Monday, February 23, 2015
Friday, February 20, 2015
Celebrating the 1995 National Champions
Tonight, BU will honor its 1995
championship squad, the fourth of its five NCAA title teams and the second to
achieve a trifecta of Beanpot, conference title and the national crown. The third-highest scoring Terrier squad of
all time (224 goals) was captained by Jacques Joubert, who played three seasons
(66G, 65A)—reaching the Final Four each year—after transferring from
Princeton. As a senior, he co-led the
team in goals with 29, including the game-winner in BU’s 6-2 win over Maine in
the NCAA title game in
Providence (video).
Joubert, who will be joined by 18 of his former teammates during tonight's game against Notre Dame, talked with THFB about that championship
season.
Note: Look for a new Terrier Tales' feature from blog contributor mh82, which will chronicle BU's 31-6-3 season that culminated in the program's fourth NCAA title. We'll post it in early March.
Q—How much of a
motivator was losing to Lake Superior in the 1994 national championship game to
the ‘94-‘95 team?
A—The
‘94 loss was a huge motivator for the returning players. Frankly, we were embarrassed by our
performance and we vowed to get back that very night. We worked so hard that off season and everyone
had just one goal.
Q—BU went into the
season as the favorite for both Hockey East and the NCAA. Was that designation
viewed as a burden or a challenge by the team? As captain, what challenges did
you face?
A—
To be honest, we
knew we had an even better team coming into the ‘95 season so we put the
expectations on ourselves and didn’t feel any outside influence or
expectations. As captain, the biggest
issue was making sure we stay focused on every game throughout the season and
not get too caught up in the end result or end of the season when it was still
November or December.
Q--Both Mike Grier
and you scored 29 goals while Chris O’Sullivan led the team with 56 points. Yet
center Steve Thornton was voted Team MVP. What made him a special player who
earned that award?
A—
We were such a
deep team, but Steve was Mr. Consistency.
He played great all year and in every situation, whether it was short-handed,
power play or even strength. He also
scored the first goal of the
championship game,
which to me was still the most important goal.
Q—BU had 14 players
with 20 or more points that season. Was scoring depth the factor that set this
team apart from the rest?
A—
We were solid
all around and the depth made it hard for any opponent to focus on shutting us
down. They could not just pick a player
or single line to shut down because we would beat them with the other two or three
lines.
Q--Of the nine
non-wins that season (6L, 3T), four were against Maine (2L, 2T). Was there any
doubt in your mind about who would win the final against the Black Bears?
A—
Maine, at the
time, was our biggest rival, but that year we believed we were a better team
despite the record. Every game against them
was a battle but there was no doubt we were going to win that game. We were on a mission all year and were not
going to let another chance at a national title slip past us. In hindsight, we were much more focused and
prepared for the 1995 tournament than the 1994 tournament.
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Q&A With Mike Geragosian
Conventional hockey wisdom says you build a team from the
goal out. And, as with other positions, raw talent needs to be developed by the coaching staff. For goalies, the tasks include helping them to perfect their technique and enhancing their ability to compete and win under pressure situations.
For sixteen seasons Terrier netminders—including Rick
DiPietro, Sean Fields, John Curry, Kieran Millan and Matt O’Connor—have been instructed,
supported, cajoled and challenged by BU assistant coach Mike Gerogosian to build on their skills, and develop the critical mental aspect of goaltending.
An All-New England goalie for Division 2 University of
Lowell in the early 1970s, Geragosian has been mentoring goalie for more
than 30 years. Before joining Jack Parker’s staff in 1999-2000 (DiPietro’s
freshman and only Terrier season), Mike had coaching stints at his alma mater,
Princeton and Merrimack. He’s also USA Hockey’s director of development for
goaltenders for in Massachusetts and operates Mike Geragosian's All American Goalie Camps.
Geragosian,
who instructs more than 500 goaltenders annually, talked with THFB about his approach to mentoring goaltenders:
Q—Matt O’Connor attended three NHL
development camps last summer and his excellent first half has drawn the
further attention from NHL teams. What improvements has he made to his game
that have contributed to his strong performance?
A— Matt has worked hard on his leg
strength on ice with me and off ice with our strength trainer Anthony
Morando. This has led to better skating,
puck control and arrival time to positioning. Matt also has improved on his
readiness and his set position for all situations including the less
challenging ones— where sloppy play can lead to tired defense and poor rebound
control and eventually goals against.
Q—In your three decades of coaching
goalies, what have been the biggest changes in approach, style and athleticism
to the position?
A— The approach is quite different. The equipment has helped the goalie evolve to
being more square to puck, leaving fewer holes under and through the body. The
goalies are certainly much bigger in most cases but the smaller ones can also
play big.
Also,
the coaching of goaltenders has evolved into a performance-enhancement
situation aimed at accelerating goalies' competencies. I have taken the hybrid
butterfly style and tweaked it into various movement variations that fit the
situation.
Q—Which elements of being in good
shape do most freshman goalies need to address:
flexibility, strength, skating (side to side), stance, etc.?
A— Most
young goalies need to learn to get body positioning that enables reactive saves
in the exact area of the target field where the puck is arriving. This takes experience
and training on and off ice with coaches who can recognize their skill
deficiencies. Leg strength, along with
growth development, also helps reaction times and stream skating to exact
positional play.
Q—You’ve mentored several
outstanding goalies during your tenure at BU? What were the strengths that
enabled them to excel?
A— The common characteristic was they
were all great athletes and had good game reads and reactive balance. Although
not exactly physically alike, the mental game for all of them was at an
extremely high level.
Q—Why do goalies take longer to
develop and generally need more time to reach the NHL?
