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BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

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  • Originally posted by Hank81 View Post
    You must be a personal friend of GQ. Most all players improve over the 4 years. My point is Quinn so busy loading pipeline of recruits that no money for team players...grinders...hustlers, working players... How many of those 3rd and 4th line players other than Olsen who is hurt 50% of time have come back after Sophmore year..The players you referred to were all recruited by Parker.....including Eichel...last time BU won Beanpot. Sullivan wanted job,family in Hingham...married with children. Instead we have a 47 year old bachelor from GQ
    GQ is 50yo.

    (You ain't insinuating GQ is ummmm, er..... yah? "Good looking older bachelor type"?? Are you?)
    a legend and an out of work bum look a lot alike, daddy.

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    • Originally posted by BUtogether View Post
      Eichel was an outlier and might end up being the worst thing ever for BU hockey
      In the 2017 world of hot takes, this one is en fuego.
      2016 and 2019 HOCKEY EAST CHAMPIONS
      2018, 2019 and 2020 BEANPOT CHAMPIONS


      MATTHEWS ARENA 1910-Present: THE CATHEDRAL OF COLLEGE HOCKEY

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      • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

        Originally posted by mookie1995 View Post
        Bobo may not be a bigger body player, but Mookie will take the over that someone signs him as a free agent before his sr season
        I'm going to take the under on that.
        Originally posted by Greg Ambrose on 3/7/2010
        The fact that you BC fans revel in the superiority of your team in an admittedly weak league leads me to believe you will be more sorely disappointed when the end comes than we will.

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        • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

          Originally posted by BUtogether View Post
          BU has the most NHL draft picks in the country
          This is also untrue, you're on a roll this week.

          Comment


          • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

            Originally posted by BUtogether View Post
            BU has the most NHL draft picks in the country...a number of them were supposed to be one or two year players...they have now been here three and counting...guess what that means
            Who is here that wasn't supposed to be? The only Juniors and Seniors that I can think of that could fall into the mold are McLeod and Somerby. I'll agree that I expected more from McLeod. Somerby could certainly have signed after last year (not saying he would have stepped into an NHL role), but wanted to come back for his senior year. Come to think of it, so did O'Regan. Did O'Regan come back because he hadn't developed enough? I think he has shown in his first pro season that he developed quite nicely in his 4 years at BU. While I have some concerns about the coaching situation, I think one thing not really mentioned through all this is that the players seems to really like playing for Quinn. Not always a good thing, but all else being equal, it is in my book.
            BU Hockey: The trophy case is once again growing

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            • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

              Originally posted by defkit View Post
              Who is here that wasn't supposed to be? The only Juniors and Seniors that I can think of that could fall into the mold are McLeod and Somerby. I'll agree that I expected more from McLeod. Somerby could certainly have signed after last year (not saying he would have stepped into an NHL role), but wanted to come back for his senior year. Come to think of it, so did O'Regan. Did O'Regan come back because he hadn't developed enough? I think he has shown in his first pro season that he developed quite nicely in his 4 years at BU. While I have some concerns about the coaching situation, I think one thing not really mentioned through all this is that the players seems to really like playing for Quinn. Not always a good thing, but all else being equal, it is in my book.
              Your last two sentences there - I have a response coming this afternoon for chickod that refers to this.

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              • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

                Originally posted by Hank81 View Post
                You must be a personal friend of GQ. Most all players improve over the 4 years. My point is Quinn so busy loading pipeline of recruits that no money for team players...grinders...hustlers, working players... How many of those 3rd and 4th line players other than Olsen who is hurt 50% of time have come back after Sophmore year..The players you referred to were all recruited by Parker.....including Eichel...last time BU won Beanpot. Sullivan wanted job,family in Hingham...married with children. Instead we have a 47 year old bachelor from GQ
                Dude, come on. I have been railing against his coaching since last season and even said I hope he isn't the coach next season. And you think I am friends with him? Also, are you saying you only want ugly old men to coach at BU?

