RE: Gopher Hockey (Full Version)

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SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (3/31/2012 1:33:19 AM)

Case in point ....

Friday night (last night). - really quiet on the national front. Couple NBA games. Buzz about NCAAs. Nothing else.
Good night for a couple semi-final hockey games, eh?
Then, you take a night off, and let the NCAA BB teams have their stage.
And then, by golly, there's nothing going on Sunday, as everyone waits for Mondays nights big finale.
Hmmm, wouldn't Sunday night be a great night to squeeze that Final hockey game in?
What part of this am I missing?

[sm=scratch.gif]




Jeff Jesser -> RE: Gopher Hockey (3/31/2012 8:49:37 AM)

I don't think ESPN has the manpower or will.  It's all about the State of Kentucky right now.   They can't get enough of it. [&o]




TJSweens -> RE: Gopher Hockey (3/31/2012 12:12:17 PM)

This wait for the Frozen Four really sucks. Drop the puck already!




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/1/2012 1:35:32 AM)

Good stuff on Bjuger and Rau

Boston College, which has won 17 games in a row, is the Gophers next opponent on Thursday in the second semifinal of the Frozen Four in Tampa.
"We are looking forward to playing [the Eagles]," Bjugstad said. "They are a fast-paced team. A lot of good players. It should be a great game.
"Our main goal at the start of the season was to win a national championship. You can't take that for granted. Obviously, BC is the No. 1 seed going in. We are really going to have to prepare this week and buckle down."
Bjugstad said the Gophers had extra motivation to beat North Dakota int he West Regional final last Sunday. "We had a lot of pent-up energy and we were a littlle bitter. It was nice getting them in that game. They are a good team, but we really brought it that game I felt.
"The momentum is good. Obviously, BC has a lot of momentum with them, too. The momentum after beating BU and NoDak was huge for us. We will be ready to go."
Bjugstad said the main reason the Gophers are winning in the postseason is the secondary scoring they are getting. ""Guys are coming up big here at the end of the season," he said. "[Travis] Boyd gets his first goal against North Dakota in the regional final. You can't really stage a  first goal better than that.
"Our defensemen are really pitching in offensively as well. Everyone is playing well from Kent [Patterson, the goalie] to our fourth line. That's the key to winning a national championship think."
RAU MAKES OTHERS BETTER
Lee Smith, the Eden Prairie High School hockey coach, has had all four Rau brothers in his program. Matt, Chad, Curt and Kyle, now with the Gophers.
"All were extremely intelligent," he said, "with a high hockey IQ. Matt and Curt were defensemen. Kyle and Chad were both forwards. What made Kyle so great was he could make everyone around him better. He ended up with a lot more assists.  Chad was an incredible finisher, but it was important to have someone that could get Chad the puck or create.
"But if Chad could shoot,  he would score. Kyle shoots, but he also has an uncappy ability to set people up."
Kyle is second on the Gophers with 18 goals -- behind sophomore centers Nick Bjugstad with 25 and Erik Haula with 20.
He is third in assists with 25.
SUCCESS EXPECTED
"It doesn’t suprise me," Smith said, asked about Rau's success with the Gophers, "because of how hard he works, how much he cares and he always is -- his preparation before a game is incredible. He understands his role and does his job. He takes great pride on the offensive side and the defensive side."
Smith said Rau's switch from center to left wing as a Gopher and being paired with 6-3 Zach Budish and 6-5 Nick Bjugstad also have helped him.
He does not have to go into corners so much, Smith said, but he is still good at taking the puck out of zone on his stick with speed. "It's fun to watch," Smith said.
"Any time somone leaves high school and goes straight to DIvision I, there is a growing curve," Smith said. "The schedule and big games he played through his career helped Kyle. That jump was not such a steep curve for him.
"And with linemates like Bjugstad and Budish, it's fun to watch them as a line," Smith said. "Kyle is little, but he never plays small. He finishes checks."
His mental approach to hockey also helps him. "He knows he will have such an impact in every game," Smith said, "but he blocks that out and just plays. Some players get nervous, but he was able to play like no one I ever had."
Kyle Rau's high school teams won two state championships and three conference titles, Smith said, and he also played in bantam and pee wee state tournaments.




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/1/2012 6:07:55 AM)

Love this kid. The last line gives me chills.



