Re: UML 2011-2012 Thread: Part II
A little over a score of young men, a coaching staff, and 5310 people found out what happens when you take care of business and eight out of nine possible tiebreakers...you can finish in second place
Four of those young men, Budd, Corcoran, Ferreira, and Vallorani, especially deserved the result and reception of last night. This weekend for our senior class (arguably one of the most tumultuous in Lowell history) was a fitting end to their final regular-season game in the Tsongas Center. After driving home last night, I stopped to reflect on what their seniors had to deal with in the course of their careers. Ferreira had a brain injury that almost ended his career even before he even took the ice and was in fact delayed by a year. All four of them were dealing with the aftermath of the near-cancellation of our program as recruits just one year prior. Thankfully, once they got on the ice, they took part of a wonderful freshmen season only mired by a "failed audio component" and a hockey analyst claiming that the team "got jobbed" in the HE Championship Game. They came back for their sophomore seasons with the team getting off to a quick start. After an unfortunate sweep by Providence and Maine during Thanksgiving week, they saw a season of expectations slowly start to slip away. The team was just five hockey minutes from the Garden in the 2010 Game 3 QF thriller in Maine, only to see their season end unceremoniously in overtime which officially knock them out of the NCAA tournament.
After the deflating loss only one year removed from the HE championship game, murmurs about the head coach's future were at a simmer immediately following that Maine game. Many pundits and Lowell fans alike were predicting a complete collapse, including several blogs that said Lowell would be lucky to win five games in 2010-2011. These men were tasked with cleaning up the mess of 2010 coupled with shepherding a new flock of freshmen numbering in the double-digits. To add insult to this daunting task, they had their captain (and best player) go down with for all purposes was a season-ending injury. It was too much for the team to handle as the season fell into a bottomless abyss. The team was virtually eliminated from the HE playoffs even before the first semester ended. I heard long time supporters start to become unglued, heck, we were yapping at each other on the boards after I started my "Is It Time for a Change at UML" post. When the five win season was confirmed, it all too surreal and this team was really in a bad place.
Sure enough, a lot of people (myself included) got their wish when our head coach resigned after one of the worse years in Lowell history. A "new" coach arrived but really wasn't "new" to the Lowell family. There were quite a few skeptics to say the least; a lot of people has Lowell as a #7/#8 seed in the playoffs; others (including the HE Coaches) had Lowell out of the playoffs #9. A few even called for a repeat of the tenth-place finish from the prior campaign.
The season got off to a tremendous start in Mankato with a freshmen goalie in net and a win. The win was turned into an unexpected sweep of Manakto, even against a team expected to be in the bottom tier of college hockey. However, over the next three games, the team came back to earth, losing a bad game to UConn and getting swept by a BC team that looked like it was going to run away with the season at that point. Fifteen seconds into the next home game vs. BU, the red light was on for the bad guys and at that point, I (and probably everyone in the stands at that instant) wrote off the season.
Matt Ferreira didn't and after that goal, help the River Hawks to score the next seven off of three assists on his own, including the first two goals. Including this game, the River Hawks went 20-7-1, swept Maine in Orono for the first time since the 80s, swept the UNH Wildcats and beat BC at home in front of huge crowds. After each of the seven losses for the remainder of the season, they came back with statement games to quell frequent calls that their joyride was over. As a group while these seniors may not collectively have as much talent as some of their younger counterparts, be rest assured that their leadership over the past year has been nothing short of exemplary and share with the coaches in the tremendous turnaround of this team, possibly the biggest in New England collegiate sports history. This was the class that when a big goal or play was needed, they provided the support to allow that to happen, but unlike so many of the prior senior classes, they were the first class to execute it in over a decade and a half.
The last four seasons been quite the roller-coaster ride. There is a cliche that says: "Life is like a roller-coaster, with plenty of ups and downs". The good news is as it's likely to be a "banner year" unless some really wacky stuff happens in the playoffs, we don't have to say good-bye to the senior class just yet.
PS: We did get fortunate with the results of last night but speaks volumes of the difference between 2010 and 2012. We didn't take care of business in 2010 and we saw the aforementioned result. We did take care of business this weekend and wound up in second place giving BU a much tougher match-up against UNH (I'm sure will be the NESN and possibly NBCSN game). In any case, I take great pride and pleasure in two questions being asked on Commonwealth Avenue this morning by the BU faithful...
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Who's this Vinny Saponari? And why can't we get players like that?"
