{"id":28298,"date":"2006-04-04T13:56:12","date_gmt":"2006-04-04T18:56:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2006\/04\/04\/preview-wisconsinmaine\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:34","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:34","slug":"preview-wisconsinmaine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2006\/04\/04\/preview-wisconsinmaine\/","title":{"rendered":"Preview: Wisconsin-Maine"},"content":{"rendered":"
For one team in the second semifinal Thursday in Milwaukee, it’s a chance to reclaim past glories. For the other, it’s a familiar experience.<\/p>\n
Wisconsin’s season can be parsed neatly into three pieces: an incredible run to the top of the polls, followed by an injury to all-everything goaltender Brian Elliott that threatened to derail the Badger Express, and finally a return to form that saw Wisconsin cruise past Bemidji State 4-0 before outlasting Cornell in a 1-0 three-overtime classic at the Midwest Regional to reach the Bradley Center.<\/p>\n
That puts the Badgers — led by Elliott and on offense by Joe Pavelski and Robbie Earl — two wins away from winning an NCAA championship without leaving the friendly confines of the state of Wisconsin for tournament play. A national title would be Wisconsin’s first in 16 years.<\/p>\n
Maine traveled a slightly different path this season, but the result was a familiar one for the Black Bears, who enjoyed a strong second half and find themselves in their fifth Frozen Four in the last eight seasons. As has happened often recently to Maine, the team will have to deal with the crowd stacked against it, with the semifinals taking place just a couple of hours’ drive from Wisconsin’s campus.<\/p>\n
But Maine’s East Regional performance showed that the Black Bears can win in different ways — running away with a game (a 6-1 rout of Harvard), or holding a lead against a frantic comeback (a 5-4 win over Michigan State).<\/p>\n
The Black Bears will depend first and foremost on the leadership and scoring of captain Greg Moore to try to get fifth-year head coach Tim Whitehead his first national title, in what is already his third appearance with Maine in the national semifinals. An NCAA championship would be Maine’s first since 1999, which came under the tutelage of the late Shawn Walsh.<\/p>\n
Wisconsin Badgers
\nRecord: 28-10-3, 17-8-3 WCHA (t-second)
\nSeed: No. 1 overall, No. 1 Midwest
\nRoad to Frozen Four: Beat Bemidji State 4-0, beat Cornell 1-0 (3ot)
\n2005 NCAA tournament: Lost in Midwest Regional semifinals<\/b><\/p>\n
This Frozen Four was awarded to Milwaukee’s Bradley Center in the summer of 2000. The Midwest Regional was awarded to the Resch Center in Green Bay, Wis., in the summer of 2003.<\/p>\n
Since then, Wisconsin fans have been keenly aware of the possibility of the Badgers winning the national championship without having to leave the state.<\/p>\n
Two games down, two to go. The Badgers took care of things in Green Bay — although they needed three overtimes and a Jack Skille goal to win the regional final against Cornell — and now figure to have the majority of the Bradley Center cheering for them against Maine in the national semifinals.<\/p>\n
It’s something they’ve been hearing about since the start of the season. Wisconsin captain Adam Burish said in the fall that he had talked to people with Frozen Four tickets who were just waiting for the Badgers to get there. The Badgers haven’t been to the Frozen Four since 1992, so getting there was a landmark.<\/p>\n