Friday, October 05, 2007

Wayne State '07-08 Season Preview

For the Wayne State Warriors, this is it.

After eight years of hockey, the program will cease to exist after the Green and Gold play out the 2007-2008 season.

The move was announced late last week and was a shocking blow to everyone in contact with the close-knit world of college hockey.

"From all the people we talked to, it was all financial," said WSU head coach Bill Wilkinson in an exclusive interview with Matt Mackinder on USCHO.com. “The bombshell is quite a setback, but we still want to go out and have a good season — this is our last shot at it."

The final WSU team will look different this year as well with 11 seniors gone from the squad that finished 12-21-2 (8-10-2 College Hockey America) last year.

Key players that will return for the Warriors up front include senior and captain Mike Forgie along with fellow fourth year skaters Derek Bachynski, Tylor Michel, and Stavros Paskaris. Juniors Jon Grabarek and Derek Punches, as well as sophomore Jared Katz, will also be looked upon the put the puck in the net.

Junior Matt Krug and sophomores Jeff Caister and Ryan Bernardi are the only returning players with experience on the blue line, so there is a lot of room for rookies to make an impact.

Sophomore Brett Bothwell is a sure bet to be between the pipes for Wilkinson’s team as the season begins. Bothwell posted an 8-9-1 record in 18 games played as a freshman.

The team will also welcome 12 new members with four forwards, six defensemen and a pair of goaltenders added to the mix.

"I think this recruiting class gives our team not only a greater level of skill, but depth as well," said Wilkinson, who will begin his ninth season behind the Warrior bench. "We have talented players coming in at all three positions."

Joining the Warriors are forwards Tyler Ruel, Andrew Berecz and Jeremy Tejchma, defensemen Ryan Adams, Jordan Bonneville, Brock Meadows, Phil Partyka, Kyle Richardson and Eric Roman and goaltenders Mike Devoney and Kyle Funkenhauser.

These 12 signees will hope to fill the skates of departed seniors Jason Baclig, Jason Bloomingburg, Matt Boldt, Mark Cannon, Taylor Donohoe, Adam Drescher, Nate Higgins, Will Hooper, Dan Iliakis and Mark Nebus.

"I guess there are several bright spots,” continued Wilkinson in the USCHO article. “One, its good we got kicked in the teeth early so that these kids can look for schools to transfer to. Every game we play, these kids will essentially be playing for [opportunities] and they'll be in the limelight. But from all the guys I've talked to, not one has made it known to me that they want to jump ship.”

According to the official WSU press release on the school cutting men’s hockey, all current student-athlete scholarships will be honored provided they meet satisfactory progress standards under NCAA guidelines. Releases will be offered to those who wish to transfer to other schools next summer, where they will be eligible to participate immediately as the normal residency requirements of the NCAA are waived.

Wayne State will begin their ninth and final year with the Green and Gold intersquad game on Sunday and then host ACHA member Eastern Michigan on Monday. All home games will be played at the picturesque Michigan State Fairgrounds Coliseum.

Other highlights on the schedule include the team flying way, way out west for the Nye Frontier Classic hosted by Alaska-Anchorage on Oct. 12-13, the start of the CHA schedule at Robert Morris on Oct. 26-27, the Lake Superior State Lakers at the Coliseum for a pair of games on Nov. 9-10 to open the WSU home schedule and a battle with conference foe Niagara at the Palace of Auburn Hills on Jan. 9 as part of the College Hockey Faceoff.

For Warrior hockey fans you have a few chances, 14 to be exact, to catch a Wayne State game.

So I only have a little advice.

Get to the Coliseum with an extra layer of clothing on, cheer on the team, buy a Chuck-a-Puck, grab a beer and questionable hot dog and enjoy the history being made in the wrong way. Oh, and don’t forget to get your picture taken by the giant statue of a 15-foot-high bull behind the arena.

Remember fondly the first game with Gordie Howe dropping the puck and pigeons dive bombing from the ceiling.

Check out your GPS to see if it still has locations saved like Great Lakes Sports City in Fraser, the SportsPlex in Taylor, Compuware Arena in Plymouth, Joe Louis Arena and, of course, the Coliseum.

