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Denver’s Comrie to Leave For WHL

Denver junior Paul Comrie will forego his final two years of eligibility, according to an article in the Denver Post today, and will join Red Deer of the major junior Western Hockey League.

Comrie, who led Denver with 21 goals and 28 assists in 40 games during his sophomore year, was expected to tell Pioneer head coach George Gwozdecky of his decision by Thursday.

According to the Post, Comrie said, “I had a great two years at the university and will miss it. But I wanted to really help the team next year. I wanted to carry more of a leadership role, and they weren’t going in the same direction as me.”

Comrie, who was taken in the ninth round of the 1997 NHL draft by the Tampa Bay Lightning, was not named one of DU’s four captains for the upcoming campaign.

The Post also noted that Comrie expects to receive from Red Deer a payment of $600 per month plus room and board, as well as two years’ worth of college tuition at the school of his choice.

NCAA Schools Fare Well at NHL Draft

Forty-two current or future NCAA Division I players were chosen by National Hockey League teams at the league’s 1997 Entry Draft.

Defenseman Ben Clymer of Minnesota was the first college player selected, as the Boston Bruins made him the first pick of the second round, 27th overall.

Boston College and Notre Dame led the way with four draftees each, followed by Boston University, Denver, and Minnesota with three. Thirteen players were chosen from CCHA and Hockey East schools, while 11 came from the WCHA and five from the ECAC.

The 42 collegians selected — 16 recruits among them — represents 17 percent of the 246 players chosen by NHL teams throughout the draft’s nine rounds.

The complete list of draftees from NCAA schools follows, listed in order of selection by round.

2nd Round

27. Boston — Ben Clymer, d, Minnesota (WCHA)
28. Carolina (from San Jose) — Brad DeFauw, lw, North Dakota (WCHA)
30. Philadelphia (from Toronto) — Jean-Marc Pelletier, g, Cornell (ECAC)
44. Pittsburgh — Brian Gaffaney, d, Northern Iowa (USHL)/St. Cloud (WCHA)

3rd Round

57. Toronto — Jeff Farkas, c, Boston College (Hockey East)
63. Boston (from Washington) — Lee Goren, rw, North Dakota (WCHA)
66. Ottawa (from New Jersey) — Josh Langfeld, rw, Lincoln (USHL)/Michigan (CCHA)
67. Chicago — Mike Souza, lw, New Hampshire (Hockey East)
70. Calgary (from Phoenix) — Erik Andersson, c, Denver (WCHA)

4th Round

83. Los Angeles — Joseph Corvo, d, Western Michigan (CCHA)

5th Round

110. Chicago — Ben Simon, c, Notre Dame (CCHA)
115. N.Y. Islanders (from Carolina) — Adam Edinger, c, Bowling Green (CCHA)
116. Washington — Kevin Caulfield, rw, Boston College (Hockey East)
120. Chicago — Peter Gardiner, rw, RPI (ECAC)
133. Colorado — Aaron Miskovich, c, Green Bay (USHL)/Minnesota (WCHA)

6th Round

136. N.Y. Rangers (from San Jose) — Michael York, c, Michigan State (CCHA)
147. Chicago — Heath Gordon, lw, Green Bay (USHL)/Providence (Hockey East)

7th Round

163. San Jose — Joe Dusbabek, rw, Notre Dame (CCHA)
169. Carolina (from Philadelphia) — Andrew Merrick, c, Michigan (CCHA)
172. Montreal — Ben Guite, rw, Maine (Hockey East)
179. Pittsburgh — Mark Moore, d, Harvard (ECAC)
181. Anaheim — Mat Snesrud, d, Northern Iowa (USHL)/1997-98 Michigan Tech (WCHA)
182. N.Y. Rangers — Mike Mottau, d, Boston College (Hockey East)
183. Florida — Tyler Palmer, d, Lake Superior State (CCHA)

8th Round

191. Boston — Antti Laaksonen, lw, Denver (WCHA)
193. Los Angeles — Jay Kopischke, lw, Northern Iowa (USHL)/Notre Dame (CCHA)
194. Toronto — Russ Bartlett, c, Phillips-Exeter (USHS)/Boston University (HEA)
196. N.Y. Islanders — Jeremy Symington, g, Petrolia (Jr. B)/St. Lawrence (ECAC)
203. Ottawa — Nick Gillis, rw, Cushing Academy (USHS)/Boston University (HEA)
206. St. Louis — Bobby Haglund, lw, Des Moines (USHL)/Northeastern (HEA)
211. Florida — Doug Schueller, d, Twin Cities (USHL)/Bowling Green (CCHA)
215. New Jersey — Scott Clemmensen, g, Des Moines (USHL)/Boston College (HEA)
217. Colorado — Doug Schmidt, d, Waterloo (USHL)/Northern Michigan (CCHA)

9th Round

222. N.Y. Islanders — Ryan Clark, d, Lincoln (USHL)/Notre Dame (CCHA)
224. Tampa Bay — Paul Comrie, c, Denver (WCHA)
226. Washington — Matt Oikawa, rw, St. Lawrence (ECAC)
227. Vancouver — Peter Brady, g, Powell River (Tier II)/Alaska-Anchorage (WCHA)
230. Chicago — Chris Feil, d, Ohio State (CCHA)
233. Phoenix — Wyatt Smith, c, Minnesota (WCHA)
234. Pittsburgh — Eric Lind, d, Avon Old Farms (USHS)/New Hampshire (HEA)
235. Anaheim — Tommi Degerman, w, Boston University (Hockey East)
236. N.Y. Rangers — Richard Miller, d, Providence (Hockey East)


List compiled by Mike Machnik.

Hockey East Announces 1996-97 All-Academic Team

Forty-one players were named to the 1996-97 Hockey East All-Academic Honor Roll, headed up by its Top Scholar-Athlete, four Distinguished Scholars, and a league-high eight players from Merrimack.

Boston University senior Shawn Ferullo earned the league’s Top Scholar-Athlete Award by compiling a grade point average of 3.91 in the school’s College of Arts and Sciences.

Hockey East also announced that four players had been named as Distinguished Scholars, the league’s highest academic honor. Receiving the award were Maine’s Dan Shermerhorn, UMass-Lowell’s Craig Lindsay, and Merrimack’s Rob Beck and Tom Johnson. To receive the award, a student-athlete must be named to the Honor Roll all four years of his career. Only 14 players have met this criteria in the award’s eight year history.

For the fifth consecutive season, Merrimack had more players named to the Honor Roll than any other Hockey East school. The Warriors placed eight players on this year’s team. UMass-Lowell was a close second with seven.

The complete list of honorees by school follows:

Boston College: Brian Callahan, Brad Carlson, Jeff Farkas, Joe Harney, Ryan Taylor.
Boston University: Shawn Ferullo, Dan Ronan.
Maine: Steve Kariya, Nils Satterstrom, Dan Shermerhorn (*).
UMass-Amherst: Gerry Cahill, Dan DiLeo.
UMass-Lowell: Shannon Basaraba, Chris Bell, Craig Brown, John Campbell, Neil Donovan, Craig Lindsay (*), Mike Nicholishen.
Merrimack: Rob Beck (*), Cris Classen, Karl Infanger, Tom Johnson (*), Casey Kesselring, Martin Laroche, Kris Porter, Darrel Scoville.
New Hampshire: Dan Enders, Jason Krog, Brian Larochelle, Mark Mowers, Chad Onufrechuk.
Northeastern: Judd Brackett, Arttu Kayhko, Brad Klyn, Brad Mahoney, Aaron Toews, Dmitri Vasiliev.
Providence: David Green, Dave Gunderson, Mark Kane.

