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A Time to Heal


“Ideas are indeed the most dangerous weapons in the world. Our ideas of freedom are the most powerful weapons man has ever forged. If we remember that, we will never have much to fear.”
–William O. Douglas, former Supreme Court Justice
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“Liberty relies upon itself, invites no one, promises nothing, sits in calmness and light, is positive and composed, and knows no discouragement.
–Walt Whitman


I came home from work Tuesday, and there was my little boy, 15 months old, laughing and playing just like always. But it wasn’t like any other day. On this day, the sweet innocence of this little boy was juxtaposed against the carnage that was on television. And all I wished was to be in his shoes; to be sweet and small and innocent, just so I wouldn’t have to know what was going on.

Just days ago, I was teaching the little guy to throw a baseball, dreaming of his future as a star athlete. Now I only think, what kind of world will this boy grow up in? Will there be a world to grow up in?

Like everyone, I am angry, disturbed, scared, shocked and many other things. Somehow, we will all cope. For me, it comes in writing this column, and seeing my wife and child when I come home each night. Soon it will be in escaping inside the entertainment of a sporting event.

But not right now.

Right now there is work to do, and other things to think about. The sports world is on hold, and that’s the way it has to be … for just a little bit longer. Hopefully not too much longer.

I was rooting so hard for those buildings to just stay erect. Sitting in my office, trying not to appear like too much of a mess, not willing to believe the buildings could actually crumble. "Stay up, stay up," I said to myself, rooting like I was at Shea Stadium in October. … New York City has lost its two front teeth. It feels naked.

In the rigors of our daily lives, sports is often a refuge. But, it can also be more than that. For as trivial as sports can be, it can also be a powerful part of our lives.

When the United States stunned the Soviet Union by winning that hockey game in a snowy hamlet in upstate New York in 1980, the nation shouted in triumph with the same “U-S-A, U-S-A” vigor you hear today. This wasn’t the melodramatic, phony-patriotic reaction you see in today’s Olympic coverage, this was a genuine reaction that truly rallied the nation. Against a backdrop of high inflation, Soviets in Afghanistan, and Iranians holding U.S. Hostages, this win gave the nation hope in a very real way that cannot be underestimated.

In 1991, with the Gulf War just starting, the NHL held their All-Star Game in Chicago. They couldn’t have picked a better place. Already known for its renditions of the Star-Spangled Banner, Chicago Stadium rocked with a 2-minute long outpouring of emotion and patriotism, and there wasn’t a dry eye in the house when it ended.

Wednesday, an AHL colleague relayed the story of being up until 7 a.m. Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. He works for the St. John’s Maple Leafs in Newfoundland, Canada, and the new arena they have erected is housing a crisis center, where many of the passengers from redirected U.S. flights ended up. New York’s Shea and Yankee Stadium are staging areas for many of the rescue teams.

Anywhere we turn, sports is there, as a symbol of what we are, for better or for worse.

But sports also has the power to heal, to teach life lessons, and to unite people. And there’s nothing wrong with saying we get these things from sports.

So I am looking forward to finding more inspiration from sports. I am looking forward to cheering again.

But not right now.

Right now, I will take inspiration in any little sliver I can get it. Such as the scene in downtown Philadelphia on Friday, where I arrived with my little carload of supplies to help the Salvation Army efforts, only to spend hours helping to load mountains of similar items onto upwards of 20 large trucks, on their way to New York.

It was a temporary respite from this unshakeable feeling I have. Unnerved is the best way to describe it.

I cannot remember feeling like this since I was 6 years old and our house was robbed. We came home one night — in fact, I was at a Mets/Yankees Mayor’s Trophy exhibition game they used to play annually — and found things missing. Shortly thereafter, I remember a police officer being in our house, telling us we were unlikely to get our things back. I then remember hearing my father say a phrase that I had never heard before: “He is shaking like a leaf,” he said, in reference to me. Whenever I hear that phrase, I remember where I first learned what it meant.

At that point, as a six-year old, you cannot possibly feel more vulnerable and afraid as knowing a strange intruder violated your home. Now, with a much larger perspective on the world, it is the same. Another strange and unknown intruder has violated my home, the United States of America.

More specifically, I also consider New York my home. I haven’t really lived in the city since I was a young kid, but you know how the saying goes: You can take the boy out of the city, but you can’t take the city out of the boy. I had just visited downtown Manhattan two weeks ago, walking around Greenwich Village, just soaking up all that I love about the place.

I love the mountains of the Adirondacks, Central New York’s Finger Lakes, or Lake Placid. But skylines are beautiful, too. I drive past New York City often. I never get tired of looking at the skyline.

But now something is wrong.

I was rooting so hard for those buildings to just stay erect. Sitting in my office, trying not to appear like too much of a mess, not willing to believe the buildings could actually crumble. “Stay up, stay up,” I said to myself, rooting like I was at Shea Stadium in October.

New York City has lost its two front teeth. It feels naked.

The City is a microcosm of the nation. It’s considered the big bully that many parts of the country love to hate. Since 1994, every time a New York team wins a sports championship, people from other parts of the country wait for a riot. They are still waiting.

New York has all that money, and all those people, and all those big buildings, and smog, and nasty people.

Yes, New York is a microcosm for the United States … and don’t think those bastards didn’t know it.

But New Yorkers aren’t nasty; they aren’t rude. It’s a front, don’t you understand? It’s a tough skin, where, in a fast-paced city at the heart of a ever-shrinking world, people must put up that front to survive.

Then, this tragedy happens, and the facade goes away. The bravery and heroism comes out, our hearts are on our sleeves, and we all stick together.

Just like America.

To the terrorists, we are too weak, because we are too free and care too much about each individual life.

