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Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

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Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

And All-Americans and Olympians.......
And in addition (not murals) but two new banners........and dreams for next year.
Well they do need to find more wall space for Olympians. I count three needing to be added. Don't think you can squeeze three more on the current Wall of Olympians. Ooops...could be four.
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

One of the rhythms of college sports is that the players we root for are there for four years and then they're gone. It's something that over four decades I've learned not just to live with but also to appreciate. I've always had my favorites, dating back to Pat McInally, and it's sad to see them go but the incoming freshmen usually provide someone new and the show goes on. It's just a part of fandom and something you learn to accept.

I find myself melancholy today not so much because the Gophers lost yesterday but because this normal passage of time is hitting me harder than I think it ever has before. The four seniors on this year's Minnesota women's hockey team have meant a lot to me for the last four years and I'm going to miss them in a way I never have another graduating class in any sport at any of the different places I've been a fan.

You see, I started attending GWH games in the fall of 2010 when Bethany Brausen, Sarah Davis, Baylee Gillanders, and Kelly Terry were all freshmen, along with Ashley Stenerson and Amanda Kessel, who for different reasons were not a part of this year's team. My arrival at Ridder Arena coincided with theirs, more or less, and for now the history of my fandom is the same as their history as players. In a fundamental way they are Gopher women's hockey to me.

The fall of 2010 was a waypoint in a bad time of my life. Other than one six week stretch last summer, I've been unemployed since the fall of 2005, when I had a complete nervous breakdown from job stress. By the time I'd recovered from that I'd been out of work long enough that no one would hire me, especially since I couldn't go back to doing what I had been. I went back to school, finishing my bachelor's degree and, when I still couldn't land a job, getting a master's in accounting in May, 2010. By the time that autumn rolled around it was clear that that had been useless as there was still no one who wanted to hire me into a field which had been devastated by the recession.

So that moment when I started watching this team was one of acute depression for me. I was miserable and casting around for something to latch on to that I could enjoy and become a part of. Fortunately, it became apparent pretty quickly that Gopher women's hockey could be that thing. It certainly hasn't been capable of solving all of my problems but I enjoyed it and could get wrapped up in it with all of the intensity that someone with autism can manage.

After thirty years of being a fan of men's college hockey there had been a growing number of things about that game that disturbed me. So I had switched which Gopher hockey team I gave my primary allegiance to, thinking that I wouldn't enjoy the game on the ice as much but that it would be worth it to be rid of all the crap associated with men's hockey. I quickly learned that the only thing I was wrong about was not liking the actual game as much. Women's hockey in and of itself won me over.

Each in different ways, Brausen, Davis, Gillanders, and Terry were a part of that. There was something about the way each of them played that was a part of why I started to enjoy it so much. One could say that I was simply desperate for anything to latch on to but they were still the ones who filled that hole.

It lasted for four years. Each of them kept getting better, giving me something new to watch them for each season. Brausen never became a big scorer but did become a great leader of people. Davis developed a complete game across the whole surface of the ice while remaining one of the best players I've ever seen on face-offs. Terry was a ferocious forechecker from the first month I watched and became one of the two best defensive forwards I've watched, along with John Madden. And Gillanders grew in so many ways, becoming first a rock solid defensive defenseman and then gaining an asserive confidence to rush the puck; that she scored two goals in her last Frozen Four was a very fitting final statement.

I won't say that I know them as I've barely talked to any of them. I have gotten to know some of their parents, however. Bill & Kathy Terry and Brock & Kathy Gillanders have been among a large group of people that have made me feel wanted within the GWH community. It is in no small part due to them that I am comfortable being a part of a large, friendly group. It can be very difficult for people with autism to gain that confidence and they have gone out of their way to make me a part of their gatherings.

And from what I can tell about the players without having really met them is that they are a very appealing bunch to root for. That's true of their play on the ice but also off of it. I can even pinpoint the exact moment when I came to that conclusion. The Power Play Club holds two postgame receptions every year that the players attend. At the first one, the freshmen get called up one by one and interviewed briefly. Then the floor is thrown open for questions, most of which come from their teammates. At the first reception I attended in the fall of 2010, Kelly Terry asked Baylee Gillanders to do her cow impression. I must admit that it is a very good cow impression but it was the interplay between the players that won me over.

In the intervening four years I have become an author. I am as yet unpublished but I have both a collection of short stories and a novel that I am working on. Aside from all of the indirect ways that the changes becoming a fan of this team halped me to go in that direction, there is also a very direct way in which it never would have happened if I hadn't. So they have had a profound impact on my life.