(*) denotes recipients of the Distinguished Scholar award.

To qualify for the Hockey East All-Academic team, a player must record at least a 3.0 grade point average in each of the two semesters in which he played hockey. A total of 189 student-athletes have been named to the squad in the eight year history of the award.

Grillo Named New Head Coach at Brown

Brown’s two-month search for a new men’s ice hockey coach is finally over.

Roger Grillo, a highly-regarded seven-year assistant at Vermont, was introduced Monday as the team’s next coach. He replaces Bob Gaudet, who left two months ago to take over the head coaching position at his alma mater, Dartmouth.

“I’m excited to move from an assistant’s position to a head coaching job with the opportunity to run my own show,” said Grillo. “I was extremely impressed by the people at Brown, and I’m excited to be given the opportunity to be head coach at one of the nation’s top universities.”

Grillo was the second person to be offered the position. Brown athletic director Dave Roach offered the job to Brown graduate and former NHL defenseman Tim Bothwell about a month ago. After two weeks of consideration, Bothwell decided to stay at his current position as head coach of the University of Calgary.

Grillo wasn’t interviewed in person during the first go around. Right after Gaudet left, Roach interviewed only Bothwell, current assistant Jamie Rice, and Boston University assistant Brian Durocher. It seemed certain that the position would go to someone with and Ivy League background — Durocher had been an assistant at Brown for a couple of years under Gaudet.

But after Bothwell turned down the offer, Roach revitalized the search, and he began to look more seriously at Grillo, a native of Apple Valley, Minn.

“Roger is recognized as one of the outstanding young assistant coaches in the country,” said Roach. “He had a tremendous impact on the Vermont program where he was known as a tireless worker and an exceptional recruiter.”

In his time at Vermont under head coach Mike Gilligan, Grillo helped lead a team that became national contenders, culminating in the Catamounts’ Final Four appearance in 1996. Vermont was also in the NCAA Tournament this past season.

Grillo played defense for the University of Maine from 1982-84 and was a 1983 draft choice of the Vancouver Canucks. After graduating from Maine in 1986, Grillo went on to coach Yarmouth High School, where his teams won three straight Maine state championships. He was named Maine’s High School Coach of the Year after all three seasons. After leaving Yarmouth, Grillo was an assistant at Norwich (Ver.) University for one season, before landing at the University of Vermont in 1990.

Durocher, meanwhile, was disappointed he wasn’t given more consideration, though he says there are worse places to be an assistant than at BU.

“I was never offered the job,” Durocher said. “I’ll leave the rest be. I don’t have any comment.”

As for Bothwell, he said the decision to turn down the job was a difficult one. His indecision was part of the reason why it took Brown so long to name a new coach.

One of the factors was his consideration for girlfriend Barbara, and what the move would mean to her. But mostly, it came down to the coaching situation itself.

“It was very attractive in a lot of ways,” Bothwell said. “But I have a more realistic chance of winning a national champ here (at the University of Calgary).”

“I was very close to taking it after I left after the interview. It was very tough to let go. You could win a national championship at Brown, but even if you do a good job after two to three years of recruiting, you’re still never going to be a favorite,” explained Bothwell.

Bothwell said that he wouldn’t rule out such a move in the future.

“Dave [Roach] did a great job making it attractive,” Bothwell said. “I can’t even say I wouldn’t be interested at some point and time. But now didn’t feel quite right. I enjoy living here, it’s a great spot.”

Grillo takes over a program that has fallen back to the bottom of the ECAC, after years of revitalization under Gaudet. Brown made the NCAA Tournament in 1993, and was a second-place finisher in the league in 1995, before fading to seventh and then last over the past two seasons.

But, just after Gaudet left, he said he believed the program was left with its second-best recruiting class in the last 10 years.

Parker to Remain at BU

Boston University head coach Jack Parker has turned down the offer from the Boston Bruins to be their next coach according to reports out of Boston.

Parker was offered the job Wednesday by Bruins general manager Harry Sinden after meeting with team officials for an hour, and had until Monday to decide.

Parker has compiled a 549-257-46 record at BU in his 24 years, winning two national championships.

Back To His Roots

For Bob Gaudet, going “home” again just felt like the right thing to do.

On Apr. 2 Gaudet, the 1995 ECAC Coach of the Year, was named the next head coach at Dartmouth, his alma mater. He leaves behind a Brown program that he helped raise from the dead during his nine years, and returns to one that he twice took to the Final Four as a standout goalie in 1979 and 1980 before it lapsed into oblivion over the next 17 years.

For a guy who’s been courted by schools like Ohio State, there’s no need to tell Gaudet, 38, that this is a lateral move professionally. But sometimes, it’s not all about career advancement.

Providence, R.I., was good to him, Gaudet says, but the Hanover, N.H., area is where he met his wife, and where the first of his three children was born while he was an assistant at Dartmouth. The time felt right.

“The kids are nine, eight and two,” Gaudet said. “It was one of the few times we could move. If you wait, it would be more difficult.

“Professionaly it probably was (a lateral move), but priorities change when you get older.

“As a young coach with a wife without kids, your priorities are different. The last nine years were a blur, it’s gone by quickly. All of a sudden, I have a boy that’s 10, and high school and college are not far off — you change your thoughts.

“I don’t think it’s a huge professional sacrifice. I’m going to be challenged in Division I coaching still, with a program with potential still.”

After Roger Demment was fired at Dartmouth, school athletic director Dick Jaeger contacted Gaudet about his interest. Solid candidates applied, like New Hampshire assistant Brian McCloskey, but it always was Gaudet’s job if he wanted it.

“We sought him out,” Jaeger said. “We had a pretty good indication he would be interested. We approached him several times (in the past).”

Jaeger only went to Gaudet, however, after talking to Brown AD Dave Roach.

“Dave was OK with it,” Gaudet said. “It’s not ever a great situation, but it was done professionally.

“There were mixed emotions. Obviously there was an interest; any time those situations come up, you owe it to your family (to check it out). It just happened so quick.

“I wasn’t looking to leave Brown. The people were great to me here.

“When the situation happened, I was half hoping it would pass, I’d put my head in the sand and it would go away, and half hoping there was some interest.”

For Jaeger, the decision to focus on Gaudet seemed like a no-brainer.

“He has great Division I coaching experience and a great track record down there (at Providence),” said Jaeger. “We’ve gotten strong testimony from those he coached, and testimony from people in the hockey world. He’s a natural. We don’t need to look any further. He likes it (in Hanover). It’s tailor-made.”

Gaudet took over Brown after it had gone through 10 straight seasons with no more than 11 wins. In his first game as a head coach at any level, Gaudet saw the Bears defeat his alma mater, only to lose the next 25 straight.

Over the next three years, Brown crept toward mediocrity before eventually making the NCAA tournament in 1993, for the first time in 17 years. In 1995, Brown flirted with first place most of the season before settling for second, and Gaudet was named the league’s top coach.