Fifty-six seconds into his first college hockey game this past October, freshman Kyle Rau scored his first goal. For a Gophers program looking for a metaphorical jump-start after three consecutive seasons missing the NCAA tournament, Rau delivered quite literally.
Those goals, mostly from close range, have kept coming for the Gophers freshman -- much as his head coach expected.
"[Kyle] is going to score goals; he has scored all his life," Don Lucia said. He has repeated those or similar words throughout the past six months and will likely say them again as the Gophers prepare for the Frozen Four starting Thursday in Tampa, Fla.
Rau, 19, leads the team with six game-winning goals and in power-play goals, but his contributions go beyond the stat sheet. In some ways, he has helped shape and change the identity of the team. If one of the main critiques of recent Gophers rosters is that they were full of skilled potential pro players who lacked grit, Rau -- who is only 5-8 and 172 pounds -- is the antithesis.
"The best way to describe him is tenacious," linemate Zach Budish said. "He'd be the smallest guy out there, but he will mix it up with guys that are 8 or 9 inches taller than him and have 75 pounds on him. He is fearless."
Lucia said the Gophers needed Rau to contribute this season, and he did immediately. Rau has thrived as the left winger on the team's top line with center Nick Bjugstad and Budish. He was named the national rookie of the month in October, when he scored seven goals. The Gophers, picked to finish sixth in the WCHA, rocketed to a 7-1 start and rode that momentum to the WCHA regular-season and the berth in the Frozen Four.
"We are all excited to be where we are," Rau said, "and we are all happy."
Big-name recruit
Rau, who became a Gophers fan a decade ago as the team was winning back-to-back NCAA titles in 2002 and 2003, brought high expectations that he could help return the program to glory.
His hockey credentials were impeccable. Unlike many top prep players who opt for the junior hockey their senior year, Rau stayed at Eden Prairie High School. He had a monster season playing with his twin brother, Curt, and a bunch of longtime buddies from youth hockey. He scored 41 goals as the Eagles won their second Class 2A state title in three years. His diving, highlight-reel goal gave Eden Prairie a three-overtime victory over Duluth East in the championship game.
Rau was chosen the state's Mr. Hockey and then joined Sioux Falls for the USHL playoffs and surprisingly led the league in postseason points. The Florida Panthers selected him in the third round of the 2011 NHL draft.
"He never gives up on anything," said Curt Rau, a defenseman for the NAHL's Odessa Jackalopes.
Kyle's teammates on the Gophers soon found that out.
"A lot of guys come to college and it takes them a little bit to figure it out," captain Taylor Matson said. "Kyle stepped in right away."
Rau has 18 goals this season and leads Division I freshmen with 43 points. The only rookie with more goals is Johnny Gaudreau of Boston College with 20. Their teams meet Thursday in the semifinals.
"They are very similar-type players," Lucia said. "About the same size. Both very slippery. Very highly skilled."
In grandpa's mold
Kyle Rau's grandfather, Jerry Rau was small, too. He was a 5-8, 195-pound guard for the Gophers football team from 1952 to '54. His best friend on the team was Paul Giel, a two-time All-America.
"I got to like Rau because of how hard he worked on the football field," Giel was quoted as saying in a 1953 newspaper story. "He impressed me as a guy who never quit."
Jerry Rau, playing in a single wing, often pulled to block for Giel on runs and passes. Before he died in 2000, Jerry Rau enjoyed telling stories to his twin grandsons on their vacation visits about his football days and other life experiences.
At home, Kyle had a backyard rink and three brothers to play with. Matt is 26 years old now. Chad, who has bounced back and forth between the Houston Aeros and the Wild this season, is 25. Matt stands 6-1, Chad 5-11 and Curt, born one minute before Kyle, is 5-10, 185.
"Kyle had to work hard and strengthen himself to compete with us," Curt said.
Said their father, Mike Rau, who played for Edina West in high school: "Kyle was always dragged along when the two older boys were playing. And he would always go behind the net and watch the games from ice level. He was always watching and studying. ... Of all our kids, Kyle was always the best checker."
Coaches and teammates alike marvel at his hockey IQ, his ability to find open spots near the net. Budish appreciates Rau's skill and versatility.
"He plays on the power play, he plays on the penalty kill. He is good defensively. He blocks shots," Budish said. "He does little things that don't show up on the scoreheet."

