{"id":24336,"date":"2002-01-03T17:35:53","date_gmt":"2002-01-03T23:35:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2002\/01\/03\/this-week-in-the-wcha-jan-3-2002\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:54:21","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:54:21","slug":"this-week-in-the-wcha-jan-3-2002","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2002\/01\/03\/this-week-in-the-wcha-jan-3-2002\/","title":{"rendered":"This Week In The WCHA: Jan. 3, 2002"},"content":{"rendered":"
Denver coach George Gwozdecky might not remember much about his team’s lone experience with a shootout, but he remembers the crowd’s reaction.<\/p>\n
Two years ago in the Denver Cup, the Pioneers tied with Notre Dame in a semifinal game. This was 1999-2000, the first year the NCAA allowed shootouts to be used to determine winners in regular-season tournament games.<\/p>\n
“It was probably the most exciting part of the game,” Gwozdecky said. “The game itself wasn’t really well played. It had it’s moments, but boy, the shootout was extremely exciting. The fans in attendance were on the edge of their seats. We were fortunate to be able to score and advance to the championship game, but it was probably the most exciting point of the game.”<\/p>\n
Here’s where we come to the problem. Some coaches will tell you they hate the shootout as a way to decide games — it stresses individualism in a team game — but even they can’t help but notice the enthusiasm from the crowd.<\/p>\n
It was the same situation in Milwaukee last weekend, when Wisconsin played Colorado College to a tie in the third-place game of the Badger Hockey Showdown.<\/p>\n
It was your average third-place game: The play wasn’t exactly stellar. The crowd wasn’t really into the early Friday-afternoon game.<\/p>\n
This was one game that benefited from the option of playing a shootout. If Wisconsin and CC had played more overtimes to decide a winner, the championship game surely wouldn’t have started before 9 p.m.<\/p>\n
The shootout wasn’t only a winner with the Badgers, it appeared to be a winner with the crowd as well. It was the only time all night that the masses at the Bradley Center appeared interested in the game (there was a brawl that got them going, but I digress).<\/p>\n
So how can you overlook the potential for fan excitement the shootout brings? Shouldn’t it be a natural for college hockey?<\/p>\n
Not according to some WCHA coaches.<\/p>\n
“I don’t like shootouts,” North Dakota coach Dean Blais said. “I think you work too hard. It’s exciting for the fans and it’s OK for the Christmas tournaments and everything.”<\/p>\n
But for the regular season? No way.<\/p>\n
“They’ve done that in the Olympics,” Blais said. “I remember when Sweden beat Canada for the gold medal. [Peter] Forsberg scored the winning goal and they won a medal. That was an awful way to separate the gold and silver medal, I thought. Play overtime, right down to the wire.”<\/p>\n
It would be just so easy to play overtime until there’s a winner, until you think about how long some NCAA tournament games have gone.<\/p>\n
On the other hand, few really like ending a game in a tie, unless you’re a coach on the road just happy with some points.<\/p>\n
“There are times where maybe you’re on the road in the second night of a series and you’re going into overtime with a tie and you’re going, ‘I’m happy. Let’s just get out of this damn thing with a tie,'” Gwozdecky said.<\/p>\n
So where’s the happy medium when it comes to overtime? Maybe there isn’t one.<\/p>\n
“From a coach’s perspective, I would like to be able to decide the game in overtime, 5-on-5,” Gwozdecky said. “I don’t think either coach likes the idea of finishing up in a tie. <\/p>\n
“You work so hard for 60 minutes, I like the idea of being able to get rewarded for it. I don’t like the idea of going 4-on-4 in overtime [like the NHL does]. I think that really takes away from everybody on the ice. In the college game, when you don’t have the red line, staying 5-on-5 is fine because there’s so much ice to work with.”<\/p>\n
In the end, that leaves college hockey all tied up.<\/p>\n
Your first game as a collegian is in front of an announced 18,819 at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, a crowd that rivals those for national championship games.<\/p>\n
Your first game is against national power Michigan State and its backbone in goal, Ryan Miller, the defending Hobey Baker Award winner.<\/p>\n
Your first game is for the championship of one of the most prestigious holiday tournaments in the nation.<\/p>\n
Just to make it complete, your first game goes to overtime.<\/p>\n
Welcome to college hockey, Josh Siembida.<\/p>\n
Siembida made his first start for North Dakota two days after joining the team in the Minneapolis airport. He lost a 4-1 lead last Saturday, but Brandon Bochenski bailed him out with an overtime winner for the Sioux.<\/p>\n
Wait, let’s go back over that one again. He played for the Sioux two days<\/i> after meeting them. That conversation must have been interesting.<\/p>\n
“Hi, how are you? Nice to meet you. Go get in goal.”<\/p>\n
Siembida was so new to the team that he didn’t even have his name on his back (never a bad thing for a goalie, though — it makes it tougher for the fans to razz you).<\/p>\n
But he did quite all right for himself. The product of the USHL’s Waterloo Black Hawks made 30 saves for the victory.<\/p>\n
