Recruiting will always be a gamble.
You win some you lose some.
The kid has to fiit the system and he has to believe in the coaching staff.
Recruiting will always be a gamble.
Gophers Brady Skjei,Mike Brodzinski, Hudson Fasching, Taylor Cammarata and Tommy Vanelli made the preliminary US World Junior roster.
Congrats to them!
http://worldjuniors.usahockey.com/page/show/842465-2013-u-s-national-junior-evaluation-camp-roster
turns 20 in July. I believe he's aged out.Funny. I'd put Mike Reilly's development ahead of the lot....is he out of consideration for some reason?
Gophers Brady Skjei,Mike Brodzinski, Hudson Fasching, Taylor Cammarata and Tommy Vanelli made the preliminary US World Junior roster.
Congrats to them!
http://worldjuniors.usahockey.com/page/show/842465-2013-u-s-national-junior-evaluation-camp-roster
USA Hockey today announced that Waterloo Black Hawks forward Taylor Cammarata has been named the Dave Tyler Junior Player of the Year, presented to the top American-born player in junior hockey this season.
The award adds to a list of honors that Cammarata has racked up this season. He recently was named both the USHL Player of the Year and USHL Forward of the Year to go along with All-USHL First Team honors. Cammarata, who celebrated his 18th birthday this month, led the USHL in scoring this season with 93 points (38g, 55a) in 59 regular season games. It is the second most points scored by a USHL player since the League was designated Tier 1 by USA Hockey in 2002. It is the 17th consecutive season that a USHL player has earned the Dave Tyler Junior Player of the Year Award. Cammarata is the third member of the Waterloo Black Hawks to receive the honor, joining Joe Pavelski (2003-04) and Jason Blake (1993-94).
The Big Ten also will change its media timeout rules this season, though there will continue to be three per period. In the CCHA, they were 1-1½-minute stoppages during the first stoppage in play after the 14-, 10- and 6-minute marks. With more games being televised on the Big Ten Network this season, the new league will have breaks after the 15-, 10- and 6-minute marks during a period for 30 seconds, a minute and then 30 seconds.
I like the timeout change, but really dislike them adding shootouts to decide games.
I like the timeout change, but really dislike them adding shootouts to decide games.
Frankly, we've been the laggard when it comes to shootouts. NHL has them, minors has them, junior hockey that feeds NCAA (i.e. USHL) has them, and so on. Many of the kids that come into our program are accustomed to having them. It will only mean something in terms of the league points. It will still count as a tie in the PWR.
“There’s talk about, in the future, putting on our radar more discussion on the potential of modifying our overtime procedure to include 4-on-4 overtime play as opposed to just 5-on-5. That’s technically available in the rule book today, but I don’t think anybody at the Division I men’s level has gone to it,” Anastos said. “We could choose to do that if we wanted to. But because of the impact that people feel in the RPI process, I don’t think we’re going to do something like that unless everybody does it across the board.”
“It would be implementing our current NCAA video replay policy through a command center-type setup like the NHL does,” Anastos said. “Now, we haven’t done that yet. But that’s something we talked about at the (NCAA) rules committee and we talked about the Big Ten potentially exploring its benefit and reporting back to the (NCAA) committee". Anastos, who will enter his third year as the Spartans’ head coach this fall, said having only six teams in the new Big Ten could allow for a little more experimentation with rules and procedures.
Speaking of the NHL, is there anyone that would seriously prefer the current format over five minutes of 4-on-4 and then five minutes of 3-on-3?
If a team gets a penalty, you could go to 4-on-3. Would kinda be a mess as you'd go 4-on-4 until the next whistle after a penalty ends.The 3-on-3 seems like a good idea at first glance, but I feel like it would inevitably turn into 5 minutes of hooking, holding and interference. There just wouldn't be enough of a negative repercussion for taking a penalty.
With the NHL draft coming up on June 30, Hockey Prospectus Draft Preview has Taylor Cammarata at 59th despite his proven offensive skill set. Lack of size (5'7") and speed seem to be the two areas that will most likely keep him out of the first two rounds. Until he shows how he transitions from the USHL into NCAA D1, he's both a risk and reward opportunity.
Four more years! Four more years!