{"id":26981,"date":"2005-01-07T13:10:57","date_gmt":"2005-01-07T19:10:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2005\/01\/07\/this-week-in-division-iii-jan-6-2005\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:05","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:05","slug":"this-week-in-division-iii-jan-6-2005","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2005\/01\/07\/this-week-in-division-iii-jan-6-2005\/","title":{"rendered":"This Week in Division III: Jan. 6, 2005"},"content":{"rendered":"
With the World Juniors tournament just concluded, college hockey has had a decidedly international focus for the past few weeks, with many top schools loaning players to various national teams. But another kind of international hockey is being played over the semester break involving Division III teams traveling out of the USA for competition.<\/p>\n
NCAA rules allow a team to take a “foreign tour” once every three years. Any contests played are outside of the normal 25 game limit. Typically, teams go to Canada for a few extra games. For example, this weekend Fredonia is at St. Clair in Windsor, Ontario, for a pair of games, while Utica travels to the Great White North for games at York University in Toronto and at the University of Ottawa.<\/p>\n
But some teams get loads of frequent flyer miles. Hobart is currently on a tour of Germany and the Czech Republic with games in Fussen, Klatovy, and Deggendorf.<\/p>\n
Bethel wins the award for most miles logged this season. The Royals just returned from a 13 day trip to Russia, which included stops (and sometimes games) in St. Petersburg, Novgorod and Moscow.<\/p>\n
But hockey wasn’t the main focus of the trip, according to Bethel coach Peter Aus. Bethel is an evangelical Christian school, and the trip was a spiritual and educational one.<\/p>\n
“The main purpose was missionary work,” he said. “We ministered in orphanages and shared the Gospel.<\/p>\n
“We met some wonderful people, and saw some amazing things. We spent New Year’s Eve in Red Square. It was a neat experience.”<\/p>\n
Forty-seven people made the trip, including 35 hockey players. “We took all but four players from the varsity as well as some players from our JV team,” said Aus. “Not everybody played, but everybody participated in some way.”<\/p>\n
The team fundraised the more than $100,000 needed for the tour, mostly though mail solicitations. “We asked each player to send out 60 letters describing what we wanted to accomplish,” said Aus. “Most sent out even more.”<\/p>\n
Bethel played mostly junior teams made up of players 16-18 years old . “We were older and more physically mature,” said Aus. The Royals were 3-0 on their trip, but Aus had a hard time remembering the scores, illustrating how little they mattered compared to what else his team did.<\/p>\n
‘It was something we’ll all remember for the rest of our lives,” said Aus. “It brought our team closer together. Everyone knew each other a whole lot better by the end of the trip.”<\/p>\n
Their hosts were so thrilled that they asked the Royals to come back next year. Aus had to explain about the NCAA rules. “But that’s not to say we wouldn’t consider doing it without any hockey at all,” he said. “It really comes down to if we can get the resources.”<\/p>\n
A more realistic plan is to do this once every three or four years, according to Aus. “But maybe not for me,” he said. “I’ll be 63 in May, and I’m not sure how long I’m going to be doing this. For me this might really have been a once in a lifetime thing.”<\/p>\n
While the BU Terriers have left historic Walter Brown Arena for the shiny new Agganis Arena, there’s still hockey to be played at WB. BU’s women’s team (currently at the club level but moving to varsity next season) still plays there, as well as Division III Suffolk University.<\/p>\n
The Rams have called Walter Brown home for several seasons, and will play 10 of their 12 home games there, as well as hold the majority of their practices in the historic arena.<\/p>\n
“It’s a great place to play and practice,” said head coach Chris Glionna. “Jack Parker and his staff have been very accommodating to us.”<\/p>\n
Suffolk is one of three Division III teams that play in Division I barns. Wentworth plays at Matthews Arena on the campus of Northeastern, while St. John’s plays at the National Hockey Center in St. Cloud, home of the St. Cloud State Huskies. Both Bethel and St. Thomas used to play at Minnesota’s Mariucci arena, but moved to different facilities due to a shortage of ice time (in part due to the addition of women’s teams) and greater flexibility.<\/p>\n
That may be the case for Suffolk as well, which is playing a pair of home games this season at Steretti Rink in the North End of Boston. “It’s closer to the school and we can have more a permanent presence there,” said Glionna. ‘(The Rink) would like us to move there. It would be good for the Suffolk community.”<\/p>\n
Both rinks have their advantages, and no decision has made yet, according to Glionna. “Either place is fine with us,” he said.<\/p>\n
Fans are forever arguing over which Division III conference is the strongest. For the past several seasons, followers of the NCHA and NESCAC have had plenty to crow about, pointing to their league’s record against other conferences.<\/p>\n
The ECAC West used to be in that class, especially during the late 1990s when RIT and Elmira were at the top of the polls and Niagara, Mercyhurst and Canisius were in the league prior to moving to Division I conferences. But as the Division I teams moved on and new programs like Neumann and Utica came along, the conference has not fared as well nationally. RIT has dominated the league for several seasons, with the Tigers winning seven of the past nine regular season titles.<\/p>\n
But with the Tigers poised to leave the ECAC West for Atlantic Hockey, the conference shouldn’t miss a beat. Some of the newer programs are beginning to dominate on a national level, and some of the original members are playing better than they have in quite some time.<\/p>\n