{"id":30525,"date":"2009-04-09T09:28:33","date_gmt":"2009-04-09T14:28:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2009\/04\/09\/out-of-great-theater-comes-tragedy-for-mackenzie-catamounts\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:57:27","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:57:27","slug":"out-of-great-theater-comes-tragedy-for-mackenzie-catamounts","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2009\/04\/09\/out-of-great-theater-comes-tragedy-for-mackenzie-catamounts\/","title":{"rendered":"Out Of Great Theater Comes Tragedy for MacKenzie, Catamounts"},"content":{"rendered":"
One person’s pleasure can be another’s tragedy, and it was pretty clear how those lines were drawn when the final horn sounded Thursday night at the Verizon Center.<\/p>\n
As Boston University celebrated its trip to the national championship game, Vermont’s Drew MacKenzie found himself as the center of tragic attention in a game that provided waves and waves of theater.<\/p>\n
The freshman defenseman was in line to be the hero for a Catamounts’ come-from-behind victory under the bright lights of college hockey’s biggest stage. His first collegiate goal, scored with just over a half a period remaining in the third, put Vermont ahead in a see-saw affair.<\/p>\n
However, things turned against him a short time later when he redirected a rebound past his own goaltender, igniting a BU rally that put the Terriers in the title game and had the Catamounts packing their locker room.<\/p>\n
“It went from being a high point to . . letting that one go in off my stick, obviously I’m disappointed, but there’s nothing I can do about it now,” MacKenzie said. “If I could take back that goal, I would. But it happened, so you can’t do anything.”<\/p>\n
It almost seemed like MacKenzie couldn’t do anything to prevent the fateful play with 6:54 remaining in the third period and his team leading 4-3.<\/p>\n
Vermont goaltender Rob Madore stopped Chris Higgins’ shot, but the rebound popped right back out in front. MacKenzie, sliding back toward his net with his stick on the ice, saw the puck deflect off his stick and into the net, a devastating way to lose the lead.<\/p>\n