What's new
USCHO Fan Forum

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

  • The USCHO Fan Forum has migrated to a new plaform, xenForo. Most of the function of the forum should work in familiar ways. Please note that you can switch between light and dark modes by clicking on the gear icon in the upper right of the main menu bar. We are hoping that this new platform will prove to be faster and more reliable. Please feel free to explore its features.

RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

Status
Not open for further replies.
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

For the football fans. RPI defeated SLU today 14-7 to even the record overall at 3-3. The Liberty League records moves to 2-1 with the toughest part of the schedule coming up with games at Union and the game with nationally ranked Hobart.

I noted that, at the conclusion of last night's hockey game, the Notre Dame fans started chanting "Beat SC!" in anticipation of Saturday's football game against Southern California.

Made me wish I could have been there, just to see what sort of strange looks I could have gotten if I had started chanting "Beat SL!" :D
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

I noted that, at the conclusion of last night's hockey game, the Notre Dame fans started chanting "Beat SC!" in anticipation of Saturday's football game against Southern California.

Made me wish I could have been there, just to see what sort of strange looks I could have gotten if I had started chanting "Beat SL!" :D

i don't mean to hijack the hockey thread with all sorts of football discussion. But after being in school at RPI for perhaps the worst stretch of football seen ever in college-with teams that not only did not win for 40+ games in a row but rarely scored, it is just great to see the Joe King era and hope this now continues under a new coach. The team deserves whatever support we can muster. BTW really missed Kurt Stutt on the call of the game today-he has a way of making the most awful blowouts still seem exciting. Plus he has done enough games to have a sense of history about the team. Now-back to hockey. I'll take a split in the upcoming weekend-but most important i want us to be competitive and of course HEALTHY!!!
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

I haven't seen nearly enough of Luke to be sure, but my gut feeling is that his meer presence would have kept ND honest on occasion
Read this and immediately got a great visual of a 6' 5" red headed meerkat standing in the crease and whistling at ND players. :p
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

Looking at the schedule, I was somewhat confused as to why SA would schedule/travel just one away game at ND? It would have made more sense to play a two game series since you are travelling that far.
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

Looking at the schedule, I was somewhat confused as to why SA would schedule/travel just one away game at ND? It would have made more sense to play a two game series since you are travelling that far.

I believe Tom asked SA about this on the WaP podcast earlier in the week. As I recall, ND didn't want to schedule a hockey game opposite the football game against USC, so it was a single game weekend or nothing. SA indicated they were thinking since last year that this would probably be the weekend to open the new rink, so he was more than happy to go out for a single game.
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

I believe Tom asked SA about this on the WaP podcast earlier in the week. As I recall, ND didn't want to schedule a hockey game opposite the football game against USC, so it was a single game weekend or nothing. SA indicated they were thinking since last year that this would probably be the weekend to open the new rink, so he was more than happy to go out for a single game.

Thanks GR.....nothing like becoming a trivia question as to who the first team to lose vs ND in their new rink!:eek:
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

Read this and immediately got a great visual of a 6' 5" red headed meerkat standing in the crease and whistling at ND players. :p

I figured that if I wrote "mere" someone would think it was babo's presence. :p ;)

(Yes, I know there would be an accent.)
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

I figured that if I wrote "mere" someone would think it was babo's presence. :p ;)

(Yes, I know there would be an accent.)

I have a feeling I'm the only other one (aside from maybe Jacques, but I don't think he reads this thread) that would get that.

Wow, did I waste post #9000 on that?!
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

we just looked lost agains ND.

Interesting that you would mention this aspect. I'm not as informed in the details of ice hockey tactics as I am in several other sports, yet at times it looked to me as if we were playing a zone defence while Notre Dame was playing a man-to-man offense, if that makes any sense....our defending tactics were consistently a step too slow relative to their puck control tactics.