There are plenty of other players on the team that I love to watch and there are other fans and parents that I enjoy getting together with. But this four have been special to me in ways that go far beyond wins and losses. I'm going to miss them a lot and it probably won't ever be quite the same.
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

One of the rhythms of college sports is that the players we root for are there for four years and then they're gone. It's something that over four decades I've learned not just to live with but also to appreciate. I've always had my favorites, dating back to Pat McInally, and it's sad to see them go but the incoming freshmen usually provide someone new and the show goes on. It's just a part of fandom and something you learn to accept.

I find myself melancholy today not so much because the Gophers lost yesterday but because this normal passage of time is hitting me harder than I think it ever has before. The four seniors on this year's Minnesota women's hockey team have meant a lot to me for the last four years and I'm going to miss them in a way I never have another graduating class in any sport at any of the different places I've been a fan.

Thank you for your piece Eeyore. I am melancholy today for reasons similar but different from what you describe. I am hoping to compose a piece to express my feelings and appreciation to those players and this team as you have just done, but for now I'll just thank you for yours.
 
I'm going to miss them a lot and it probably won't ever be quite the same.
It may not, but I think you'll be happy to find that there will be other groups that will at least come close. For example, the 2008 graduating class was special in many of the same ways: some great parents, excellent leadership within the class, players who brought diverse skills, and overall, just great people. As good as the class of 2014 was as hockey players, IMO, each is a far better human being.
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

Lovely post, Eeyore. Thanks for sharing. And it was nice to meet you at the weekend, even if right next to the band isn't the best place to say hello...
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

It may not, but I think you'll be happy to find that there will be other groups that will at least come close. For example, the 2008 graduating class was special in many of the same ways: some great parents, excellent leadership within the class, players who brought diverse skills, and overall, just great people. As good as the class of 2014 was as hockey players, IMO, each is a far better human being.

I don't doubt that that's true. It's just that no other class will ever have the opportunity to introduce me to women's hockey.
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

One of the rhythms of college sports is that the players we root for are there for four years and then they're gone. It's something that over four decades I've learned not just to live with but also to appreciate. I've always had my favorites, dating back to Pat McInally, and it's sad to see them go but the incoming freshmen usually provide someone new and the show goes on. It's just a part of fandom and something you learn to accept.

I find myself melancholy today not so much because the Gophers lost yesterday but because this normal passage of time is hitting me harder than I think it ever has before. The four seniors on this year's Minnesota women's hockey team have meant a lot to me for the last four years and I'm going to miss them in a way I never have another graduating class in any sport at any of the different places I've been a fan.

You see, I started attending GWH games in the fall of 2010 when Bethany Brausen, Sarah Davis, Baylee Gillanders, and Kelly Terry were all freshmen, along with Ashley Stenerson and Amanda Kessel, who for different reasons were not a part of this year's team. My arrival at Ridder Arena coincided with theirs, more or less, and for now the history of my fandom is the same as their history as players. In a fundamental way they are Gopher women's hockey to me.

The fall of 2010 was a waypoint in a bad time of my life. Other than one six week stretch last summer, I've been unemployed since the fall of 2005, when I had a complete nervous breakdown from job stress. By the time I'd recovered from that I'd been out of work long enough that no one would hire me, especially since I couldn't go back to doing what I had been. I went back to school, finishing my bachelor's degree and, when I still couldn't land a job, getting a master's in accounting in May, 2010. By the time that autumn rolled around it was clear that that had been useless as there was still no one who wanted to hire me into a field which had been devastated by the recession.

So that moment when I started watching this team was one of acute depression for me. I was miserable and casting around for something to latch on to that I could enjoy and become a part of. Fortunately, it became apparent pretty quickly that Gopher women's hockey could be that thing. It certainly hasn't been capable of solving all of my problems but I enjoyed it and could get wrapped up in it with all of the intensity that someone with autism can manage.

After thirty years of being a fan of men's college hockey there had been a growing number of things about that game that disturbed me. So I had switched which Gopher hockey team I gave my primary allegiance to, thinking that I wouldn't enjoy the game on the ice as much but that it would be worth it to be rid of all the crap associated with men's hockey. I quickly learned that the only thing I was wrong about was not liking the actual game as much. Women's hockey in and of itself won me over.

Each in different ways, Brausen, Davis, Gillanders, and Terry were a part of that. There was something about the way each of them played that was a part of why I started to enjoy it so much. One could say that I was simply desperate for anything to latch on to but they were still the ones who filled that hole.

It lasted for four years. Each of them kept getting better, giving me something new to watch them for each season. Brausen never became a big scorer but did become a great leader of people. Davis developed a complete game across the whole surface of the ice while remaining one of the best players I've ever seen on face-offs. Terry was a ferocious forechecker from the first month I watched and became one of the two best defensive forwards I've watched, along with John Madden. And Gillanders grew in so many ways, becoming first a rock solid defensive defenseman and then gaining an asserive confidence to rush the puck; that she scored two goals in her last Frozen Four was a very fitting final statement.

