Ref. Your sentiments nailed it for me. The here and now is what it is. What it is, what it is as my not so "PC" kids say. Boy has Mr. Pesce stepped up. Love his game now. Goumas, Willows, how about Speelman? Love it
Anyway, like Chuck says, just win baby! Don't forget the SOG's though Chuck
Snively65, I can't believe you were there for the first games played at lively Snively and the Whitt too. That's awesome! I'm having some difficulty wrapping my head around the fact that you were teaching at UNH during the Snively days. That puts you around the same age as, IDK, Walter Peterson!??
A few confessions here ... first, while I understand and appreciate all the time and thought that everyone is putting into figuring out where UNH stands vis-a-vis qualification for the NCAA tourney, I honestly can't bring myself to root against other teams/programs who lie just ahead of UNH in the PWR, just so UNH can (again - as they did recently with HE QF home ice) "back into" a slot in that tourney. I mean ... Yale?? As in, "Defending D-1 Champions Yale"??? Should the defending champions be denied a shot at defending their D-1 title because some formula puts UNH only the slightest tick ahead of them? I dunno, that seems a bit squirrely to me.
And maybe I'd feel differently if UNH was more than a borderline-above-.500 team, and had a legitimately strong argument to qualify for the tourney. Honestly, they don't. I'm not criticizing anyone for how you folks may be approaching things - hey, above all else, we all should be fans on our own terms - but from my little corner of the world, if UNH doesn't make it to Boston OR even makes it to Boston but ends up falling short of an at-large NCAA bid, then c'est la vie. That's the expected consequences of being a mediocre .500 team over the better part of a five (5) month season.
Just win the QF's, let's have a good time in Boston, and if the 'Cats can break form and keep winning, we're all happy.![]()
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Snively65, I can't believe you were there for the first games played at lively Snively and the Whitt too. That's awesome! I'm having some difficulty wrapping my head around the fact that you were teaching at UNH during the Snively days. That puts you around the same age as, IDK, Walter Peterson!??
A few confessions here ... first, while I understand and appreciate all the time and thought that everyone is putting into figuring out where UNH stands vis-a-vis qualification for the NCAA tourney, I honestly can't bring myself to root against other teams/programs who lie just ahead of UNH in the PWR, just so UNH can (again - as they did recently with HE QF home ice) "back into" a slot in that tourney. I mean ... Yale?? As in, "Defending D-1 Champions Yale"??? Should the defending champions be denied a shot at defending their D-1 title because some formula puts UNH only the slightest tick ahead of them? I dunno, that seems a bit squirrely to me.
And maybe I'd feel differently if UNH was more than a borderline-above-.500 team, and had a legitimately strong argument to qualify for the tourney. Honestly, they don't. I'm not criticizing anyone for how you folks may be approaching things - hey, above all else, we all should be fans on our own terms - but from my little corner of the world, if UNH doesn't make it to Boston OR even makes it to Boston but ends up falling short of an at-large NCAA bid, then c'est la vie. That's the expected consequences of being a mediocre .500 team over the better part of a five (5) month season.
Just win the QF's, let's have a good time in Boston, and if the 'Cats can break form and keep winning, we're all happy.![]()
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Nah. None of these bubble teams are more deserving than UNH, except maybe Duluth, which finished 2nd in SOS. UNH dropped to 4th in SOS over the last two weekends against BU and Mac. But, most of the bubble teams played incredibly wimpy schedules. Michigan 15th in SOS, Colgate 16th, NU 22nd, Cornell 28th, Lowell 30th (yeah, I know, they beat us twice, but we won SOG both nights), PC 33rd, Yale 39th (how embarrassing for the reigning NC), Quinnipiac 40th (how even more embarrassing for the reigning NC runner up), Ferris State 43rd (who?), and Minnesota State a horrific 44th (and yet they are a front runner for a conference autobid; what a joke).
UNH lost eight games to the top 7 PWR teams in Div 1, six to the top 3, and only got blown out in one of them. Lot of tough losses there. The Cats were easily the best 0.500 team in the country, I think.
I know there is still hockey to play this season for the wildcats but are any of you fans somewhat worried about our scoring abilities for next season. As of right now I see us losing 4 possibly 5 of our top 6 scorers (27, 21, 5, 6, (12?))I know we have a boatload of recruits coming in next year, and I know 4 of them are very talented forwards who put up tons of points (Foegele, Eiserman McNicholas, Poturalski) but Kelleher led the US18 team in scoring last year playing D1 teams like, our best in the country at the time UNH Wildcats, and hasn't done much for us this year as a Freshman. Im worried our offense might struggle next year. Thoughts?
