{"id":24260,"date":"2001-11-08T16:06:43","date_gmt":"2001-11-08T22:06:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2001\/11\/08\/this-week-in-the-wcha-nov-8-2001\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:54:20","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:54:20","slug":"this-week-in-the-wcha-nov-8-2001","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2001\/11\/08\/this-week-in-the-wcha-nov-8-2001\/","title":{"rendered":"This Week In The WCHA: Nov. 8, 2001"},"content":{"rendered":"
In the storied tradition of college hockey, 49 coaches have attained the 300-win plateau — Canisius’ Brian Cavanaugh the most recent.<\/p>\n
George Gwozdecky is one victory away from being the 50th. He’s at 299, but to hear him talk about it, he might as well be going for win No. 183 this weekend at Michigan Tech as No. 300.<\/p>\n
“It means absolutely nothing to me,” Gwozdecky said, “I’ll be very honest with you.”<\/p>\n
In a way, that’s unfortunate. Part of this great game is its history, and when it has a chance to be made, it should be celebrated.<\/p>\n
Gwozdecky, on the other hand, sounds as if he doesn’t want his 300th win to overshadow his players or his team.<\/p>\n
— Denver coach George Gwozdecky, downplaying his imminent 300th win.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
“To me, it’s really insignificant compared with all of the other things that are happening within the program this year,” he said. “That’s the way I truly feel about it. Perhaps when I’m long out of this game, I’ll be able to look back at it. But there’s so many good things going on with the team and how the team’s playing and being developed. <\/p>\n
“To me, whether it’s one game away or 10 games away, it’s very insignificant.”<\/p>\n
With his team’s next victory, Gwozdecky will become the fifth active WCHA coach with at least 300 wins. He’ll join Wisconsin’s Jeff Sauer, Michigan Tech’s Mike Sertich, St. Cloud State’s Craig Dahl and Minnesota’s Don Lucia.<\/p>\n
He won 67 games at Wisconsin-River Falls and 83 at Miami before arriving at Denver in 1994. <\/p>\n
Instead of focusing on 300 as a milestone, however, he’s looking at another step on the road to a successful season.<\/p>\n
“I don’t mean to downplay it, because for some people it might seem like something that should be talked about,” Gwozdecky said. “I really don’t consider it that way at all.”<\/p>\n
Compliments are compliments, no matter the source.<\/p>\n
Many people have called St. Cloud State the No. 1 team in the country this week, enough that the Huskies gained that status for the first time in the school’s Division I history.<\/p>\n
There are some statements, however, that mean just a little more than the rest. For instance, when Dean Blais, coach of the WCHA’s best team over most of the last five years, says you’re at the top of the pack, it carries a bit more weight.<\/p>\n
“Best team in the country, I think, right now,” the North Dakota coach told the Grand Forks Herald<\/i> after Saturday’s 6-1 SCSU victory and a sweep of the defending MacNaughton Cup champion.<\/p>\n
Thirty-six of the 40 voters in the USCHO.com poll agreed this week. What does that get them?<\/p>\n
In April, it could get them a wooden plaque adorned with gold and a few pictures that will become part of team lore.<\/p>\n
In November, though, it brings the best game every opponent can muster, plenty of attention that may or may not be wanted and higher expectations.<\/p>\n
Yes, higher expectations than 8-0 and 6-0 in the league. How about 10-0 and 8-0 after this weekend, for one?<\/p>\n
That’s what the Huskies have earned: Once you’re No. 1, any slip-up from that point is magnified. Look at Minnesota. The Gophers played a sub-par weekend against Michigan Tech, still came away with three points on the road and saw the nation’s top spot travel 60 miles up Interstate 94.<\/p>\n
Let’s be honest here: The Huskies will not be the No. 1 team for the rest of the season. Doing so would most likely mean they ran the table through the entire season — a 44-0 record that would put them among the greatest hockey teams of all time.<\/p>\n
At some point, there will be another No. 1. The Huskies, though, need to focus on not making this run the best of their season. People don’t remember who starts the season on top; they remember who ends it there.<\/p>\n
“We’re only eight games into the season,” St. Cloud goaltender Dean Weasler told the St. Cloud Times<\/i>. “Whatever they say right now doesn’t matter. You could say it puts a target on us, but I think we’ve had one all along this year.”<\/p>\n
Said forward Lee Brooks: “We’ve got to take the games one by one, and if people are going to come gunning for us, I guess that’s good. That will mean we’ll have to play that much better.”<\/p>\n
It had to work out this way at some point. Minnesota goaltender Adam Hauser, maligned for allowing four goals on eight shots in his first period of work this season, made further amends last Saturday night.<\/p>\n
Travis Weber came on in that opener against North Dakota and earned the victory. When Weber was lit up for four first-period goals by Michigan Tech last weekend, Hauser replaced him, stopped 18 of the 19 shots he faced and helped Minnesota earn a tie.<\/p>\n
This week’s Clay “Woodrow” Wilson update comes with some happy news: “Woody” scored his first collegiate goal in the first period of last Saturday’s 5-5 tie with Minnesota, then followed it up with another goal later in the period.<\/p>\n
For the season, that’s two goals and no assists for the freshman defenseman.<\/p>\n
And all of Sturgeon Lake, Minn., population 250, celebrating its centennial in 2001 and hometown of Clay Wilson, rejoiced.<\/p>\n