Showing posts with label ciskie votes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ciskie votes. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Preseason NCHC Predictions

Another season is upon us, and now it's time to fruitlessly predict how the NCHC will finish pull out the crystal ball and make some picks.

Before we do that, here's how they finished in 2014-15:

1. North Dakota
2. Miami
3. Omaha
4. Denver
5. UMD
6. St. Cloud State
7. Western Michigan
8. Colorado College

For fun, here's how I picked them:

1. Miami
2. St. Cloud State
3. North Dakota
4. UMD
5. Omaha
6. Denver
7. Western Michigan
8. Colorado College

Not as bad as the year before, but still not very good. Of course, that won't stop me from trying again. I wish I wasn't so stubborn.

8. Colorado College

I was prepared to move the Tigers out of the cellar, even with questions up front and in goal, largely because of defenseman Jaccob Slavin. Then I turned on the NHL Network and saw him playing for the Carolina Hurricanes. Guess that means he's not coming back.

(Kidding. I knew he was gone. But seeing that was a stark reminder of how young CC is going to be this season.)

It seemed the Tigers had some moments of positivity in Mike Haviland's first season. There were plenty of nights where CC was competitive and just lost out on some bad bounces, or the stunning lack of scoring really reared its ugly head. I just don't see how they get out from that with 14 freshmen on the roster this year. Haviland will have a much better team, though. If the Tigers get goaltending they could really surprise.

7. Western Michigan

How stupid competitive is the NCHC? Western Michigan is good enough to make the NCAA Tournament. I have them seventh in an eight-team league.

Highly-respected veteran coach Andy Murray lost big forward Colton Hargrove to the Boston Bruins, but he returns speedy forward Sheldon Dries and highly-skilled Nolan Laporte, who can score goals while also getting under the skin of opponents. The hard-nosed Broncos did lose talented defenseman Kenney Morrison and four-year goalie Frank Slubowski, but Lukas Hafner is back in net, and Murray has some promising young defensemen to deploy.

(The team overall is young. Laporte and Hafner are the best -- in my view -- of a five-man senior class at WMU.)

Western might not wow anyone with its speed or pace of play, but the Broncos are a formidable foe because of how consistently hard they play. They're as good as anyone in the league at making life hell for opponents in all zones.

6. St. Cloud State

Last year, the Huskies finished sixth in the NCHC. How did they end their season? By blitzing Omaha in a two-game road playoff sweep, then taking down No. 1 North Dakota in the NCHC semifinals before bowing to Miami in the title game. Oh, and then SCSU went to the NCAA West Regional, beat Michigan Tech, and ended its season a win away from a second trip to the Frozen Four in three years.

Not too shabby, eh?

Bob Motzko has built a power here, a team capable of annual NCAA trips, and this year is no different. With that being said, the Huskies do have to fill some holes. Goal-scorer Jonny Brodzinski left early, and SCSU also lost steady leaders like Joe Rehkamp and Nick Oliver up front, along with Andrew Prochno and Tim Daly in the back.

Talent? They've got it. Joey Benik already made the leap, and he could be a darkhorse Hobey candidate. David Morley and Kalle Kossila lead a strong senior class, and Charlie Lindgren is rock-solid in goal.

5. Omaha

Some teams lost talented players. Omaha lost its backbone. If not for Ryan Massa, UNO doesn't make the Frozen Four. He might not have been at his best in the semifinal loss to Providence, but Massa was as good as any goalie in the country last year, and he was that way basically from start to finish.

He's gone now, but Dean Blais isn't shedding tears and wondering how his team will compete. While Massa was backstopping UNO to Boston, young players were learning the ropes and showing a ridiculous amount of promise. Now, the Mavs have Avery Peterson and Jake Randolph back as sophomores, joined by junior forwards Austin Ortega and Jake Guentzel, as dangerous as anyone in the league.

Blais will need Luc Snuggerud and Joel Messner to keep stepping forward on the blue line, as depth there is a bit questionable.

4. North Dakota

"Bruce, you're doing it again. You're underrating UND."

North Dakota fans should be happy. It seems I do this every year, and every year UND outperforms my expectations.

I respected Dave Hakstol as much as any opposing coach I've ever dealt with. I've heard nothing but good things about Brad Berry, who takes over after Hakstol left for the NHL. This prediction isn't about coaching. Not in the least.

