Sunday's Game, and What Lies Beyond (finale)
After apparently offending half the board (or more?) with some of my pre-match observations, we can finally get to the game here on USCHO Dos. As I'm sure Snives noticed, there were a LOT of UNH starters who hailed from beyond our borders, and I'm sure MS7 could learn from this by trying to expand his recruiting map as many on here have suggested in recent years. Coach Hubbard is still relatively early in his UNH tenure, but what he has built in that short stretch is amazing, and having won the last three (3) America East tourney titles is impressive.
Problem is, on Sunday, one team played like their season was on the line, and one team played like their season was not on the line. And it was pretty obvious right from the start, UVM was there to battle. The first foul was within a couple minutes, and it was a hard foul, sending a clear message that I'm not sure UNH ever received, at least until it was too late. UVM had the better of the early play, using a high press that I'm not sure UNH's backs ever really adjusted to, and compressing space to corral UNH's mids. UNH tried to play around the pressure out on the wings, but really never got much established, and seemed to grow increasingly frustrated as UVM executed on its game plan.
What turned out to be UNH's best chance on goal came about 10 minutes into the match, when a 20 yard shot from the top of the box forced the UVM 'keeper into a diving save to push the ball around the post to his right. By then, UVM had already tested the UNH 'keeper after his backs had given up an early chance. And what would be UNH's best chance of the match came after a similar giveaway by a UVM defender under pressure saw UNH's left-sided mid bearing down on goal from an angle, about 10 yards out, with a clear shooting opportunity. But he curiously chose not to shoot, looking instead to find a trailing runner with a better angle on goal, UVM cut out the pass, and that disappeared quickly.
My hope was that at the halftime break, Coach Hubbard might be able to make some adjustments to turn the tide (it was still scoreless, but it felt like UVM was playing its game), and for awhile in the second half, it looked like UNH was doing a better job of playing between UVM's lines, but UVM always seemed to react quickly and close/crowd out any brief openings that UNH enjoyed. When the goal came, though, it was a beauty - full volley, guessing about 15 yards out, top right corner with the UNH 'keeper never having a chance. You can watch a full weekend of PL games sometimes and not see a goal of that quality. And the UVM kids - no doubt recalling the "you suck" chants from the pre-game intros - rushed over to give it back to the UNH student section, and in spades. I couldn't help but smile ... I'm all for the pre-game chants, be it soccer or hockey, it livens things up for sure, and gives it all a fun edge, but the UVM players' response was in-your-face perfection.
Right then and there, I knew the game was over. There was no way UNH was going to break these kids down, they'd tried to go around them, they'd tried to go through them, and the teams could have played until midnight, and I doubt UNH would have scored. This was UVM's moment ...
... and for UNH, it had an all-too-familiar scent of distant postseason hockey (or even football) failings. Football is probably the better comparison, as it's also a sport where UNH plays in a league not generally recognized as nationally competitive, whilst Hockey plays in what has been (by consensus) one of the top two national D-1 leagues for a very long time now.
Looking ahead, with UNH in the tourney, and with a home game in the Round of 32 (as 16th seed) they will have a chance to make amends and advance to play what will likely be the #1 seed in the Round of 16. I'm hoping to catch what will likely be the home season finale this Sunday at THTBSB, and might show up a few minutes later than I did last weekend to avoid some of the annoying crap. My guess is Coach Hubbard will get them past the first round, and then "try to do a UVM" against the top seed in the next round to get to the Round of 8, which would arguably justify their #6 in-season national ranking. My further guess is, they're not built to play and win that kind of game (sound familiar, long-time hockey fans?), but it doesn't change the fact that Coach Hubbard is building a program that allows UNH to compete at levels nationally that we used to take for granted with the program across the street. And if Soccer can do it ... why not Hockey???