Sports is also part of what these terrorists see wrong about us. Too much money, too much freedom, and too much leisure time on our hands. A bunch of slovenly beer-swilling football fans kicking back on their 57-inch HDTV, paid for on money made by selling junk bonds.

But as Dick Gephart said, “Terrorists think freedom is our weakness. It is our strength.”

Soon, we will all be able to laugh again … Soon, we will all be able to cheer again. Hopefully, very soon.

But not right now.

2 ex-SLU Players, Coach’s Brother, Presumed Dead

Still reeling from the news of Mark Bavis’ tragic death, the college hockey world was dealt another blow as the list grew to three.

Mike Pelletier and Rich Stewart, two members of St. Lawrence’s 1988 NCAA Finalist team, are missing and presumed dead, victims of Tuesday’s terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan.

The former Saints teammates worked for Cantor Fitzgerald, a London-based firm that has reported 700 of its 1,000 employees unaccounted for. The firm operated offices out of the 101st, 103rd and 105th floors of the North Tower.

The brother of Union assistant coach Kevin Patrick is also among the missing. James Patrick was also employed by Cantor Fitzgerald.

There had been some hope that Patrick was found when his name showed up on ny.com as one of the injured in New York City hospitals, but that report turned out to be false.

“The family and everyone has been on a roller coaster since this happened,” said Union head coach Kevin Sneddon.

There had also been reports that Patrick’s wife had heard from him on his cell phone after the incident, but it turned out that it was his wife trying to contact him.

[Please check back to USCHO as more details come in.]

Close Call For Two More ex-College Players

As the hours and days go by, more news filters in about former college hockey players caught in this week’s horrific mess.

Former Boston University defenseman Mark Krys, who played for the Terriers from 1987-91, escaped with his life, evacuating one of the World Trade Center Twin Towers before it crumbled in the aftermath of Tuesday’s terrorist attack.

According to a story in the Canadian Press, the Timmins, Ont., native went from the 60th floor to the 44th just moments before the first plane hit, heading to get a cup of coffee. Being closer to the ground may have saved his life.

“I didn’t know anything,” Krys said in the article. “I just heard a huge bang. Debris and fire went shooting across our window. When we saw that, we knew
something was wrong.”

Meanwhile, former Union defenseman Bill Moody was in his office at Goldman Sachs just two blocks when the attacks occured. He was on the phone with his family to tell them he was fine, when the line went dead as the Twin Towers began to crumble. Moody, who played at Union from 1993-97, was finally heard from again hours later.

Krys, 32, was a sixth-round draft pick of the Boston Bruins in 1988. He recently concluded a 10-year career in the AHL, IHL and Europe, and was working as a bond trader.

“I saw people jumping out of the building. There was panic,” Krys said to the Canadian Press. “People were going in every direction. No one knew what was going on. There was paper and debris and fire balls flying everywhere.”

Krys said he took the elevator down, but didn’t stop to watch the building burn. Instead he was trying to contact his family, but couldn’t, so he walked down to the ferry and took it across the Hudson River and home to New Jersey as fast as he could.

Krys was a senior when Mark Bavis was a sophomore for the Terriers. Bavis was on one of the planes that was hijacked and crashed into the World Trade Center, killing everyone on board.

Walsh in Intensive Care, Stable

Maine head coach Shawn Walsh, battling kidney cancer since last summer, is in stable condition after being admitted to the intensive care unit of a Bangor hospital. Walsh, 45, checked himself into the hospital Monday because he was having trouble breathing.

According to an article in the Bangor Daily News, Walsh’s condition is improving, despite the setback.

“He is responding to the antibiotics,” said Lynne Walsh, his wife, to the Daily News. “He had a CAT scan on his lower abdomen this afternoon [Wednesday] and everything was fine. We’ve been in contact with NIH [National Institutes of Health] and they have been very positive.”

Following two rounds of rigorous immunotherapy treatments and a stem cell transplant courtesy of his brother, Kevin, Walsh then went through four straight months of taking immunosuppressive drugs. The drugs are intended to allow the stem cells to attack the cancerous cells, but it also shuts down the immune system, making you susceptible to infection.

Two weeks ago, nearing the end of his immunosuppresant drug treatment, Walsh said he was beginning to wear down.

“It’s been tougher than I thought. It’s day 107 and it’s been a grind,” he said in late August. “The last 40 days I’ve had a real lack of energy. Not enough to keep me out of the office, but it’s tiring going up steps.

“But that’s good. It means the stems cells that are attacking my body so hard are attacking the cancer.

“I was on chemo for 100 days. That beats you up, but I’m off it now. But now my body is having to adjust to being off the chemo.”

Walsh was diagnosed with kidney cancer 15 months ago and has had his left kidney and left lung removed.

BU Family Reacts to Bavis News

Minute after minute, as events unfolded, millions of Americans sat riveted in horror to the events of an eerie Tuesday morning, wondering what could happen next.

And then it happens. Already shaking our heads in disbelief, along comes another blow.

Someone you know is among the carnage.

Former Boston University forward Mark Bavis (1989-93), along with fellow Los Angeles Kings scout, and long-time NHL player, “Ace” Bailey, were headed back to L.A. for the start of Kings camp. That’s when fate stuck them in the middle of a historically tragic event.

The hockey community is well-known for being a tight-knit group. When the news struck that Bavis was among those lost when a plane was deliberately slammed into the side of one of the World Trade Center Twin Towers, word spread quickly.

Among the first to hear was Jack Parker, BU’s coach of 28 years. Soon thereafter, word got to UMass-Lowell coach Blaise MacDonald, an assistant for three years at BU while Bavis was there.

MacDonald was particularly shaken because he had just been with Mark less than two days ago. When he got the call from Parker, the tone in his voice told the story.

“As soon as I picked up the phone, I knew something tragic had happened,” MacDonald said.

