Re: Harvard Crimson 2013-2014
A very well-respected coach who had developed many of the early greats, told me years ago that one of the reasons he warned players away from Harvard, was that as far back as when Botterill was there, Stone would continue to give her and her line mates heavy minutes even late in blowout games, rather than using these as opportunities to provide some ice time to third and fourth line players. The apparent rationale was to give those top players as much of an edge as possible statistically in Kazmaier voting, and therefore make her and the program look better still. With the number of Kaz awards over the years, I guess it worked. I've seen that occur more than you might expect in recent years also.
That's a great point in general about the women's game now compared to the start of the NCAA era. Back then, there were games that a team like Harvard knew it was going to win no matter what it did. Give a fourth line heavy minutes, rest a Kazmaier finalist -- no problem. Particularly with backup goaltenders, those were opportunities to give some spot starts to get some seasoning and get used to the stage. Now, if you start a backup and she flops, any team can make it hurt and as you say, the PairWise can be unforgiving.
A very well-respected coach who had developed many of the early greats, told me years ago that one of the reasons he warned players away from Harvard, was that as far back as when Botterill was there, Stone would continue to give her and her line mates heavy minutes even late in blowout games, rather than using these as opportunities to provide some ice time to third and fourth line players. The apparent rationale was to give those top players as much of an edge as possible statistically in Kazmaier voting, and therefore make her and the program look better still. With the number of Kaz awards over the years, I guess it worked. I've seen that occur more than you might expect in recent years also.