{"id":24837,"date":"2002-10-15T14:07:37","date_gmt":"2002-10-15T19:07:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2002\/10\/15\/200203-utica-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:54:31","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:54:31","slug":"200203-utica-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2002\/10\/15\/200203-utica-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2002-03 Utica Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last year was a learning experience for the Pioneers, as they started from nothing and quickly built a team people noticed. Gary Heenan’s theme last season was that his team of freshmen needed to gain maturity and learn to play like sophomores and juniors in order to achieve their goal of making the playoffs.<\/p>\n
The Pioneers fell just short of that goal, but gained a lot to carry into the coming season.<\/p>\n
“I don’t know that we ultimately achieved that level of maturity last year,” said Heenan. “Talent-wise, I think we’re there, but I think maturity hurt us coming down the stretch last year. It is experience, and we didn’t have it. I don’t think it was ever a question of talent. It was a question of guys being really prepared and going after it 60 minutes at a time. We’re really excited to have guys back who can say they have experience now. It’s not that we’re a second-year team, it’s that we’ve been here already so there really are no excuses for lack of maturity this year.”<\/p>\n
But with the success of last year’s inaugural season comes a downside. Utica won’t be able to take teams by surprise, and will instead need to fight for every win to achieve their lofty goals.<\/p>\n
“In our league, you have to show up every day,” said Heenan. “We’ve got to be ready every game. I still believe it is the strongest conference in the country. And I believe that we fit into that conference. One thing I think we learned was that last year we may have surprised some guys; they weren’t expecting much from a first-year club. We’re not going to have that luxury this year.<\/p>\n
“With our record and what we achieved last year, teams are going to be prepared for us and be prepared for a battle. We’ve got to work that much harder and execute that much more, for us to be successful. Our goal this year is to fight for that third spot in the playoffs. We were tremendously disappointed last year (to miss the playoffs) because we thought it was achievable. Playoffs will remain the goal, but we feel that we could achieve a third-place spot.”<\/p>\n
There are two critical areas to address during the second and third year of building a college hockey team. The first of those is the need to balance the class size on the team. All but two members of last year’s Utica squad were freshmen. Obviously, a coach would like to remain loyal to those players who helped him to start the team. However, he also needs to continually recruit at least a handful of players each year in order to build a mix from freshmen to seniors over the first four years of the program.<\/p>\n
Heenan worked towards that goal this year by bringing in six freshmen. And in doing so, he also began to address the second critical area. New teams can have so many glaring deficiencies that it is impossible to plug all of the holes at once. So a coach needs to prioritize them, and recruit players to fill the neediest places first.<\/p>\n