“Jack Parker is like a father figure to me, and he’s been through an awful lot in his life. He taught me how to deal with these kinds of situations, but you’re never conditioned for these types of events. It always tests your faith.”

"Here I am, we had opening day at the school, and word hits. A good percentage of these kids are from New York. So I’m running, handing out notes to kids, telling them their mom called or their father’s OK. It was like the military, delivering messages to kids. Then I get called in out of blue, and I saw my wife crying …"

— Dan Donato, former BU teammate of Mark Bavis

When Parker told MacDonald, he still hadn’t gotten a hold of Bavis’ twin brother Mike, a current BU assistant who was on a recruiting trip at a tournament in Calgary.

When news finally reached Mike, that’s when it got to Dan Donato, now the head hockey and baseball coach at Salisbury (Conn.) Prep School, who was a year behind Bavis at BU. In another symbol of the tight-knit hockey community, the cousin of Donato’s wife is Nebraska-Omaha assistant coach Tom Mutch, who was also in Calgary.

“We got a call pretty much right away,” said Donato. “He [Mutch] knows how close I am with those guys. We grew up since I was 5 years old with those guys. We went to Catholic Memorial together, then we each did a post-grad year, and met back at BU.”

The news spread like branches on a tree. One branch would get the news, and before you knew it, the shock waves hit the entire forest of the BU family.

Donato and his brother, Ted, a star at Harvard and long-time NHL player, played together with the Bavis twins on the same Catholic Memorial team, and shared that connection, too.

“You really find out how small the hockey world is,” said Dan Donato. “I remember talking to Teddy [on Tuesday] and all the teammates. He heard from [former BU All-American] Shawn McEachern, who heard from [former BU goalie] Peter Fish. We were all teammates at Catholic Memorial.”

MacDonald also felt, and feels, a special kinship with the Bavis brothers. The Bavis’ father passed away from a heart attack while they were attending BU. MacDonald had lost his father when he was 17.

“I gave them support there, because I had experienced that,” MacDonald said. “What a wonderful family … very strong.”

Ken Rausch, now an assistant with MacDonald at Lowell, was two years behind Bavis. His day was impacted by the terror in more ways than one.

Rausch said a Lowell recruit was flying in from Indianapolis that morning, headed for Newark, N.J. and eventually for Manchester, N.H. That plane was re-routed to Boston.

“Everyone’s heading out of the city, and I had to head into Logan [Airport] to pick this kid up,” said Rausch.

“He landed and he had the sense to call his parents and us. I don’t think he knew the scope at the time. The pilots did tell them that a plane had crashed in New York, but that’s all they really knew.

“We got back to the office here and I was trying to be as upbeat as possible. The first person I see is Blaise, and he said, ‘Did Jack get a hold of you?’ I said, ‘No,’ and he [McDonald] didn’t want to tell me [the news] in front of the recruit. So, I took him to see the guys and came back in the office and asked what’s up.

“I was just floored. I was standing at the time and I just slumped into a chair. I was holding back tears, and I’m sure a couple snuck out. That was probably about 12:30 or 1 p.m.”

Rausch, two years behind Bavis at BU, remembered how each of them began coaching at the same time, helping guide the Massachusetts Select-15 team to a gold medal.

“We had been in the business about the same amount of years,” Rausch said. “He was a great motivating factor for me. He taught me many things of what it’s about to be a Terrier.”

BU’s athletic department later found out that it didn’t end there. Two other members of their family were being mourned today: Tom McGuinness, 42, a swimmer in the late ’70s, was a co-pilot on American Airlines Flight 11; and Brian Sweeney, a football player and 1986 graduate, was on another of the planes.

Meanwhile, the calls kept coming.

“I’ve gotten a bunch of calls from the CM team in ’88,” said Donato. “I got a call from [former Harvard goalie] Chuckie Hughes, from [current Merrimack assistant coach] Mike Doneghy. … The manager of the ’88 team called me last night.

“That class was a special class. There were seven CM kids on my BU team.”

Donato said the news hit him as he was trying to soothe the teenage students around him.

“Here I am, we had opening day at the school, and word hits,” he said. “A good percentage of these kids are from New York. So I’m running, handing out notes to kids, telling them their mom called or their father’s OK. It was like the military, delivering messages to kids.

“Then I get called in out of blue, and I saw my wife crying …

“Not only do I lose a good friend — obviously the hockey side is the least part of it — but he’s such a great guy. He did so much work with USA hockey, he coached at Harvard and Brown. There isn’t a person out there that will say a bad word about him.”

It was a tragedy of epic proportions, for the United States of America, and for all of the individual families who lost loved ones. But having a true family to lean on goes some way toward relieving the pain.

“These are times where you need to lean on people, need to lean on yourself spiritually,” MacDonald said. “You’re not really sure how you’re supposed to feel, that’s the difficult thing. That’s where friends and families come in.

“It’s so overwhelming when you talk to your team. It’s so overwhelming when you try to explain that we need to have compassion for people from Arabic countries that don’t have these beliefs and you stereotype them as evil. Our instincts are to take an eye for an eye, but maybe there’s other ways to deal with it.

“I believe in my heart of hearts, Markie is in a better place right now. I have deep thoughts and prayers for his family, for Michael…”

Bavis Among Those Killed on Hijacked Plane

The hockey world was not spared the tragedy of Tuesday morning’s terrorist attacks on the United States.

Bavis

Bavis

Former Boston University star Mark Bavis was among the 65 people on board United Airlines Flight 175 that were killed when hijackers crashed the plane into the World Trade Center. The flight departed from Boston’s Logan Airport, bound for Los Angeles.