I won't say that I know them as I've barely talked to any of them. I have gotten to know some of their parents, however. Bill & Kathy Terry and Brock & Kathy Gillanders have been among a large group of people that have made me feel wanted within the GWH community. It is in no small part due to them that I am comfortable being a part of a large, friendly group. It can be very difficult for people with autism to gain that confidence and they have gone out of their way to make me a part of their gatherings.

And from what I can tell about the players without having really met them is that they are a very appealing bunch to root for. That's true of their play on the ice but also off of it. I can even pinpoint the exact moment when I came to that conclusion. The Power Play Club holds two postgame receptions every year that the players attend. At the first one, the freshmen get called up one by one and interviewed briefly. Then the floor is thrown open for questions, most of which come from their teammates. At the first reception I attended in the fall of 2010, Kelly Terry asked Baylee Gillanders to do her cow impression. I must admit that it is a very good cow impression but it was the interplay between the players that won me over.

In the intervening four years I have become an author. I am as yet unpublished but I have both a collection of short stories and a novel that I am working on. Aside from all of the indirect ways that the changes becoming a fan of this team halped me to go in that direction, there is also a very direct way in which it never would have happened if I hadn't. So they have had a profound impact on my life.

There are plenty of other players on the team that I love to watch and there are other fans and parents that I enjoy getting together with. But this four have been special to me in ways that go far beyond wins and losses. I'm going to miss them a lot and it probably won't ever be quite the same.

Eeyore, thanks for putting your thoughts down in a post. I think many of us can relate to your feelings about what this senior class has meant to you.
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

Great team the Gophers had bit looks like the soft non con schedule didn't do them any justice. Ending the season with 2 losses and not winning it all isn't very fulfilling....great run but didn't win when it counted.....
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

Great team the Gophers had bit looks like the soft non con schedule didn't do them any justice. Ending the season with 2 losses and not winning it all isn't very fulfilling....great run but didn't win when it counted.....

Won't discount the possibility. On the other hand, the 2 games against Wisconsin in February, the WCHA tourney games against UMD and UND, and the 2 NCAA games leading into the final game were all serious wins. I think they were all serious enough to burnish them. Duluth and UND both played really good games in the WCHA tournament.

Minnesota had opportunity to get into max fighting condition for the championship game. But they didn't play a complete enough game and Clarkson did. But I do think the Gophers showed through their strong stretches against Clarkson that it would have been easy enough for them to win if they did play a complete enough game. I am seriously bummed that the Gophers had some lapses, a couple weaknesses got exposed. The Gophers could have certainly won with a better game.

But once again, Clarkson did it; they played a winning game and the Gophers didn't. They could have, but they didn't. And Clarkson did.
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

Great team the Gophers had bit looks like the soft non con schedule didn't do them any justice.

Grant? Is that you?

Seriously, I doubt that playing a couple of games against, say, Cornell back in November would have made much of a difference in March. Besides, as ARM pointed out, there were plenty of teams that found both Yale and Princeton to be a challenge to play against.

Ending the season with 2 losses and not winning it all isn't very fulfilling....great run but didn't win when it counted.....

And this I really disagree with. All the games count, except the ones that are listed as being exhibitions. They went to work 41 times and had a successful day on 38 of them. That's something that most of us can't say and it's something to be proud of.
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

They went to work 41 times and had a successful day on 38 of them. That's something that most of us can't say and it's something to be proud of.

Despite not having won their last game, I seriously doubt that most of us will live to see the day when ANY team dominates women's D1 hockey like the Gophers have over the past three years. Let me know the next time ANY team goes 113-7-3...or for that matter 79-2-1 over a two year period.
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

Great team the Gophers had bit looks like the soft non con schedule didn't do them any justice. Ending the season with 2 losses and not winning it all isn't very fulfilling....great run but didn't win when it counted.....

trolling, trolling, trolling on the river...........

“Envy is for people who don’t have the self-esteem to be jealous.”
― Bauvard
 
Saluting The Seniors

Saluting The Seniors

...I find myself melancholy today not so much because the Gophers lost yesterday but because this normal passage of time is hitting me harder than I think it ever has before. The four seniors on this year's Minnesota women's hockey team have meant a lot to me for the last four years and I'm going to miss them in a way I never have another graduating class in any sport at any of the different places I've been a fan.

You see, I started attending GWH games in the fall of 2010 when Bethany Brausen, Sarah Davis, Baylee Gillanders, and Kelly Terry were all freshmen, along with Ashley Stenerson and Amanda Kessel, who for different reasons were not a part of this year's team. My arrival at Ridder Arena coincided with theirs, more or less, and for now the history of my fandom is the same as their history as players. In a fundamental way they are Gopher women's hockey to me...
Your whole post is insightful, appealing and genuine. The above passage is one of many exemplifying those qualities. Outstanding work.
 
