{"id":26420,"date":"2004-04-02T11:33:35","date_gmt":"2004-04-02T17:33:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2004\/04\/02\/far-from-finished\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:55:40","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:55:40","slug":"far-from-finished","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2004\/04\/02\/far-from-finished\/","title":{"rendered":"Far From Finished"},"content":{"rendered":"
Fini.<\/i><\/p>\n
That’s what Junior Lessard thought his season was. Fini.<\/i> Over.<\/p>\n
And how cruel would it have been? Lessard fell to the ice with a twisted knee on March 20 in the third-place game of the WCHA Final Five. He didn’t get off the ice in good shape.<\/p>\n
The thoughts started going through his mind. Is this injury bad enough to end the season? In the third-place game, a game that was for nothing but pride? Would it keep him from playing in the NCAA tournament, a goal he had held for four years?<\/p>\n
It sure seemed bad enough to bring the Minnesota-Duluth senior’s season, a possible Hobey Baker season, a possible NCAA championship season, to an abrupt close. At least that’s what was in his head.<\/p>\n
“The thing I was most disappointed about is I thought my season was maybe going to be over,” said Lessard, a St. Joseph de Beauce, Quebec, native who doesn’t try to hide a hint of a French accent. “It took me four years to get to the NCAA tournament, and I was just like, ‘Are you kidding me? How can that happen?'”<\/p>\n
As it turned out, Lessard’s season was far from fini.<\/i><\/p>\n
Lessard didn’t practice until the day before the Midwest Regional semifinal against Michigan State, but the right winger got a pair of good signs that day: He was able to skate well enough on the tender left knee to conclude he was going to be able to play; and he won the showdown, the team’s penalty shot competition at the end of the week’s practices.<\/p>\n
Then, another breakthrough. He scored two goals on four shots in a 5-0 rout of Michigan State and had more of a supporting role as the Bulldogs dispatched two-time defending national champion Minnesota.<\/p>\n
That leaves Lessard — USCHO’s Player of the Year for 2003-04 — in what has to be one of the high points of his career. On Thursday, he’ll take the national scoring lead into the Bulldogs’ national semifinal game against WCHA rival Denver in Boston. A day later, he’ll be in the front row as one of the three finalists for the Hobey Baker Award.<\/p>\n
If things go well for his team on Thursday, he’ll play for a national championship on Saturday.<\/p>\n
The stakes are part of the reason Lessard was able to heal so quickly from what appeared at first to be a serious injury. He fell behind one of the goals at the Xcel Energy Center in the WCHA third-place game and immediately tried to get up. But the knee wouldn’t allow it.<\/p>\n
After a few minutes, he left the ice with some help and a lot of nervous teammates and coaches. He returned to the bench for the third period but was relegated to supporting the team from the sidelines.<\/p>\n
— Lessard’s linemate Evan Schwabe<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
As the Midwest Regional approached, the talk shifted from a likelihood that Lessard would at least try to play to a strong doubt that the senior assistant captain would pull on the sweater. Every time he pushed off on the left leg in that pregame skating session, Lessard could feel the pain in his knee.<\/p>\n
It didn’t matter.<\/p>\n
“You know what you’re playing for and you know what the reward’s going to be, so you can suck it up a little more and deal with it,” Lessard said. “That was tough, but I just thought playing was a pretty big boost for my teammates as well.”<\/p>\n
It sure seemed like it was.<\/p>\n
“For any player, when you have an injury, there’s always uncertainty mentally,” UMD coach Scott Sandelin said. “I think that gave him some confidence, which also gave us confidence that, hey, maybe he can play.”<\/p>\n
Judging from the season Lessard has had, he sure can play.<\/p>\n
The red-haired 23-year-old leads the nation with 30 goals and 61 points this season and is bidding to become UMD’s fourth Hobey winner and the first since Chris Marinucci won 10 years ago with a 61-point season.<\/p>\n