Bavis, a native of Roslindale, Mass., had been working for the past year as an amateur scout for the Los Angeles Kings. Also aboard the plane was fellow scout, and former NHL forward Garnet “Ace” Bailey, who played 14 years of pro hockey from 1967-81, including time with the Boston Bruins, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues and Washington Capitals.

Mark Bavis scored 32 goals and 80 points in four seasons at BU.

Mark Bavis scored 32 goals and 80 points in four seasons at BU.

“First and foremost, we are shocked by the tragedies that have occurred today and the tremendous loss of life that has taken place,” said Los Angeles Kings general manager Dave Taylor. “We had a number of scouts traveling to Los Angeles today from all parts of the world as we prepare for the opening of training camp on Wednesday and, unfortunately, two of our staff members, Ace Bailey and Mark Bavis, were scheduled to be aboard United Airlines Flight 175.

“We have received confirmation from their families that both Ace and Mark were in fact on that flight and our entire organization is deeply saddened and shaken by the loss of these individuals.”

Bavis, 31, and twin brother, Mike — currently an assistant coach at BU — played for the Terriers from 1989-93, participating in four straight NCAA Final Fours. Mark Bavis, a ninth-round draft pick of the New York Rangers, played three seasons of minor pro hockey in the AHL and ECHL, before leaving to coach in the USA Hockey program. He was an assistant at Harvard, and then with the Chicago Freeze of the NAHL junior league before joining the Kings’ staff last year.

The plane Bavis and Bailey were on, one of four apparently hijacked early Tuesday morning, was the second of two that crashed into the World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan, New York City. Both skyscrapers and a number of surrounding buildings eventually crumbled.

Five years ago, former Harvard defenseman Michel Breistroff was killed when TWA Flight 800 exploded and crashed off the coast of Long Island. Speculation said that was part of a terrorist act, too, but that was never confirmed.

[Please check back with USCHO for more details as they come in.]

Coaches, Media Disagree in ECAC Preseason Poll

The ECAC head coaches have tabbed Harvard as the preseason favorite in the 2001-2002 Coaches’ Poll, while the media have chosen Clarkson as their preseason favorite.

The coaches’ first-place votes were split among five different teams, with the Crimson garnering five of the 12 first-place votes and 108 points overall. The preseason No. 1 ranking is the first for Harvard since the 1989-90 season. The Crimson lost in the semifinals of the ECAC Tournament last season.

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Clarkson gathered two first-place votes and finished one point ahead of Cornell, who gathered three first-place votes, 101-100. The Golden Knights were last season’s regular season champions, but were upset in the first round of the ECAC Tournament by Vermont. The Big Red defeated Harvard in the semifinals, but lost the Championship Game to St. Lawrence last season.

The other semifinalist in the ECAC Tournament, Dartmouth, received one first-place vote, and was voted fourth, ahead of two-time defending ECAC Champion St. Lawrence. The Rensselaer Engineers received the remaining first-place vote and were voted sixth.

Vermont, the fifth team in Lake Placid last season, was voted seventh. Yale, Colgate and Union were picked from eighth to 10th, with Princeton and Brown rounding out the Coaches’ Poll.

The Media Poll, voted on by 22 members of the ECAC media, was very different from the Coaches’ Poll.

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Clarkson was picked to finish first with eight first place votes, finishing ahead of Dartmouth and its five first-place votes by two points.

Harvard received three first-place votes in being voted third, while St. Lawrence (4) and Rensselaer (2) were voted to finish fourth and fifth, respectively. Cornell, third in the Coaches’ Poll, received no first-place votes from the media and wound up sixth.

Princeton was voted seventh, Vermont eighth, and Union and Yale finished in a tie for ninth place. Colgate and Brown rounded out the Media Poll.

Whitehead Returns to Maine as Assistant

Maine announced the hiring of Tim Whitehead as an assistant coach today. Whitehead, a former assistant under head coach Shawn Walsh, returns to Maine after spending the last 10 years at UMass-Lowell, the last five as head coach. He fills the vacancy created by the departure of Gene Reilly to the Grand Rapids Griffins of the American Hockey League.

“I’m excited to go back to Maine, and I’m looking forward to working with Shawn and Grant [Standbrook] again,” said Whitehead. “I love to coach, and this is a great coaching opportunity for me. We have a lot of family in Maine, and my wife and I will really enjoy being close to family.”

The addition of Whitehead gives the Black Bears two experienced former Division I coaches; Standbrook coached five years at Dartmouth and has been an assistant for five different national champions. This experience is especially important given Walsh’s battle to defeat cancer over the past 16 months.

“Tim will help us keep consistency in our program,” said Walsh. “He knows our system, and he knows the league inside-out. He’s a top-notch teacher and coach that will add a lot to the success of our program. Personally, I can’t wait to see him on the ice with our team.”

Whitehead served as an assistant at Maine during the 1990-91 season before moving on to Lowell, where he was an assistant for five years before assuming the head role.

In his five years as the River Hawks’ head coach, Whitehead went 76-93-11. He was honored as a finalist for the American Hockey Coaches Association (ACHA) Spencer Penrose Coach of the Year Award in 1997 and 2001, and was also runner-up for Hockey East Coach of the Year honors in 1997 and 2001.

Following a year of uncertainty over his status, Whitehead and Lowell athletic director Dana Skinner could not agree on a new contract following last season, and the two sides parted ways.

Whitehead, 40, graduated from Hamilton College in 1985 with a bachelor’s
degree in government, and earned a master’s degree in education from Maine
in 1991.

Gophers Still Waiting for Welch

Dan Welch won’t return to school at Minnesota for the start of the 2001-2002 season, but Gophers coach Don Lucia is holding a spot for him — for a while.

Welch, expected to join the Gophers after a year hiatus when he was academically ineligible, has not met the requirements to be reinstated in school and will not be eligible to play in the first semester.

