{"id":27617,"date":"2005-10-05T22:37:53","date_gmt":"2005-10-06T03:37:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2005\/10\/05\/womens-wcha-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:18","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:18","slug":"womens-wcha-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2005\/10\/05\/womens-wcha-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"Women’s WCHA Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Western Collegiate Hockey Association is not necessarily the strongest conference in women’s hockey, but it is definitely the most successful. The first six years of the league’s existence have resulted in six national championships, three apiece for members Minnesota-Duluth and Minnesota.<\/p>\n
Beginning its seventh season and second as an eight-team conference, the WCHA has shown surprising stability, with the only change in the lineup being the addition of North Dakota last year. All of the head coaches have at least three years of experience with their current institution, with the average tenure being four and a half years.<\/p>\n
For the first time last season, the WCHA earned three invitations to the NCAA tournament, which expanded from four to eight teams. Minnesota-Duluth and Wisconsin fell in close quarterfinal matchups. Minnesota earned its second consecutive NCAA title, after repeating as the league’s regular season and tournament champion.<\/p>\n
Minnesota-Duluth, Wisconsin and Minnesota have claimed the top three spots in the WCHA standings each year, and they remain the favorites. The talent advantage they have enjoyed over the competition shrinks this season, because they have been hit the hardest by personnel losses due to graduation and the Olympic games. Among the missing stars are the Bulldogs’ Caroline Ouellette, Carla MacLeod and Molly Engstrom of the Badgers, and the Gophers’ Natalie Darwitz, Kelly Stephens, and Patty Kazmaier Award recipient Krissy Wendell. Bolstered by strong recruiting classes and the experience gained by their returning players, Ohio State, Minnesota State-Mankato, St. Cloud State, North Dakota, and Bemidji State look to shake up the conference standings in 2005-2006. But the 53-2-1 mark that the big three posted in conference play against the rest of the league demonstrates that it is a wide gap to bridge.<\/p>\n
The WCHA tweaks the format for the conference tournament again in 2006. The new arrangement is similar to postseason play in the ECAC, with best-of-three quarterfinal series being hosted by the top four seeds. The semifinals and finals are to be played the following weekend at Ridder Arena in Minneapolis.<\/p>\n
2004-05 Record:<\/b> (28-9-1, 20-7-1 WCHA)
\nHead Coach:<\/b> Mark Johnson (75-23-9, 4th season), a former assistant and player with the Badger men’s team, led Wisconsin to a school record win total last season. His distinguished playing career included winning an NCAA title, an Olympic gold medal in 1980, and 11 years in the NHL.
\n2004-05 Stat Summary:<\/b> When you think of Wisconsin, you think of a team where the top priority of every player on the ice is to stop the opposition from scoring, and the Badgers were 3rd nationally, averaging 1.55 goals allowed. Surprisingly, they boasted the 2nd most prolific offense (4.47) and scoring margin (2.92) in D-I.
\nKey Departures:<\/b> The Badger blue line takes a major hit with the graduation of Carla MacLeod (6-20-26) and Molly Engstrom (13-19-32), now skating for Team Canada and Team USA respectively, plus former U.S. national selection Nicole Uliasz (4-14-18). The graduation of Jackie Friesen (17-7-24) and departure of junior Lindsay Macy (19-24-43) cost Wisconsin some of the size in their deep forward lines.
\nKey Returnees:<\/b> Junior Sara Bauer (26-29-55), WCHA Rookie of the Year two seasons ago, and seniors Sharon Cole (11-27-38) and Nikki Burish (14-21-35) lead the forwards, while Bobbi Jo Slusar carries the torch on defense. Senior Meghan Horras was 4th nationally in goals against average (1.75).
\nKey Newcomers:<\/b> Canadian U-22 defenseman Alycia Matthews will help reinforce the defensive corps. Recruits Erika Lawler, Tia Hanson, Kayla Hagen, and Angie Keseley provide additional firepower.
\nOutlook:<\/b> If this was golf, Wisconsin would be the “Best Player to Never Win a Major.” In fact, the Badgers have never won a title of any sort. Expect that to change in 2006.<\/p>\n2. Minnesota<\/h4>\n
2004-05 Record:<\/b> (36-2-2, 25-1-2 WCHA)
\nHead Coach:<\/b> Laura Halldorson (226-44-20, 9th season at Minnesota; 285-119-29, 16th career season) was recognized as AHCA National Coach of the Year in 2004, 2002, and 1998. She has led her team to 3 national titles, 7 national semi-final appearances, 4 WCHA regular season conference crowns, and 3 WCHA tournament championships.
\n2004-05 Stat Highlights:<\/b> The Gophers led the nation in offense (4.92), power play (31%), scoring margin (3.58), winning percentage (.925), and were second in defense (1.35).
\nKey Departures:<\/b> Minnesota graduates the two goalies who have shared the team’s last 147 games, Brenda Reinen and Jody Horak, who posted 83 wins in her career. The 5-member senior class also included forward Kelly Stephens, whose 218 career points rank 4th in program history. Lost to the US national team are two All-Americans who top that list, Krissy Wendell (237 career points, 104 last season) and Natalie Darwitz (246, 114 season \u2013 equaling A.J. Mleczko’s all-time mark). Team USA also claimed last season’s top-scoring defenseman in the nation, Lyndsay Wall (14-34-48).
\nKey Returnees:<\/b> Defense figures to be the strength of this year’s team, anchored by seniors Ashley Albrecht, Chelsey Brodt, and Allie Sanchez. Among the 13 returning letter-winners, the top scorers were WCHA Rookie of the Year Bobbi Ross (15-18-33), Erica McKenzie (12-9-21), and captain Andrea Nichols (10-8-18).
\nKey Newcomers:<\/b> The addition of Canadian U-22 goalie Brittony Chartier figures to turn a potential problem position into a strength. A second freshman and a senior transfer round out the goaltending corps. Two freshmen, including Melanie Gagnon, another veteran of Canada’s U-22 team, bolster an already strong blue line. Ms. Hockey in Minnesota Gigi Marvin heads the list of three arrivals up front.
\nOutlook:<\/b> Minnesota’s roster compares well with that of any team in the country. However, gone are the players who produced 351 of the teams 507 points, including 294 from one line. In 2001, the Gophers hosted the Frozen Four but watched from the stands, the only time they haven’t participated in the national tournament. To avoid a repeat in Mariucci Arena next March, they must continue to be stingy on defense and compensate for the lack of a dominant offensive force with contributions from numerous sources.<\/p>\n3. Minnesota-Duluth<\/h4>\n