{"id":25924,"date":"2003-09-29T21:49:45","date_gmt":"2003-09-30T02:49:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2003\/09\/29\/200304-minnesota-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:55:30","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:55:30","slug":"200304-minnesota-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2003\/09\/29\/200304-minnesota-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2003-04 Minnesota Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
In the moments before each game, Don Lucia is “scared to death” wondering whether his team will win.<\/p>\n
But the Minnesota coach will counter claims that his team has to be feeling extraordinary pressure as the first two-time defending national champion in 31 years.<\/p>\n
“I think winning it doesn’t put any extra pressure on our players or our program. Everybody wants to beat Minnesota,” Lucia said. “So whether we’re 20-10 or 10-20, I don’t think it matters if we’re going into Duluth or North Dakota or wherever else we go. They want to kick our rear end — that’s just the way it is. And I think that says a lot about our program and where we’re at as far as the respect factor.”<\/p>\n
His program starts this season at the top. That’s because of two straight national championships. That’s because of the return of Thomas Vanek, the Frozen Four most outstanding player who was selected No. 5 overall by Buffalo in the June NHL entry draft. That’s because the Gophers have still have most of the players that handled expectations so well last season.<\/p>\n
Of the 20 players that dressed in last April’s championship game against New Hampshire, 17 are back this season — a number that could have been 19 if not for early departures by defenseman Paul Martin and goaltender Travis Weber.<\/p>\n
“One of the things that I think has really helped is that I think, as a team, we’ve been humble and know that it requires a lot of hard work,” Lucia said. “What happened last year has no bearing on what happens in the future.”<\/p>\n
What happened in the offseason, however, may have quite an impact on the Gophers’ run at a third straight NCAA title.<\/p>\n
Martin’s loss to New Jersey of the NHL had been the subject of speculation after a junior season that landed him on the WCHA’s second team. The Gophers will expect Keith Ballard and Chris Harrington to progress a little faster to fill the gap.<\/p>\n
But when Weber decided not to return to school for personal reasons, it left the Gophers thin at goaltender too late in the summer to be able to do anything about it. So they’ll rely on junior Justin Johnson, who stepped in for an injured Weber to win the WCHA Final Five last season, and newcomer Kellen Briggs from the United States Hockey League.<\/p>\n
If there are doubts about Minnesota this season, they can be tied to those two departures.<\/p>\n
“We have question marks like everyone else,” Lucia said. “If a goaltender can step forward, if we have some defensemen emerge and can make that next step, then we should have a pretty good team.”<\/p>\n
Ballard will have to be a top-rate defenseman in the mold of recent Gophers blueliners Jordan Leopold and Martin to keep Minnesota afloat. He’ll be the quarterback on the power play, Lucia said, and likely will be playing upwards of 30 minutes a game.<\/p>\n
He was a second-team all-WCHA pick as a sophomore, but Lucia said he is counting on him to be a first-team player and an all-American this season.<\/p>\n
Harrington has gained 10 pounds from a summer in the weight room. He started off last season by struggling with turnovers, but gradually improved. He and Ballard likely will be the top defensive pair to start this season.<\/p>\n
The goaltenders, meanwhile, will get much of the attention to see whether Johnson can handle more playing time and whether Briggs can make a seamless transition from juniors to college.<\/p>\n