{"id":29665,"date":"2008-02-11T23:14:37","date_gmt":"2008-02-12T05:14:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2008\/02\/11\/beanpot-notebook-championship-monday\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:57:10","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:57:10","slug":"beanpot-notebook-championship-monday","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2008\/02\/11\/beanpot-notebook-championship-monday\/","title":{"rendered":"Beanpot Notebook: Championship Monday"},"content":{"rendered":"
This was one of the closest Beanpots ever. Three of the four games were one-goal affairs, two decided in overtime, while the other game was determined by a two-goal margin. That goal differential of five in four games tied for the lowest ever with the 1965 tournament (BC coach Jerry York’s first Beanpot as a player), which also featured two overtime games. There were a total of 12 lead changes in the four games.<\/p>\n
“We played two overtime games, and it really shows the competitive nature of the four area schools,” said BC coach Jerry York. “I think we played our best hockey in the overtime.”<\/p>\n
For the second time in school history, the Eagles won two overtime games in the Beanpot. In the first in 1994, BC also defeated Harvard in the title game, then by a score of 2-1.<\/p>\n
Both games in this tournament came beyond the five-minute mark of the overtime session, meaning they would have been ties in regulation games.<\/p>\n
“This kind of game prepares us for further down the road,” said York. “This is the first significant title we play for. It helps the players get used to being in these situations. When you get to a regional final, when you get to a Frozen Four, you can learn a lot from games like these. [Seniors like Mike Brennan] have been in these situations before, but now this helps freshmen like Brian Gibbons and Nick Petrecki.”<\/p>\n
No Beanpot school has ever won the NCAA championship without first winning the Beanpot.<\/p>\n
With Northeastern taking a 4-2 lead at roughly the midpoint of the consolation game, things didn’t look so great for Boston University. While the Beanpot is known to partisans as “The BU Invitational,” a quick look through the record book uncovers one of the few bad statistics for the Terriers.<\/p>\n
The last time BU finished in fourth place in the tournament was on February 11, 1980; the time before that, on February 11, 1963. Two of the three fourth-place finishes Boston University has had in this tournament came on the 11th.<\/p>\n
And Monday? The calendar read February 11.<\/p>\n
In fact, prior to this season, the Terriers had played in the Beanpot six times on February 11, compiling a lowly 2-4 record. And it looked like yet another fourth-place finish was in the cards, until Colin Wilson scored two of three goals to win it for BU.<\/p>\n