we’re here to stay and that we’ll keep getting better.

“We’ve got a great bunch of freshmen…a great bunch of guys here, and we’ve got a good bunch coming in. Poulin really has us in the right direction, so the future is out there for us.”

Inman says that the challenge of building something practically from scratch rather than walking into a ready-made situation was a factor in his decision to play for Notre Dame.

“That was one of the things that I looked at closely. Was the team going to rebuild and be good in the years to come? I could tell that the basics were there. The program has really turned around, and I wanted to be a part of it.

“Maybe stepping into a school that had already been established might have been a little bit different situation, but I thought that this was the place where I was going to get to play and contribute, and be part of something that’s going to be great in a few years.”

Neilsen says that the stories the outgoing seniors have told about the recent history of Notre Dame hockey have been encouraging.

“The more we talk to these guys [the seniors] at the end of their careers…they talk a lot about how it was when they came, and it’s come a long way in those four years. It’s getting better and better, with more and more people coming to the games. There are still those people who don’t know that we have a team, or think it’s a club team…but our core of fans that are there are great. And in South Bend, too, people know about us more and more.”

Neilsen, Zasowski, and the other youngsters in South Bend do well to listen to their older counterparts.

As senior Ben Simon said after the 4-0 loss to Michigan State in the CCHA semifinals, “It’s gone by quick. A lot of great memories. I’m going to look back and smile, to know I was part of this program.”

In Detroit this past weekend, Dave Poulin was able to look back at 20 years of Notre Dame hockey and take stock.

Twenty years from now, those who have invested the time and energy in continuing the work that Poulin has started may look back and see March 17, 2000–St. Patrick’s Day–as the first of many big steps for the Irish.

Kazmaier Finalists Named

Four finalists for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award, which recognizes the accomplishments of the most outstanding player in women’s intercollegiate varsity ice hockey, were named Tuesday by the USA Hockey Foundation.

The finalists are goaltender Ali Brewer (Racine, Wis.), a senior from Brown University; goaltender Sara DeCosta (Warwick, R.I.), a junior from Providence College; defenseman Tara Mounsey (Concord, N.H.), a junior from Brown University; and forward Carisa Zaban (Glenview, Ill.), a senior from the University of New Hampshire.

Three finalists are ordinarily selected, but due to a tie for third place in the voting, four finalists were named.

The announcement was made by USA Hockey Foundation President Walter L. Bush, Jr., and the award’s executive committee, which, in addition to Bush, includes Jim Erickson, Bob Fallen, Cammi Granato, Laura Halldorson, Robert Ridder, Sr., Julie Sasner and Ben Smith.

The finalists and recipient are chosen by an 11-member selection committee comprised of women’s intercollegiate varsity ice hockey coaches, representatives of the print and broadcast media, and a representative of USA Hockey. Criteria include outstanding individual and team skills, sportsmanship, performance in the clutch, personal character, competitiveness and a love of hockey, with consideration also given to academic achievement and civic involvement.

The inaugural Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award was presented to University of New Hampshire forward Brandy Fisher (Potsdam, N.Y.) in 1998. Harvard University forward A.J. Mleczko received the honor last year.

The Kazmaier Award, in its third year of existence, is named in honor of the late Patty Kazmaier, a four-year letter-winner and All-Ivy League defenseman from Princeton University from 1981-82 through 1985-86. An accomplished athlete who helped lead the Tigers to the Ivy League championship in three consecutive seasons, Patty Kazmaier-Sandt died in 1990, at the age of 28, following a long struggle with a rare blood disease.

Profiles of the finalists are as follows:

Ali Brewer, senior goaltender, Brown University (Racine, Wis.)

One of the most accomplished goaltenders in the history of the Eastern College Athletic Conference, Brewer closed out her career in impressive fashion. She posted a 1.33 goals-against average during the regular season, tops in the ECAC and third-best in the nation. Boasting a .942 save percentage, second-best in the country, Brewer registered 551 saves while allowing only 34 goals.

The three-time ECAC/Heaton Goaltender of the Week posted an impressive 21-3-3 record, earning as many victories as any other goaltender in women’s college hockey. Her .833 overall winning percentage led the league.

Sara DeCosta, junior goaltender, Providence College (Warwick, R.I.)