Tell stories of the glory years with Jason Durbin, Keith Stanich, Dusty Kingston, Tyler Kindle, David Guerrera, Marc St. Jean and so on.

Reflect with a smile on the anger, and sometimes downright jealously, of players and fans from Bemidji to Huntsville to Niagara as the newcomers in Green and Gold won back-to-back-to-back conference titles in 2001, 2002 and 2003.

Reminisce about the NCAA Regional at Yost Ice Arena in 2003 where the team came so painfully close to shocking Colorado College.

And by all means please stop by and thank “Wilky," his assistants Chris Luongo and Frank Novock, trainers John Caloia and Mike Chan, equipment manager Jim “Soupy” Campbell, Dr. Karageanes, Mike Flynn, Jeff Evans, Jeff Weiss, Tom Gorman, Rob Fournier, Jason Clark, the game-day staff and everyone involved for all their hard work, dedication, and commitment and over the past eight seasons.

Hard to believe it, but this is it.

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Western Michigan '07-08 Season Preview


Broncos charge into 2007-2008 season

by Tom Morelli/WMU Beat Writer

Western Michigan University’s performance in 2006-2007 (18-18-1, 14-13-1 CCHA) can best be described as the tale of two halves.

The Broncos struggled to find some consistency in the beginning, heading into the holiday season with a 6-9-1 record. Perhaps during the winter break, head coach Jim Culhane made a New Year’s resolution to win more games because that’s exactly what his team did. Western Michigan experienced a sudden surge of momentum to close out the season with a 12-9 run.

The Broncos were highly successful in part because of freshman sensation Mark Letestu, who led the team with 24 goals and 46 points. After receiving CCHA Rookie of the Year accolades, Letestu left Western Michigan to sign a free agent contract with the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Other significant losses from last year are forwards Brett John, Kevin Labatte, Jason Moul and Paul Szczechura, defenseman Ryan Marhle and goaltender Daniel Bellissimo.

With several players having moved on, it begs the question: Which Broncos team will show up in 2007-2008?

In his ninth year with the program, Culhane will be working with a young roster, which includes eight freshmen. Two incoming recruits – forwards Max Campbell (New York Rangers) and Ryan Watson (Florida Panthers) – were taken in June’s NHL Entry Draft and join defenseman Chris Frank (Phoenix Coyotes, 2006) and forward Matt Clackson (Philadelphia Flyers, 2005) as the only current Broncos to be drafted.

Ryan Watson is the younger brother of current Bronco Cam Watson.

Who will be leading the way for Western Michigan this season is still up in the air, as Culhane will decide on his captains after Saturday’s Brown and Gold intrasquad scrimmage.

Junior forward Jeff LoVecchio returns as possibly Western Michigan’s greatest scoring threat (19-15--34), and was named an All-CCHA Pre-Season Honorable Mention.

Taking care of business between the pipes is sophomore Riley Gill, who won the starting goaltender spot from Bellissimo in the middle of last season. Gill looked like a seasoned veteran for the Broncos, posting a 2.79 goals-against average in 23 games, including four shutouts.

Unlike previous years, Western Michigan won’t have to jump into the conference schedule to begin the season. The Broncos will open the season at home Oct. 19-20 against Bentley College, followed by a road series against Niagara University the week after.

Culhane hopes the non-conference games will help fine-tune his team before CCHA play begins.

“I like the way our schedule opens up this season – I’m a big advocate of non-conference games,” said Culhane. “Our league is so competitive from top to bottom, so you have to be ready every night.”

Western Michigan will head off to Burlington, Vermont for a December tournament, facing off with Quinnipiac on Dec. 29 and the winner of Vermont/Holy Cross the following night.

Another highlight on the schedule includes a home-and-home series with defending NCAA champions Michigan State on Feb. 15 and 16.

While last season lies in the the past, Culhane wants his team to pick-up from where they left off. He’s instilled a blue-collar mentality onto his players and believes that team chemistry will be their greatest asset for the upcoming campaign.