Away from the rink, Rau -- a serious student who is enrolled in the Carlson School of Management -- blends in easily with the mass of students at the university.
Well, except for his ultrablond hair. Team leaders coaxed everyone into dyeing their locks for the playoffs. Kyle's parents suggested a trim might be wise after the color change.
"No, we are going with it," he said.
He wants to fit in, even if it temporarily means looking like a member of a punk rock band.
The best for last
One of Rau's strongest traits is particularly relevant this time of year: He plays his best in the biggest games.
In addition to his state tournament heroics last season, he scored in the last minute to give the Gophers a sweep of North Dakota at Mariucci Arena in early November. And in the first West Regional game last weekend, Rau had a goal and three assists against Boston University for a season-high four points.
"That is what we train for in the summertime," Rau said, "to be in the big game. And now it is here."
For the first time since 2005, the Gophers are in the Frozen Four. There are plenty of reasons, but Rau is near the top of the list.
"This is where the program belongs," Rau said, "and everyone knows that."




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/1/2012 9:30:32 PM)

Whoa!
Jutting out at MSU
never thought I'd see that
4 as a player, 10 as an assistant, 12 as the HC
Lifetime ....




Lynn G. -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/1/2012 10:12:04 PM)

Mankato has had a reputation for playing pretty dirty, haven't they? Is that Jutting's reputation?




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/1/2012 10:22:17 PM)

Not from my point of view.
Always been a tough draw for them, they get some guys who others won't or can't take.
I've always had a soft spot for Troy, got to knwo him some a decade ago, and he was always gracious and open.
(worked hard to get his players moved on in life, thats where I dealt with him, when we were looking for coaches from guys who had played)
Ironically, they have one of their best freshmen classes on hand right now.
Will be interesting to see where they go with the new hire.
Sorry, can't answer your question Lynn. I guess I've alwys just considered them scrappy, and I think they play with that "oh, so I'm not good enough to be recruited by you, huh?" chip on their shoulder that oh, yeah .... EVERYONE carries against the Gophers.  [:D]




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/1/2012 10:23:49 PM)

They have turned out a couple outstanding pros in Troys tenure.




Lynn G. -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/1/2012 10:31:08 PM)

I can't say that I've paid attention to them forever, it just seems like in the past couple of years it has stood out to me that Mankato seemed dirty. Might be just a small sample size that I was seeing.




Jeff Jesser -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/2/2012 8:13:07 AM)

Agree with SMF.  I've not looked at them as "dirty" but they play hard and with a smaller school-type chip on their shoulder.  




Lynn G. -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/2/2012 8:23:55 AM)

Good enough. I'll open my mind back up. Once you get a mindset about a team you tend to make some assumptions that may not be true.




Jeff Jesser -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/2/2012 8:28:06 AM)

Not always the case though.


ND could find a cure for cancer, ALS and blindness, broker a peace deal between Israel and Palestine and solve world hunger and they would always be worthless sacks of crap IMHO.  [:D]




Lynn G. -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/2/2012 8:35:34 AM)

[:D]




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/2/2012 10:31:33 PM)

The Frozen Four is almost here.
Meet a Gopher: Senior Jake Hansen is the right wing on the Gophers' second line and is an assistant team captain.
The 6-1, 191-pound Hansen had career highs in goals with 15, assists with 22 and, of course, points with 37. He scored three game-winners and had six power play goals.
He is a plus-18, ranks second on team in most penalties with 28. Has a six-game points streak with 4 goals and three assists in that stretch. He was a third round draft pick of the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2007.
One of the more vocal and emotional team leaders.
Meet an opponent: Brian Dumoulin is a 6-4, 225 junior defenseman. He was named Hockey East's best defensive defenseman for the second season in a row and was among the 10 finalists for the Hobey Baker Award before they narrowed the candidates to three.
He has six goals and 20 assists for 26 points in 42 games. His plus-25 ranking is the best on BC. He was a second round draft pick of the Carolina Hurricane in 2009. He is from Biddeford, Maine.
He played on the U.S. team in the 2011 World Junior Championships in Buffalo, N.Y. Team USA won the bronze in that tournament. One of his teammates on the U.S. team was Gophers forward Nick Bjugstad.
Frozen Four facts: This is the Gophers' 20th Frozen Four, Boston College's 19th. Only Michigan has appeared in more, 22.
The quote: Gophers coach Don Lucia on Hansen: "He has had a high motor all season long. He is not one of the focal points of our offense, but his game has really rounded out this year. He is as good a penalty killer as we have had all season long."
THE DON SAYS
On sophomore winger Nate Condon: "[He's got]  speed. He seems to score big goals. He has been outstanding on the  penalty kill. He is a  good two-way defensive player as well."
On sophomore defenseman Nate Schmidt: "[He had a] breakout year. A guy that we thought had the ability, the talent. He learned what it meant to work this past year, especially this offseason, getting himself in great shape. He has earned everything he received this year. A very deserving second team all-league player."