After shutting down opposing scorers all season, Providence College goaltender DeCosta closed out the 1999-2000 campaign with an outstanding .943 save percentage, good for first in the nation. In the Eastern College Athletic Conference, DeCosta posted a 1.54 goals-against average, ranking her second overall in the ECAC and fifth among all netminders in the country. Her 17 victories (17-9-3) included seven shutouts and she allowed Friar opponents only 51 goals in 32 games.

A four-time ECAC/Heaton Goaltender of the Week honoree this season, DeCosta is a 1998 U.S. Olympic team member.

Tara Mounsey, junior defenseman, Brown University (Concord, N.H.)

Mounsey, although injured in the second half of the 1999-2000 season, put up such spectacular numbers that when the regular season finally ended, her name was still among the nation’s leaders in many offensive categories. Mounsey, a Brown University co-captain, registered 24 points (14-10) in 18 games of Eastern College Athletic Conference action, third among defensemen. She gathered a 1.33 points per-game average and notched five power-play goals, tying for fifth in league play.

Mounsey’s defensive skills were just as impressive, as the Bears successfully killed over 90 percent of their penalties, fourth-best in the nation. A member of the 1998 U.S. Olympic team, she received All-Ivy League First Team honors for the third time in her career.

Carisa Zaban, senior forward, University of New Hampshire (Glenview, Ill.)

Zaban is one of the most prolific scorers in women’s college hockey today. By finishing third in the nation and first overall in the Eastern College Athletic Conference with 72 points (35 goals, 37 assists) in just 33 games, she made her final collegiate season one to remember.

On February 20, Zaban scored her 256th career point, breaking New Hampshire’s all-time mark set by Kathy Bryant in 1981. The Wildcats’ leading scorer for all four seasons of her career, she is also closing in on New Hampshire’s all-time record for goals (129) and entered the ECAC playoffs 11 goals shy of the record, held by Brandy Fisher, the inaugural Kazmaier Award recipient in 1998.

The award, supported in part by a grant from the NHL Foundation and sponsored by Texaco, will be presented at a dinner on the evening of Thursday, March 23, at the Boston Marriott Copley Place.

Individual dinner tickets, priced at $100.00, and table sponsorships may be purchased by calling the USA Hockey Foundation at (800) 566-3288, ext. 165; or Steve Burke at (781) 686-1105. Individual tickets and sponsorship packages are tax-deductible.

Pairwise Rankings Analysis: Selection And Seeding

In past seasons, the selection of teams for the NCAA tournament was absolutely straightforward. Last year, however, a new wrinkle created some ambiguity in the process when the selection committee added language that allowed it to reject a team based on conference strength.

This was put into place primarily because of the insular nature of the MAAC’s schedule last year. And sure enough, Quinnipiac, the MAAC regular-season champion, finished high enough in the Pairwise Rankings (PWR) to be selected for the NCAA tournament. However, Quinnipiac was left off the list of selected teams, precisely the outcome the language was intended to allow.

Again this year, Quinnipiac finished in the top 12 teams in PWR, but there is no real question — Quinnipiac lost every game it played versus teams from the “big four” conferences, and no one expects Quinnipiac to get a bid. Next season, the MAAC will probably have an automatic berth to award, but for now, the MAAC championship is the highest goal in that league.

The question this year regards Niagara. Niagara, like Quinnipiac with the MAAC, plays in a new Division I league, College Hockey America. Most of the teams in the CHA are not yet competitive with the rest of Division I, and as such, Niagara’s 20-0-1 conference record isn’t particularly enlightening.

Niagara had some impressive wins this season, including a 3-0 win over nationally-ranked Boston University and a 2-1 victory over NCAA bubble team Rensselaer. However, for every impressive win, there was an equally dreadful loss. Niagara seemed to falter late in the season, and suffered a noggin-scratchin’ 2-1 loss to MAAC school Canisius, as well as a loss and an overtime win against the number-10 team in the CCHA, Western Michigan.

Overall, Niagara finished 9-6-2 against members of the four major conferences, with those opponents making up a field of pretty representative teams in Division I. The question is, is that good enough to attract the selection committee’s eye? We’ll find out for sure when the teams are announced.

The PWR has been very accurate in years past for determining the field of teams to be taken in the selection process, though the seeding process, which must concern itself with minutiae like intraconference matchups and even gate attendance, often remains a mystery. This year, we’ll consider cases with and without Niagara earning one of the remaining at-large bids.

