“I felt very comfortable investing myself in St. Cloud State.” Nic Dowd on coming back to Huntsville.

Nic DowdYou may have heard that Nic Dowd is a star hockey player for St. Cloud State University, the highly-ranked team that comes to town this weekend.  You may have also heard that Dowd is from Huntsville.  Dowd, like the Geoffrion brothers before him, attended Culver Military Academy before playing junior hockey.  Dowd isn’t alone in Southern players leaving for northern climes to hone their game: notably, Jared Ross moved to Detroit to play for Detroit Catholic Central before coming back to Huntsville to play.

We asked Nic to talk to us about playing hockey in Huntsville, his move to St. Cloud, and what it will mean for him to play in front of friends and family this weekend.  My thanks go out to Nic, Tom Nelson at SCSU sports information, and my partner Michael for transcribing the audio.

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At his roots, Nic is a Huntsville hockey kid.  “I grew up playing in the Huntsville Amateur Hockey Association with the Huntsville Chargers all the way up until my freshman year of high school,” said Dowd, “and then I played AAA hockey for the TPH Thunder in their first year of existence. They’ve been developing kids throughout the Southeast in a great way.”

We asked Dowd what it would take to keep players in the South during their developmental years, and he said that “it’s going to be pretty difficult. There are a lot of advantages to going to prep school. Realistically, I don’t know if there’s a high need for hockey-oriented prep schools in the South.”

But as a good alumnus should, Dowd has a lot of faith in his old organization. “I think the Thunder are doing a great job, and I think the amateur hockey associations in Huntsville have done a great job for providing kids with an opportunity to play. I know that TPH and Alabama-Huntsville join up throughout the year and the summers to produce summer camps to allow kids to play, so I think that’s a great start.”

Did Nic want to play at UAH?  “Definitely growing up I wanted to play for Huntsville. That was the goal for a lot of kids growing up and still is in Huntsville.”  When asked if he had a favorite Charger, Dowd replied, “One player I watched a lot was Jared Ross. Obviously, he was kind of the stud on Huntsville back in the day. I was pretty fortunate to get to know him personally, and we keep in touch when I come home over the summers. He guided me in the right direction and let me skate with him over the summers and worked out together.”

Dowd is among the many voices in the community that believe that UAH’s presence is vital to the area’s hockey development. “Without the Chargers being there, I’d say a lot of kids would not even realized college hockey existed,” said Dowd. “That was my first exposure to be able to watch great hockey.”

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We asked Dowd about how he came to St. Cloud.  “In juniors, I only had a couple of schools that were talking to me at the time. Coach [Bob] Motzko came all the way out to Wenatchee, Washington, which was the team I was playing for in the North American League.”

Dowd was clearly impressed with Motzko’s interest. “For a coach to come all the way out there and take time away from his family and his friends and his current hockey team, it meant a lot to me and showed me that he was invested in me as a player. I felt very comfortable investing myself in St. Cloud State.”

If you ask Dowd about St. Cloud’s organization, his pride in it clearly shows through.  “I’ve been extremely privileged to be part of this organization and this university,” Dowd said, “starting from our athletics directors, both past and current, all the way down to our coaching staff and the professors here at the university. I could not have asked for a better experience in my four years and wish I could go back and do it all over again and really soak up my freshman year all the way up to my senior year.

UAH visited St. Cloud in 2012-13, games that the Huskies won in an 8-3, 4-0 series where Dowd scored the first goal in each game.  When asked about the experience, Dowd termed it “interesting”, but he’s clearly looking forward to playing at the VBC.  “To play down there is going to be a lot different than playing up here,” Dowd said. “I’m not playing kids who are from Huntsville — they’re from all over the country and the world.”

Dowd is clear on who he represents.  “As a visiting team, I look at St. Cloud State as the university I represent,” Dowd said, “and it’s my team. Although Alabama-Huntsville was my team growing up, St. Cloud State is going to be my alma mater when I graduate.

Dowd is ready for tomorrow night.  “It’s really come full circle to be able to play at a great university and represent St. Cloud and to be able to play my hometown university is definitely something special.”