                Anyway, to answer your question, yes, a bunch of talentless hacks who don't really belong on a D1 roster left after 13-14. Since then, which grinders/hustlers have left prior to graduating? Piccinich, Greer, Baillargeon all left because Quinn wanted them to play that role and they didn't want to. Fortunato was a supposedly high-end offensive talent; he was not a defensively-sound, stay-at-home D man so he doesn't fit into your category. The only player I can think of that wasn't on the screwed up 13-14 roster was Udahl. He left without ever playing a game. I fail to see how this negatively impacts BU. Hohmann, Moran, Lane all stayed for four years. Phelps, Kelley, Andren, Roberto, Cloonan, Olsson, Somerby, MacLeod, Switzer, Diffley - all still here. There is no truth to your statement and it seems to be built on a false narrative, which I will get to when I respond to chickod.

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                • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

                  Originally posted by chickod View Post
                  So that begs the question. Is this the way it's going to be from now on? Because I, for one, have no interest in watching an NHL farm team. I have been going to BU hockey games since 1971. I get it that "things have changed," but why can't he also recruit some "middle tier" talent who will not go to the NHL and provide some continuity for the program as well as leadership when they progress to upperclassmen? It doesn't have to be "all or nothing." And if that is what it is going to be, then you are going to have a hard time convincing me that Quinn WANTS to be anything more than a "developer" of NHL players. As an alumnus, I would have thought he would want to maintain (I won't say "restore" because that will make some of you apoplectic) the status of this storied program. Understand...I am not making absolute statements. I am ASKING. Is this an anomaly? I would like to watch a team where a good percentage of the players stay more than one year. Because you will NEVER develop a cohesive unit with this much turnover. And if that is what it is going to continue to be, I'm not interested.
                  Chickod, I have to tell you that I think you are a little nuts. I don't mean anything rude by that, but I just don't think your beliefs/fears are rooted in reality. The way you speak about it, it sounds as though we have had a rash of guys leaving after one year. Under Quinn, exactly one single player has left early to play in the NHL (I define "early" as prior to their fourth year, or prior to graduating, whichever comes first). You harken back to the old days when everything was much different with BU hockey and your example of this is ... 08-09. Following that season, two players left early (Strait & Wilson). After the next season, Bonino, Shattenkirk, and Cohen left early. Then Warsofsky. Then Chiasson and Clendening, then Nieto. Under Quinn, O'Regan and Grizz could have left, but they didn't. Somerby and Hickey could have left early, but they came back. If JFK or Greenway really wanted to go, they could have after last season. There's no reason Keller, Fabbro, or McAvoy needed to be here this season, but they are. So, in a matter of five years, we lost nine players early to the NHL. In four years under Quinn, we have lost one. Don't create an issue where there is not one. Will it become an issue in the future? Maybe. Maybe not. We have no way of knowing. But acting as if this problem already exists, like you are, is really strange to me.

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                  • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

                    Originally posted by BU Fan 84 View Post
                    The way you speak about it, it sounds as though we have had a rash of guys leaving after one year.
                    You're completely missing my point. It's about the mindset. If you're LeBron James in the sixth grade and you are showered with praise, told how wonderful you are and given advantages all along the way, what happens? Your ego becomes enormous and you begin to act entitled. When these NHL picks and WJH players come in, they are already expecting to be going to the NHL. It doesn't matter if they don't actually end up being as good as "advertised" and have to stay in school longer. I'm talking about the mentality with which they play. It's tougher to get a group of high ego players working together as a cohesive unit. I don't know what you have been watching, but someone described that Monday they were skating around like "chickens with their heads cut off." That's exactly what I saw. There is no cohesiveness (sorry to keep using the same word but I can't think of another one that describes it any better); there is too much individuality and examples of players trying to do everything by themselves. That comes with the territory when you have highly skilled players. But it's up to the coach to try to get them to modify their style for the good of the team.

                    So I wish everyone would stop with this "but only [insert number here] players ACTUALLY have left." IT DOESN'T MATTER. It's the fact that they came here EXPECTING not to finish school and to go to the NHL. If you take a guy who KNOWS he is not NHL caliber, he is going to tend to fit into a system better, because he knows he is going to have to be a team player to be successful. Also, this is going to be his last experience as part of a team at this level, because he will probably get a degree and a job doing something other than playing hockey. So there is tremendous motivation to win.

