{"id":24233,"date":"2001-10-25T14:19:42","date_gmt":"2001-10-25T19:19:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2001\/10\/25\/this-week-in-hockey-east-oct-25-2001\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:54:19","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:54:19","slug":"this-week-in-hockey-east-oct-25-2001","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2001\/10\/25\/this-week-in-hockey-east-oct-25-2001\/","title":{"rendered":"This Week in Hockey East: Oct. 25, 2001"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Cream of the Crop<\/h4>\n
Prior to the arrival of Joe Bertagna as Hockey East commissioner, the league typically selected a preseason All-Hockey East team. Under Bertagna, however, the practice was abandoned and for good reason.<\/p>\n
“I’ve never done that in any league I’ve worked for,” he says. “I find that it’s unfair. Postseason honors are significant, [whether it’s] all-league, All-American or Hobey Baker. <\/p>\n
“I think that anointing someone at the start of the year before they’ve done anything in that year may give them an unfair edge. People tend to remember things. If somebody is supposed to be a preseason all-league choice, then he gets that edge without ever having stepped on the ice that season. <\/p>\n
“So I think it’s inappropriate. The kids who earn those honors at the end, should earn them on a level playing field. <\/p>\n
“Especially on defense. The forwards usually take care of themselves and the goalies [do, too]. But sometimes when you’re voting for defensemen, unless you’re voting for a guy with a lot of points or a guy like [former BC Hobey Baker Award-winner Mike] Mottau, a dominating player, people are scratching their heads to see who the third or fourth best defenseman is and sometimes even the top one. <\/p>\n
“If somebody has carried this mantle all year that he’s the preseason all-league defenseman and nobody is sure of [anybody] else, [people might think], ‘I haven’t heard anything negative, so he must be that good. I’ll give him a vote.’ <\/p>\n
“I don’t think that’s right.” <\/p>\n
Clearly, Bertagna is right. However, there’s no reason why those of us not in an official capacity can’t have a little fun and make a few predictions of our own. As a result, here’s this writer’s view of who will be on the All-Hockey East team by the end of the season with some rankings thrown in for good measure. <\/p>\n
These predictions don’t necessarily reflect the players’ performances last year, but rather their expected productivity this season. Statistics shown, however, are last year’s. <\/p>\n
Aquino entered the league as a curiosity — a 17-year old freshman — but has become one of its marquee stars. Among returning players, only Providence’s Devin Rask topped Aquino in points last year and that was with linemates that had previously been far more productive than Aquino’s. <\/p>\n
With no disrespect at all intended toward the other members of the Ba-Da-Bing Line<\/i> — Nick Parillo and Marco Rosa — neither one is yet at the offensive level of Rask’s Peter Fregoe. Parillo has great speed and Rosa, a sophomore, will eventually be a very good one, but Aquino is the proverbial straw that stirs the drink. <\/p>\n
“He just keeps getting better and better every year,” says Merrimack coach Chris Serino. “Obviously, he’s got fabulous speed, but he’s also a finisher. He’s become more consistent year-in and year out. <\/p>\n
“He hasn’t even scratched the surface of where he’s going. He’s a tough kid, he’s got great speed and he’s got skills.” <\/p>\n
Aquino may end up as the most frequently shadowed player in the league this year, but he’ll still put up points in bunches. <\/p>\n
Rask ranks as Hockey East’s top returning scorer and by a healthy margin. He also has the luxury of familiar faces on his line since Fregoe and assorted wingers including Jon DiSalvatore and Drew Omicioli are all back. <\/p>\n
As a result, it’s likely that Rask will once again be at, or near, the top of the Hockey East scoring race. However, that may be looking at things backwards. Instead one might predict that since Rask will be back, it’s likely that Fregoe et al<\/i> will once again be highly productive. <\/p>\n
“In a good way, we think he’s just a dog out there,” says PC coach Paul Pooley. “He just goes and competes. He likes traffic. He goes to the front of the net and he just works so hard. He has a real feel for the game. When you combine those attributes, that’s why he’s so effective.” <\/p>\n
Rask’s hard-nosed grit makes him the antithesis of the prima donna who loves the power play and the fat statistics, but whose heart doesn’t go pitty-pat at the idea of working in the corners or killing penalties. <\/p>\n
“Some of his best work is when he’s on the PK,” says Pooley. “He led the Saskatchewan league in shorthanded goals and he [might have even] set a record. He just loves that challenge.” <\/p>\n
3) Darren Haydar<\/b> (New Hampshire, senior, 18-23–41). <\/p>\n
Haydar earned second-team All-Hockey East honors his first two years, but was omitted last season when over half of his points came in nonconference games. <\/p>\n
While he won’t reprise the 61 points he had as a freshman unless UNH has recruited another Jason Krog to center for him, Haydar still seems destined to hit the big five-oh. When he flies down the ice, you expect things to happen. <\/p>\n
“He’s just so clever with the puck,” says UNH coach Dick Umile. “He has complete control of the puck when it’s on his stick. One-on-one he’s as good as any player I’ve ever coached. <\/p>\n
“He’s a very, very talented player who has a lot of confidence. This will be his fourth year and he hasn’t missed [a single] game, so physically he’s a tough kid who is a very, very skilled player. He’s an all-around hockey player.” <\/p>\n
4) Ben Eaves<\/b> (Boston College, sophomore, 13-26–39) <\/p>\n
Last season, Eaves was typically overshadowed by linemate Brian Gionta or fellow rookie Chuck Kobasew or Krys Kolanos. He got off to a modest start, in part because of back problems, but had become a big-time threat in his own right by the second half of the season. (In his first 17 games, he posted a 2-10–12 scoring line, but jumped to 11-16–27 over the last 24 contests.) <\/p>\n
With so much gone from the offense that led the Eagles to a national championship last year, Eaves will be expected to carry much of the scoring load on a suddenly very young team. <\/p>\n
“His knowledge of the game is exceptional,” says BC coach Jerry York. “He really understands the game and that sets him apart from a lot of players, whether it’s defensively or offensively. <\/p>\n
“He’s got outstanding skills, great work ethic and he competes. He’s got a chance to become one of the real top players that we’ve had here at BC.” <\/p>\n
5) Martin Kariya<\/b> (Maine, junior, 12-24–36) <\/p>\n
Kariya may well follow in his brother Steve’s footsteps, breaking into the limelight after a collegiate apprenticeship of more modest initial production. He’s gotten progressively better, going from an 8-17–25 freshman campaign to last year’s 36-point total. The speedy playmaker averaged over an assist-per-game in the last dozen contests of the season, forming a symbiotic combination with defenseman-turned-sniper Michael Schutte. This was best exemplified by Kariya’s icewater-in-the-veins pass to Schutte on the doorstep for the tying goal with three seconds left in Maine’s NCAA tournament win over Minnesota. <\/p>\n
“Martin is extremely focused,” says Maine coach Tim Whitehead. “I’ve been very impressed with his concentration level. He really executes. <\/p>\n
“He leads by example on and off the ice. He’s very committed to improving and helping the team. <\/p>\n
“As far as skills, he’s very quick, he’s got great hockey sense and he sees the ice very well. Pound-for-pound, he’s very strong and tough. He’s great on faceoffs. He’s very aware defensively. <\/p>\n
“He’s just a real good all-around player. He’s great in all situations: power play, penalty kill, five-on-five and the key faceoff. As a result, he winds up on the ice a lot.”<\/p>\n
6) Peter Fregoe<\/b> (Providence, senior, 16-21–37) <\/p>\n