UAH’s seniors: “The identity of our team … is to outwork every team every night.”

Pardon me if you’ve heard this before: Doug Ross, 25 years; Danton Cole, three years; Chris Luongo, two yrs; Kurt Kleinendorst, one year.  As I got ready to interview our seniors, I thought about this: when you grow up, you play bantams and midgets, a level or two of juniors, and then you go to college.  At all of those stops, you change coaches, but when you come to college, you expect some stability.

The UAH 2014 seniors have not had that stability.  How has this affected them?

“At the beginning of the year, it’s something that the seniors talked about,” said Brice Geoffrion.  “We looked at how many freshman started here that year and how few of us are left.  There was 12 of us, and now it’s just four.”

“When you play junior, you get accustomed to playing for a new coach every year or two, so in that way, it’s similar,” Mat Hagen said.  “But for the program, I think that it’s great that they’ve got a guy who’s going to be here for at least the next three years, and I’m sure that he’ll be here much longer.”

“It’s been tough,” CJ Groh said.  “It’s been a roller coaster for me, as I’ve never been able to really establish myself with a coach and get an understanding.  I think now we’re going in the right direction with Coach Corbett, but it’s definitely tough.”

“It’s been hard in terms of program identity and stability,” Alex Allan said.  “As a player, having to change systems every year is difficult.  It’s hard having a new guy looking at you every year and thinking, ‘Can this guy play in my system?’  Guys may tighten up more a bit than they should.  But on the other end, it’s been a good learning experience having to work with different personalities, systems, and the way people doing things.”

It’s more than just the voice in a player’s ear on the bench — it’s who brought them there.  “I was recruited by Lou and Danton, and there’s guys in here that were recruited by Kleinendorst, so it’s a mix,” Hagen said.  Geoffrion said, “It was Coach [Dennis Williams] who first reached out to me.”  Williams, you’ll remember, was a UAH assistant before taking the Bowling Green job … in 2009.

Corbett has a lot of expectations for the team and his seniors.

“The identity of this team is that we’re better than we have been in the past years,” Geoffrion said. ” We’ve really been needing a skill line, and I think that we might have that in [Alex] Allan, [Chad] Brears, and [Regan] Soquila.  But we’re also going to have to outwork every team every night.  We’ll have to be in better shape so we can be better in the third and outlast our opponents in the time of the game where they’re won.”

“He’s big on details and discipline,” Hagen said.  “The first thing that he wants is for you to be a good person first and then worry about what you are as a hockey player.”

“I think that he’s more of a factor in our education,” said Groh.  “All of my teachers tell me that he’s on top of things and finding out how things are going.  He seems like a really good players’ coach.”

“He’s pretty easy to read,” Allan said.  “He doesn’t say much to me, but I know what I expect from myself.”

“Coach Corbett has been great,” Geoffrion added.  “He’s passionate, and you can really tell that he knows what he’s doing.  What happened in the past with the other coaches is done.”

Graduation looms for these men.  Hagen switched from business into civil engineering, which is the opposite of how that normally goes.  “It’ll take me another semester after the switch, but it’s been good for me as I’m going into engineering.  This is definitely the town for that.  I would’ve never thought growing up in BC and then moving to Ottawa that I would come to Alabama, become an engineer, and settle down for the long term.”

Geoffrion and Allan are due to finish on time, and Groh said that he’ll need a summer to finish.  Allan is looking to play professionally.

“Depending on how my year goes, I’ll decide if I want to try to play longer.  I’m close to getting my Italian citizenship — playing over there would be an awesome experience.  When it comes down to European hockey, it comes down to the quota on imports, so if you have citizenship in that country, you’re not counted against the quota.”

Adversity was the theme of our discussions.  Mat Hagen was introspective when asked about that topic.  “I got a phone call from Coach Luongo offering me a scholarship.  It feels like a long time ago.  I wouldn’t change anything that’s happened.  Both CJ and I have had some tough times here as well as some good times.  I know that being here has helped me grow through adversities, from knowing whether the program would be here or not or who would be coaching.  My four years has prepared me for the real world.”