                    What I said was I'm not interested in watching an NHL farm team. I didn't say "they all left early." How many players on the Pawtucket Red Sox actually make it to the majors and stay there? How many players on the Providence Bruins actually make it as an NHL regular? But that doesn't change the fact that they're farm teams. The players come and go as if they're on a merry-go-round.

                    I am just lamenting that college hockey is becoming like that. I am not BLAMING anybody. I simply am not interested in watching a farm team. Let them play juniors if their only goal (pun intended) is to go to the NHL.

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                    • Originally posted by BU Fan 84 View Post
                      Chickod, I have to tell you that I think you are a little nuts. I don't mean anything rude by that, but I just don't think your beliefs/fears are rooted in reality. The way you speak about it, it sounds as though we have had a rash of guys leaving after one year. Under Quinn, exactly one single player has left early to play in the NHL (I define "early" as prior to their fourth year, or prior to graduating, whichever comes first). You harken back to the old days when everything was much different with BU hockey and your example of this is ... 08-09. Following that season, two players left early (Strait & Wilson). After the next season, Bonino, Shattenkirk, and Cohen left early. Then Warsofsky. Then Chiasson and Clendening, then Nieto. Under Quinn, O'Regan and Grizz could have left, but they didn't. Somerby and Hickey could have left early, but they came back. If JFK or Greenway really wanted to go, they could have after last season. There's no reason Keller, Fabbro, or McAvoy needed to be here this season, but they are. So, in a matter of five years, we lost nine players early to the NHL. In four years under Quinn, we have lost one. Don't create an issue where there is not one. Will it become an issue in the future? Maybe. Maybe not. We have no way of knowing. But acting as if this problem already exists, like you are, is really strange to me.
                      I am curious as to why you assume it is only the players decision to leave early or not. Many times the NHL team sees no development and moves on

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by chickod View Post
                        You're completely missing my point. It's about the mindset. If you're LeBron James in the sixth grade and you are showered with praise, told how wonderful you are and given advantages all along the way, what happens? Your ego becomes enormous and you begin to act entitled. When these NHL picks and WJH players come in, they are already expecting to be going to the NHL. It doesn't matter if they don't actually end up being as good as "advertised" and have to stay in school longer. I'm talking about the mentality with which they play. It's tougher to get a group of high ego players working together as a cohesive unit. I don't know what you have been watching, but someone described that Monday they were skating around like "chickens with their heads cut off." That's exactly what I saw. There is no cohesiveness (sorry to keep using the same word but I can't think of another one that describes it any better); there is too much individuality and examples of players trying to do everything by themselves. That comes with the territory when you have highly skilled players. But it's up to the coach to try to get them to modify their style for the good of the team.

                        So I wish everyone would stop with this "but only [insert number here] players ACTUALLY have left." IT DOESN'T MATTER. It's the fact that they came here EXPECTING not to finish school and to go to the NHL. If you take a guy who KNOWS he is not NHL caliber, he is going to tend to fit into a system better, because he knows he is going to have to be a team player to be successful. Also, this is going to be his last experience as part of a team at this level, because he will probably get a degree and a job doing something other than playing hockey. So there is tremendous motivation to win.

                        What I said was I'm not interested in watching an NHL farm team. I didn't say "they all left early." How many players on the Pawtucket Red Sox actually make it to the majors and stay there? How many players on the Providence Bruins actually make it as an NHL regular? But that doesn't change the fact that they're farm teams. The players come and go as if they're on a merry-go-round.

                        I am just lamenting that college hockey is becoming like that. I am not BLAMING anybody. I simply am not interested in watching a farm team. Let them play juniors if their only goal (pun intended) is to go to the NHL.
                        Amen...and if you have a coach who enables this mentality and is more interested in being an "advocate" to the NHL teams than playing the players who produce and want to be here then it looks like what we have been watching in the second half.

                        Comment


                        • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

                          Originally posted by chickod View Post
                          The players come and go as if they're on a merry-go-round.
                          The problem with your point is, the players aren't coming and going on a merry-go-round to the NHL under Quinn, as 84 points out. Unless you want to lament that the best player the college game has seen in ~25 years left early to go pro, there's no example. Conflating guys showing up and leaving early because they wanted to play in Canada or wanted more PT when their play wasn't warranting it with guys showing up with the intention of stopping over for a year or two on their way to the NHL is a false comparison. Greer/Piccinich/Fortunato etc. /= Eichel and perhaps Keller.