Instead, I'm curious about UND's forward depth and goaltending. Even if Drake Caggiula puts up All-NCHC numbers as I believe he will, and even if Nick Schmaltz has the big year I think he will, I don't know that North Dakota has the scoring depth to win the league again.

What do I know? That North Dakota's blue line -- featuring Paul LaDue, Troy Stecher, captain Gage Ausmus, and soon-to-emerge Tucker Poolman -- is as good as any in college hockey. And just think: Jordan Schmaltz left early for pro hockey.

3. Miami

A disappointing end to last season, for sure, losing to Providence in the first round of the NCAAs, and when you look on paper, it's easy to say Miami was gutted up front. Austin Czarnik, Riley Barber, and Blake Coleman are all gone.

But the underrated Sean Kuraly and Anthony Louis are both back up front, and the RedHawks were able to supplement a large senior class (ten guys, including both primary goalies) with another strong recruiting class, led by NTDP star Jack Roslovic.

Defenseman Matthew Caito is one of the seniors, and sophomore Louie Belpedio will be one of the nation's best blue-liners this year (you'll notice I voted Belpedio to my preseason all-league team).

Despite the heavy losses, I expect Miami will content. Rico Blasi's team might not score as much this year, but they'll be stronger from the net out to make up the difference.

2. Denver

Similar to North Dakota, I do question Denver's forward depth. Trevor Moore and Danton Heinen are the most explosive forwards in the conference, but Jim Montgomery does need to find them a new center (assuming he keeps them on the same line). The good news? With all due respect to Daniel Doremus, Montgomery could put a broomstick in between those two and get 20 points out of it (it's an old wrestling analogy, just go with me on it). If Montgomery needs volunteers to play center on that line, I'll look into my college eligibility.

In all seriousness, you're not going to find a better one-two scoring punch, possibly in the country. Whoever plays center will be a better player for it, just having these two to feed. We talk about great centers making the linemates better. In DU's case, the unbelievably-talented Moore and Heinen can make the center better.

(Again, assuming they stay on the same line. I'd have to think DU at least starts out that way.)

Joey LaLeggia is the biggest loss in the NCHC, but Denver's blue line isn't a barren wasteland without him. Nolan Zajac and Will Butcher are ready, and Montgomery has some nice complimentary pieces in Matt VanVoorhis and Adam Plant. Freshmen Blake Hillman and Sean Mostrom will compete for a piece of the pie as well.

Oh, and the goalies. Tanner Jaillet and Evan Cowley both return, and while both had their share of struggles at times, Montgomery has a potent tandem in net.

1. UMD

Before you cry "HOMER!," know this:

2015-16 is my 11th year calling UMD hockey. I'm such a terrible homer that this is the first time I've ever picked UMD to win its conference.

And I have my reasons.

It starts with preseason All-NCHC goalie Kasimir Kaskisuo. Here's what I wrote about him in March:
Kaskisuo was fantastic in the NCAA Tournament, to the point I voted him Most Outstanding Player for the Northeast Regional (votes were due before BU got the late power play). He played well in both games, and this summer will be a key to his success going forward. I think he has a chance to be one of the best goalies in the NCHC, if not Division I, next season if he has a good offseason.
Now, we see it all come together for Kaskisuo. He unquestionably had a rough patch last season, and there were times his fundamentals were just a little off what they should be. If he can improve that .917 he put up as a freshman by even a couple percentage points, UMD is off and running. If something happens to Kaskisuo, senior Matt McNeely is waiting in the wings. "Matty Ice" only got in five games last year, but one of those was a crucial 2-1 win over Minnesota. In that game at the North Star College Cup, McNeely played possibly his best game as a Bulldog and helped UMD snap a four-game losing streak that threatened to spoil a promising season.

Preseason all-league defenseman and cap'n Andy Welinski leads a stout blue line that returns big-minute guys Willie Raskob and Carson Soucy (emerging as a top prospect on the Wild blue line, by the way), along with improved senior Willie Corrin. Oh, and Hermantown's Neal Pionk debuts this year after two strong years in the USHL.

Up front, the top line of Tony Cameranesi, Austin Farley, and Karson Kuhlman return intact, along with juniors Dominic Toninato and Alex Iafallo. UMD adds former Hibbing star Adam Johnson after he had a very good year in the USHL last year.