“I signed a contract that I would get certain grades, and it didn’t happen,” Welch told Rachel Blount of the Star Tribune of Minneapolis.

After scoring six goals and eight assists in his freshman season with the Gophers, 1999-2000, Welch played for Omaha of the United States Hockey League last season after learning he was ineligible for college play.

With Omaha, he scored 30 goals and added 27 assists while attending a community college in an attempt to get his grades up.

Welch will attend a community college while living at home in Hastings, Minn., and will work out with the Hastings High School team, of which his father is head coach.

“They told me if I get a 3.0 at community college and have a plan to become a better student, there’s a good chance they will accept me back in the spring,” Welch said. “I’m going to keep working.”

Lucia said he won’t fill Welch’s spot on the roster. But if Welch can’t be readmitted for the spring semester, Lucia will look elsewhere.

“If it doesn’t happen in January, it will never happen,” Lucia told Gregg Wong of the St. Paul Pioneer Press. “It will be time for both of us to move on.”

Serino Diagnosed With Cancer

SERINO

SERINO

Merrimack coach Chris Serino has been diagnosed with a malignant tumor in his neck. According to stories by Kevin Conway and Bill Burt in the Lawrence (Mass.) Eagle-Tribune, the decision as to whether chemotherapy or radiation treatments are needed is pending. The impact on Serino’s ability to coach full-time will depend on the treatment, but maintaining his usual schedule remains a possibility.

The coach, renown for his one-liners, informed his team by saying, “I have some bad news and good news. The bad news is I have cancer in my throat. The good news is I can’t yell at you anymore.”

Serino becomes the second active Hockey East coach afflicted with the disease. Maine coach Shawn Walsh has battled kidney cancer since being diagnosed last summer.

Serino is 36-63-11 in his first three seasons with Merrimack, his first college head coaching job. He came to the Warriors after two different stints as assistant coach at New Hampshire.

A 1971 graduate of American International, Serino joined UNH in 1991 after three seasons as head coach at the Northfield Mount Hermon School in western Mass., where his teams compiled a record of 47-21-3. From 1980-87, he was head coach at Saugus High School, and in 1986-87 he was named Eastern Massachusetts Coach of the Year. He posted a career record of 100-23-14 at Saugus, winning three conference titles.

Serino, 52, and his wife, Robin, have five sons, ranging in age from 10-22.

[Please continue to check back with USCHO as details unfold.]

Serino News Stuns Players

In three seasons as Merrimack College head hockey coach, Chris Serino has thrived as a loud, blunt, tell-it-like-it-is taskmaster. For that reason, the way in which he informed his team this week of being diagnosed with throat cancer came as no surprise.

The announcement, however, most certainly did.

Just days after doctors discovered a malignant tumor in his neck, Serino, 52, wasted no time in delivering the disturbing news to his team during Tuesday’s first preseason meeting.

"It’s going to be tough and may be a bit of a distraction but hopefully not that much. The Maine coach [Shawn Walsh] has it a lot worse, and they were able to handle it well last year and finish second. Hopefully, we can do the same."

— Merrimack forward Anthony Aquino

In typical Serino style, the Peabody resident and father of five called on his keen sense of humor to soften the initial shock.

“I told them, ‘I have bad news and good news,'” said Serino, who is scheduled to begin cancer treatments next week. “I told them, ‘The bad news is I have cancer in my throat. The good news is I can’t yell at you that much anymore.'”

His punchline was met with a stunned silence throughout the locker room. Days later, Merrimack players, fellow coaches and school administrators are still trying to come to grips with the situation.

“One minute he’s talking about curfew, the next he’s saying he was diagnosed with throat cancer,” said senior Ryan Kiley. “Nobody really said anything. Our jaws just hit the floor. We were all shocked.”

Sophomore Marco Rosa added, “It came as a huge surprise. No one would have expected it. Coach looks invincible to us. He’s someone we all look up to, something like a father. That’s why it this so tough to deal with.”

Considered more than just a coach by many of his recruits, Serino realized the news would be particularly tough to deal with for most of the players. Therefore, he decided the earlier he confided with the team the less of a distraction it would be by October’s season opener.

“They were silent — for once,” said a smiling Serino, recalling the locker room scene. “I think the kids look at me as someone always in charge of the situation, who knows what’s going on. In this case I don’t, so that’s why I told them right away in order to get going about our business. We’ve got a great team and we’re ready to go. That’s the way I want it to stay.”

Junior Anthony Aquino, who along with fellow captains Tim Foster and Nick Parillo was informed by Serino almost immediately after the diagnosis, said the team as a whole remains stunned but is committed to its task at hand.

“It was a big shock to the players, especially the freshmen and rookies who are just starting their careers,” Aquino said. “It’s going to be tough and may be a bit of a distraction but hopefully not that much. The Maine coach [Shawn Walsh] has it a lot worse, and they were able to handle it well last year and finish second. Hopefully, we can do the same.”

Rosa says the Warriors can turn to Serino’s courageous approach in dealing with the disease as motivation whenever they may face adversity this season.

“What he’s going through will be twice as tough as anything we go through this season,” Rosa said. “He’s a great inspiration for us. He’s in a fight for his life, and we can use that as an example. The whole team is just thankful, though, that it seems like it was caught in time.”

With the severity of his treatments still unclear, Serino told the team he plans to actively participate in its preseason regimen without disruption. The Warriors won’t take to the practice ice for another three weeks.

If any extended absence is called for, newly promoted associated head coach Mike Doneghey will be in charge with assistants Stu Irving and Louis Finocchiaro prepared to take on additional responsibilities.

“There probably will be days that he’ll be sick and not going to be here,” said Doneghey, a former Merrimack player beginning his third season under Serino. “The good thing is things are already in place for this year and next year, too. It’s not like last year when we had nine freshmen coming in. We’re ready to go.”

