Sent this note this morning:
Dear Mr. Scalise:
Tim Murphy. Katey Stone. Tommy Amaker. Mike Shafer. Keith Allain. Jerry York. Jack Parker.
Ted Donato?
Credit where credit is due. Ted Donato is a Harvard hockey hero. I watched him during and just after I attended Harvard. By all accounts he’s a great guy.
But compared to his colleagues and his peers at rival schools, Ted Donato is in a class by himself. With rare exceptions, year in and year out, these other coaches field highly competitive teams that give their fans something to get excited about. Not infrequently, they win championships. For the Harvard men’s hockey program, mediocrity is a good year. It’s getting embarrassing. In the Beanpot semi-finals, Harvard has been outscored nearly 20-1 over the past four years.
They had a nice run last year – I loved going to Atlantic City – but they were dominated by Union, outshot by 2-1. Last year was an anomaly. Even then, Harvard was one overtime goal away of not getting out of the ECAC quarter finals. They had a once-in-a-decade forward in Alex Killorn, who carried the team on his shoulders. Without him, they never would have finished in the top four.
If wins and losses over several years mean anything, and they do to fans, parents and players as they do in life, there is no argument left to keep this coach, unless you believe that it’s uncouth to fire an Ivy League coach despite dismal performance, an argument that I believe most people in the Harvard hockey community reject. That argument is above all unfair to the players, many of whom come in as NHL draft choices but leave without realizing their potential. They deserve better.
Tommy Ammaker proved this year that off-the-ice problems should have been no excuse for failure. Harvard Men’s Hockey didn’t have an abysmal season this year because they were three players away from being a highly competitive team. They were well-developed 8-10 players short of that.
Harvard hockey has been dysfunctional since the 1990s. Mazzoleni delivered two championship teams and handed over a team to Donato that won a championship the next year. He got ran off the reservation for his troubles. But even some of his teams had miserable regular seasons before kicking into high gear around playoff time.
Harvard has a great hockey platform. Ted Donato can’t get his teams on the ground. Finishing dead last in the ECAC has to be the last straw. There’s no reason why Harvard can’t use that platform to attract a first-rate coach who delivers a team that is at least competitive and fun to watch year in and year out. That coach is not Ted Donato. An amicable parting of ways with a Harvard hockey hero is in order. Anything less would be a disservice to us long-suffering fans and anyone who truly cares about Harvard hockey.
Sincerely,
Bruce Corwin