Welcome back to another edition of Tuesday Morning Quarterback: East. It’s an exciting time out on the right coast with the Beanpot in the books for less than 24 hours, and two of the three eastern conferences less than two weeks from the end of the regular season.<\/p>\n
So let’s jump right to it:<\/p>\n
BU, Again<\/h4>\n
I like the Boston University Terriers. Really, I do. <\/p>\n
But after the Scarlet and White won their 28th Beanpot, including the third straight and 10th in 12 attempts, with a 2-1 overtime victory on Monday night, I was left shaking my head wondering if maybe this tournament is losing a bit of its lure with one team having such a dominant presence.<\/p>\n
When Brian McGuirk’s wrist shot deflected off a skate and sailed off the crossbar and into the BC net just 5:06 into the overtime, I was amazed at how many people made a mass exodus. <\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
A lot of fans at the TD Banknorth Garden Monday night didn’t stick around to see John Curry collect the tournament MVP award (photo: Melissa Wade).<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
There was no sticking around to watch the trophy presentation. No one seemed to care who won the Eberly Award or the MVP (John Curry deservedly got both). <\/p>\n
If you weren’t donning a BU home or road jersey, you were on Causeway Street before the Bull Gang even had a chance to roll the red carpet onto the ice. <\/p>\n
I was speaking with longtime Boston Globe<\/i> writer Jim McCabe, who doubles as a college hockey reporter while spending the majority of his time as one of the more respected writers on the PGA Tour. He relayed the thoughts of his fellow PGA reporters when he told them about the Beanpot. <\/p>\n
He said that the other golf reporters chuckle that a college hockey tournament in which the same four teams play every year, on most years the same two clubs end up in the championship game and generally the same club ends up the victor gets any media attention whatsoever. <\/p>\n
Maybe it’s because at this point, everyone heads to the Beanpot to see BU lose. If that’s the case, though, there are a lot of disappointed fans.<\/p>\n
Truth be told, BU’s mystique in the Beanpot is unexplainable. Head coach Jack Parker says most of it is due to good goaltending. On Monday, that was certainly the case as Curry put on a show, an “I couldn’t pay for a clinic like this” goaltending clinic. <\/p>\n
He finished with 64 of 65 saves in the two games to set an all-time mark for save percentage (.985). At times he looked unbeatable, and had Nathan Gerbe not been left completely open for a couple of seconds in the third period, Curry might have pitched a zero-for-the-tournament double shutout. <\/p>\n
Maybe that’s why the faithful still flock to the TD Banknorth Garden for the first two Mondays in February — anticipating the fact that somehow a goaltender could once again steal a championship for the Terriers. <\/p>\n
The fact of the matter is, no matter how badly we want to whine that BU is the unbeatable champ or that BC and BU play in the championship game every year (that will change next year when they face off in the opening round), people still want to be there, in the seats, watching the Beanpot each year. <\/p>\n