Here are the top 14 teams in the PWR, taking into account all of the results from the various conference tournaments:

Rk Team                GP  W- L- T  Win%  Rk     RPI  Rk  PWR
1 Wisconsin 40 31- 8- 1 0.7875 1 | 0.6095 1 | 25
2 Maine 38 26- 7- 5 0.7500 4 | 0.6082 2 | 24
3 North Dakota 39 26- 8- 5 0.7308 5 | 0.5982 3 | 23
4 St Lawrence 33 24- 7- 2 0.7576 3 | 0.5886 5 | 22
5 Niagara 27 18- 7- 2 0.7037 8 | 0.5723 8 | 20
6 New Hampshire 37 23- 8- 6 0.7027 9 | 0.5921 4 | 19
7 Colgate 33 23- 8- 2 0.7273 6 | 0.5701 9 | 19
8 Boston College 38 26-11- 1 0.6974 11 | 0.5835 6 | 18
9 Boston University 40 24- 9- 7 0.6875 12 | 0.5830 7 | 18
10 Quinnipiac 28 20- 5- 3 0.7679 2 | 0.5657 11 | 16
11 Michigan State 40 26-10- 4 0.7000 10 | 0.5631 12 | 16
12 Michigan 39 26- 9- 4 0.7179 7 | 0.5680 10 | 14
13 St Cloud 37 21-13- 3 0.6081 15 | 0.5459 13 | 12
14 MSU-Mankato 35 19-13- 3 0.5857 16 | 0.5250 16 | 12

In the 10th slot is Quinnipiac, which is generally regarded as out of the tournament selection process. All further analysis will assume Quinnipiac will not receive a bid.

Now we come to the two cases: with or without Niagara.

Excluding Niagara, we have the following top 12 teams:

Wisconsin
Maine
North Dakota
St. Lawrence
New Hampshire
Colgate
Boston College
Boston University
Michigan State
Michigan
St. Cloud
MSU-Mankato

Including Niagara, we have the same first ten teams, plus Niagara to make 11. The 12th spot is a tie between WCHA teams St Cloud and MSU-Mankato. Let’s look at the individual comparison between the two:

    MSU-Mankato vs St Cloud
RPI 0.5252 0 0.5465 1
L16 10- 4- 2 1 9- 5- 2 0
TUC 7- 6- 2 1 6- 7- 3 0
H2H 0 2
COP 17- 9- 3 1 17-11- 3 0
============================================
PTS 3 3

It’s a tie between the two teams, but ties are broken by the RPI, and so St Cloud wins, by the narrowest of margins.

So the list is now:

Wisconsin
Maine
North Dakota
St. Lawrence
Niagara
New Hampshire
Colgate
Boston College
Boston University
Michigan State
Michigan
St. Cloud

According to these two options, the choice before the committee is between MSU-Mankato and Niagara, a selection which simply cannot be made by using the information at hand. The committee will hash it out, but until then it’s anyone’s guess.

Seeding is much more difficult to predict. In the past, the PWR has been an accurate predictor of teams selected, but not particularly accurate in terms of seeding.

Here’s one attempt at seeding, with Niagara (which is considered a West team, since the CHA is a “western” conference in the eyes of the NCAA) in the field.

Start out by placing the teams in their respective regions:

West                       East
1 Wisconsin 1 Maine
2 North Dakota 2 St. Lawrence
3 Niagara 3 New Hampshire
4 Michigan State 4 Colgate
5 Michigan 5 Boston College
6 St. Cloud 6 Boston University

Traditionally, the practice is to swap the bottom two schools in each bracket and reseed:

West                       East
1 Wisconsin 1 Maine
2 North Dakota 2 St. Lawrence
3 Niagara 3 New Hampshire
4 Boston College 4 Colgate
5 Boston University 5 Michigan
6 Michigan State 6 St. Cloud

This looks pretty good, except Boston College and Boston University would have a first-round matchup. That should be avoided, which is easily done by swapping BC and Niagara. In the end, we have:

West                       East
1 Wisconsin 1 Maine
2 North Dakota 2 St. Lawrence
3 Boston College 3 New Hampshire
4 Niagara 4 Colgate
5 Boston University 5 Michigan
6 Michigan State 6 St. Cloud

This particular seeding accomplishes many things, including:

Avoiding all first and potential second-round matchups between intraconference foes.

Keeping St. Lawrence and Colgate, the two New York schools, in Albany, which would increase the draw there.

Admittedly, St Cloud is sent East but would presumably be a bigger draw in Minneapolis. However, with WCHA opponents Wisconsin and North Dakota getting the two byes, it would be impossible to keep St Cloud in the West and avoid a potential second-round matchup.

