{"id":41304,"date":"2012-01-27T11:01:10","date_gmt":"2012-01-27T17:01:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=41304"},"modified":"2012-01-28T00:03:27","modified_gmt":"2012-01-28T06:03:27","slug":"commentary-thoughts-on-minnesotas-potential-national-goaltending-and-rivalries","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2012\/01\/27\/commentary-thoughts-on-minnesotas-potential-national-goaltending-and-rivalries\/","title":{"rendered":"Commentary: Thoughts on Minnesota’s potential, national goaltending and rivalries"},"content":{"rendered":"
We’ll keep the vibe … random thoughts on college hockey.<\/p>\n
Last week I floated an idea that video should be allowed to be used to determine if an official got the right guy on a major penalty. I read the rule book prior to that writing and I thought that the only way an official could go to video review on a major penalty was in NCAA championship competition, meaning the NCAA tournament.<\/p>\n
Page HR-92, under Video Review, Section 60, letter A provides for video review criteria under a heading called NCAA Championship Procedures. Letter G in that section states that video is allowed “To correctly identify individuals who participated in a fight or committed an infraction.”<\/p>\n
I thought NCAA championship procedures meant only the NCAA tourney but I was incorrect. My apologies and thanks to those in high places for correcting my interpretation. <\/p>\n
I’d love to buy into Minnesota and say that this is the year it makes a long run into the national tourney, but once bitten twice shy. Over the past eight years Minnesota has put out a goalie that seemed to have the goods to get it done. I wasn’t a huge fan of Kellen Briggs but I did buy into Jeff Frazee and Alex Kangas and look where that got us.<\/p>\n
I’m buying into Kent Patterson, even though in the two games I saw him he was pretty average. He has played 99.3 percent of the minutes this season, is 17-9-1, has six shutouts and has played with a lead or been in a tie game for 80 percent of the minutes he has played. That is pretty dominant.<\/p>\n
Speaking of Minnesota, Mark Bahr did a great job as the video coach for Team USA at the World Junior Championship. Bahr serves in that capacity for the Gophers. <\/p>\n
Earlier this season a list of the top 10 goalies in college hockey was compiled and debated. <\/p>\n
My feeling (as well as some of the ex-goalies in the NHL scouting community) this season is that there might not be 10 elite goalies at the NCAA level. You have a lot of B’s and C’s but not a ton of A’s.<\/p>\n
If you see enough teams you notice that parity exists in college hockey because teams are not getting Grade A goaltending on a consistent basis. Notre Dame has two good ones who have made the Irish a formidable team but neither has taken over yet with a dominant run. As a tandem they are solid.<\/p>\n
That is not to say every team is having goaltending issues, but a lot are. Right now, leaving stats out of this, my top three are Kenny Reiter at Minnesota-Duluth, Kieran Millan at Boston University and Shawn Hunwick at Michigan.<\/p>\n
After that, and in no order, I like Andy Iles at Cornell and Patterson at Minnesota. Joe Cannata at Merrimack and Doug Carr at Massachusetts-Lowell have been solid all season in an offensive-minded conference. Taylor Nelson at Ferris State and Cal Heeter at Ohio State would round out my list of guys to whom I’d entrust a big game. Your unbiased thoughts?<\/p>\n
Speaking of goalies, former Michigan netminder Bryan Hogan posted his first shutout as a pro for the Dayton Gems in a Central Hockey League game against Rapid City. After a weekend set of games and a 24-hour bus ride home, Hogan was rewarded for his efforts with a trade from the struggling Gems to the first-place Wichita Thunder.<\/p>\n
The Thunder are an original CHL franchise in the new version of the league. I’m a proud CHL alum, having been the associate head coach of the Macon Whoopee and interim head coach of the Memphis RiverKings. <\/p>\n
While not what it once was, the Maine-BU rivalry seems to bring out the best in the teams. Back before BU and Boston College exploded into what it is today, BU-Maine was the all the rage in the 1980s and ’90s.<\/p>\n
If you wanted to play in the big city, you went to BU. If you wanted to play out in the country, you went to Maine. Their rivalry was as much cultural as it was hockey. In the last few years each has been able to win big games against each other. In the 1992-93 season when Maine had a team that lost only one game — to Boston University at home, in overtime.<\/p>\n
That intensity still resonates today when these two get together and they see each other for a weekend set at Agganis Arena, with Saturday’s game on CBS Sports Network. Both teams are on fire right now and if Maine keeps this up, it will be back in the NCAA tourney where it belongs.<\/p>\n