“I’ve told my players that I’m very proud of the work they’ve put in,” Culhane said. “We had a great off-season in which we strengthened both our bodies and minds. For us, I think we need to bring a lunch pail approach to how we play.”

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Michigan State '07-08 Season Preview

By Matt Bishop

Coming off the program’s first national title in 21 years, MSU head coach Rick Comley said he’s more driven now than he’s ever been.

“That’s the feeling I have sitting here, right now,” Comley said Tuesday at MSU Media Day.

“These are golden years for me … it’s such a great school and a great program, there’s so much pride taken from winning a national championship, I’m just hungry to do it again.”

And it’s a good thing, too, because his Spartans are going into the season with a large target on their backs, courtesy of being the defending national champions — and a No. 3 national ranking.

But Comley knows the challenge of trying to repeat. After winning the national title in 1991 at Northern Michigan, Comley’s squad won the WCHA Tournament, but were bounced by Michigan in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

Now he has to take that experience and try to apply it to this year’s team throughout the course of the season.

“In 1992, I thought we should’ve won it again,” Comley said.

“We were probably favored all year to win it. Early in a season like this, expectations will be extremely high and you’re judged harshly and quickly as to how you react to it, but what you do is take the positives from it, the lessons that we learned last year but with the biggest lesson of all being that you’re good enough to do it.”

Even though his team is coming off a national title, Comley still believes his team isn’t seen on the same level nationally as a Boston College or a Minnesota.

“As great as we are, we still fight for respect,” Comley said. “We’re always fighting for that level of respect, and every time you put on that jersey or every time I walk behind that bench, you want to continue to prove things to everybody.”

This season, the Spartans might have the ability to take respect from their opponents – and the national pundits as the team’s four top scorers – junior Tim Kennedy, senior captain Bryan Lerg, junior Justin Abdelkader and senior Chris Mueller – return along with a goaltender, junior Jeff Lerg, who helped carry the Spartans through the NCAA Tournament, allowing five goals in the four tournament games.

“It’s a real nice situation for a coach,” Comley said. “When you return talent and you bring in talent, like we said last year, last year’s team became the sum of the parts and what eventually proved out last year is that we did have good parts. This year, I don’t think there’s any question that we do. But it doesn’t mean we’re better than anybody else in our league or any of the top teams in the country, but I believe we can compete with them.”

But in the hunt for a repeat, Comley remains focused on his usual coaching style that’s gotten him over 700 career wins.

“As my record indicates, I’m a second half coach,” he noted. “I like to play kids the first half, give opportunity, develop kids, develop a team. I’m not as personally concerned about record until Christmas.”

So even though winning the CCHA regular season championship is a big goal for the team, the season is not a sprint, it’s a marathon.

“If you’re going to make the league championship a target, I’d have to change that approach,” Comley said.

“I’d like to win it. I think the players are kind of taking the approach that they haven’t won it and they’d like to, but to me the big picture is playing that last game and winning that last game.”


*************************************************


Lerg learning to balance scoring with leadership as team captain

By Matt Bishop

Senior forward Bryan Lerg said it’s always been his dream to be captain.

Now, it’s reality.

Lerg will serve as captain of the MSU hockey team for the 2007-08 season.

“Last year we had a unanimous pick in that locker room in Chris Lawrence and Bryan was this year,” MSU head coach Rick Comley said. “It’s a big responsibility for him. This year’s situation is a little different in that we have very high expectations for Bryan the individual. Not only must he fill the role of a good captain, he’s got to be productive, too.”

Lerg said he’s learned a lot from the three captains he’s served under – Jim Slater, Drew Miller and Lawrence.

“I think I can lead this team in the right direction,” he said.

“I’m really happy to be named captain, and I have a lot of good assistants helping me out.”

Serving under Lerg will be senior Chris Mueller and juniors Justin Abdelkader, Tim Kennedy and Jeff Lerg.

Lerg is already confident in his team heading into what should be a tough year.

“It’s going to be another tight year,” he said. “I have a lot of faith in our team, and I know with all the hard work I’ve seen so far, it’s going to be a good season.”