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/2/2012 10:34:43 PM)

Schmidts probably been the biggest surprise to me.
Naasty shot on the PP
Love his confidence with the puck in kill situations also.
Anyone see him railroad-track it all the way from our zone, all the way back to our net, killiing time, while the Sue chased? Mad skillz and confidence to do that.
Best thing to come outta St Cloud since Jimbo Fargo Frenette. 




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/3/2012 1:07:38 AM)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzYP25ZfrXk&feature=related





Jeff Jesser -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/3/2012 8:41:59 AM)

ESPN can now concentrate on their coverage, laugh/snort/snicker, of the Frozen Four since BB is done.  I just hope there is no:

pool tourney
card game
horse race
cricket match
beer pong
hot dog eating contest
mud wrestling
volleyball tourney
ping pong
arena league football
canadian football
icelandick football
harlem globetrotters versus the generals replay from 1982
womens softball
mens softball
kids softball
animal softball
lawn darts
lawn farts


If none of those pop up, we should be ok. 




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/3/2012 4:20:07 PM)

[&:][&:][&:]
Zactly

Lets hope Tebow stays indoors ... if he ventures out, the whole weekend will be hockey-less.




Jeff Jesser -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/3/2012 4:23:26 PM)

and 2 more weeks of winter!




Jeff Jesser -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/4/2012 9:50:58 AM)

Uh-oh.  I underestimated ESPN.  Baylor ladies went 40-0.  We could be in real trouble here [:-]




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/4/2012 4:09:49 PM)

[&:][&:]




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/4/2012 4:21:54 PM)

The boys left for Tampa yesterday.
God, it would be nice to win one again.
It'd give me hope again.
They were the last team of males in this state to win a title of any kind (worth having),..... may as well be them again.




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/4/2012 4:23:28 PM)

Bad news? .... BC is LOADED
Good news? ..... get by BC, the final would look verrrry winnable.




SoMnFan -> RE: Gopher Hockey (4/4/2012 6:35:39 PM)

March 30 was a somber day across the college hockey world.
It marked the first Friday since early October when the sport wasn't played. It also signaled the beginning of the curtain call.
Tampa, Fla., isn't by any means a traditional location for the end of the road, but the Tampa Bay Times Forum is ready to host the final weekend of college hockey. And the 80-plus degree weather along Florida's Gulf Coast is a welcome change following several months of winter for the majority of the sport's faithful fan base.
Like it or not, the 2012 Frozen Four is here.
And on the eve of the annual celebration that brings together some of the most passionate fans in any sport, the good news is that the four teams that advanced to Tampa defied the odds that often define a one-and-done postseason.
Boston College (31-10-1), Ferris State (25-11-5), Minnesota (28-13-1) and Union (26-7-7) haven't had their sticks taken yet and one aspect of this mix is that it represents a unique quartet to reach this stage.
For the first time since 1996, four regular-season champions have advanced to the Frozen Four. While rare, it's also a great achievement. There's no denying that a hot team can rip off several wins in March and erase a season's worth of inconsistency, but these four were models of consistency in winning the five-month marathon that is the college hockey regular season.
So tip your cap to the Hockey East Eagles, the CCHA Bulldogs, the WCHA Gophers and ECAC Dutchmen and don't wonder whether any of them truly belong in Tampa.
Instead, embrace their accomplishments and enjoy the final three games that this season has to offer. The puck drops on the 2012 Frozen Four on Thursday afternoon when first-timers Ferris State and Union face off in the first national semifinal (4:30 p.m. ET, ESPNU/ESPN3), followed by college hockey royalty in BC and Minnesota in the nightcap (8 p.m. ET, ESPN2/ESPN3).