Not that it should matter, but given the difficulty UMD had extracting points from games against Western Michigan last year, it probably helps the Bulldogs that they only see Western Michigan once this year. It's the kind of scheduling break that could make a difference in such a competitive league.

UMD has skill, size, depth, and goaltending. I believe the Bulldogs have the fewest holes in the NCHC, and they are my pick to claim the Penrose Cup.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Preseason All-NCHC Team Announced

The NCHC announced its preseason all-league team yesterday. Here is the pertinent information.
Four teams are represented on the 2015 NCHC Preseason All-Conference Team led by two selections each from Denver and Minnesota Duluth. The Pioneers placed two forwards on the team in junior Trevor Moore and sophomore Danton Heinen, who earned 21 and 20 votes respectively. The third forward is North Dakota senior Drake Caggiula, who garnered 17 votes. UMD senior defenseman Andy Welinski anchors the Preseason All-NCHC defensive pairing with 22 votes while Miami senior Matthew Caito is the other defenseman, receiving 10 votes. Minnesota Duluth sophomore goaltender Kasimir Kaskisuo completed the Preseason All-NCHC Team with 14 votes.

Moore (Thousand Oaks, Calif.) was a First-Team All-NCHC selection and the NCHC Forward of the Year as a sophomore in 2014-15, when he led the NCHC with 22 goals and was third in the conference with 44 points in 39 games. His 30 points in conference play also led the NCHC while his 13 goals tied for the league lead. Heinen (Langley, B.C.) was the NCHC Rookie of the Year and a Second-Team All-NCHC recipient a season ago when he tied for the NCHC scoring lead with 45 points, third among freshmen nationally, including 16 goals in 40 games. The Boston Bruins prospect also chipped in 26 points in conference play, tops along all freshmen. Caggiula (Whitby, Ont.), also a Second-Team All-NCHC honoree in 2014-15, compiled 36 points in 42 games on 18 goals and assists each. In conference play, he tied for the NCHC lead with 13 goals and totaled 22 points.

On the blue line, Welinski (Duluth, Minn.) was another Second-Team All-NCHC member from last season, tallying 21 points in 40 games with 51 blocked shots. The Anaheim Ducks prospect recorded 12 points, including seven goals, and blocked 25 shots in conference play as a junior.  Caito (Coto de Caza, Calif.) was an NCHC Honorable Mention pick last year when he compiled 24 points in 39 games and posted a plus-19 rating, tops among NCHC defensemen a season ago. In conference play, he tallied 16 points, including three goals, blocked 45 shots and accrued a plus-10 rating as a junior.

Rounding out the NCHC Preseason All-Conference Team is Kaskisuo (Vantaa, Finland), who earned NCHC All-Rookie Team honors in goal last season after posting an 18-14-3 record while making 36 starts, recording a 2.30 goals-against average and posting a .917 save percentage. He was one of just two NCHC netminders last year to start all 24 conference games as he went 12-9-3 with a 2.27 GAA and a .918 save percentage.

Last season, four of the six student-athletes chosen for the NCHC Preseason All-Conference Team were also named to the 2014-15 NCHC All-Conference First Team at the end of the season.

2015 NCHC Preseason All-Conference Team
F – Trevor Moore, Denver, Jr. – 21 votes
F – Danton Heinen, Denver, So. – 20 votes
F – Drake Caggiula, North Dakota, Sr. – 17 votes
D – Andy Welinski, Minnesota Duluth, Sr. – 22 votes
D – Matthew Caito, Miami, Sr. – 10 votes
G – Kasimir Kaskisuo, Minnesota Duluth, So. – 14 votes
For those interested, here's how I voted:

Forwards
Moore
Heinen
Tony Cameranesi, UMD

Defensemen
Welinski
Louie Belpedio, Miami

Goalie
Kaskisuo

Most difficult choices I had were Cameranesi over Austin Ortega and Drake Caggiula at forward, and Belpedio over Caito, Paul LaDue, and Carson Soucy on defense.

For UMD's sake, I hope the voters are as sharp with these picks as they were last year. If Kaskisuo especially is good enough to be all-conference in March, UMD will be in great position going into the postseason.

Saturday, January 10, 2015

NCHC Fictional Midseason Awards

GRAND FORKS, N.D. -- I had planned on doing this last week, but illness overcame me in Thunder Bay and I decided to put it off. It took until Wednesday before I felt remotely myself, and by then I had to prepare for this weekend series. So here we are.