The team came full-circle, of sorts, this past year. Brown finished last with league record of 4-17-1. Gaudet’s last win there was against the same team as his first — Dartmouth.

But, despite the tailoff the last two seasons, there’s little doubt that Gaudet left the Brown program in much better shape than he found it.

“We had a really good recruiting class coming,” Gaudet said. “We got a couple of kids that will be able to play that were major junior (and therefore ineligible last year). It was clearly my second-best recruiting class.”

At Dartmouth, Gaudet will again be asked to help a struggling program rejuvenate itself. And it would seem that Dartmouth has as good a chance as Brown did, especially when you consider its top-class facility, Thompson Arena. So the pressure is on, not just for Gaudet, but for Jaeger to finally produce a winning team.

“If this (hiring) won’t work, I’ll go on a cruise somewhere, and just pick a random name,” said Jaeger.

“I put a lot of pressure on myself,” said Gaudet. “Coming (to Brown) there was the pressure of the situation here. Taking over a program that was down and out was difficult. The situation here was pretty tough. As a 29-year-old head coach, if I didn’t get it done, I wouldn’t have gotten another job.

“Now at Dartmouth there’s another challenge, but I think that’s good. They really haven’t had the success people want, they haven’t been in the playoff picture. I think that’s definitely a realistic goal.”

Said Jaeger, “I think we can do as well (as this past year), if not better, then hit the ground running. He doesn’t have as much rebuilding to do.”

Dartmouth looked like it might turn a corner under Demment, who was named ECAC Coach of the Year in 1993 when the Big Green finished sixth. But the program never got over the hump, and instead took steps backward. There’s been concern from the outside over whether something inherent to the program made it impossible to win. There are obvious hindrances at any Ivy League school, but Gaudet says he wouldn’t be going if he wasn’t sure.

“There’s a lot of trust you place, when you make a decision like this, that things will be supported (by the school administration),” Gaudet said. “And that’s my feeling. And it’s my job to give them the best possible student-athletes to deal with. But the fact of the matter is, it shouldn’t be drastically different.”

“When I played there, we played there in front of a packed house. I know times have changed with TV and accessibility, but I do think it can be done or I wouldn’t have chosen to do it.”

“We do have good tradition,” Jaeger said. “Others have gotten better, and we’ve struggled of late. We have a great arena — a great fan arena — much like Burlington (Vt.). We want to do everything in reason to be successful, attractive, fun to watch. We’ll win some, lose some, while giving people a heck of a game.”

Of course, now the search is on for Gaudet’s successor at Brown. Gaudet is hoping Roach takes a good look at Brown assistant Jamie Rice, the 29-year-old Babson graduate.

“Jamie Rice has been with me five years, and he was previously at Dartmouth and Colby,” Gaudet said. “He’s been around quite a bit. He’s a really good candidate for the job. My hope is that Jamie’s given a real legitimate chance here.”

Another candidate is Boston University assistant Brian Durocher, 40, who was at one time an assistant with Gaudet. But that’s only if he’s interested.

“Brian’s another great one,” Gaudet said. “He’s a super guy and a dear friend. He was here and really helped to get the thing going.”

Gaudet has twice come close to taking jobs at scholarship schools, and everyone had assumed that would be his next step. By going to Dartmouth, those plans are now on hold, but Gaudet says the move doesn’t mean he’s given up on the idea of moving up in the coaching world.

“I’m going to Dartmouth to do the job, and I’m going to work really hard and get after it,” Gaudet said. “I’m 38 years old, I’m not just washed up. I’ve got some jump left. Maybe down the road — but I know I’m going to be (at Dartmouth) for a while.”

ECAC Dumps Hockey East 10-8 In Senior All- Star Game

The Second Annual Eastern Senior All-Star game provided a surplus of excitement and goals for the 3,203 college hockey fans in attendance Sunday Apr. 6 as the ECAC all-stars edged the Hockey East seniors, 10-8, in an up-and-down, run-and-gun offensive shootout at the University of Vermont’s Gutterson Fieldhouse.

The ECAC team (comprised of players from ECAC Division I, as well as Division II/III all-stars from Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont) took a 3-1 lead at the end of the first period and never trailed in the contest, although the score was tied 4-4, 5-5, 7-7 and 8-8 before Vermont forward J.C. Ruid finally tallied what turned out to the gamewinner at 15:49 in the third period to lift the home team to victory.

Ruid, who finished with a goal and four assists to lead all scorers, was named Most Outstanding Player for the ECAC, while Providence College defenseman Hall Gill scored a goal and added two assists to be named MOP for Hockey East squad (comprised of players from Hockey East, along with ECAC Div. II/III players from Massachusetts, Maine and New Hampshire).

The ECAC fielded an all-UVM first line of Ruid and All-Americans Eric Perrin and Martin St. Louis. The trio combined for four goals and 13 points on the afternoon while fellow UVM-er Matt Stelljes, subbing in for Clarkson’s Todd White who was sick, tallied two goals and added an assist to give the local fans plenty to cheer about.

The Hockey East squad also got outstanding offensive performances from Rob Bonneau of UMass-Amherst (1-2–3), David Wainright of B.C. (2-1–3) and David Green of Providence (0-4–4).

Trailing 8-6 with less than 10 minutes remaining, the Hockey East team got back-to-back goals from Wainright at 12:24 and 13:00 to tie it up, 8-8.

Ruid put the ECAC ahead to stay at 15:49, scoring off a scramble in front of the net. The Ballston Lake native then banked a pass of the boards up ice to St. Louis who put the puck into an empty net with 10 seconds remaining to seal the victory.

Each team used three different goalies. The ECAC’s lineup consisted of Brian Audette of Brown (12 saves), Dave Dragone of Potsdam (17 saves) and Tim Thomas of Vermont (12 saves), each playing a period, in that order. Hockey East started Martin Legault of Merrimack (eight saves) in the first period, followed with Stuart Logan of Bowdoin (13 saves) in the second and Dan Dennis of Providence in the third (seven saves).

The ECAC’s goals were scored by: Matt Stelljes-Vermont (2), Martin St. Louis-Vermont (2), Eric Perrin-Vermont (1), J.C. Ruid-Vermont (1), Petr Vasicko-Elmira (1), Mark Kotary-Oswego (1), Matt Pagnutti-Clarkson (1) and Sebastien Bilodeau-Middlebury (1).

The Hockey East team got goals from: David Wainwright-B.C. (2), Hall Gill-Providence (1), Neil Donovan-MA-Lowell (1), Brian Callahan-B.C. (1), Nick Lamia-Colby (1), Rob Bonneau-MA-Amherst (1), and Reg Cardinal-Maine (1).

Drury Named New England MVP by Hockey Writers

Chris Drury was named Most Valuable Player and Best Forward in New England by the New England Hockey Writers.

Drury, an All-America center from Boston University and runner-up for the Hobey Baker Award, was voted as the recipient of the Leonard M. Fowle Award as New England’s Most Valuable Player and the Herb Gallagher Plaque as New England’s Best Forward. Drury led BU with 38 goals and 62 points this season.

Drury also received the Walter Brown Award by the Gridiron Club of Greater Boston as New England’s top American-born collegiate player. This marks the fifth straight year that a player from BU has been given this honor.