Re: Minnesota Golden Gopher Women's Hockey 2013-14 Season

One of the rhythms of college sports is that the players we root for are there for four years and then they're gone. It's something that over four decades I've learned not just to live with but also to appreciate. I've always had my favorites, dating back to Pat McInally, and it's sad to see them go but the incoming freshmen usually provide someone new and the show goes on. It's just a part of fandom and something you learn to accept.

I find myself melancholy today not so much because the Gophers lost yesterday but because this normal passage of time is hitting me harder than I think it ever has before. The four seniors on this year's Minnesota women's hockey team have meant a lot to me for the last four years and I'm going to miss them in a way I never have another graduating class in any sport at any of the different places I've been a fan.

You see, I started attending GWH games in the fall of 2010 when Bethany Brausen, Sarah Davis, Baylee Gillanders, and Kelly Terry were all freshmen, along with Ashley Stenerson and Amanda Kessel, who for different reasons were not a part of this year's team. My arrival at Ridder Arena coincided with theirs, more or less, and for now the history of my fandom is the same as their history as players. In a fundamental way they are Gopher women's hockey to me.

The fall of 2010 was a waypoint in a bad time of my life. Other than one six week stretch last summer, I've been unemployed since the fall of 2005, when I had a complete nervous breakdown from job stress. By the time I'd recovered from that I'd been out of work long enough that no one would hire me, especially since I couldn't go back to doing what I had been. I went back to school, finishing my bachelor's degree and, when I still couldn't land a job, getting a master's in accounting in May, 2010. By the time that autumn rolled around it was clear that that had been useless as there was still no one who wanted to hire me into a field which had been devastated by the recession.

So that moment when I started watching this team was one of acute depression for me. I was miserable and casting around for something to latch on to that I could enjoy and become a part of. Fortunately, it became apparent pretty quickly that Gopher women's hockey could be that thing. It certainly hasn't been capable of solving all of my problems but I enjoyed it and could get wrapped up in it with all of the intensity that someone with autism can manage.

After thirty years of being a fan of men's college hockey there had been a growing number of things about that game that disturbed me. So I had switched which Gopher hockey team I gave my primary allegiance to, thinking that I wouldn't enjoy the game on the ice as much but that it would be worth it to be rid of all the crap associated with men's hockey. I quickly learned that the only thing I was wrong about was not liking the actual game as much. Women's hockey in and of itself won me over.

Each in different ways, Brausen, Davis, Gillanders, and Terry were a part of that. There was something about the way each of them played that was a part of why I started to enjoy it so much. One could say that I was simply desperate for anything to latch on to but they were still the ones who filled that hole.

It lasted for four years. Each of them kept getting better, giving me something new to watch them for each season. Brausen never became a big scorer but did become a great leader of people. Davis developed a complete game across the whole surface of the ice while remaining one of the best players I've ever seen on face-offs. Terry was a ferocious forechecker from the first month I watched and became one of the two best defensive forwards I've watched, along with John Madden. And Gillanders grew in so many ways, becoming first a rock solid defensive defenseman and then gaining an asserive confidence to rush the puck; that she scored two goals in her last Frozen Four was a very fitting final statement.

I won't say that I know them as I've barely talked to any of them. I have gotten to know some of their parents, however.
Bill & Kathy Terry
and Brock & Kathy Gillanders have been among a large group of people that have made me feel wanted within the GWH community. It is in no small part due to them that I am comfortable being a part of a large, friendly group. It can be very difficult for people with autism to gain that confidence and they have gone out of their way to make me a part of their gatherings.

And from what I can tell about the players without having really met them is that they are a very appealing bunch to root for. That's true of their play on the ice but also off of it. I can even pinpoint the exact moment when I came to that conclusion. The Power Play Club holds two postgame receptions every year that the players attend. At the first one, the freshmen get called up one by one and interviewed briefly. Then the floor is thrown open for questions, most of which come from their teammates. At the first reception I attended in the fall of 2010, Kelly Terry asked Baylee Gillanders to do her cow impression. I must admit that it is a very good cow impression but it was the interplay between the players that won me over.

In the intervening four years I have become an author. I am as yet unpublished but I have both a collection of short stories and a novel that I am working on. Aside from all of the indirect ways that the changes becoming a fan of this team halped me to go in that direction, there is also a very direct way in which it never would have happened if I hadn't. So they have had a profound impact on my life.

There are plenty of other players on the team that I love to watch and there are other fans and parents that I enjoy getting together with. But this four have been special to me in ways that go far beyond wins and losses. I'm going to miss them a lot and it probably won't ever be quite the same.

Is that the same Bill Terry who used to play for Michigan Tech? If he is, that guy had game! A real pain-in-the-donkey.
 
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