The following assumes some things. It assumes 1) I have a vote in the league honors, and 2) there are any kind of midseason awards.

I don't have a vote, but I'm going to post my thoughts for discussion and entertainment purposes only.

These observations are based on my observations from the first half of the season. There is a flaw. I haven't seen Western Michigan play, not live because UMD hasn't played them, and not on video, either. I've seen every other team in the NCHC both live and on video.

Anyway, here goes. I'll give you two all-league teams and some other individual honors through half the season.

FIRST TEAM
Forwards
Riley Barber, Miami
Austin Ortega, Omaha
Dominic Toninato, UMD

Defensemen
Joey LaLeggia, Denver
Andy Welinski, UMD

Goalie
Ryan Massa, Omaha

SECOND TEAM
Forwards
Austin Czarnik, Miami
Austin Farley, UMD
Mark MacMillan, North Dakota

Defensemen
Matthew Caito, Miami
Jordan Schmaltz, North Dakota

Goalie
Zane McIntyre, North Dakota

APOLOGIES TO ...
Forwards
Jonny Brodzinski, St. Cloud State
Drake Caggiula, North Dakota
Blake Coleman, Miami
Jake Guentzel, Omaha
Danton Heinen, Denver
Nick Schmaltz, North Dakota

Defensemen
Kenney Morrison, Western Michigan
Nolan Zajac, Denver

Goalie
Evan Cowley, Denver
Jay Williams, Miami

ALL-ROOKIE TEAM
Forwards
Danton Heinen, Denver
Karson Kuhlman, UMD
Jake Randolph, Omaha

Defensemen
Louie Belpedio, Miami
Luc Snuggerud, Omaha

Goalie
Kasimir Kaskisuo, UMD

INDIVIDUAL AWARDS
Goalie of the Year
Ryan Massa, Omaha

Defenseman of the Year
Andy Welinski, UMD

Forward of the Year
Austin Ortega, Omaha

Rookie of the Year
Danton Heinen, Denver

Offensive Defenseman of the Year
Joey LaLeggia, Denver

Defensive Forward of the Year
Karson Kuhlman, UMD

Player of the Year
Austin Ortega, Omaha

Saturday, January 11, 2014

NCHC All-League Midseason Peek

OMAHA, Neb. -- I'm pretty sure media isn't going to be invited to vote on the official All-NCHC team this season. I'm too lazy to look it up and confirm it, however.

(North Dakota fans are probably happy that I won't get to vote this year.)

Either way, it was an annual bit when UMD was in the WCHA that I would do a mid-season look at the postseason awards. Sometimes, you called me a rock-eating moron. Sometimes, you just read it. Usually, you ignored it.

Do with it what you must. Here's my early look at 2013-14, starting with all-league teams.

FIRST TEAM
Forwards
Josh Archibald, Nebraska Omaha
Riley Barber, Miami
Shane Berschbach, Western Michigan

Defensemen
Joey LaLeggia, Denver
Andrew Prochno, St. Cloud State

Goalie
Ryan Faragher, St. Cloud State

SECOND TEAM
Forwards
Jonny Brodzinski, St. Cloud State
Rocco Grimaldi, North Dakota
Ryan Walters, Nebraska Omaha

Defensemen
Dillon Simpson, North Dakota
Nolan Zajac, Denver

Goalie
Sam Brittain, Denver

APOLOGIES TO ...
Forwards
Justin Crandall, UMD
Austin Czarnik, Miami
Nic Dowd, St. Cloud State
Justin Kovacs, Western Michigan
David Morley, St. Cloud State

Defensemen
David Makowski, Denver
Jordan Schmaltz, North Dakota
Jaccob Slavin, Colorado College

Goalie
Ryan McKay, Miami

ALL-ROOKIE TEAM
Forwards
Alex Iafallo, UMD
Luke Johnson, North Dakota
Trevor Moore, Denver

Defensemen
Will Butcher, Denver
Jaccob Slavin, Colorado College

Goalie
Kirk Thompson, Nebraska Omaha

INDIVIDUAL AWARDS
Goalie of the Year
Ryan Faragher, St. Cloud State

Defenseman of the Year
Andrew Prochno, St. Cloud State

Forward of the Year
Josh Archibald, Nebraska Omaha

Rookie of the Year
Alex Iafallo, UMD

Offensive Defenseman of the Year
Joey LaLeggia, Denver

Defensive Forward of the Year
Riley Barber, Miami

Player of the Year
Josh Archibald, Nebraska Omaha

I'm happy to talk about these picks. Hit me up on Twitter or in the comments. Just be nice. I don't cuss at you. Don't cuss at me. Or insult my mother/wife/son/dog.