Here are five key questions heading into the national semifinals:

1. Is the Boston College-Minnesota semifinal really the national title game? As mentioned, Ferris and Union are breaking the seal on their Frozen Four participation. So call that two appearances. Down the hall, BC and Minnesota have a combined 43 Frozen Four trips. In fact, the Eagles are making their 10th Frozen Four appearance in the past 15 seasons.
Want more ammo for the second semifinal? BC and Minnesota have a combined nine national titles and there are 27 players (18 for Minnesota, nine for BC) who have played this season for the Eagles and Gophers who were previously drafted by an NHL franchise. Ferris and Union have a combined zero draft picks who will dress Thursday.
But that's all about history and this weekend is all about the present. OK, so let's not forget that BC and Minnesota represent the two best conferences in college hockey. And the Eagles enter Frozen Four play with a 17-game winning streak and a pair of shutouts in NCAA regional play.
The bottom line is it's hard to argue against the BC-Minnesota winner going on to capture another national title.

2. Could we see another first-time champion? If you buy into the BC-Minnesota logic, then it's unlikely that either Ferris State or Union will skate around with the national championship trophy on Saturday night. And history isn't exactly on their side, either.
Except for last year.
Minnesota-Duluth captured its first national title in 2011 when it defeated Michigan in overtime at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul. It marked the 18th school to win the NCAA hockey championship.
Prior to that you have to go back to 1993 (Maine) to find a first-time champion. And the last time a first-time participant won the Frozen Four? That would be Lake Superior State in 1988. Sounds like it's time for Ferris State coach Bob Daniels and Union coach Rick Bennett to channel their inner Frank Anzalone and try to summon up some Lakers hockey magic because it would make for some special hockey this weekend.

3. Which team has the edge in special-teams play? You never know if the men in stripes will swallow the whistles or try to join the spotlight, so the four teams in Tampa should be prepared to excel on special teams as needed.
The best combination of power play and penalty kill belongs to either BC or Union, depending on your perspective. The Eagles are 11th nationally with the man-advantage at 21.5 percent efficiency. And they are third on the PK at 88.0 percent. But an important note is the 11 short-handed goals BC has this season. Even down a man the Eagles have swagger and a transition game that can be electrifying -- and they aren't afraid to show it.
By contrast, workmanlike Union is once again strong on the power play, ranking fourth nationally (24.3 percent) while posting a very respectable 84.8 efficiency on the PK, good enough for 10th nationally.
The other two teams are good in one phase of special teams and pedestrian at the other. Ferris State ranks sixth nationally on the penalty kill (85.8 percent) but just 25th with the man-advantage (19.2 percent). Conversely, the Gophers are strong on the PP at 23.2 percent (fifth nationally) but just 81.0 percent efficient on the penalty kill (36th nationally).

4. Which goaltender could steal the national championship? The numbers again favor BC and Union in this department.
The Eagles' Parker Milner was inconsistent for the first four months of the season, but a 17-game winning streak has a way of curing problems and the junior from Pittsburgh now has season numbers that look like this: 27-5-0, 1.70, .935.
Union's Troy Grosenick found himself in the Hobey Baker mix, thanks to his gaudy stats, until the three Hat Trick finalists were announced last week. The sophomore ranks second nationally in winning percentage (22-5-3, .783), goals-against average (1.64) and save percentage (.936).
In terms of stealing two wins, Ferris' Taylor Nelson (20-6-3, 2.10, .923) and Minnesota's Kent Patterson (28-13-1, 2.23, .911) probably better define that notion. And as Minnesota-Duluth's Kenny Reiter demonstrated last season, you don't have to have the best stats to be the last goaltender on the ice on Saturday night.

5. Who is going to win the Hobey Baker Memorial Award? The three finalists are Maine's Spencer Abbott, Minnesota-Duluth's Jack Connolly and Colgate's Austin Smith.
Abbott and Smith have traded their college skates for professional ones as each is finishing out the season in the American Hockey League with the Toronto Marlies (Maple Leafs) and the Texas Stars, respectively.
Smith (36 goals, 21 assists, 57 points) is the nation's leading goal scorer while Abbott (21-41-62) is No. 1 in helpers and points. Connolly's numbers are equally impressive at 1.46 points per game (20-40-60).
I'll go with Connolly, who also served as captain at Minnesota-Duluth and exemplifies the best of what college hockey has to offer.
In terms of the on-ice action, I see a Boston College-Union final with the Eagles capturing their fifth national title and third in the past five seasons. Enjoy the hockey and good luck getting through to next October.




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