The writers also honored a number of others with awards given out at their annual banquet on April 8.

Boston University defensemen Jon Coleman was tabbed as New England’s Best Defenseman. Coleman, a First Team All-America selection, finished the season with five goals and 32 points.

Mike Mottau, freshman defenseman for Boston College, is the recipient of the George C. Carens Award as Rookie of the Year. Mottau ranked second among BC defensemen with 18 assists and 23 points.

New Hampshire sophomore forward Jason Krog was honored with the Paul Hines Award as Most Improved Player. Krog increased his rookie totals of four goals and 24 points to 23 goals and 67 points this season.

Travis Dillabough of Providence was named the winner of the Frank Jones Award as the Best Defensive Forward. The senior forward received the same honor from Hockey East and recorded totals of 13 goals and 21 points.

Senior defenseman Rick Schuhwerk of Northeastern received the Joseph Tomasello Award as Unsung Hero. He captained the Huskies and finished with two goals and 14 points.

Medford Square Sporting Goods owner Tony Lucci is the recipient of the Sheaffer Pen Award for contribution to New England hockey.

The award as ECAC East Player of the Year was shared by Colby forward Dan Lavergne and Middlebury defenseman Sebastian Bilodeau. Williams’ David Haimson received the ECAC East Rookie of the Year.

Named as the ECAC North Player of the Year was Dan Genatossio of Fitchburg State. John Gurskis of St. Michael’s was the ECAC Central Player of the Year, while the ECAC South Co-Players of the Year were Matt Goodrich of Quinnipiac and Chris McMahon of Skidmore.

The writers also honored three coaches this season. Merrimack coach Ron Anderson received the Clark Hodder Award as New England Division I Coach of the Year. Norwich’s Mike McShane was named as the ECAC East-Koho Coach of the Year, and St. Michael’s Lou DiMasi was the ECAC North-Central-South Coach of the Year.

Dartmouth Names Gaudet 19th Head Coach

On Wednesday, Dartmouth College confirmed a story that first appeared on U.S. College Hockey Online by appointing current Brown head man Bob Gaudet as its nineteenth men’s ice hockey head coach.

“When the search committee first came together, we had a good idea of what we were looking for in an ideal candidate,” said Dartmouth athletic director Dick Jaeger. “[Gaudet] met all of those criteria.

“In addition, the more I talked to hockey people around the country, the more it became apparent [Gaudet] is recognized as one of the finest and highly regarded coaches in the college game. We are ecstatic to have him return to his alma mater to lead the Dartmouth men’s hockey program.”

Gaudet graduated from Dartmouth in 1981 after playing four years in goal for the Big Green, which he led to two Ivy League titles and consecutive third-place NCAA championship finishes in 1979 and 1980.

Gaudet was an assistant at Dartmouth under George Crowe and Brian Mason before moving to Brown as the head coach nine years ago. In that time, Gaudet won two Ivy League titles, and coached the Bears to their first NCAA tournament appearance in almost 20 years.

“I’m really excited to be coming back,” said Gaudet. “Going to school at Dartmouth was one of the best things that has ever happened to me, and a lot of great things have happened for me as a result of my Dartmouth experience.

“To come back as head coach is a wonderful situation. I know the school and the people, and being familiar with the ECAC, I’m looking forward to meeting the players and getting right into it.”

Gaudet replaces Roger Demment, who was fired after six seasons, during which he compiled an overall record of 45-111-10.

Spokespersons for Brown University could not be reached comments on the school’s search for Gaudet’s successor.

New Season-Opening Tourney To Debut In October

The Ice Breaker Cup, a new season-opening college hockey tournament, debuts at the Rosemont Horizon in Chicago next October.

The tournament will feature four Division I teams, one from each of the four major conferences,in a single-elimination competition on Oct. 11-12, the first weekend of the NCAA college hockey season.

“The Ice Breaker Cup is a great new event for everyone associated with college hockey,” said Bruce McLeod, commissioner of the WCHA, which is hosting the tourney.

“The tournament is a super kick-start for our athletes and our fans. Best of all, the tournament is an opportunity to showcase the college game in Chicago, an important national media market and hotbed of amateur hockey.”

The inaugural event will pit the Wisconsin against Clarkson, and Michigan State against Boston University in the first round. The winners will play a championship the next day, preceded by a third-place game.

It is anticipated that the tournament will receive a once-in-four-years exemption from the NCAA to allow teams to participate without counting the games against their 34-game maximum. Over a four year period, 16 different teams could each take advantage of the exemption once.

This year’s event is being co-promoted by the Horizon, a 17,250-seat venue which houses the IHL’s Chicago Wolves, and KemperLesnik Communications, promoter of college basketball’s Maui Invitational and golf’s Kemper Open.

NCAA Shifts Tourney Dates

To avoid conflicts with the men’s and women’s basketball tournaments, and to improve the opportunity to sell tickets, the NCAA is moving the Division I men’s ice hockey championships a week later.

As reported last fall on U.S. College Hockey Online, starting next year, the hockey semifinals and finals will be played one week after the roundball Final Fours. In addition, starting in 2000, the schedule will include one week off between the regionals and the semifinals.

Specifically, the hockey finals, called the Frozen Four in some circles, will be played the 14th weekend after Jan. 1 each year.

According to the NCAA, the changes will “allow the host institution the ability to market the four semifinalists in its community.”

The schedule of future schedules and sites:

1998

West Regional   March 27-28     Yost Arena, Ann Arbor, Mich.
East Regional March 28-29 Pepsi Arena, Albany, N.Y.
Finals April 2 and 4 FleetCenter, Boston, Mass.

1999

East Regional   March 26-27     The Centrum, Worcester, Mass.
West Regional March 27-28 Dane County Coliseum, Madison, Wisc.
Finals April 1 and 3 Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim, Anaheim, Calif.

2000

Finals          April 7 and 9   Providence Civic Center, Providence, R.I.

2001

Finals          April 6 and 8   Pepsi Arena, Albany, N.Y.

2002

Finals          April 5 and 7   St. Paul Civic Center, St. Paul, Minn.

2003

Finals          April 4 and 6   Marine Midland Arena, Buffalo, N.Y.

All-America Teams Announced

Led by Hobey Baker Award winner Brendan Morrison, Michigan boasts four members on the 1996-97 Titan University Division I All-America teams, the most of any school in the nation.

The University Division teams, selected by members of the American Hockey Coaches Association (AHCA), consist of 24 players divided into East and West, First and Second teams. In addition to the four Wolverines named, three players each from Boston University and Clarkson University are among the honorees. The University of North Dakota, the newly-crowned NCAA Division I champion, has two.

The College Division teams, also selected by the AHCA, similarly consist of 24 players divided the same way. NCAA Division III runner-up Wisconsin-Superior placed four players on the teams, along with three from the Rochester Institute of Technology and two each from Colby, St. Mary’s, NCAA Division II champion Bemidji State, and NCAA Division III champion Middlebury.

The complete list is as follows:

Matt Henderson: Wasted Years

When you feel you’ve wasted two years of your life, what tack do you take? If you’re ever going to be the Most Outstanding Player of a national championship tournament, you have to change course and make up for lost time.

That’s the exact approach taken by North Dakota junior forward Matt Henderson. In the fifth year of turning his hockey career around, Henderson led his team to a 6-4 win over Boston University in the NCAA title game at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee.