Not surprisingly, Serino, who also serves as an alumni liaison for the school, has received the complete support of the college’s administration.

“Chris is a very important part of our community, as anybody could tell,” said Merrimack President Richard Santagati. “He’s exhibited extraordinary enthusiasm for our school and is a great advocate for our mission and for what Merrimack College is all about.

“We don’t see any changes ahead. He’s our coach. We’ll take whatever steps he feels is necessary, but Chris will continue to do what he does best. I think that’s what he needs to do, too.”

Athletic Director Bob DeGregorio says Serino’s positive attitude will eventually eliminate any lingering shock over the news throughout the school’s entire athletic program.

“This is awful but his attitude is great,” DeGregorio said. “We’re all going to have the same attitude about it.”


This article originally ran in the Friday, August 31 edition of the Lawrence (Mass.) Eagle-Tribune.

D-I Hockey in Pittsburgh? Penguins Hope So

The Pittsburgh Penguins have approached four area universities about being a tenant in their new arena, according to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.

According to Tom Rooney, a member of the Penguins ownership group, Mercyhurst, located North of Pittsburgh in Erie, Pa., and currently in Division I, is not one of the schools being mentioned.

“We’ve had numerous conversations with Mercyhurst,” Rooney said to the Tribune-Review, “but we’d like a school a little closer in. That’s a school about 90 miles away.”

That leaves a number of schools in the Pittsburgh vicinity, such as the University of Pittsburgh, Carnegie Mellon, Grove City, Robert Morris, Duquesne and Slippery Rock. None of those schools currently have a varsity hockey program, however.

The Penguins are hoping that a Division I hockey program can share the building, and presumably provide more revenue on days when the building would otherwise be dark.

“There are four schools who have definitely shown an interest,” Rooney said. “It’s our goal to get a Division I program going here. We’ve told people we would support it. It would be great to have as a secondary anchor in the building.”

Mercyhurst is already scheduled to play a game against Ohio State in the Penguins’ new arena in January, 2003.

Ferris State Loses Osaer to NHL

Ferris State goalie Phil Osaer has decided to forego his senior season to sign with the St. Louis Blues organization. He was a seventh round selection (203rd overall) of the Blues in the 1999 NHL Draft, and is Ferris’ all-time leader in both goals against average (2.18) and save percentage (.916).

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“This is a dream come true for me and an opportunity I couldn’t pass up,” said Osaer, 21. “I’m excited about being able to chase a boyhood dream of mine although I’m going to miss everyone at Ferris State.

“[St. Louis] considers me a potential NHL prospect and that’s what kind of sold me on signing. I figured if I didn’t sign with them, then someone else might and the opportunity wouldn’t be there next season.”

Bulldogs coach Bob Daniels was understandably disappointed, but happy for Osaer.

“We’re excited about this opportunity for Phil,” said Daniels. “From a team standpoint, it’s difficult when you lose one of your top all-time goaltenders at the end of the summer and it’s an obstacle we will have to overcome.
Unfortunately for us and others, events such as these are occurring more frequently in college hockey.”

Osaer, a native of Livonia, Mich., was a second team All-CCHA selection last season after going 9-12-3 with a 2.36 GAA and a .909 save percentage. During his three years in Big Rapids, he posted a 24-22-6 record.

York Inks New 5-Year Deal

Boston College coach Jerry York has signed a new five-year contract with the school that runs through the 2005-2006 season.

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“I believe that Jerry York is the premier college ice hockey coach in the country and all of us at Boston College are thrilled that Jerry will continue to direct our program,” said BC director of athletics Gene DeFilippo. “Jerry York is an outstanding example to his players both on and off the ice and his loyalty to Boston College is second to none.”

York led the Eagles to the 2001 NCAA Division I Men’s Ice Hockey Championship and Boston College has advanced to the NCAA Frozen Four in each of the past four seasons.

“Boston College is home to me and I am very happy to continue my coaching career at the school,” said York. “I am grateful to everyone at Boston College who has made the success of our program possible. It is truly a team effort here and I am very lucky to receive such wonderful support from our administration.”

York assumed the head coaching duties at Boston College, his alma mater, on June 15, 1994. The 2001-2001 campaign will be his 30th season as a head coach; he spent seven years (1972-79) at Clarkson and 15 years (1979-94) at Bowling Green. He won the NCAA Championship at Bowling Green in 1984.

York has also coached Boston College to the Hockey East Tournament title in three of the past four seasons (1998, 1999 and 2001).

He begins the 2001-02 season as college hockey’s sixth all-time winningest coach (fourth among active Division I coaches) with 626 wins.

York is a 1967 Boston College graduate and earned All-America first team and All-New England honors in 1966-67. He led the Eagles to a 60-26 record over his collegiate playing career, the 1965 Beanpot title and a second-place finish in the 1965 NCAA tournament.

Colgate Removes ‘Red’ From Nickname

The Red Raiders of Colgate University are “Red” no more. The ECAC school announced today that it is dropping the “Red” from its nickname and will now be known simply as the Raiders.

The decision was announced by Colgate’s Board of Trustees, upon the recommendation of the President, Director of Athletics and the members of the Campus Committee on Athletics. The change takes effect immediately.

According to a release issued by the school, the decision to change the nickname was made “to move away from the racial stereotype, which is indeed not the true origin of the nickname for Colgate but may nonetheless be offensive to the general public in ways that undermine the institution’s values and commitments.”

The nickname “Red Raiders” was originally coined in 1932 by Dexter Teed as a reference to the maroon uniforms of Colgate’s football team. However, in later years, the name took on a Native American flavor, with various caricatures and mascots. In the 1970s, the Native American references were officially dropped, but pressure has mounted to change the name anyway as a result of lingering sentiments to the old mascots.