If Niagara is left out, we have the following, after swapping and reseeding:

West                       East
1 Wisconsin 1 Maine
2 North Dakota 2 St. Lawrence
3 Boston College 3 New Hampshire
4 Boston University 4 Colgate
5 Michigan State 5 St. Cloud
6 Michigan 6 MSU-Mankato

With this seeding, there are no first- or potential second-round matchups between conference-mates, and again Colgate and St Lawrence are kept in Albany.

Another possibility is that the committee will give Niagara a bid, but disregard its PWR standing for seeding purposes, instead regarding Niagara initially as a sixth seed, much as MSU-Mankato would be. In this case, the seeding process proceeds exactly as in the scenario above, but with Niagara finishing up in MSU-Mankato’s spot, as the sixth East seed. That is, we get final seedings as follows:

West                       East
1 Wisconsin 1 Maine
2 North Dakota 2 St. Lawrence
3 Boston College 3 New Hampshire
4 Boston University 4 Colgate
5 Michigan State 5 St. Cloud
6 Michigan 6 Niagara

The NCAA seedings will be announced on ESPN2 at 1:30 Eastern time on Sunday, March 19.

The Unnoticed Superstar

Ink. Press. Publicity.

Most of the time, it goes to forwards. They get it when they score a key momentum-turning goal or bury a game-winner late in the third period or in overtime.

And when the forwards don’t get it, the goaltenders do for tossing a shutout or making one acrobatic save after another.

Defensemen? Fuhgedaboudit.

For them to get noticed, they either have to score a goal or screw up. For the average blueliner, the latter is more likely to happen.

Boston College’s Mike Mottau, however, is anything but average. He’s already a two-time All-American and is a mortal lock to make that three in the next few weeks.

Most of that fame comes from his offense. Even a hockey neophyte can look at the stats and appreciate his abilities. Earlier this year, he set a Hockey East record for most career points in league games by a defenseman with 93 — 14 goals and 79 assists.

On this evening, he broke a BC record for career games played with 159 as soon as he stepped on the ice. Then, with 40 seconds left in what looked like a 1-0 loss to Maine, he tied another school mark — this one for career assists (127) — when he took a faceoff won by Blake Bellefeuille and slid a D-to-D pass to Bobby Allen, who ripped a shot into the net to tie the game.

“I don’t really think about it,” he said days earlier when asked about the assist record. “One of my roommates keeps track. I don’t know how many away I am. It’ll be exciting, but I’m just concentrating on winning games now.”

No doubt about it, Mottau’s offense deservedly draws attention and is a big reason why Boston College has been Hockey East’s top scoring team the last three years.

“It’s so much easier when you have great defensemen who can just move the puck up and get it on your tape and you’re out of your zone,” said Brian Gionta earlier this season. “Mottau, Allen and all of them, they’re just a great bunch of guys who know the game and get the puck out of your zone.

“That’s the biggest key, because if that first pass isn’t right on, then it slows the game right down and you get caught in your own end. We probably have one of the best defensive corps in the country. That’s a huge benefit to us.”

But Mottau is far from a one-dimensional offensive threat. He’s every bit as exceptional, if not more so, in his own end. On Thursday, he won the Hockey East award for Best Defensive Defenseman, a rare honor for someone who is also the league’s top-scoring blueliner.

The evidence on this evening came repeatedly. Within a span of a few minutes in the second period, he broke up a pass on a two-on-one, delivered a thundering check to Barrett Heisten and then later showed his offensive dimension, hitting Ales Dolinar with a potential breakaway pass at the far blue line.

So it was a no-brainer to have Mottau on the ice for a key defensive zone faceoff in the closing seconds with the score tied, 1-1, and the game set to go into overtime thanks to the stunning goal by Allen.

But with 2.5 seconds left on the clock, the game went, in BC coach Jerry York’s words, “from euphoria to disappointment.” Maine’s Niko Dimitrakos took a faceoff won back to him and cut around a picked-off Mottau and ripped asunder Eagle hopes of a Hockey East tournament three-peat.

Of course, the season isn’t over for Boston College.

“You take a hit and move on,” said York.

There’s still a shot at a national championship. The Eagles solidified their grasp on a berth in the NCAA tournament by rallying to defeat New Hampshire in the Hockey East semifinal game one night earlier, in no small part to Mottau’s rarely discussed leadership.

