Elk River shifted out of 7AA hockey logjam

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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There will be a new hockey champion in Section 7AA next season. That certainty evolved from the Minnesota State High School League’s decision to move Elk River out of 7AA and into 4AA, its natural geographic location.
“You’re kidding!” said Duluth East coach Mike Randolph, when informed Thursday of the move. “You just made my day. It’s great news. Actually, they don’t belong in 7AA, and Tony Sarsland [Elks coach] knows it and said it over and over.
“In fact, it was unfortunate for Elk River last year, because they were good enough to make it to state but we played what was probably our best game of the season and beat ’em 7-1 in the 7AA final. That gave us the boost to go on and win the state.”
This year, however, East lost to Elk River in the 7AA semifinal, then the Elks went on and beat Hibbing in a spectacular 2-1, triple-overtime final in Hibbing, to make it to the state tournament. It was the first time in tournament history that no team from the actual Section 7 geographic area reached the tournament since it was one class or Class AA.
“In a way, after they beat us, I’d like to have the chance to beat them,” said Hibbing coach Mark DeCenzo. “But that’s just the stubborn side of me.
“Elk River is not a northern team, and I hate to see a representative from the northern region not be from the north. This year it was particularly frustrating, because our sixth seed in 7AA would have been a good representative at the state tournament, but none of our teams made it.”
Randolph agreed. “At our banquet, I said that I thought Section 7AA was deeper than the state tournament this year,” Randolph said.
East, Hibbing, Greenway of Coleraine, Cloquet and Grand Rapids were all left behind when Elk River won the sectional, and Sarsland came right out at the time and said it wasn’t right. “The teams from Duluth and the Iron Range deserve to be in the tournament because they are the reason the tournament has reached the level it’s at,” Sarsland said.
The high school league initially left Elk River in 7AA at its Wednesday meeting, but acted later to move the Elks as an amendment. To assure 7AA has eight Class AA teams, Brainerd was shifted into 7AA. “At least Brainerd is a northern team,” said DeCenzo.
In 4AA, Elk River will become the immediate favorite next season, while playing against natural rivals Anoka, Blaine, Champlin Park, Coon Rapids, Maple Grove, Osseo and Park Center, and the section also includes Armstrong and Cooper from the Robbinsdale school district — two teams that give the section 10 schools, and two teams which would more logically be in Section 6AA, perhaps.
Several years ago, the league moved Elk River into Section 8AA, as its eighth team, and the Elks had some top-five rated teams that ran into powerful Moorhead teams and lost in classic sectional showdowns. Ironically, Section 4AA did not have a strong representative during those years, when Elk River undoubtedly would have been an annual state tournament entry.
Just as ironically, last year, when Moorhead had one of its weakest teams in a decade, Roseau moved up from A to AA, which meant Elk River could be moved back out of Section 8 and into 4AA. But with Duluth Denfeld moving from AA to A, Section 7 was left with seven schools, so the high school league made Elk River the state’s vagabond, and sent them from 8AA to 7AA.
This year, while the Elks were a powerful enough team to be seeded No. 1 in 7AA, the luck of the draw meant they had to play East in Duluth and Hibbing in Hibbing — hardly fair treatment for a top seed.
East will play Elk River next season in a December game at the DECC, but, as Randolph said, the Elks finally and fairly are now back where they belong.