The night before the championship game, Henderson did some talking to himself. “I’m going to leave no stone unturned; I’m going to leave my heart on the ice.”

It was no small one that he left out there. “Matt has the biggest heart in the league (WCHA),” says freshman teammate Aaron Schweitzer, who like Henderson is a member of the All-Tournament Team.

Henderson assisted on North Dakota’s rally-starting first goal and scored twice in a five-goal second-period explosion that lifted the Fighting Sioux to their sixth national championship.

A six-point weekend (four goals, two assists) put him at the top of the tournament scoring list.

The period of adjustment for Henderson came after his senior year at White Bear Lake High School in Minnesota. “I threw away two years of high school. I was King Crap. I wasted two years of my life,” Henderson recalls. “And now, I’m going to make it up,” he promised himself as he began a two-year stay with the St. Paul Vulcans of the United States Hockey League in 1992.

He righted his hockey career impressively by being named a league all-star in 1993-94. But, there was nothing secure about his hockey future. With only a month remaining before the start of the 1994-95 academic year, Henderson didn’t feel he had a bona fide offer to play college hockey.

“Amherst was just going Division I, and Illinois-Chicago. [UIC’s] program ended, so I guess I made the right decision there. I wanted to stay close to home and play in the WCHA, the best league in the nation.”

Still, no offers. He called St. Cloud State and was told they already had a lot of players. He also considered playing Division II or III.

“With one month left before school,” says Henderson, “(UND coach) Dean Blais called. He said ‘We heard you can play. If you want, you can come up and try out. If you make the team we can give you some (scholarship) money.'”

“I can look back now and smile.”

Henderson’s first year at UND wasn’t all smiles; his relationship with Blais, the coach of his last, best D-I hope, wasn’t rosy. “We didn’t see things eye to eye,” Henderson says.

“He wanted the seniors to make the team go. He thought I (as a freshman) was too big for my britches.”

“I wanted more, he got complacent,” recalls Blais, who was in his rookie season as coach. “I told him, ‘Get on board or get out of town.'”

Henderson agrees, “I think I was (complacent). It was “a slap of reality in the face.”

Henderson’s quest to wipe out two “wasted” years should be considered complete. In Milwaukee, he competed in a national event loaded with five Hobey Baker finalists, including teammate Jason Blake.

The Hobey winner, Brendan Morrison of Michigan, and runner-up Chris Drury of Boston University, came to Milwaukee amid fanfare, acclaim and attention. Henderson leaves Milwaukee as the tourney’s Most Outstanding Player and as a national champion.

To Henderson, that’s all right. “I’ll take the national championship.”

Brendan Morrison: 1997 Hobey Baker Award Winner

According to the Hobey Baker selection committee, a Hobey Baker Award winner should “exhibit strength of character” and possess “oustanding skills in all aspects of the game.”

According to Michigan head coach Red Berenson, this year’s Hobey Baker winner is “an excellent person” who “shares his success with his teammates.”

And this year’s winner is “the same child today as he was when he was five years old,” according to the ultimate authority on Brendan Morrison: his mother.

“He has basically the same friends at home as the ones he grew up with,” says Deb Morrison. “He’s always kept in contact with them. He’s always treated everybody as an equal.”

Morrison’s linemate, Jason Botterill, echoed Deb Morrison’s sentiments. “He gets all this media attention, but whenever you’re just talking to him, he never feels above you, and you never seem to feel below him. He’s always very warm and very humble. He’s been like that to every player on this team. His respect for other players and other people is what sets him aside.”

“Nothing has changed,” says Morrisons mother. “Even his personality is exactly the same. He’d be the first one to walk up to you, introduce himself, but not talk about himself.”

The native of Pitt Meadows, British Columbia, could tell you a lot about himself and his career at the University of Michigan. Morrison’s statistics at Michigan are impressive: tied for eighth for career goals (101); most assists (182); most points (283); tied for seventh in NCAA Division I points (283).

The Hobey Baker is just one of Morrison’s awards. This year, Morrison was named the CCHA Player of the Year for the second consecutive season. This year marks his third time selected to the All-CCHA First Team. He became the first player in the 32-year history of the Great Lakes Invitational Tournament to be named Most Valuable Player three times.

And then there was that overtime goal that gave the Wolverines the NCAA Championship last year.

Not bad for a kid who “couldn’t even skate when he was five years old.” Says Deb Morrison, “He was all over the ice, but he did go for the puck all the time.”

“As far as Brendan Morrison is concerned,” says Berenson, “he’s been a player where what you see is not always what you get. When I first saw him, he was a scrawny kid. I had no idea that he was going to be the player that he has become. And it’s not just because of his size or the kind of kid he is; he had something special in him that made him want to be better than the average player.

“He just hasn’t had a Hobey Baker season, he’s had a Hobey Baker career. To lead the country in scoring as a sophomore, that’s a statement in itself.”

When the Hobey Baker Award winner was announced, Berenson praised Morrison’s desire to come back to captain the Wolverines his senior year after the team had won the national championship in 1996.

That chance at a second consecutive national championship was denied Michigan when the Boston University Terriers beat the Wolverines 3-2 in a semifinal game the day before Morrison was announced as the Hobey Baker winner.

“Brendan would be the first to tell you that he’d trade in a victory (Thursday) for this award,” said Berenson. “Last year, the shoe was kind of on the other foot. We won the championship; Brendan didn’t win the Hobey. And he was fine with that.”

When he accepted the award, Morrison said, “I know some of the guys are disappointed with the outcome of the game last night, but we have nothing to hang our heads about. We had a successful year, and we did all the little things along the way, and sometimes the best team doesn’t win.”

At the ceremony, Morrison thanked the Michigan coaching staff, the equipment manager and athletic trainer and their assistants, his parents Ron and Debbie Morrison, his sister Jennifer, his uncle, his grandmother, his girlfriend Erin, and the Michigan fans. And, of course, his teammates.

“I’d like to thank the senior class,” he said, his voice breaking with emotion. “Its been a tremendous four years with those guys. Its going to be extremely tough to top those four years.”

As hard as it was for Morrison and the Wolverines to lose in the semifinals, saying goodbye to this year’s senior class may be even harder.

“You could take one of us out,” said senior Blake Sloan, “and it takes a little piece of everyone away. I have never been associated with good players and good people in all my life, like the eight other guys in my class. To have guys like that click like that is incredible.”

While nothing can make up for losing to Boston University, Sloan says that at least the seniors can gain some satisfaction from this award.

“Particularly for the senior class, we each take a little bit away from it,” he said.

The Hobey Baker ceremony provided at least some sense of closure for this Michigan senior class, the final appearance the nine seniors would make as teammates. Berenson, meanwhile, exuded pride in Morrison and his eight classmates.

“I think as much as you’re sad to see them go, I think it’s good that they’re going,” said Berenson. “It’s their time to go. They’ve done everything they can do at the college level. They’ll all leave with their degrees, and they’re ready for the next step, whatever that step is, whether it’s hockey or it’s not hockey. Their time has come. That’s the way it should be.

“For us, there will be an awful hole in our program. Well have to find other Botterills and Morrisons, so-called unknown players that are going to make themselves known at Michigan. And that’s our job.”