                          Originally posted by chickod View Post
                          It's the fact that they came here EXPECTING not to finish school and to go to the NHL.
                          How do you know what all of these players, present and past, came here expecting to do?
                          ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

                          Comment


                          • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

                            Originally posted by brassbonanza View Post
                            How do you know what all of these players, present and past, came here expecting to do?
                            If you aced the super-duper Advanced Placement physics course in high school and got a scholarship to, say, MIT, would you "expect" to become a successful physicist? Or would you say, "Yeah, I did OK but I think I'll go to Berklee and become a jazz musician?"

                            Jeez...if a fifteen year-old kid is told by everyone how great they are, you don't think they have "higher than normal" expectations? Many of us enrolled in BU, for example, without any "special" skills so we had to find our way. These guys (the NHL draft picks) have their path laid out for them. Again, it doesn't matter if the TEAMS decide they will leave early or THEY do - it has to do with the mindset for what they feel they are trying to accomplish. And the goals of a potential NHL player are typically different than that of a journeyman or four-year student.

                            So what are you saying? You think they DON'T expect to go to the NHL?

                            This is becoming pointless. Obviously neither side is going to budge and we each have our opinions. Let's just leave it at that...

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                            • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

                              Originally posted by BUtogether View Post
                              I am curious as to why you assume it is only the players decision to leave early or not. Many times the NHL team sees no development and moves on
                              I'm not. It doesn't matter WHY they leave early; it's the expectation when they get there that they WILL. It creates a different mindset because their long-term goal is different than the guy who knows he is not NHL caliber.

                              Comment


                              • Re: BU 2017 Season Thread II: Terriers rising

                                Originally posted by chickod View Post
                                You're completely missing my point. It's about the mindset. If you're LeBron James in the sixth grade and you are showered with praise, told how wonderful you are and given advantages all along the way, what happens? Your ego becomes enormous and you begin to act entitled. When these NHL picks and WJH players come in, they are already expecting to be going to the NHL. It doesn't matter if they don't actually end up being as good as "advertised" and have to stay in school longer. I'm talking about the mentality with which they play. It's tougher to get a group of high ego players working together as a cohesive unit. I don't know what you have been watching, but someone described that Monday they were skating around like "chickens with their heads cut off." That's exactly what I saw. There is no cohesiveness (sorry to keep using the same word but I can't think of another one that describes it any better); there is too much individuality and examples of players trying to do everything by themselves. That comes with the territory when you have highly skilled players. But it's up to the coach to try to get them to modify their style for the good of the team.

                                So I wish everyone would stop with this "but only [insert number here] players ACTUALLY have left." IT DOESN'T MATTER. It's the fact that they came here EXPECTING not to finish school and to go to the NHL. If you take a guy who KNOWS he is not NHL caliber, he is going to tend to fit into a system better, because he knows he is going to have to be a team player to be successful. Also, this is going to be his last experience as part of a team at this level, because he will probably get a degree and a job doing something other than playing hockey. So there is tremendous motivation to win.

                                What I said was I'm not interested in watching an NHL farm team. I didn't say "they all left early." How many players on the Pawtucket Red Sox actually make it to the majors and stay there? How many players on the Providence Bruins actually make it as an NHL regular? But that doesn't change the fact that they're farm teams. The players come and go as if they're on a merry-go-round.

                                I am just lamenting that college hockey is becoming like that. I am not BLAMING anybody. I simply am not interested in watching a farm team. Let them play juniors if their only goal (pun intended) is to go to the NHL.
                                With all due respect, I agree with BU Fan 84 that your beliefs/fears are not rooted in reality. In reading this and your other posts, I feel your viewpoints are based on an Utopian, idealistic perspective of what you still think college hockey *should* be, supported by theoretical assumptions of one's mentality and attitude when they're part of a program like BU's.

                                I get that you lament that BU hockey and D1 college hockey as a whole has evolved from when you first started following it back in the 70s. Truthfully, if you're no longer interested in following a program that is very attractive towards many players of the highest caliber who are eligible to and WANT to play D1 college hockey, it sounds like your vision of what college hockey should be can certainly be found in some great D3 programs. Sorry.

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