There was a period of time just after the second ND goal in which during 5 x 5 hockey the puck seemed to spend an eternity in the RPI end. Notre Dame had such control that it looked like a power play, even though it wasn't. There would be two RPI players covering a space in which there was one Notre Dame attacker, which allowed Notre Dame players to pass to an open spot on the ice while a teammate simultaneously moved to that open spot. I knew enough to notice that when ND moved the puck around, they did not pass to a static teammate but timed the pass so that puck and teammate arrived in the same place at the same time. Then when someone scrambled to cover, they would do the same thing again, and again, until they got a clear look. I was very impressed. It reminded me of some Arsenal soccer teams from several years ago, or Barcelona, well-organized disciplined patient and relentless.

Overall, I think it is really good to play against the best teams at the beginning of the season, it helps you measure where you are, and more importantly, it gives you a first-hand vision of what you want to aspire to. It takes mental conditioning as well, you can't just react, you need to learn how to discern those subtle cues in your opponent's body language that help you anticipate what he is planning to attempt before he actually executes. I remember trying to coach that skill another sport, and at first my 'students' did not even know what I was talking about, sometimes you have to experience it first-hand before you really start to pay attention.
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

Interesting that you would mention this aspect. I'm not as informed in the details of ice hockey tactics as I am in several other sports, yet at times it looked to me as if we were playing a zone defence while Notre Dame was playing a man-to-man offense, if that makes any sense....our defending tactics were consistently a step too slow relative to their puck control tactics.

There was a period of time just after the second ND goal in which during 5 x 5 hockey the puck seemed to spend an eternity in the RPI end. Notre Dame had such control that it looked like a power play, even though it wasn't. There would be two RPI players covering a space in which there was one Notre Dame attacker, which allowed Notre Dame players to pass to an open spot on the ice while a teammate simultaneously moved to that open spot. I knew enough to notice that when ND moved the puck around, they did not pass to a static teammate but timed the pass so that puck and teammate arrived in the same place at the same time. Then when someone scrambled to cover, they would do the same thing again, and again, until they got a clear look. I was very impressed. It reminded me of some Arsenal soccer teams from several years ago, or Barcelona, well-organized disciplined patient and relentless.

Overall, I think it is really good to play against the best teams at the beginning of the season, it helps you measure where you are, and more importantly, it gives you a first-hand vision of what you want to aspire to. It takes mental conditioning as well, you can't just react, you need to learn how to discern those subtle cues in your opponent's body language that help you anticipate what he is planning to attempt before he actually executes. I remember trying to coach that skill another sport, and at first my 'students' did not even know what I was talking about, sometimes you have to experience it first-hand before you really start to pay attention.

A lot more descriptive than I was-but really saying the same thing. We played a very good first period on the road. Then ND just did what was necessary-and we did not. They adjusted to us and we did not adjust to them. It is a tough learning experience and i hope we gained from it. ND is a very good team-I do not think we are all that far from being a much better team than we showed. The question remains can we adjust to different opponents and make the adjustments during the games coming up that we need to. We just cannot go out there and stick to Plan A all game long-we have got to have Plan B and Plan C to go to while the game moves along. I think I say this every year though.
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

I figured that if I wrote "mere" someone would think it was babo's presence. :p ;)

(Yes, I know there would be an accent.)

I have a feeling I'm the only other one (aside from maybe Jacques, but I don't think he reads this thread) that would get that.

Wow, did I waste post #9000 on that?!

Has education gotten that bad?


I hope not! I got it...you don't have to be Canadian to understand French! :p
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

No excuses but Ferris St. punked Miami 2X this weekend and Miami were some peoples preseason #1. They blanked them the second night. Have I ever mentioned I hate the trap.
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

Have I ever mentioned I hate the trap.

The trap can be a very effective forechecking system to use against a skilled team, by a skilled team. The strategy is to force turnovers and regain possession of the puck, while conserving energy. Most skilled trapping teams are excellent in transition. (ie. see last year vs Colgate in playoffs)
 
Re: RPI 2011-12 Part II: We Like to Post!

You certainly have an obsession with putting accented characters in players' names where they don't belong.

Speaking of which, does Lalibert* spell his name with the accent or not? Given the pronunciation and etymology, it certainly seems like it should be accented, but his jersey, RPI Athletics and the student directory leave it out. Does anyone know for sure?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top