Lerg tallied 23 goals and 13 assists last season, but the biggest statistic was his eight game-winning goals.

“I’ve got to be there at the right, I have to put the puck in the net,” Lerg said. “Between those top two lines, there’s a lot of points. Those are the two lines that need to put the puck in the net at the right time. When it comes down to crunch time, you have to be the leader on and off the ice.”

New ‘do

Lerg showed up at media day with a new look. Over the summer, he cut his traditional curly hair in favor of a more conservative look.

“I just woke up and it was gone,” he joked. “I just woke up one morning and had enough. It hadn’t been cut in four years.”

But the new style won’t last too long, as he said he plans on letting it grow once again.

A little family research – or just consulting Bryan’s cousin Jeff – revealed that this is the way Bryan grew his hair for much of his youth.

“I grew up playing with him for nine years and every one of his team pictures was nice, trim hair like that,” Jeff Lerg said.

“It’ll flow out. He goes in stages like that.”

Early on

MSU will play its annual Green & White game Sunday at 2 p.m., before its only exhibition contest of the season at 7 p.m., Tuesday against the University of Windsor.

The national championship banner will be raised prior to the Spartans’ home opener against Colgate on Oct. 19.

Monday, October 01, 2007

Wayne State Women '07-08 Season Preview

For opponents of the Wayne State Warriors, last year’s graduation didn’t offer much of a reprieve.

Although the Warriors graduated co-captain Laura Monk, a defensive pillar who earned twelve points last season (3-9), the team returns eighteen letter-winners, including their top five scorers.

CHA adversaries will continue to fear last year’s MVP and Top Gun, Melissa Boal. Boal, a junior this season, netted forty-five points (28-17) last season, including eleven power-play tallies and three game-winning goals.

She often collaborated on the ice with fellow juniors Sam Poyton and Lindsay DiPietro. Poyton, who earned acclaim during her rookie season for surpassing Kelly Zamora’s team record for goals scored, earned thirty-seven points last year (17-20), and had the highest shot success percentage on the team. DiPietro was last season’s infamous set-up artist: she earned thirty assists (37 points total) and was awarded last season’s President’s Cup.

The Warriors’ sophomore class is no less formidable: Brandi Frakie, last season’s Rookie of the Year honoree, will look to match or improve on her fifteen point (9-6) season. Additionally, Tegan Schroeder will continue to be a staple on defense—particularly after spending part of the summer at Team Canada’s Conditioning Camp. Frakie and Schroeder were both named to the CHA All-Rookie team.

Schroeder will continue to be supported on the blue line by junior Tina Vanderhoeven, sophomore Christine Jefferson, and senior Danielle Wilson.

Not to be shown up by underclassmen, the five seniors will also command the spotlight this season: most notably, the goaltending tag-team of Valery Turcotte and Tiffany Thompson. Turcotte was between the pipes for the majority of last season, finishing with an 11-14 record and a 3.49 GAA. However, “backup” seems an insufficient term for Thompson, who saw time in eleven games; she secured a 4-3 record and a 3.06 GAA.

Additionally, the senior class is rounded out by Wilson, fellow defender Jenny Cameron, and forward Ashley King. King served as co-captain with Monk last year and was the recipient of the Warrior Award. She’ll wear the “C” this year, and will be supported by assistant captains Jefferson, DiPietro, and junior forward Amanda Hungle, who will wear an “A” for the second consecutive season.

Finally, the Warriors add three newcomers to their roster: forwards Janet Babchishin and Adriana Pfeffer, and goaltender Paige Keranen.

Despite finishing last season just under .500 (15-18-1), the team went 6-6 in the CHA, and ended their season with a loss in the CHA finals to #2 Mercyhurst. Jim Fetter, who begins his fourth season as Warriors head coach, is joined by new assistant coach Allison Rutledge, a recent graduate of Niagara University.

After an exhibition game at York, the Warriors open their season on the road at Clarkson University. They’ll also contend with Union, Cornell, St. Lawrence, Northeastern, Rensselaer, Colgate, Minnesota, Maine, and Quinnipiac, before opening CHA play against Robert Morris in January.