After the Wolverines won the national championship last year, there was speculation that their nine juniors would forego a senior year in college for professional hockey. All nine came back.

“I made the decision that I wanted to come back and be with these other eight guys,” said Morrison. “I have absolutely no regrets. It’s been the best year of my life.”

And from among the best — runner-up Chris Drury, Mike Crowley, Jason Blake, Mike Harder, Randy Robitaille, Martin St. Louis, Brian Swanson, Todd White, and his teammate, John Madden — Brendan Morrison has been named the best in 1997.

Bob Gaudet To Be Named Head Coach At Dartmouth

Bob Gaudet, who was the goalie on Dartmouth’s last NCAA Tournament teams in 1979 and 1980, will leave his current position as head coach at Brown and fill the head coaching vacancy at his alma mater, according to sources close to both teams.

Gaudet, 38, is expected to be formally introduced as the next coach of the Big Green early next week. He replaces Roger Demment, who was fired three weeks ago after another season in which the Big Green failed to make the ECAC playoffs.

Gaudet would not confirm the move, saying only, “We have to take care of this by early next week.”

Dartmouth athletic director Dick Jaeger could not be reached for comment.

In nine years at Brown, Gaudet compiled a 93-142-31 record, including 7-19-3 this past season (4-16-2 ECAC). He was ECAC Coach of the Year in 1995, when the Bears contended for first place until the last week of the regular season. In 1993, Brown earned a berth in the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1976.

Gaudet was an assistant at Dartmouth from 1983-88. He was a finalist for national coach of the year honors in 1993 and 1995. He played in the Winnipeg Jets’ system in 1981-82 before a knee injury ended his playing career.

Considered as early candidates to replace Gaudet at Brown are two of his former assistants: Brian McCloskey, currently assistant coach at New Hampshire, and Boston University assistant Brian Durocher.

They All Remember

It’s been 50 years since Dartmouth and Michigan met in the first NCAA Championship game. Fifty years since Spif Kerivan, member of the Dartmouth squad, lost his front teeth. “My memories of the game are somewhat personal,” he says.
“I also remember the game as a controversial game in terms of some of the calls,” continues Kerivan. He’s not alone.

Fifty years later, more than 20 hockey players from both teams meet again at this 50th NCAA Championship game, and every one of them remembers the same thing about the first one: The Goal.

Of course, to about half the players in attendance, there was nothing controversial about The Goal. Some of the other players — the Dartmouth players — insist there was no goal at all.

At the end of the second period of that first NCAA Championship game, a goal was scored — The Goal — that led to Michigan’s first NCAA title in a most unusual way.

Michigan alumnus Wally Grant says The Goal is just a difference of opinion. “It was a disputed goal. It went up in the air and came down on the net, and it bounced back behind the goalie. They [Dartmouth] thought the whistle had blown, and our team obviously did not.

“After 50 years,” he continues, “I think they’ve forgiven us.”

Think again.

“It was the first time in the history of college hockey that a goal was scored while a team was sitting in the dressing room,” says Bill Riley, captain of the ’48 Dartmouth team. “This is how it happened.

“The puck was dropped. He [the referee] blew a whistle. The goalie heard the whistle and skated out of the net. A Michigan player went down and tucked it into the net.”

The period ended, and the teams headed into the locker rooms. “When we came out, the score was 5-4 instead of 4-4, and we were very disappointed,” says Riley. “It was just one of those things. It was a tough way to drive home, having a goal scored on us while we were sitting in the dressing room.

“I dream about it.”

Don’t ask the Michigan players about the controversy. “Frankly, I don’t remember the controversy,” says Michigan reserve goaltender Paul Milanowski.

Don’t ask Dartmouth players who scored The Goal. “I don’t know who it was,” says Riley. “I have no idea.”

“There was no goal,” echoes a teammate.

“You have to play over those things, like injuries, disputed goals, referees,” says Grant. Replaying those memories — no matter how they’re remembered — has kept these players close for fifty years.

“Our memories remain because weve formed such strong friendships between the two teams,” says Bob Norton, member of the ’48 Michigan team. “To have 13 here from Dartmouth and 11 here from Michigan means something.”

It means something extraordinary. Fifty years of NCAA Championship hockey. Fifty years of friendship. Fifty years to rankle over one single goal.

Five Guys In Milwaukee, Part III

“Five Guys In Milwaukee,” which appears daily on USCHO during the NCAA championships, is Scott Brown’s travelog of a weekend at the Final Four.

Friday, March 28

7:59 a.m. Today’s a relatively free day — no games, just the Hobey Baker presentation in the afternoon. We are taking full advantage of this fact to get some rest, so nobody’s up…

8:00 a.m. Except Dave.

9:00 a.m. Dave’s still the only one up.

10:00 a.m. Dave’s still the only one up.

12:17 p.m. I get up. Tim’s running around with the computer stuff, trying to get USCHO’s display together downstairs. The Vote for Hobey stuff is all there, until somebody hauls off with the Todd White and Chris Drury profiles. Popular guys, apparently.

1:34 p.m. Frank, Lee and I go to lunch. Tim’s in a frenzy of activity. I almost feel bad enough to go help him. Almost.

2:33 p.m. I finally feel guilty enough to go downstairs and help Tim out a little bit with the stand. There’s a pretty good crowd building for the Hobey announcement, in no small part because the bar opened three minutes ago.

4:30 p.m. The Hobey presentation begins. Michigan fans have turned out in considerable numbers, in hopes that Brendan Morrison will take the hardware home. Boston U. — rooting for Chris Drury — is represented as well, though not in such quantity.

4:40 p.m. Morrison wins. The roar from the Wolverine contingent is probably audible all the way back to Yost Arena.

4:43 p.m. Morrison’s acceptance speech is going swimmingly. He’s thanked everyone under the sun very graciously, and is impressing the audience with his poise until of the BU-UM game last night he mentions that “sometimes the best team doesn’t win.” This sends the room into a frenzy, with the Maize and Blue fans hooting and hollering and the BU partisans incensed.

8:23 p.m. Tim heads out to our Staff Meeting With The Fans at one of the establishments down on Water Street — or, if you believe the promotional materials — “Milwaukee’s Famous Water Street.”

9:18 p.m. I follow. The place has “Welcome College Hockey Final Four” plastered all around, and the names of the schools alongside: “Michigan,” “Boston University,” “North Dakota,” and especially “Colorado College University.” Ouch.

10:30 p.m. The meeting is rather tame. Tim is holding forth with several hockey aficionados, while Lee is on what must be a third bowl of chili, with about a cup of sour cream on top. I’ve been mooching beers off fellow staffers, since all two of the local ATMs refuse my card.

12:08 a.m. Time to head back — the championship is again at noon, presumably to avoid competition with the basketball Final Four, which starts at 4:30 Central time.

Saturday, March 29

9:00 a.m. must…get…up…

10:00 a.m. not up…

10:30 a.m. Up. Much of the USCHO staff has gathered in our room for some strategic planning. Or something like that. Dave leaves early to head over to the game, which I suspect has something to do with the five-star food they’re supposedly serving over there. Next year I’m going to wangle a press credential, and then they’ll probably have hot dogs.