As new uniforms, equipment and publications are phased in by Colgate, they will reflect the new name.

Another One Bites the Dust: BC Loses Orpik

They say bad news comes in threes. For Boston College head coach Jerry York, that old adage was never truer than this summer.

ORPIK

ORPIK

The Pittsburgh Penguins have announced that the Eagles’ Brooks Orpik has agreed to pass up his senior year and turn pro. Orpik, a 6-foot-4-inch, 230-pound bruising defenseman whom the Penguins have been high on, recorded two goals and 39 assists in 119 career games for BC, along with 322 penalty minutes. He enjoyed his best year as a junior in helping the Eagles to the 2001 NCAA Championship with 20 assists and 124 penalty minutes.

The Penguins selected Orpik with the 18th pick of the 2000 NHL Entry Draft.

Orpik’s departure came on the heels of teammate Chuck Kobasew’s defection to the major junior Kelowna Rockets of the WHL. York is also waiting for the proverbial other shoe to drop, as junior to be Krys Kolanos is close to either signing with the NHL’s Phoenix Coyotes or leaving BC for the WHL while negotiations continue.

The departure of all three underclassmen would put a severe dent in the Eagles’ hopes of repeating as Beanpot, Hockey East and NCAA champions in 2001-02.
But York put on a brave front in a school news release.

“We’re very happy for each of these players, and wish them the best in the future,” York said. “They certainly made great contributions to our program.

“We have a very solid group of players returning, and we’ve added some very promising newcomers to the line-up.”

It’s Official: Kobasew Leaves BC For ‘Home’

Bruce Hamilton devoted his summer trying to land a new star, and today, his hard work paid off.

Hamilton, the general manager of the Western Hockey League’s Kelowna Rockets, a Canadian major junior team in British Columbia, made things official today; he announced the signing of Boston College freshman phenon Chuck Kobasew at a noon-time press conference.

Kobasew

Kobasew

Kobasew, the Hockey East Rookie of the Year and NCAA tournament Most Outstanding Player this past season, apparently could not resist the chance to play close to home, and play a 72-game schedule.

“The main reason is to play more games,” Hamilton said of Kobasew’s motives. “That was a big part of it. And he has three or four guys on this team that he’s friends with.”

Neither Kobasew nor Boston College head coach Jerry York could be reached for comment.

Players are drafted in major juniors, and Kobasew was selected by Prince George, a team in the Northern part of B.C. Instead, Kobasew decided to attend Boston College.

If he was homesick, it didn’t show on the ice, as he helped lead the Eagles to a national championship. The 6-foot, 180-pound Kobasew scored 49 points last season for the Eagles, and had a nation’s-best 10 game-winning goals. He was then selected in the first round of this June’s NHL Draft by the Calgary Flames. At that time, Kobasew said leaving BC “hasn’t really crossed my mind.”

However, Hamilton, getting tipped off that Kobasew might want to play in Kelowna, made a deal for him on NHL Draft day.

“One of my former players [Mitch Fritz] is from his hometown,” said Hamilton. “He cued me off. That got the ball in motion.”

Hamilton said he’s sure that, if Kelowna didn’t acquire his rights, Kobasew would still be with Boston College.

“He wanted to play here in Kelowna. I knew that right away when I started talking to him,” Hamilton said. “We got his rights the day of the draft, and I talked to him there. We had conversations for quite a while — a dialogue with his father and I mostly.”

This weekend, there came a moment of truth for Kobasew. He apparently made up his mind late last week, and started telling friends at the Canadian Junior National Team camp in Calgary that he was going to leave BC. That’s when York got frantic, and began making his pitch to Kobasew.

“He [Kobasew] had a tough weekend,” Hamilton said. “He had to deal with the coach at BC. They did what I would do. They’re trying to keep him there. But he told me Saturday what he wanted to do.

“I have some sympathy for them [Boston College]. We’re recruiting against them all the time. But I’m doing what I have to do.”

Hamilton said there were a number of things working in his team’s favor, and even though Kobasew apparently was not motivated by a desire to become an NHL free agent — like many other players have done — his NHL status was a factor.

“These guys, if they leave college, an NHL team has to offer him a contract,” Hamilton said. “But next June [Calgary must make] a qualifying offer.

“We get a lot of guys because we live in an unbelievable city, it’s a resort city. … We have an outstanding training facility. But at Boston College, there’s not a lot they don’t have. So winning him over that way wasn’t what was going to do it.

“Our coach is well respected, he gets to play more games, and being close to home — he has a very tight-knit family — his mom and dad will get to see him every game.”

Kobasew’s departure from BC opens up the age-old question about the recruiting rivalry between U.S. colleges and Canadian major juniors. But, Hamilton said, the thought of there being animosity between the two camps is not true in his mind.

“The thought of us and college fighting each other is not really true,” he said. “We don’t really deal with them.

“I had a player I picked in the first round from Anchorage (Alaska), who was not even in the USA Hockey program. We draft him first and all of a sudden he’s on the Under-17 team. And all along, we felt he was coming here, and lo and behold, Michigan got him. … Duncan Keith was in our camp at 16. The coach at Penticton (Jr. A) said, ‘I’ll get him ready for you.’ Bang, he went to Michigan State.

“So, they win some, we win others. It’s the nature of the game … until the rules change. The NCAA had a chance to do that, but chose not to.”

St. Scholastica Tabs Borys

Over the last three years, Cory Borys has charted NCHA teams. He has studied videos of NCHA teams. He has paid attention to the nuances of NCHA teams.

This season, he’ll run his own.

Borys, an assistant coach for St. Norbert, was hired Friday as the eighth head coach in St. Scholastica history. He replaces Mark Workman, who resigned in May after six seasons.