Snively65. Now I get it. You were a kid when Snively was under construction and teaching when The Whitt was under construction. So you were a "townie." Thats coolAnyway, I also remember the Cornell and BU days also and I remember Harvard skating into Snively and kicking our butts in the ECAC playoffs one year when UNH was a higher seed.
BTW, I agree with your SOS assertion as well but SOG rules!![]()
UNH lost eight games to the top 7 PWR teams in Div 1, six to the top 3, and only got blown out in one of them. Lot of tough losses there. The Cats were easily the best 0.500 team in the country, I think.
The Harvard victory was in the 1976 ECAC quarterfinals. UNH was seeded 3rd, Harvard 6th. Lost because of a couple of goals by Kevin Carr from Arlington. That's back in the day when UNH had no idea how to win a home playoff game. After going on the road and beating Penn in '72 (Umile's year), they lost on the road in '73, lost the famous OT game to RPI in '74 (C-H-C), lost on the road in '75 and then lost to Harvard in '76. UNH was pretty good offensively, and they had Cap Raeder in goal for at least a couple of these years, but they could not find a way to win. They finally broke through in '77, beating Brown in OT on a Dave Lumley shot from the point that was going 10 feet wide but it deflected off a Brown skate and into the net. That started a six year run where they made the FF three times and won their only ECAC tournament title ('79).
If people are frustrated now with the fortunes of the Wildcats, think of what it was like back in the '70's when UNH, year in and year out, was one of the more talented teams in the country and couldn't even advance let alone win the whole thing.
It's awesome to talk sweep on Friday in the papers but you've gotta show up.
And speaking of disrespecting other teams, Colgate and MSU have lost one game between them since February 1st. I don't expect either to win their respective league tourneys, but each are playing pretty well recently.Colgate, Minn State, Duluth, and Yale need to flame out early, which could happen.
The Harvard victory was in the 1976 ECAC quarterfinals. UNH was seeded 3rd, Harvard 6th. Lost because of a couple of goals by Kevin Carr from Arlington. That's back in the day when UNH had no idea how to win a home playoff game. After going on the road and beating Penn in '72 (Umile's year), they lost on the road in '73, lost the famous OT game to RPI in '74 (C-H-C), lost on the road in '75 and then lost to Harvard in '76. UNH was pretty good offensively, and they had Cap Raeder in goal for at least a couple of these years, but they could not find a way to win. They finally broke through in '77, beating Brown in OT on a Dave Lumley shot from the point that was going 10 feet wide but it deflected off a Brown skate and into the net. That started a six year run where they made the FF three times and won their only ECAC tournament title ('79).
If people are frustrated now with the fortunes of the Wildcats, think of what it was like back in the '70's when UNH, year in and year out, was one of the more talented teams in the country and couldn't even advance let alone win the whole thing.
Wasn't that loss to RPI the one when Cap Raeder, otherwise a very solid goalie, let in a fluke shot from at least center ice -- maybe even the RPI blue line? I was there in the 70's, attended every home game, and experienced the ups and downs. My insufficient memory banks allow me to recall very few specifics about individual games, but I do remember that ugly goal.
Greg was referring to the quarterfinal game where an injured Raeder gave it a go but allowed 4 first period goals before UNH tied it up on the first shift of the second period. They ultimately lost in OT.
Pretty sure that game was 40 years ago this past Wednesday, thought for sure someone would point that out on here.
The Harvard victory was in the 1976 ECAC quarterfinals. UNH was seeded 3rd, Harvard 6th. Lost because of a couple of goals by Kevin Carr from Arlington. That's back in the day when UNH had no idea how to win a home playoff game. After going on the road and beating Penn in '72 (Umile's year), they lost on the road in '73, lost the famous OT game to RPI in '74 (C-H-C), lost on the road in '75 and then lost to Harvard in '76. UNH was pretty good offensively, and they had Cap Raeder in goal for at least a couple of these years, but they could not find a way to win. They finally broke through in '77, beating Brown in OT on a Dave Lumley shot from the point that was going 10 feet wide but it deflected off a Brown skate and into the net. That started a six year run where they made the FF three times and won their only ECAC tournament title ('79).
If people are frustrated now with the fortunes of the Wildcats, think of what it was like back in the '70's when UNH, year in and year out, was one of the more talented teams in the country and couldn't even advance let alone win the whole thing.