{"id":26147,"date":"2003-12-31T15:56:58","date_gmt":"2003-12-31T21:56:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2003\/12\/31\/hall-decision-to-leave-niagara-not-so-sudden\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:55:34","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:55:34","slug":"hall-decision-to-leave-niagara-not-so-sudden","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2003\/12\/31\/hall-decision-to-leave-niagara-not-so-sudden\/","title":{"rendered":"Hall Decision To Leave Niagara Not So Sudden?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Jeremy Hall’s “sudden” decision to leave Niagara after playing only 17 collegiate games appears not to have been so rash after all.<\/p>\n
According to Niagara coach Dave Burkholder, Hall had been mulling his move for over a month and had already once quit the team, in the week leading up to the Dec. 13-14 weekend against Boston University and Massachusetts-Lowell. Hall very quickly asked and was allowed to rejoin the team, playing against the Terriers and River Hawks. He did not, however, return after Christmas.<\/p>\n
“We did not even discuss it as a team, because he had tried to quit once before,” Burkholder said. “He quit during the Boston University-Lowell weekend, leaving and saying he was going back to his junior team. The next day he came back and asked to rejoin the team, saying he had been ‘duped’ — that’s a direct quote.<\/p>\n
“The team voted and allowed him to come back. It was during our exam week and he played that weekend. However, after Christmas we came back and saw the empty stall and nothing more was said about him.”<\/p>\n
The game against Lowell was a high point of the Purple Eagle season. Niagara came back from a 5-0 deficit to win, 6-5. Hall, however, was scoreless in that game.<\/p>\n
Burkholder made no comment as to why Hall might have left, other than to express “dismay” at quotes made by Danville coach Tom “Chico” Adrahtas on Monday that the decision came about suddenly. Wings Vice President\/General Manager Josh Mervis clarified the timeline and suggested that Hall’s discomfort with Niagara extended before the year began in the spring of 2003.<\/p>\n
“I’m not going to speculate as to what specifically made up his mind,” Mervis said. “I think a little of it came from a very good friend of Jeremy’s who made a decision to go to a different school in the spring of last year, a more named school. That sort of got the creative juices of his flowing a little bit.<\/p>\n
“Jeremy had second thoughts in the spring right there not to enroll in Niagara at all.”<\/p>\n