{"id":23732,"date":"2001-01-10T21:52:54","date_gmt":"2001-01-11T03:52:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2001\/01\/10\/between-the-lines\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:54:10","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:54:10","slug":"between-the-lines","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2001\/01\/10\/between-the-lines\/","title":{"rendered":"Between the Lines"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last column, we discussed the classic 1997 Michigan-BU semifinal, and fawned over how many future NHL players were in that game. With close to 1,000 NHL games recorded by players who participated in that matchup, it’s an average of over 300 per year.<\/p>\n
We then started looking for other Frozen Four games where the combatants had better totals, and found the 1991 BU-Northern Michigan final. A silly computational error subtracted 1,000 games from the total, yet still beat the 1997 contest in average NHL games played per season. The correct total should have been 4,071, for an average of 452 games over nine years.<\/p>\n
However, thanks to a number of dedicated readers also with too much time on their hands, a new champion has been discovered: The 1982 NCAA Final between North Dakota and Wisconsin.<\/p>\n
This game featured a mind-blowing 20 future NHL players, totalling 9,565 games over 18 years. That’s an average of 531.5 NHL games played per year, with Chris Chelios and James Patrick still playing.<\/p>\n
Here’s the breakdown: North Dakota (5,776): Craig Ludwig (1,256); Patrick (1,064), Troy Murray (914), Dave Tippett (721), Rick Zombo (652), Phil Sykes (456), Jon Casey (425), Dave Donnelly (137), Gord Sherven (97), Darren Jensen (30), Jim Archibald (16) and Dan Brennan (8). Wisconsin (3,789): Chelios (1,170), Bruce Driver (922), Brian Mullen (832), Patrick Flatley (780), Marc Behrend (38), John Newberry (22), Phil Houck (16), John Johannson (5) and Terry Kleisinger (4).<\/p>\n
Wow!<\/p>\n
Bergene writes, “For my money, that<\/i> year was the all-time high in talent for college hockey, in the West at least, and the NHL stats would seem to bear that out. … The average games per year of 531 would be higher if we measured just the first 10 year or 12 years, which is a more typical pro career than 18 years.”<\/p>\n
Which brings up a good point. Somewhere along the line, on both ends of the spectrum, this average games per year figure may not be a reliable barometer. What we now need is some sort of statistics major to do, like, a regression analysis, or something.<\/p>\n
Hvinden, a North Dakota supporter, writes, “In addition to being a game full of future pros, this was one of my early favorite games. I remember watching the game on ESPN as an eight year old. [In] 1982, North Dakota and Wisconsin is the<\/i> rivalry. The schools are in the third year of a four-year run where they will trade off NCAA titles. Fights of this era are legendary. One of the future pros listed is Jim Archibald, UND and WCHA career penalty minute leader (540).”<\/p>\n
Which also may be the NCAA mark, though those kinds of records are incomplete.<\/p>\n
By the way, another candidate — mentioned by reader Steve Gruhn — was the 1985 semifinal between RPI and Minnesota-Duluth, with players like Brett Hull, Norm Maciver, Adam Oates and Darren Puppa. That game totalled 4,463 NHL games over 12 players in 15 years, or 297.5 per year.<\/p>\n
Have you seen the kind of penalty minute numbers being put up by Western Michigan’s Brian Pasko? The freshman defenseman has apparently not been reminded that he went to college, not juniors.<\/p>\n
— WMU coach Jim Culhane on defenseman Brian Pasko<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
In a recent game against Merrimack, Pasko put up 30 penalty minutes on the same play. A misconduct a weekend seems pretty regular for him.<\/p>\n
Pasko’s penalty minutes are now approaching 130. As a matter of comparison, those pacifists at Alaska-Anchorage have 212 PIMs as a team through 18 games.<\/p>\n
Western Michigan coach Jim Culhane, certainly no choir boy in his day, has nonetheless been trying to control Pasko.<\/p>\n
“We love his passion for the game, and his willingness to compete is what excited us,” Culhane says. <\/p>\n
Pasko has only been playing organized hockey for four years, three of them in the Jr. A NAHL with the Chicago Freeze. Therefore, he’s only known the junior style of play.<\/p>\n
“It’s an education process,” says Culhane. “In junior hockey, you can drop the gloves. He’s learning what the college game is all about. There’s going to be some bumps along the way.”<\/p>\n
No good records exists on the all-time single season, or career, NCAA mark for penalty minutes. But, as mentioned earlier, Archibald has to be a candidate. His single-season high was 197 in 1984-85. And, according to WCHA media relations director Doug Spencer, statistics at that time did not include game misconducts as 10 penalty minutes.<\/p>\n
In 1992-93, Ohio State’s Craig Patterson had 164 minutes in league games alone.<\/p>\n
So, it appears Pasko has a long way to go. But, my guess is Culhane reels him in long before then.<\/p>\n
Another exciting World Junior tournament has come and gone, and not even a yawn is heard below the 49th Paralell.<\/p>\n
Americans are missing good hockey.<\/p>\n
The United States had a solid 3-1 record in Group play at this year’s tournament in Moscow, losing only to the Czech Republic. Unfortunately, as the No. 2 seed, the U.S. was matched up against Canada, which was third in Group B. Again, the Canadians stymied the U.S., winning 2-1 in the quarterfinals despite getting off only 15 shots on net.<\/p>\n
So, another year without a medal for the Americans, but they had a respectable tournament nonetheless under new head coach Keith Allain, a former goalie at Yale. Some players that stood out were Michigan’s Andy Hilbert, RPI’s Marc Cavosie and Providence’s Jonathan DiSalvatore.<\/p>\n
Yale coach Tim Taylor, who Allain once played under, was an assistant with the U.S. team this time around. He thought, despite the disappointment of not winning a medal, Team USA did extremely well.<\/p>\n