A— It’s usually a long journey for most
goaltenders, due to the need for experience in this position. The ups and downs
can be mentally difficult. Neurologists have proven that the frontal part of the
brain, which helps decision-making, doesn't fully develop until age twenty-six! In
contrast, many young goalies have rapid physical development. So, we have a
Mercedes with a Go-cart engine until full brain development can occur.
Q—What qualities do you look for
when evaluating a goalie prospect?
A— The four areas of goaltending I look at
are: physical, tactical, technical and mental.
The
six C's also are important in my evaluation of a goaltender: consistent, compact,
capable, concentration, challenging and, most of all competitive. Also, working
with the head coaches and recruiting coaches for input and future development
has been a recipe for success.
Mike was interviewed by Bernie
Corbett earlier this season for Episode 9 of Inside BU
Hockey and discussed the three Terrier netminders. His remarks begin at the 24:10 mark.
Friday, December 26, 2014
We’ve Got The Jack
Celebrating
BU’s resurgence led by its freshman phenom, blog contributor defkit tags his
USCHO message board posts with “BU Hockey: We’ve Got the Jack.” True, Jack
Eichel has been the catalyst for BU’s first-semester success, but, in fact, for more than
65 years, BU Hockey has had “the Jack.” The names can be found all over the BU
record books and in the BU Athletics Hall of Fame: Jack Parker, Jack Garrity, Jack
Ferriera, Jack O’Callahan and Jacques Joubert, among others.
Last
month, another pivotal “BU Jack” received a long-overdue honor when former
standout Terriers skater and ten-year head coach Jack Kelley was inducted
into the Massachusetts Hockey Hall of Fame. Kelley had previously been named to the U.S.
Hockey Hall of Fame (1993), the BU Athletics Hall
of Fame (1973) and the Connecticut
Hockey Hall of Fame (video).
●
New England Hockey Journal report
“The
Mentor” recently was interviewed
by BU play-by-play radio announcer Bernie Corbett for Inside BU Hockey and
reflected on the induction as well as the current BU squad, which he saw in
action against Maine last month. Audio begins
at the 34:00 minute mark
THFB
augmented the interview with some additional questions:
Q—In your 10 season as
BU’s head coach, besides the two NCAA titles games (1971 & 1972), is there
another game that is most memorable to you?
A—In
my second year, we won two games that I felt made a statement that we were on
the verge of being competitive with the rest of the top teams. The first game
was a 1-0 victory over Boston College at McHugh Forum. Bruce Fennie scored the
lone goal, and Jack Ferriera stopped everything BC shot at him. The second game
that year was a double overtime victory vs. Harvard in the Beanpot. Lyman
Carter, a transfer that year, scored the winning goal. To me, those were two
important wins that indicated we were headed in the right direction. The start
of the third year, I believe we won our first ten games of the year and we ended
up winning twenty-five games.
Q—In that same decade,
who are a few players that would make your All-Opponent team?
A—Those
players most memorable to me are Ken Dryden of Cornell, Joe Cavanaugh of
Harvard, John Cunniff of Boston College, and Tim Sheehy of Boston College.
Q— And a personal
highlight from your playing days?
A—One
of the more satisfying wins from my playing days was beating Boston College 8-1;
believe it or not, I scored 4 goals in that game! Which goes to show, even a
blind squirrel finds a nut occasionally!
When
the BU hockey program resumed under Coach Harry Cleverly after World War II, it
quickly became one of the best in the East. In 1949-50, three Jacks joined the
BU varsity, helping to power the Terriers to their first NCAA tournament: Jack
Garrity, who set the all-time record for goals in the season with 51, Jack
Martin, who would score 77 points in three BU seasons and Jack Kelley, who
would score 22 goals and add 10 assists in ’49-’50,
A
standout at Belmont High School, Kelley had been named Boston’s top schoolboy
performer in 1945 and went on to play AAU hockey with Team USA. He began his BU
career as a wing on the 1949-50 NCAA finalist team, and scored a pair of
goals in his first varsity game, a 10-2 win over Tufts. He later switched to
defense, helping BU to a second NCAA appearance in 1950-51. Kelley would become
an All-East first team defenseman and BU’s team MVP in 1951-52. At the time of his graduation, he was the
school's all-time leading scorer among defensemen and finished with 52 goals and
43 assists in three seasons.
Following
a stint as coach at Weston High School, Kelley was named head coach at Colby
College where his White Mules teams went 89-15-5 over seven seasons, with
Kelley earning NCAA Coach of the Year honors in 1961-62.
He
took over a slumping BU program in 1962 and in his third season, the team won
14 of its final 16 games to finish 25-6. The Terriers were back and during ten
seasons under Kelley, they would win 206 games against 80 losses and 8 ties for
a remarkable .714 winning percentage. The Kelley decade brought BU six Beanpot
championships, its first ECAC title and back-to-back NCAA championships in 1971
and 1972, the only time the feat was achieved by an Eastern school. His players
would earn first-team All American recognition 14 times including half of the
1971-72 Eastern All-America team.
Kelley
moved on to the fledgling WHA in 1972-73 as coach and general manager, leading
the New England Whalers to the first league title—the AVCO Cup. Later, he ran
the Detroit Red Wings AHL franchise in Glens Falls, N.Y., and served as
president of the Pittsburgh Penguins.
In 2008, BU and his former players and managers honored Kelley with a bust that Terrier fans see on the concourse at Agganis Arena
Today,
Kelley splits his time between Maine and Florida, and, along with his daughter,
Nancy Saucier, he races Standardbred horses in two- and three-year old stake
races. His son
Mark is Senior Director of Amateur Scouting for the Chicago Blackhawks; and son
David, who captained the Princeton hockey team, is the prolific writer and
producer of Hollywood films and television shows.
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