Borys, who served under Tim Coghlin for three years after playing for him for four, got the Saints job in large part because of his familiarity with the NCHA, St. Scholastica athletics director Dana Moore said.

“What I did at St. Norbert and what Tim put me in charge of — making sure that I do all the video, do our tendency sheets and lineups — helped me familiarize myself in the last three years with the [NCHA] teams and the players,” Borys said. “That’s going to help me greatly.”

Borys doesn’t have to wait long to return to the Green Bay, Wis., area. In his second regular-season game, he’ll be in charge of the bench next to the one occupied by his mentor.

The Green Knights host the Saints at the Cornerstone Community Ice Center in Green Bay on Nov. 3.

“”That’s going to be entertaining, I know that,” Borys said. “You look forward to coming back, coaching against the guy you worked under for three years and played for for four. The old teacher-vs.-student game, you always look forward to that.

“Granted, I didn’t think it would be the second game of the season.”

Said Coghlin: “I think everybody will probably have mixed emotions that night. As much as we will be wishing he does well, not on Nov. 3.”

Coghlin compiled what he called a “short list” of candidates to replace Borys, but declined to elaborate or identify anyone on the list. He did say, however, that he has received calls of interest from program alumni and others.

Borys, a Yorkton, Saskatchewan, native, scored 19 goals and 21 assists in four years as a player at St. Norbert. In 1998, he was named the top male athlete among the school’s graduating seniors and was one of three nominees from Division III for the Hockey Humanitarian Award, presented to college hockey’s finest citizen.

Moore declined to comment on the agreement with Borys, except to say he would not be under contract and he would be subject to the same yearly performance appraisal as the rest of the Duluth, Minn., school’s faculty and staff.

When Workman resigned in May after a 9-17-1 season, the school announced that assistant athletics director Dave Reyelts would take over the program on an interim basis for the 2001-02 season. That plan, Moore said, met with some resistance from the public and a national search for a permanent coach was launched.

At that point, Borys was interviewing for the opening at Milwaukee School of Engineering, a position he said he was offered but turned down. When he decided MSOE wasn’t right for him, Borys decided to throw his hat in the ring at St. Scholastica.

He was one of about 45 applicants, Moore said. Ten candidates went through phone interviews and four were scheduled for on-campus meetings.

Borys said one of his challenges will be to instill a winning attitude in a team that hasn’t done much in the way of winning in a while. He’s scheduled to have 12 seniors and seven juniors on the roster, but faces another challenge out of the gate: The Saints’ first eight games are on the road.

Arnason Departure All But Certain

It’s been four months of speculation, and still nothing has been officially determined. But essentially, the early departure of St. Cloud star Tyler Arnason to the NHL is a done deal.

Tyler Arnason turned in another huge performance against North Dakota in the 2001 WCHA title game.

Tyler Arnason turned in another huge performance against North Dakota in the 2001 WCHA title game.

Arnason, a senior-to-be, still has not signed a pro contract with the Chicago Blackhawks, the team that owns his rights. But he is participating in Blackhawks rookie camp, and, it seems, gradually over the course of the summer, the notion that Arnason would not return has been accepted as fact by the coaching staff and athletic department.

As far as St. Cloud is concerned, the issue is closed.

In the recently-released preseason prospectus, sophomore defenseman Jeff Finger has usurped Arnason’s No. 8 on the 2001-02 roster, and Arnason is nowhere to be found.

“Nothing is official, but he’s already said he wants to be a pro,” said St. Cloud spokesperson Anne Abicht.

Arnason led the Huskies with 56 points this past season, and had a stellar postseason while being named WCHA Tournament MVP.

In May, St. Cloud lost defenseman Duvie Westcott, who also skipped his senior season to sign with the NHL’s Columbus Blue Jackets.

Report: Kobasew Set to Bolt BC for Juniors

Boston College’s Chuck Kobasew, the 2000-01 Hockey East Rookie of the Year and 2001 NCAA tournament Most Outstanding Player, is poised to leave school for Major Juniors, according to a report by Kevin Conway in today’s Eagle-Tribune (Lawrence, Mass.).

According to the article, Kobasew, who is currently participating in the Canadian National Junior Team tryout camp in Calgary, has confided in fellow camp members, including Merrimack’s Anthony Aquino, that he will not return to BC.

Kobasew

Kobasew

Kobasew’s junior rights are held by the Western Hockey League’s Kelowna Rockets, based out of British Columbia, his home province. The Rockets traded for Kobasew’s rights in June, at which time club general manager Bruce Hamilton said, “We are very excited at the prospect of Chuck playing for us this year. He is a dynamic player who will add instant offence to our team.”

The 6-foot, 180-pound Kobasew scored 49 points last season for the Eagles, and had a nation’s-best 10 game-winning goals. He was then selected in the first round of this June’s NHL Draft by the Calgary Flames. At that time, Kobasew said leaving BC “hasn’t really crossed my mind.”

A number of players in recent years have used major juniors as a way to get out of their NHL rights, but it’s uncertain if that is the case here.

Other possible reasons for Kobasew’s decision include the desire to be closer to home, or wanting to participate in what he might perceive to be a more competitive league.

BC coach Jerry York was dismayed upon hearing the news of Kobasew’s potential departure.

“We’re battling for his return,” said BC coach Jerry York, to the Eagle-Tribune. “We’re still under the impression that he’s coming back, but it’s a complicated issue.”

The article said York was attempting to reach Kobasew on Wednesday night.

BC is already being faced with the apparently imminent departure of another star forward, junior-to-be Krys Kolanos. Kolanos has been involved in discussions with the Phoenix Coyotes, the team that drafted him in the first round in 2000, for most of the summer. According to a recent report, those talks have intensified.

The loss of both stars would obviously deal a serious blow to the Eagles’ hopes of repeating as national champions.

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