“The main concern was that he’s not ready for the challenge,” Blais said. “You throw him in there and he gets bombed, confidence-wise and everything else, it would be tough. But we didn’t have too many other choices. We’re at Minnesota [this weekend] and we’re certainly not going to throw him right in there.”<\/p>\n
Siembida met up with the team in Minneapolis on Thursday for the trip to Detroit. He practiced with the Sioux later that day and again on Friday morning.<\/p>\n
He suited up for the game against Michigan on Friday, to go through the team’s pregame routine. He watched the Sioux win that one in overtime while Jake Brandt played in goal, and then went to the coaches.<\/p>\n
“On Friday night after the game, he came down and said he was ready to play Saturday,” Blais said. “He felt the speed of the game and the speed of the shots would be a little bit different, but he said he was ready to play.”<\/p>\n
Apparently, he was.<\/p>\n
There are periods of complete, utter domination, and then there are those like Denver had in its first period against Bowling Green in the Denver Cup.<\/p>\n
The shots were 27-2 for the Pioneers, but the score was only 1-0. Frustrated? Sure, but we’ll talk more about Colorado College later.<\/p>\n
Pioneers coach Gwozdecky credits his team’s maturity and having gone through that experience before as the factor that helped it stay focused and chisel out a 3-1 victory.<\/p>\n
The Pioneers have been in that boat before. It’s yet another one of the examples from last year that have carried over to make the 2001-02 Pioneers a better team.<\/p>\n
“Experience is so invaluable,” Gwozdecky said. “We ran into situations like that last year where we had good pressure and many good goal-scoring opportunities, but we couldn’t score. We would come into the locker room and a number of the players would be frustrated by that and it would carry over into the next period. <\/p>\n
“But it’s a good example of how experience and maturity help develop our team. We maintained our course, maintained our direction, we didn’t get overly concerned. We just kept trying to do the things we have done.”<\/p>\n
This is a familiar situation for the WCHA teams from Colorado. CC took 100 shots last weekend at the Badger Hockey Showdown and came away with five goals, a loss and a tie and fourth place.<\/p>\n
The frustration mounted for the Tigers, which could have clouded their vision of the work ahead. That’s where Gwozdecky said his team differed.<\/p>\n
“A number of the experiences we went through last year, and situations very similar to what we experienced on Friday night, helped us an awful lot in getting through that and understanding that what’s past is past,” Gwozdecky said.<\/p>\n
“There’s always that tendency that when you start to press, you start to get a little frustrated, you give up something defensively. You make a mistake, you press too hard, you’re a little too aggressive in your pursuit of the puck, your desire to keep the puck in the zone, your desire to get it back quicker. … All of a sudden, boom, the other team gets one opportunity, it seems. They come down, they’ve got you outnumbered and they put the puck in the back of the net.<\/p>\n
“That’s where at times last year we were our own worst enemy. I think you can only learn that and understand that … through experiences that you go through that show you what you have to guard against. Eventually, if you stay the course, you’re going to wear your opponent down. You’re going to be able to get that good bounce. It might not come in the very first minute of the period; it might come in the last minute. The odds are that, if you continue to play the way that’s giving you success and goal-scoring opportunities up to that point, it’s usually going to result in good things.”<\/p>\n
To this point for Denver, again No. 1 in the Pairwise Rankings, it has.<\/p>\n
St. Cloud State appears to be settling in nicely at No. 1 in the USCHO.com poll. Good thing, too, because the Huskies have the potential to be there for a while.<\/p>\n
They don’t figure to earn many strength-of-schedule points, at least until the last two weekends of the regular season. To put it bluntly, they may have the easiest second-half schedule of any of the three MacNaughton Cup contenders.<\/p>\n
In the next seven weeks of the season, they have home games against UMass-Amherst, Minnesota-Duluth (two), Alabama-Huntsville (two) and Alaska-Anchorage (two). On the road, they play Brown, Providence, Wisconsin (two) and Michigan Tech (two).<\/p>\n
Nonetheless, the last two weekends may make up for it all. The Huskies play at Denver on Feb. 22 and 23, and close out the season with a home-and-home series with Minnesota on March 1 and 2.<\/p>\n
Those last four games, though, could be the only time St. Cloud plays a team with a winning record in the second half (Huntsville is the only other team currently above .500 — 10-9-1).<\/p>\n
It sets up the odd scenario that the Huskies could not lose a game before Feb. 2 and still find themselves No. 1 in the country and in second place in the WCHA. If Denver also wins out in that period, it will have taken over first place in the league.<\/p>\n
North Dakota’s Blais knew what was coming all along. With 10 freshmen in the lineup nightly, growing pains were unavoidable.<\/p>\n
Is this the time the Sioux brings it all together?<\/p>\n