{"id":29327,"date":"2007-10-10T12:35:37","date_gmt":"2007-10-10T17:35:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2007\/10\/10\/200708-bowling-green-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:57:03","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:57:03","slug":"200708-bowling-green-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2007\/10\/10\/200708-bowling-green-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2007-08 Bowling Green Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
When you think of the 2006-07 Bowling Green Falcons, two things come to mind immediately:<\/p>\n
1. Jonathan Matsumoto was a superstar.<\/p>\n
With 11 goals and 22 assists, the Falcons junior led the team in scoring. He also had six power-play goals. <\/p>\n
2. In every possible way, BGSU was a last-place team.<\/p>\n
Last year’s Falcons were last in four critical statistical categories: goals scored per game, goals given up per game, power-play conversion, and penalty killing. <\/p>\n
Seems bleak, eh? Matsumoto signed a contract with the Philadelphia Flyers at the end of his junior year, while the Falcons anchored the basement two years in a row and actually had fewer league wins in 2006-07 than the previous season. <\/p>\n
Well, sometimes numbers lie. Matsumoto may have led the team in scoring, but senior forward Derek Whitmore is the Falcons’ leading returning goal-scorer, with 19 to his credit last year, as many goals with the man advantage as Matsumoto had, one more game-winning tally than Matsumoto had (two total), and a shorthander. <\/p>\n
With the departure of Matsumoto and the loss of Rich Meloche and James Unger to graduation, the Falcons lose just 20 goals.<\/p>\n
That’s the good news.<\/p>\n
The bad news is that BGSU scored just 75 total goals last season. The Falcons had absolutely no game from the dots on down to the goal in the opponent end. <\/p>\n
But there’s more good news: with only three departed goal-scorers, BGSU returns 13 other players who scored at least one goal last season. <\/p>\n
Okay. So it’s tough to spin. But a trio of sophomores — Kai Kantola, Todd McIlrath and Tomas Petruska — look promising. Rookie Jacob Cepis had 34 goals last season for Cedar Rapids (USHL) last season.<\/p>\n
Returning junior goaltender Jimmy Spratt had a good-ish second half, and the Falcons return their entire blue line.<\/p>\n
Admittedly, it’s all hard to spin.<\/p>\n
“Twenty-three of our players are back from last year,” said head coach Scott Paluch, “led by our captain Derek Whitmore. Our most improved player from last year, Jimmy Spratt in goal, is back and building on an outstanding second half. <\/p>\n
“We had a really good second half. It didn’t add up to as many wins as we would have liked.<\/p>\n
“We were a pretty good team in the second half.”<\/p>\n
Did you get that? The buzz phrase is second half.<\/i><\/p>\n
In fairness to the Falcons, they were a tougher team down the stretch. They beat Michigan, 3-2, lost a couple of one-goal games to Notre Dame in early February, they took Nebraska-Omaha to overtime in the first game of the first round of the CCHA playoffs … but they were also shut out three times and lost seven games by three or more goals in the second half. <\/p>\n
Follow the Leader<\/b><\/p>\n