{"id":24756,"date":"2002-10-01T17:00:54","date_gmt":"2002-10-01T22:00:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2002\/10\/01\/200203-minnesota-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:54:29","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:54:29","slug":"200203-minnesota-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2002\/10\/01\/200203-minnesota-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2002-03 Minnesota Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
Funny how the significance of the national championship trophy flips, just as the calendar flips into October.<\/p>\n
Starting one Saturday night in April and continuing through September, it’s a celebration and a sigh of relief — no use for lingering regrets from the last season. It’s the sign that you’re the tops in college hockey.<\/p>\n
But when the puck drops on a new season, it means something else. Suddenly, you’re the biggest target on some teams’ schedules. More, like it or not, you have an incredible burden.<\/p>\n
For 30 years, no team has started the season as the defending national champion and ended it with another golden NCAA trophy.<\/p>\n
But anything less wouldn’t be quite enough, would it? Maybe that’s especially true when you’re from the “State of Hockey,” as it’s known in your parts.<\/p>\n
To make things just a bit tougher, you’ve lost your top point scorer, your top goalscorer, your top defenseman (who, by the way, was voted the best player in the nation last season) and your top goaltender.<\/p>\n
Go to work, Minnesota. With everyone gunning for you and the Golden Gophers’ faithful having had a taste of the NCAA championship, there’s plenty to be done.<\/p>\n
“If it is a burden,” Gophers coach Don Lucia said of the national title, “I’d like to have it more often.”<\/p>\n
The losses are astounding, but that the Gophers have the potential to get back to the same form this season is just as phenomenal. The Gophers knew they were going to lose Hobey Baker winner Jordan Leopold, 75-point scorer Johnny Pohl and oft-maligned goaltender Adam Hauser. <\/p>\n
They didn’t know at the start of last season that top goalscorer Jeff Taffe would be departing as well, but that’s one of the consequences of an outstanding year.<\/p>\n
But through quick progression of young players and a top-notch recruiting class, the Gophers could get back to the promised land this season.<\/p>\n
The Gophers’ biggest weakness on offense likely will be at center, where Pohl and Taffe held things together. Suddenly, Matt Koalska, he of the “Polish Leap” after tying last season’s title game against Maine, jumps two spots to become the top centerman.<\/p>\n