Gretzky departure leaves NHL to its own defenses

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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As an eager hockey reporter, I covered the Minnesota North Stars of the NHL and the Minnesota Fighting Saints of the World Hockey Association back in October of 1978. So at the start of the season I accompanied the North Stars to Chicago for a Sunday night game at Chicago Stadium — which had that phenomenal old pipe organ, and the horn from a Great Lakes freighter that would blow the lid off the place every time the Blackhawks scored.
The North Stars were scheduled to fly into Toronto the next day, to prepare for a Tuesday night game against the Maple Leafs. Instead of going with the team to Toronto, Lou Nanne, — who had moved from North Stars player to general manager by then — and I rented a car and drove to Indianapolis. The old WHA was trying to hang on in those days, a last gasp before an inevitable merger of its strongest franchises, and on that Monday night in October of 1978, the Indianapolis Racers were at home in Market Square Arena to play the Edmonton Oilers.
The attraction for me was one of the most amazing stories in professional sports history. The Indianapolis Racers had angered the entire NHL by going into Canada’s junior ranks and stealing away a kid who was only 17 years old. His name was Wayne Gretzky, and he was something special, everybody said. But seeing would be believing, because the thought of picking any high school junior, and inserting him into a major league roster in any sport, was bizarre.
Lou Nanne’s reason for going was because “Sweet Lou from the Soo” was already well into his alter-ego career as a lifetime public relations man for everybody who ever came from Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, and Gretzky had scored 70 goals and added 112 assists for 182 points in 64 games the previous season for the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds junior team of the Ontario Hockey League.
The mainstream NHL media avoided the WHA in those days, so I had no trouble setting up an exclusive interview with Gretzky. He was shy, but warmly personable as he explained how he was living with a family, and between road trips he was attending high school in the daytime, and playing pro hockey at night. Gretzky was relaxed and poised, and humble and unassuming — traits he carried always during his throughout his storied 20-year career. But this is about the 21st season, which seems to have been forgotten by historians.
At the game, I sat in the seats at the end of Market Square Arena rather than the press box to focus in and see what was so great about this skinny teenager. He could keep the puck on his stickblade like a yo-yo on a string, and even then he could tantalize grizzled pros by luring them to come after the puck, then pull it away and pass to the area they had vacated.
At one point, Gretzky skated toward the goal where I was sitting but the puck was blocked away and wound up behind the net. Gretzky pounced on it and fired it off the back of the goaltender’s leg and into the net for a goal. Later in that game, Gretzky scored a more conventional goal, too.
It was a couple games into the season, but I wasn’t aware until after the game that those were the first two goals the kid had scored. It seems like that game was just a couple of years ago, instead of 21 years ago. Just like it seems incomprehensible that Gretzky, who will always look like he’s 25, has decided to retire from the game at age 38.
Gretzky scored three goals along with three assists in eight games with the Racers, then he was traded by the soon-to-be-extinct Racers to Edmonton, where he went through the remaining 72 games by scoring 43-61 — 104. Hard-core NHLers said the WHA was lousy, and nobody could score like that in the NHL. As it turned out, that was the final year of the WHA, and Edmonton was one of the surviving franchises that was accepted into the NHL one year later. So in 1979-80, Gretzky scored 51-86 — 137 in the NHL.
The rest, as they say, is history. Gretzky had so many stupendous seasons, that recounting the stats simply becomes meaningless. True, the ’81-82 year was something special, because Gretzky had 92 goals (still a record), including 50 in the first 39 games, and added 120 assists for a record 212 points. That year, he set another NHL record by winning the league scoring title by a 65-point margin.
He jacked his record up to 215 points in 1985-86, with 52 goals and a record 163 assists. But the points are only numbers compared to how he played the game. People marvel at how Gretzky goes behind the goal and torments defense by making plays from there. True enough, he used the net as a built-in “pick,” waiting for a defenseman to come after him one way, then escaping on the other side to trap a defender and assure himself of an open pass-receiver. It turns out, Gretzky also is legendary for scoring from behind the net.
But to me the most memorable part of Gretzky’s game was to rush across the blue line while everybody in an opposing jersey sprinted to get back and defend their goal. Gretzky then would do a quick, tight, outside curl, waiting to let the defenders pick up the first winger coming in, while he’d always find a trailer, who was always wide open, and feather a pass to him in perfect shooting position’
His magical ability to sense where everybody on the rink was at all times enhanced his ability to lay soft passes to open ice that could only be anticipated, and therefore caught, by alert teammates.
Opponents, even thugs, never took runs at Gretzky. It almost was an unwritten rule that nobody wanted to be reviled for injuring the league’s treasure, but just as important was the certainty that if you ran at Gretzky, he would get the puck to someone you should have been covering.
Gretzky led Edmonton to four Stanley Cups in nine years before financial problems caused the Oilers to trade the franchise to the Los Angeles Kings. He was there for seven-plus years, got the Kings to a Stanley Cup final, and it was while wearing his No. 99 jersey with the Kings that Minnesota fans got to see him in the North Stars final season. Gretzky finished the 1995-96 season with the St. Louis Blues, then was off to Broadway, where he spent the last three years.
His numbers faded. Gretzky, now 38, scored only 9 goals and 53 assists this season, but the Rangers were dismal, missing the playoffs, which is no small achievement in the NHL. Nine goals. When you think about it, he has scored more goals than that in the playoffs alone in six different seasons.
I have my own theory on why and how Gretzky’s point tallies have faded. The obvious thing is that the Rangers don’t have a perfect winger, like Jari Kurri, who complemented Gretzky by anticipating and finishing off those magnificent no-look passes both at Edmonton and Los Angeles.
But back then, when Gretzky was changing the way the NHL would perceive excellence, there was a reason that Kurri, who was from Finland, could anticipate Gretzky’s brilliance. There were no Russian players in the NHL in those days. But if you saw those old Soviet teams, you realized that players like Valeri Kharlamov, or Alexander Maltsev, played with the same creative flair of Gretzky years before him.
In recent years, the arrival of outstanding Russian players, like Sergei Fedorov or Igor Larionov, or Pavel Bure, plus Czech superstars like Jaromir Jagr, have followed Gretzky’s lead. Almost every team has a Russian or two, and if you noticed, when Gretzky zoomed up the rink, crossed the blue line, then did that patented little outside curl to pass to the trailing winger, that pass suddenly started being anticipated and intercepted by those European players.
It didn’t mean Gretzky, the Great One, was any less great. It just means that he taught the world too well, and it took the NHL a little longer to figure it out.
It would be wonderful if we could assume that Gretzky has changed the NHL forever. In truth, he has. But not in the way we might like. Instead of other franchises trying to play like Gretzky, they all have spent so much time trying to corner the elusive No. 99 that almost all of them now stress defense. Nobody can get open, everyone is checked to submission, and freedom to make plays is at an all-time premium in the NHL.
Jagr won the NHL scoring title with 127 points this season. That’s fantastic. Those 127 points also are a mere 36 fewer than the ASSISTS Gretzky earned 13 years ago. So maybe the new NHL style is good. Along with retiring Gretzky’s No. 99 for life, the NHL’s current style seems certain to also be retiring his records.
Funny thing about the NHL, it still hasn’t forgiven the WHA. Gretzky’s career goals are listed as 894, but that’s just NHL goals. They don’t count the 43 more he scored for Edmonton back in 1978-79, or the three he scored for the Indianapolis Racers. They would run his total to 940. And, great as are the memories of those subsequent 938 goals, I’ll always cherish the memory of the first two.