11:36 a.m. The Bradley Center again beckons. We’re hoping for another good game, though the question is whether BU will try to play the same hard-hitting style that was so successful against Michigan Thursday. North Dakota’s offense is stylistically similar, though their forwards are smaller overall than the Wolverines’. We figure the Terriers will try it again.

12:45 p.m. They do, and soon build a 2-0 lead behind goals from Peter Donatelli and Drury. But as the game progresses, the BU players seem more and more drained from their efforts in the semifinals, and soon the UND skaters are evading the checks that flattened Michigan earlier.

1:30 p.m. The UND explosion is underway. Four goals in the period thus far, sandwiched around one BU tally, have the score 4-3. The crowd, which was firmly behind the Terriers when Michigan was the opposition, is divided for this one.

1:44 p.m. North Dakota scores the backbreaker. David Hoogsteen’s goal in a scrum at the BU end with only five seconds left in the second period makes it 5-3, and takes a lot of the suspense out of the third.

2:37 p.m. BU does get a six-on-five goal with 39 seconds left, but UND answers with an empty-netter to seal the win. The players swarm out onto the ice in a pile, which makes me wonder who’s on the bottom down there. Sticks, gloves, pads — all go flying onto the ice.

2:58 p.m. The awards have been handed out and the names read. Though it doesn’t seem possible, the season is over. Next year’s finals are in Boston, at the FleetCenter, and we’re already making plans, which is good — never too soon for this bunch. We’ll see…

True Blue — Or Orange, Or Brown, Or Crimson, Or…

When North Dakota, Colorado College, Boston University and Michigan converged on Milwaukee for this years championship tournament, carloads and planeloads of Sioux, Tigers, Terriers and Wolverines came along to cheer.
So did the Falcons, the Black Bears, the Golden Gophers, the Spartans, the Wildcats and the Lakers. The NCAA Championship Tournament attracts hockey fans from all over North America, and when fans travel to the tournament, they bring their colors with them, even when their favorite teams stay home.

“I’m a little disappointed that we didn’t get into the tournament this year,” said Erik Anderson, a St. Cloud State fan. “We got our tickets last year, and we’ve been planning it for a year.” Erik, who is from North Dakota, was rooting for the Sioux during the North Dakota-Colorado College game. Regardless of the outcome, Erik said he would root for the remaining WCHA team in the championship game.

Such conference loyalty was lacking in the many CCHA fans who were watching the first game of the Tournament. Dan O’Brien, a Michigan State alumnus, said he would root for Michigan “under no circumstances.” Dan said the tournament is a chance for fellow hockey fans and friends to get together every year.

“I’ve been coming since ’84. It’s the only time of year when we get to see each other and get together and work off some steam.”

Dan’s group consists of “five or six of us that all went to school together,” along with people he and his friends have met through hockey. “We’ve added on people. We met some fellow named Greenie over the Internet who’s a Boston University fan. He brought a couple of his friends because we had some extra tickets. So we made an unholy alliance with them to try to dispose of Michigan.”

Pete Jaran is a member of Dan’s “unholy alliance” from New Jersey. Pete claims to be an RPI fan, but wouldn’t wear the jersey because “I didn’t go [to school] there.”

Pete’s hankering for the hockey road takes him to northern New York State to watch RPI play St. Lawrence and Clarkson every year. “It’s about a seven-hour drive to get up there. But there’s a crew of somewhere between four and eight guys that get together, twice a year. We’ve been doing it since 1978.”

Pete and Dan met through a mutual friend, and see each other at the championship tournament every year.

Milwaukee’s relative proximity to Michigan and Ohio brought many fans from the CCHA, but some teams were better represented than others. “This is the only Ferris State shirt I’ve seen here, and I’m a Ferris State grad, too,” said Dan Smith. Dan plans to attend the championship tournament even when it’s unlikely that Ferris will make an appearance.

Why? “Because I’m a hockey fan!” he said. “I like going to the final four. Its fun. Everybody should be here.”

“Since I can’t cheer for Ferris, I’m cheering for Boston today. I don’t care too much for Michigan.” Dan said that he would cheer for many of the other CCHA teams if they were to play in the tournament. “I would cheer for Michigan State, I would cheer for Western Michigan, probably most of them. Michigan’s not my favorite team.

“I’m a Ferris State fan, because I started watching them in 1974 when they really didn’t have a hockey team. We used to get in the van and drive 50 miles south to Grand Rapids and practice because we didn’t have a hockey rink.

“There was no money, no players, no anything.” Dan didn’t play himself. “I helped. I rode in the van. I drove the van periodically. I had a lot of fun, even though we didn’t have a good team at that time.”

John Pegg was wearing a Miami hat studded with hockey pins. He, his wife, Karen, and their son, Christopher, are Miami season-ticket holders who got hooked by attending last year’s championship in Cincinnati. This is their second championship tournament, and they plan on attending many more, whether or not their Miami team makes the semifinals. “If there’s any possible way we can do it, we’re going to keep doing it,” said John.

“I like college hockey better than I do professional hockey,” John said. “I think there’s more spirit in it.”

“You get to stand down at the glass,” added Christopher.

John said he was rooting for BU. Karen said she was “kind of neutral.” Christopher said, “Go Blue!”

“I think Michigan’s going to win it all,” said John, “but I can’t root for them. I just can’t.” John says he doesnt harbor any negativity for Michigan especially, but “they beat Miami twice this year.”

Tracy Schultze was wearing a Bowling Green jersey, but the Falcons are only one of her teams. Her other teams include Lake Superior State, Michigan State, New Hampshire and Maine. Tracy and a friend traveled from Los Angeles for the tournament. She likes the Falcons because of Rob Lake.

“We’ve always loved hockey. We’re Kings season-ticket holders, and they used to have a Freeze-Out at the Forum. Since they’ve done away with that, we have to travel.”

Tracy said she comes “every year,” but then admitted this was her second year. “Well, it’s been every year since we started to come!” She plans to keep coming back.

Also making their second consecutive trip to the tournament were Bev and Mary Youngs. The sisters-in-law have been Laker fans “since they’ve been playing hockey.” The women said they plan on doing this even when Lake Superior isn’t making an appearance. As Bev put it, “We get to take a trip with our husbands, and we don’t get to see them that often because they’re always working!

“Its great fun to get the four of us together. We enjoy hockey. There’s a lot of cameraderie here. You see other people wearing their colors.”

Jean White.

Jean White is a Wisconsin fan, which you wouldn’t know immediately from her Harvard jersey. “It’s pretty much like Wisconsin colors,” she explained. She and her family attend the tournament “only when it’s in Wisconsin. We live in Milwaukee.” She said her husband went to the tournament 35 years ago. “He saw Red Berenson play.”

Jean is not a Harvard fan. “We have two sons that are in college. One was going to go to Harvard and be a goalie, but he decided to go to Williams instead. So we got a shirt.”

Like many other fans in attendance, Jean was not enamored of the defending champions.

“It’s hard to root for Michigan,” she said. Part of the reason, she said, is the Big Ten rivalry, but there was another. “They’re arrogant,” she said. “They think that they’re going to win.”

Not every hockey fan in town was here for the game. One anonymous Minnesota Golden Gopher fan scheduled a business trip to Milwaukee to coincide with the tournament, but reshuffled his schedule to meet with clients during the semifinals when Minnesota bowed out. He left after Thursday’s games.