“He just told us [before the third period] that this was not going to be our last game,” said Bellefeuille. “We don’t have an automatic bid for the NCAAs, so he just emphasized, ‘Let’s not let this be our last game.’ He really got us pumped up.”

York is even more emphatic about what Mottau’s leadership means to the Eagles beyond his offensive and defensive prowess.

“I’ve coached 28 teams and there are captains and co-captains, so that’s a lot of top kids involved,” he said. “But he’s by far the best captain I’ve ever had. His comrade-ship with the other players and just the peer pressure that he puts on his contemporaries to do the right thing and work hard. He’s got terrific leadership skills.”

There’s also the remaining matter of individual awards. Mottau has already been named Hockey East Co-Player of the Year with UNH’s Ty Conklin, as well as another All-Hockey East First Team selection.

What’s left other than a third All-America honor? Mottau was recently named one of ten finalists for the Hobey Baker Award along with teammates Jeff Farkas and Gionta.

The odds don’t favor Mottau, even though he may well be the best player in the country. Only two defensemen have won the honor, Tom Kurvers in 1984 and Mark Fusco in 1983. That’s a long dry spell for blueliners.

“I don’t think about it,” he said recently outside the BC locker room. “We have some Hobey Baker candidates here. It’s good to look back after a season and look at points and accolades. It’s nice. But when it’s happening, I don’t think about it because it’s almost a distraction. Right now, we just want to win games. The points and recognition are secondary.”

He then added with a grin, “For a defenseman, you’ve got to take that as secondary all the time.”

Horcoff Sweep Highlights CCHA Awards

Michigan State senior Shawn Horcoff won an unprecedented five laurels to highlight the 2000 CCHA Awards, presented Thursday, March 16, at the Fox Theatre in Detroit.

Horcoff

Horcoff

Fellow Spartans Joe Blackburn, Ryan Miller, and Mike Weaver, who picked up two plaques, accompanied Horcoff as Michigan State led all CCHA teams in postseason accolades.

Michigan’s Jeff Jillson was also honored twice.

Horcoff was named to the CCHA All-Academic Team and the league’s first All-Conference team, was the leading scorer in league play this season with eight goals and 36 assists, and was also named the league’s Best Defensive Forward and Player of the Year.

After being named Player of the Year, Horcoff thanked the Michigan State coaches for their patience, thanked his equipment manager, trainer, and strength and conditioning coach, and said of his four years as a Spartan, “It’s made me into a man.”

Blackburn was named to the league’s All-Academic Team, Miller earned Best Goaltender honors, and Weaver was named first-team All-Conference as well as picking up the Best Defensive Defenseman award.

Lake Superior State head coach Scott Borek was named coach of the year. Borek, who said that the award was more of a reflection on his players than himself, told a story about his family that he said illustrates the perspective you need as a coach.

Last season the Lakers lost a 5-4 home game to the Nanooks, after being up 4-0 in the first. Lake Superior had a chance to tie on a penalty shot and missed. “Not only did I get booed by the fans,” said Borek, “but I walked into my house and got booed by my wife and four kids.”

Borek said, “We have a saying in my house: It’s only a movie. That keeps it in perspective.”

Until this week, Borek had yet to be offered a contract extension on his current three-year deal. Yesterday, he said, he was negotiating with the university.

Northern Michigan’s Chris Gobert was named the league’s Rookie of the Year, while Jillson was named Best Offensive Defenseman and earned a spot on the league’s first-team All-Conference roster, and fellow Wolverine Sean Peach was given the Terry Flanagan Memorial Award, an honor that goes to a player who has overcome adversity to continue to play hockey. The award is named for assistant Bowling Green coach Terry Flanagan, who died of cancer in 1991.

Peach, a senior, sat out his sophomore season with a series of concussions, and there was doubt about whether he’d take the ice again. He talked about how difficult it was to watch from the sidelines the during the 1997-98 season, when Michigan won its most recent national title.

“Probably they won because I wasn’t there,” Peach quipped.

Other players named to the All-Academic team include Andy Jurkowski (Notre Dame), Jim Dube (Ferris State), Dustin Whitecotton (Miami), and Jason Redenius (Western Michigan).

In addition to Horcoff, Weaver, and Jillson, the first-team all-CCHA honorees were Mike Comrie (F, Michigan), Roger Trudeau (F, Northern Michigan), and Jayme Platt (G, Lake Superior).

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