{"id":29372,"date":"2007-10-12T16:54:51","date_gmt":"2007-10-12T21:54:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2007\/10\/12\/20072008-maine-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:57:04","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:57:04","slug":"20072008-maine-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2007\/10\/12\/20072008-maine-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2007-2008 Maine Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last year was certainly “A Tale of Two Seasons” for the Maine Black Bears. They failed to secure playoff home ice for the first time since 1997-98 and then got swept in the first round by Massachusetts. Initially, many wondered if an NCAA berth would be forthcoming. The PairWise numbers, however, didn’t lie and the Black Bears’ season lived on. All the way, as it turned out, to the Frozen Four. Again.<\/p>\n
This year’s Preseason Coaches’ Poll projects the Black Bears to finish fourth but with a significant gap between them and the other three usual suspects: Boston College, New Hampshire and Boston University. In fact, they finished closer to co-fifth-place projections UMass and Vermont and almost as close to seventh-place pick Northeastern as compared to third-place BU.<\/p>\n
“That’s fine,” Maine coach Tim Whitehead says. “We have so many unknowns, this year in particular, it would be very tough to pick where we are going to finish. Anywhere in the mix would have made sense.”<\/p>\n
The biggest unknowns are up front where holes abound after the loss of the top three scorers, five of the top six, and six of the top eight. Only Billy Ryan (13-20-33) and Keenan Hopson (7-15-22) and Wes Clark (8-5-13) return from the double-digit points club. Last year’s juggernaut power play, tops in the nation and a big reason behind the team’s “second season” success, won’t be reprised.<\/p>\n
“We don’t have a lot of scoring coming back and we don’t have any elite scorers coming in,” Whitehead says. “That will definitely be a challenge for us. We have seven freshman forwards coming in. They’ll see the ice quite a bit more than freshmen typically do.”<\/p>\n
Of the seven, Tanner House, Robby Dee and Andrew Sweetland stand the best chance of making an immediate impact. <\/p>\n
“It will have to be a group effort,” Whitehead says. “I don’t know if there is a Teddy Purcell in this freshman class. We’ll just have to wait and see. Certainly there are a lot of good hockey players in there. <\/p>\n
“It’s a very typical Maine class of recruits. You may be sitting there [now] saying, ‘Who’s that guy? Where’s he from?’ But at the end of the year hopefully you’re saying, ‘Who’s that guy? Where’s he from?’<\/i> We’ll see. It’s going to take time.”<\/p>\n
Two of the three freshman blueliners, Josh Van Dyk and Mike Banwell, are also likely to be in the lineup each night as well, even though every defenseman but Mike Lundin returns.<\/p>\n