Wait. I don't have a dog.

Monday, September 23, 2013

NCHC Preseason Poll: My Votes

Last week, the NCHC posted its inaugural preseason poll, showing Miami on top and UMD sixth. Here's how I voted, with some words on each team.

8. Nebraska Omaha Mavericks

This was tough. I mean, excruciating. But I prioritized a number of things in putting this list together, including scoring balance, defense, and goaltending. I also looked at the fact that UNO appeared to be (again) trending in the wrong direction late last season. The Mavericks went just 3-7 over their last ten games, and two of the wins were over Alaska Anchorage. Also in that span was an exhibition loss to the US Under 18 Team. I don't know what to make of UNO's goaltending, and I just don't think the uber-talented Ryan Walters (Hobey candidate if UNO ends up being better than I'm expecting) and Josh Archibald can score enough to keep the Mavericks out of last place in the NCHC's first season.

7. Colorado College Tigers

If anyone else finishes last in the league, I'd guess it's CC. There's talent here with this group, including the highly underrated Alex Krushelnyski. I think Archie Skalbeck could make a leap this season. CC loses Mike Boivin in the back, however, and I think a lot will end up on the shoulders of freshman Gustav Olofsson (Wild second round pick in 2013) to do things offensively that Boivin (14 goals) did last year. Joe Howe is gone, so the net belongs to Josh Thorimbert for the time being, though he was inconsistent like crazy last year and could get unseated.

6. St. Cloud State Huskies

This was also difficult. There's a ton of scoring talent, with guys like Jonny Brodzinski, Nic Dowd, Kalle Kossila, and youngster Joey Benik, who really emerged in the postseason. Where the Huskies could suffer is the back line, where Nick Jensen departs, leaving Andrew Prochno as the team's top defenseman. He and Kevin Gravel are capable, but the depth isn't as strong here. SCSU was a tough team to figure out, because I do think the experience of last year's Frozen Four run is significant, but the Huskies lost a lot of big-time skill and leadership from that team, and now we'll see if it can be quickly replaced.

5. Denver Pioneers

No more Gwoz means Denver might be slightly less interesting, at least from a reporter's standpoint. But Gwoz doesn't leave a bare cupboard for new bench boss Jim Montgomery. Top recruits like Will Butcher stuck around, and so did senior goalie Sam Brittain, who inherits the No. 1 job for the time being after Juho Olkinuora departed. The Pioneers aren't as deep up front as SCSU, but I think they have more talent on defense and better goaltending. For this Pioneers team, it's going to be all about how they handle the adjustment from Gwozdecky to someone who isn't Gwozdecky.

4. UMD Bulldogs

I believe this team is poised for a rise after a down year. If a No. 1 goalie doesn't emerge, UMD could be in some trouble, but UMD has high-end talent at forward with Tony Cameranesi, Austin Farley, Caleb Herbert, and freshman Dominic Toninato. Andy Welinski is going to be a top defenseman in this new league, and freshman Willie Raskob has a lot of talent. The Bulldogs have to fill some third- and fourth-line holes, but look for this team to display more puck possession, crisper offense, and an improved back line.

3. Western Michigan Broncos

Here's my reach in the poll. The Broncos only scored 87 goals last season, and leading scorer Dane Walters is gone. I'm betting big with this pick on a few things: Chase Balisy becomes a bigger part of the offense, as does Denney Morrison from the blue line; Colton Hargrove emerges as a top-line scoring threat; and Frank Slubowski keeps doing Frank Slubowski things in goal. Andy Murray is a hell of a coach, and it's going to be fun to watch him match wits with guys like Hakstol, Motzko, Sandelin, and Blais on a regular basis.

2. North Dakota

This might be more of a respect vote, because I'm not sure UND has enough defense to win consistently in a tougher league. However, I've wondered this about UND before, and UND's always just fine. North Dakota will do okay this season, too. Rocco Grimaldi will have a huge season, as will Mark MacMillan. There's more than enough talent in the back with guys like Dillon Simpson and Jordan Schmaltz. I do wonder about UND's goaltending, which was shaky at times, but you could do a lot worse than returning two guys who combined for a .916 save percentage.