UMD women’s hockey team has international flair

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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UMD women’s hockey coach Shannon Miller isn’t ready to announce her first team’s roster yet, but with more players close to committing, the team has taken on a distinct international flavor.
Duluth Dynamite teammates Tresa Lamphier and Leah Wrazidlo are the top Up North recruits, and prospects from this past season’s UMD club team include defensemen Jessica Smith and Angella Harvieux, and forward Jessi Flink.
Otherwise, prospects include goaltender Amanda Tapp, defensemen Pamela Pachal and Nevada Russell, and forwards Michelle McAteer and Joanne Eustache, all from Canada; goaltender Amanda Tapp of Switzerland; forward Maria Roth of Sweden; and defenseman Breana Berry from Wayzata, and forward Alexa Gollinger of St. Paul Academy.
Miller said that some other top prospects are set, pending finalizing of scholarship papers, but wouldn’t comment on the list of prospects. She said she still intends to conduct open tryouts in the fall before the team’s inaugural season.
UMD FOOTBALL COACHING
LIST NEARING FINAL STAGE
The UMD football coaching selection committee met again Tuesday with the intention of paring down the list of candidates from 16, in hopes of having a half-dozen finalists by next week. Vince Repesh and Jim Malosky Jr., the two assistants under just-retired Jim Malosky and the co-coaches of last falls Bulldogs, both remain in the field of candidates. And both are assured of being retained as assistant coaches if another candidate is chosen.
Among the rumored front-running candidates is Randy Hedberg, the offensive coordinator at the University of North Dakota, and several head coaches from the Wisconsin State University Conference, have reportedly applied, including Bob Nielson of Eau Claire, John Miech of Stevens Point, and Ed Meierkort of Stout. Lloyd Danzeisen of Fergus Falls Community College is rumored to be another candidate.
“We’re sort of in a vacuum right now, but the last 16 candidates give us a good cross-section of different perspectives,” said Jonathan Conant, chairman of the search committee.