This particular fan didn’t think that the Terriers had much of a chance in the tournament, and said that they would have finished no higher than fifth place if they had to play in the WCHA.

Good thing he changed his travel plans.

Five Guys In Milwaukee, Part II

“Five Guys In Milwaukee,” which appears daily on USCHO during the NCAA championships, is Scott Brown’s travelog of a weekend at the Final Four.

Thursday, March 27

8:03 a.m. It’s awful early to be up, as far as I’m concerned. Dave doesn’t seem to have a problem with it, though — I suspect he’s the result of some secret breeding experiment to create a race of untiring superhumans. Cheery ones. Very sick.

8:26 a.m. I do get up. We’re supposed to meet Paula and Ed downstairs and go to breakfast someplace. None of us really know where to go, and we forget to tell Frank, who’s still in his jams when meeting time rolls around.

10:07 a.m. Paula and Ed are indeed downstairs, so we walk down to a local pub. The place is starting to fill up with college hockey fans, including one guy in a Michigan State jersey who intermittently gets up with some bizarre percussion instrument and belts out standards like “Roll Out The Barrel.” The crowd approves.

11:33 a.m. With the restaurant now absolutely packed with people — wearing shirts and hats and pins of all stripes, we figure it’s time to go. The first semifinal is at noon, local time.

11:38 a.m. The Bradley Center is a beautiful venue. Bright, airy, big, the works. Someone tells us that it was originally built specifically for hockey, and it shows. Tim, Lee and I are in the nosebleed section, about fifteen rows back in the upper level.

12:07 p.m. They drop the puck for the UND-CC game. Tim is expecting a blowout, but I’m hoping the Tigers can hold the Sioux in check and make a game out of it.

2:15 p.m. Tim is right. UND scores three goals in the first before CC battles back to 3-2 early in the second, raising the hopes of the largely nonaligned crowd. But the Sioux get two back almost immediately, and go on to win 6-2.

5:22 p.m. Tim, Lee and I try to get into the sports bar across the street from the hotel, but it’s a standing-room only crowd. We go around the corner to a little Chinese restaurant instead.

6:38 p.m. We come flying into the Bradley Center. The TV monitors stationed all around the building show that the game is already underway, though only a minute or two has gone by.

6:43 p.m. The energy level of the crowd is totally different from the earlier game. BU has come out playing physically, and the arena roars with each hit. Despite the significant Michigan contingency, the crowd is solidly pro-Terrier. A lot of them seem to have come out in the hopes that BU can take out the defending champs. “Anyone but Michigan!” some guy in the back hollers.

7:30 p.m. The BU band has learned “On Wisconsin,” and is applying it shamelessly in an effort to rally the locals. It’s working, although a lot of their other selections feel like circus music.

9:10 p.m. In the third, BU is up 3-1. Brendan Morrison decides to make it (still more) interesting, swatting it past Larocque on a six-on-five to bring Michigan within one with less than a minute to play.

9:10:01 p.m. The Michigan band plays “Hail to The Victors,” surprisingly for only the fifteenth time.

9:15 p.m. BU hangs on despite a total inability to clear the zone, and the game ends with a roar from the audience. “Bye-bye, Blue!” shrieks the guy in the back. The Michigan fans are not pleased, but anticipate some measure of redemption at the Hobey Baker presentation tomorrow.

Tinkering With The Rules

The first full season of the Referee-Assistant Referee concept of officiating college hockey nationally is one game shy of completion.

As most frequently explained, the Assistant Refs (ARs) are to call penalties the Referee doesn’t see. It’s an explanation that may not be completely accurate, but short of getting a court order for the NCAA Ice Hockey Rules Committee to open its books, it is the definition that has been used as the starting point for discussions with supervisors of officials this tournament weekend.

The reviews of 1-Ref-and-2-ARs have, by and large, been quite positive from coaches and officials. Fans, of course, will never be happy with referees. One of the few outspoken critics of the system is a well-intentioned, albeit picky, play-by-play announcer from a Midwestern sports channel.

His gripe has been, “How can you expect an AR to determine what a Ref doesn’t see?”

The basics of this system have been in use in the CCHA for three seasons, where Supervisor of Officials Dave Fisher says the ARs have been instructed to call infractions that occur behind the Ref. Now, thats a reasonable instruction — easily defined and easily followed. After a two-year trial in that conference, watched by zebras and zebra trainers from East to West, the principle was adopted nationally.

Through three seasons, says Fisher, “There have been no complaints, none, about calls made behind the play.”

The CCHA experiment started on a small scale and grew as it proved successful. In the first year, as the puck progressed out of an end zone, the AR was allowed to call penalties in that zone up to the blueline, if the infraction was behind the referee. By midseason, the AR’s jurisdiction was expanded to the center line. In year two, the system was working so well that jurisdiction expanded to the far blue.

The CCHA’s intent, whether stated publicly or not, was for officials to call stick infractions and actions that might result in injury. Again, a reasonable set of instructions.

But now that the system has been adopted by the NCAA and is in use in all four conferences, the predictable has occurred. College hockey’s regional biases and interpretations have reared their confusing, confounding and oftimes ugly heads.

Whats worthy of two minutes in the ECAC and Hockey East isn’t worth the wax some players put on their sticks in the CCHA.

The regional differences became glaringly evident at the West Regional games in Grand Rapids, Mich. More than once, Eastern ARs fluttered the peas in their whistles and Westerners bellowed, “Now what?”

NCAA Supervisor of Officials Charlie Holden agrees. “It shocked some people.”

ECAC referees, to their credit, know the NCAA rule book to the nth degree. They exercise literal interpretations of the rules. If they spot a penalty according to the letter of the law, they blow play dead. It doesn’t matter if the referee has seen the penalty or not. In effect, there are three full-time referees.

“In certain parts of the country,” Holden says, the refs have told their assistants “if I didn’t see it, (you) call it.” In a sense, that’s refreshing — refs without vanity, not concerned about being shown up by some guy not wearing an arm band. “Everyone involved in the game,” says Holden, “agrees we need more than one set of eyes. But, they have to remember it’s what the (NCAA) Rules Committee wants, not what each conference wants.”

To that end, Holden met with supervisors of officials from each of the conferences in Milwaukee Friday. They discussed implementation of the system, and whether ARs should call penalties.

“Is that what the Rules Committee wants? The answer is ‘Yes’.”

The basic tenets of the system seem to be accepted by most, if not all, coaches. Hockey East supervisor of officials Brendan Sheehy says that after just one season, coaches in that conference liked it. “They want to make sure all penalties are called.”

By midseason, Hockey East ARs called 91 penalties. In stark contrast, there were 47 such calls in the CCHA for the entire season. The WCHA total for the season was two dozen. Holden has asked each of the supervisors for final totals by the middle of April.

Holden’s concern is not the principle of the system but the mechanics. “It took us six years to get them (referees and their supervisors) to call checking from behind.”

This weekend, he’s asking about the holding-the-stick penalty. Do members of the rules committee, league supervisors and coaches want such an infraction behind the referee and behind the play to be called by an assistant refereee?

The system seems here to stay. What pleases the picky Midwestern TV voice is knowing the policymakers are intent on refining it so that it’s mechanically and logically sound, and that they aren’t forcing the ARs to become omniscient beings with some form of high-definition vision.

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