1. Miami RedHawks

No-brainer, in my view. These polls are impossible, especially with new league alignments, but Miami has the most returning talent in all phases, and it's not like the CCHA was a scrub league last year. Scoring will be balanced, and they have high-end skill guys like Austin Czarnik and Riley Barber back, along with defenseman Matthew Caito and goalies Ryan McKay and Jay Williams. This is a well-coached team that expects to be on top of its league, and I think Miami might be the team to beat, nationally as well as in the NCHC.

Saturday, March 09, 2013

One Man's All-WCHA Ballot

As is typical, I was handed a ballot for the All-WCHA team on Friday night, before UMD's game with Omaha.

And also typical is my general rule to post my ballot for the masses. I think it's fun for discussion, as everyone voting is going to have a different perspective.

The same rules apply. These selections are based on what I've seen, and discussions I've had with folks around the league. I don't use the ballot as a way to personally attack anyone or any team, and I don't use it to cast a bunch of non-sensical votes for UMD guys because I call their games.

In the seven years I've done this ballot, this is easily the toughest set of decisions I've ever had to make, especially at the forward position.

Here goes nothing.

ALL-WCHA TEAMS
First team
Forwards
Eriah Hayes, Minnesota State
Drew LeBlanc, St. Cloud State
Ryan Walters, Omaha
Defensemen
Mike Boivin, Colorado College
Nick Jensen, St. Cloud State
Goalie
Stephon Williams, Minnesota State

Second team
Forwards
Danny Kristo, North Dakota
Matt Leitner, Minnesota State
Rylan Schwartz, Colorado College
Defensemen
Joey LaLeggia, Denver
Nate Schmidt, Minnesota
Goalie
Juho Olkinuora, Denver

Third team
Forwards
Erik Haula, Minnesota
Corban Knight, North Dakota
Michael Mersch, Wisconsin
Defensemen
Derek Forbort, North Dakota
Andrej Sustr, Omaha
Goalie
Joel Rumpel, Wisconsin

Apologies to ...
Forwards
Josh Archibald, Omaha
Nick Bjugstad, Minnesota
Jonny Brodzinski, St. Cloud State
Tony Cameranesi, UMD
Alexander Krushelnyski, Colorado College
Alex Petan, Michigan Tech
Mike Seidel, UMD
Defensemen
Jake McCabe, Wisconsin
Zach Palmquist, Minnesota State
Goalie
Landon Peterson, Wisconsin

Thoughts
Incredibly difficult decisions at forward, especially leaving Archibald off. Mersch's season, especially as his team's clear No. 1 scoring threat, has been great. And I couldn't ignore the goal production of Kristo, who has scored some big goals for his team this year.

ALL ROOKIE TEAM
Forwards
Tony Cameranesi, UMD
Austin Farley, UMD
Alex Petan, Michigan Tech
Defensemen
Mike Reilly, Minnesota
Andy Welinski, UMD
Goalie
Stephon Williams, Minnesota State

Apologies to ...
Forwards
Jonny Brodzinski, St. Cloud State
Rocco Grimaldi, North Dakota
Kalle Kossila, St. Cloud State
Defensemen
Nolan Zajac, Denver
Goalie
Adam Wilcox, Minnesota

Thoughts
More tough decisions at forward, but Cameranesi and Farley have carried a ton of weight for UMD all season, and as the Bulldogs have surged a bit lately, the two have continued to be big-time players. Brodzinski was easily the hardest player to leave off the ballot, but Petan has been wonderful for Tech, averaging a point per game in league games. That isn't easy to do under any circumstances.

WCHA PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Ryan Walters, forward, Omaha
WCHA ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Tony Cameranesi, forward, UMD
WCHA COACH OF THE YEAR: Mike Hastings, Minnesota State

Thoughts
I'm surprised the coach portion of the ballot was even open. This should be unanimous for Hastings, frankly. No one else comes close to the job he did, outside of maybe Bob Motzko, but that's a bit of a stretch, I think.

Walters was a pretty easy choice in the player category, and while Cameranesi was a tough choice, I think the work he has done -- spending much of the season as UMD's de facto No. 1 center -- speaks volumes for his talent level.