Laaksonen, Bottems lead Minnesota to title

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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So far, the concept of not taking any scholarship hockey players to the Chicago Showcase high school hockey all-star tournament seems to be working just fine for Minnesota. Bolstered by the goaltending of Cloquet’s Adam Laaksonen, and two goals from Hibbing’s O.J. Bottoms, Minnesota whipped Pittsburgh 6-2 in Sunday’s championship game to complete a clean sweep of the nationwide tournament in Chicago.
Minnesota won all three games in its four-team preliminary bracket, then beat the Missouri all-stars in the quarterfinals, Buffalo, N.Y., in the semifinals, and Pittsburgh in the title match. It was the third consecutive Chicago Showcase championship for Minnesota.
“We were as good as we’ve ever been,” said Ted Brill of Grand Rapids, the organizer and co-coach with Dave Hendrickson of Virginia. “I didn’t notice any letoff of the other teams, but we had a good group. Everybody we had knew we all had to work together, and we had all ‘We’ and no ‘Me’ on the team.”
After competing well in the tournament for several years with the top players chosen from the annual post-season Maroon and Gold all-star series, it was Brill’s idea to select the team but to exclude those players who already had Division I scholarship commitments. The plan was to give maximum exposure to some very good players that had so far been overlooked, and even though Minnesota is the only team in the nationwide tournament to exclude its top players, this was its third straight championship.
“Everyone involved with Minnesota hockey can be very proud of the way these kids performed,” said Brill. “We had outstanding goaltending, our defense dominated play in our own end, and our forwards were flying everywhere. Our lines were balanced, and we rotated straight through.”
In fact, Brill added, he told goalies Laaksonen and Adam Berkhuel from Stillwater to split up the games anyway they chose, and they agreed to split each game, alternating which one started. Brill said he also told each line to rotate who sat out penalty kills, and everything went smoothly.
With all players selected from the recent Great Eight statewide tournament, Minnesota opened the tournament last week with a rousing 11-4 victory over Buffalo, then beat Northern New England 10-2, before completing its preliminary-round sweep with a 5-0 victory over Wisconsin. Critics could suggest that Minnesota had the easier bracket, with traditional co-favorites Massachusetts and Michigan both in another bracket, but the playoff round suggested Minnesota’s bracket was the toughest.
Up North players made major impacts on Minnesota’s success. When Minnesota beat Missouri 7-3 in the quarterfinals, Roseau’s Mike Klema scored two goals. In the semifinal 10-5 romp over Buffalo, Roseville’s Brett Hammond and Hill-Murray’s Dan Miller scored twice each.
Pittsburgh eliminated Michigan 5-4 in the other semifinal, but in the title game, Bottoms scored for a 1-0 lead, but Pittsburgh came back to gain a 2-2 tie after one period. Hill-Murray linemates Dan Miller and Matt Koalska scored for a 4-2 second-period lead, as Laaksonen allowed only one goal in the first half of the game. Minnesota put it away in the third period, clinching the victory when Bottoms scored into an open net at the finish.

NCAA hockey tournament needs an overhaul

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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The curious regional setup of the NCAA hockey tournament has outgrown what once was a novel idea. It needs an overhaul, and the sooner the better.
The NCAA continues to look upon the hockey tournament as sort of a nuisance child in the family of NCAA tournaments. The ruling committee selects 12 teams to play at two sites. This year’s sites were Madison, Wis., and Worcester, Mass. Madison should be fun, you figure, recalling all those nights of sellout crowds screaming and chanting.
Kohl Center has been built in Madison now, and the Badgers have to share it between their hockey and basketball teams. It is large, with over 15,000 or 16,000 possible. But Dane County Coliseum bid for the tournament, and got it with more like 8,500 capacity.
The Badgers weren’t in the tournament, and neither was Minnesota. Without two such noted draws, the first-round games drew 2,414 fans to see Boston College edge Northern Michigan, while Colorado College whipped St. Lawrence 5-2. The next day, 2,910 poured into the place. Where are those Badger fans? On spring break. But consider this: In the plush new Kohl Center, neither the Badger hockey team nor the basketball team sold out its 14,000-plus seats for even one game.
However, that total of 5,324 fans would have fit nicely into Engelstad Arena in Grand Forks, or even at the new facility in Colorado Springs, although it is certain that holding the tournament at any campus rink where its team is involved would easily outsell the paltry showing in Madison, where the question was answered once and for all that the crowds are Badger fans, regardless of the sport.
The current setup has a couple of glaring problems. First, it needs to be presold to fans more enthusiastically than this one was, with only 2,400 sold before the tournament began. Second, I don’t like a tournament where one team has a bye while its opponent is decided in a rugged game the night before.
My suggestion is to go to 16 teams, something the NCAA steadfastly has refused to consider. Then we do away with the ridiculous power-rating setup and simply advise the four leagues that they each can come up with four teams. Let the leagues decide who will be seeded 1, 2, 3, and 4. Submit them to the NCAA, then they can put the tournament together by the following formula:
* Pick four sites, one for each league. Hockey East could be in Boston, ECAC in Lake Placid, CCHA in Detroit, and the WCHA could rotate among the various capable buildings, or, better still, be held until the final week before being decided, based on the No. 1 seed.
* At each of the four sites, the host team is seeded No. 1, while a No. 2, No. 3 and No. 4 — all from different leagues — will also be seeded in. Then you play 1 vs. 4 and 2 vs. 3 in the semis, with the winners going the next night for a spot in the final four.
Local fans would probably be more tempted to go watch the other teams play, in addition to their own, in this setup. And they play off to one winner. At Madison, there were a couple buses from North Dakota, but they left before dawn on Sunday, got in to see the game, then headed home after the game. While it’s tough for a team to have to play a good team for the right to play a rested, better team, it’s also unfair to the team seeded with a bye. And why should that team, or its fans, show up and spend money for games a day early when their team is scheduled to play just one game, the next day?
I envison the Lake Placid site having Clarkson, Michigan, Denver, and Boston College; the Boston site would have New Hampshire, St. Lawrence, St. Cloud State and Ohio State; the Detroit site would have Michigan State, Colorado College, Maine and RPI; and Grand Forks could host North Dakota, Northern Michigan, Providence and Colgate.
Next year, the WCHA host could be Denver, or CC, or St. Cloud, or Wisconsin, depending on who is No. 1 seed. If some arena is too small, think about last weekend, and how easy it would be to get more than 6,000 for each session.
Whatever, this formula would leave room so that if one conference is better — or luckier — in a given year, it would gain more than one berth in the final four. But it would be determined on the ice, not in a boardroom. This year, the committee weighed all the criteria carefully, and decided the CCHA was deserving of four places while the ECAC got two, and, since those two weren’t seeded very high, both were whipped quickly. But if the CCHA got four teams, only one made it, in Michigan State. The WCHA got blanked, while Hockey East got three teams — and all three made it to Anaheim. Does that mean the computer was bunk? Should it have given four spots to Hockey East and cut down the CCHA and WCHA?
Forget the politics, or even the computer. Let each league have four teams, and let those leagues decide how they want to seed and submit their four. Regular season? Fine. Playoff? OK. Just submit your own league’s 1-2-3-4 teams, by preconceived formula or by league vote.