I encourage other media members to make their ballots public, but certainly never hold it against those who do not. Your comments and critiques are welcome, but I do not take kindly to personal attacks because you don't agree with my choices.

Thursday, January 03, 2013

WCHA Mid-Season Awards

Halfway through the WCHA season, it's time for my annual look back at what we've seen so far, complete with a look at what my All-WCHA ballot would look like if I had to fill it out now.

(Which, thankfully, I do not.)

We'll start with all-league teams.

FIRST TEAM
Forwards
Corban Knight, North Dakota
Ryan Walters, Omaha
Nic Dowd, St. Cloud State

Defensemen 
Nick Jensen, St. Cloud State
Joey LaLeggia, Denver

Goalie
Adam Wilcox, Minnesota

SECOND TEAM
Forwards
Drew LeBlanc, St. Cloud State
Alexander Krushelnyski, Colorado College
Erik Haula, Minnesota

Defensemen
Andy Welinski, UMD
Nate Schmidt, Minnesota

Goalie
Stephon Williams, Minnesota State

THIRD TEAM
Forwards
Tony Cameranesi, UMD
Danny Kristo, North Dakota
Chris Knowlton, Denver

Defensemen
Derek Forbort, North Dakota
Jake McCabe, Wisconsin

Goalie
Juho Olkinuora, Denver

APOLOGIES TO
Forwards
Ben Hanowski, St. Cloud State; Kalle Kossila, St. Cloud State; JP Lafontaine and Matt Leitner, Minnesota State; Rylan Schwartz, Colorado College; Mike Seidel, UMD; Scott Winkler, Colorado College; Dominic Zombo, Omaha.

Defensemen
Wade Bergman, UMD: Mike Boivin, Colorado College; Andrew Prochno, St. Cloud State; Dillon Simpson, North Dakota.

Goalie
Joel Rumpel, Wisconsin; Clarke Saunders, North Dakota

ALL ROOKIE TEAM
Forwards
Tony Cameranesi, UMD
Kalle Kossila, St. Cloud State
Austin Farley, UMD

Defensemen
Andy Welinski, UMD
Mike Reilly, Minnesota

Goalie
Adam Wilcox, Minnesota

WCHA PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Ryan Walters, Omaha
WCHA COACH OF THE YEAR: Mike Hastings, Minnesota State

Monday, October 22, 2012

BlogPoll Ballot: October 22

Here is this week's ballot:


Movement aplenty, it seems. I think it's justified.
  • I hope there's room on the K-State bandwagon. Watching them tear apart West Virginia was damn impressive. The fact Oregon and Florida sit behind KSU is not a shot at either of them. The Wildcats were that good this past week, and deserve this bump.
  • Florida looked good in beating up South Carolina, too. The Gators are obviously a serious threat.
  • Cue the "Alabama vs. Florida in the SEC Championship" and the "That's The Real National Title Game" hype. Meanwhile, Oregon and Kansas State just lie in the weeds.
  • Louisville and Rutgers are still unbeaten. No, I don't think it matters in the big picture, unfortunately.
  • Notre Dame did not impress against a BYU team I don't think is terrible, but also shouldn't be able to stay this close in South Bend.
  • I hate to rate Wisconsin this high, but I really like what I've been seeing.

Monday, October 15, 2012

BlogPoll: This Week's Ballot

This week's ballot looks as follows:

A few things:
  • What the hell happened to West Virginia?
  • I'd be stunned if the national championship game wasn't SEC vs. SEC again.
  • No, that doesn't mean I think that should happen.
  • I don't have any better read on Mississippi State or Louisville this week than I did last week.
  • Rutgers, too.
  • Ohio, for that matter.
  • TCU is a team to watch. I think this is still a good club, but Casey Pachall's absence will undoubtedly have an impact on the offense.. He's tough to replace.

Monday, October 08, 2012

BlogPoll: Week 7 Ballot

Here you go:

Let's sort out some more of the unbeatens, okay?

I don't know what to make of Ohio, Louisiana Tech, Louisville, or Oregon State. I'm tepid-at-best about Mississippi State, but I think the Bulldogs have a sneaky-tough team.

And if it weren't for bowl-ineligible Ohio State, no Big Ten teams would be on this ballot. Nice job, B1G. For your sake, let's hope your hockey conference doesn't end up sucking this much.