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  • About the Author

    John GilbertJohn Gilbert is a lifetime Minnesotan and career journalist, specializing in cars and sports during and since spending 30 years at the Minneapolis Tribune, now the Star Tribune. More recently, he has continued translating the high-tech world of autos and sharing his passionate insights as a freelance writer/photographer/broadcaster. A member of the prestigious North American Car and Truck of the Year jury since 1993. John can be heard Monday-Friday from 9-11am on 610 KDAL(www.kdal610.com) on the "John Gilbert Show," and writes a column in the Duluth Reader.

    For those who want to keep up with John Gilbert's view of sports, mainly hockey with a Minnesota slant, click on the following:

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  • Exhaust Notes:

    PADDLING
    More and more cars are offering steering-wheel paddles to allow drivers manual control over automatic or CVT transmissions. A good idea might be to standardize them. Most allow upshifting by pulling on the right-side paddle and downshifting with the left. But a recent road-test of the new Porsche Panamera, the paddles for the slick PDK direct-sequential gearbox were counter-intuitive -- both the right or left thumb paddles could upshift or downshift, but pushing on either one would upshift, and pulling back on either paddle downshifted. I enjoy using paddles, but I spent the full week trying not to downshift when I wanted to upshift. A little simple standardization would alleviate the problem.

    SPEAKING OF PADDLES
    The Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution has the best paddle system, and Infiniti has made the best mainstream copy of that system for the new Q50, and other sporty models. And why not? It's simply the best. In both, the paddles are long, slender magnesium strips, affixed to the steering column rather than the steering wheel. Pull on the right paddle and upshift, pull on the left and downshift. The beauty is that while needing to upshift in a tight curve might cause a driver to lose the steering wheel paddle for an instant, but having the paddles long, and fixed, means no matter how hard the steering wheel is cranked, reaching anywhere on the right puts the upshift paddle on your fingertips.

    TIRES MAKE CONTACT
    Even in snow-country, a few stubborn old-school drivers want to stick with rear-wheel drive, but the vast majority realize the clear superiority of front-wheel drive. Going to all-wheel drive, naturally, is the all-out best. But the majority of drivers facing icy roadways complain about traction for going, stopping and steering with all configurations. They overlook the simple but total influence of having the right tires can make. There are several companies that make good all-season or snow tires, but there are precious few that are exceptional. The Bridgestone Blizzak continues to be the best=known and most popular, but in places like Duluth, MN., where scaling 10-12 blocks of 20-30 degree hills is a daily challenge, my favorite is the Nokian WR. Made without compromising tread compound, the Nokians maintain their flexibility no matter how cold it gets, so they stick, even on icy streets, and can turn a skittish car into a winter-beater.