Groh added, “I think that it’s great to come in here and learn to deal with adversity, like Mat said.  It’s a great challenge and a time to face things that you’ve never faced before.  Hockey’s been an up-and-down for me personally, but it’s been great for me.”

Allan isn’t satisfied with the results that he’s gotten in college.  “I was pretty successful in junior, but I obviously haven’t really done much offensively here.  I think that I’ve matured a lot as a player.  I’ve had to change my game to be successful at this level.  I’ve become a lot more well-rounded as a player.  Am I happy with where I’m at?  No, not really.”

Where do the seniors see the team in five years?  CJ was quick with his response: “Hopefully with the same coach.”

Alex expressed confidence: “I think that it’ll be great.  We’re in the league, there’s support like I’ve never seen before, and we’ve got a coach who wants to come in here and put a stamp on the program.  We’ve got a good group of recruits coming in.”

CJ added, “I think that Dr. Altenkirch has been great with his support, and now that we have a coach here that believes in what we’re doing with school, I think we’re going to be good.”

Mat finished us out: “Just from what we’ve seen here for the first couple of months.  The way that this program is going this year compared to our first three years, there’s a big difference.  Everything was thrown together last minute.  This year, everything is more organized, and you feel like you’re being treated better.  In theory, this should make us better on-ice.  Then you look at the support that the fans bring, and everything is there for the program to be successful.”

It’s been a rough start to this season, and it’s been a tough time for our seniors, but there is no quit in them.

@uahhockey is now @weloveuahhockey

In the midst of the chirp-fest last week, I started thinking about the fact that it would make sense for us to hand the @uahhockey handle over to the program.  When we started, there wasn’t anyone doing coverage of the program on Twitter, and we were happy to fill that void.  It was coming to be that the Twitter community was acting as if we were the University, and no amount of disclaiming to the contrary was going to make that clear to people who don’t obsessively follow our Twitter feed (which we don’t recommend, FYI).  When the University kicked off an official Twitter feed under @uahhky, as we noted earlier today (before editing it to add information about the changeover), it became even clearer that it’s what should be done.  When the University reached out, we were ready to make the change.

I quickly threw ideas out in my head about what the account should be, and I quickly settled on @weloveuahhockey.  I think that’s perfectly clear.  We orchestrated the changes so that there’d be no chance that someone could swoop in and take @uahhockey out from underneath both of us.

So, go follow @uahhockey.  They’re here, they’re official, and they will represent the University well.  If you were following us at that account, you now automatically follow @weloveuahhockey, and you will need to follow @uahhockey anew.  Sorry about that, but there’s no way that we can gift your follows to them (much as we’d like to do so).

Hopefully this will reduce any confusion.

The Home Weekend That Was: Bemidji 2013

We’ve got three photographers scrambling around downstairs at UAH hockey games, and we think that you like what you’ll see.  Chris Brightwell has posted his photos from Friday night and Saturday night, and we’ve got photos from Jazzmine Jordan and Timothy Burns as well.

First up are Jazzmine’s photos:

Jamie Kendra Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Jamie Kendra
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Charger players sign autographs on Friday night. Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Charger players sign autographs on Friday night.
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

In the tunnel Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

In the tunnel
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Carmine Guerriero Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Carmine Guerriero
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Jack Prince Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Jack Prince
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Guerriero and Carlson Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Guerriero and Carlson
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Carmine Guerriero Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Carmine Guerriero
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Ben Reinhardt Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Ben Reinhardt
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid and Anderson White Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid and Anderson White
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Dr. E. J. Brophy sings the national anthem prior to Friday's game. Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Dr. E. J. Brophy sings the national anthem prior to Friday’s game.
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Dr. Robert Altenkirch skates the ceremonial puck onto the ice. Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Dr. Robert Altenkirch skates the ceremonial puck onto the ice.
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Kyle Lysaght, welcome back to Huntsville. Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Kyle Lysaght, welcome back to Huntsville.
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Brothers gotta hug. Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Brothers gotta hug.
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

To be fair, this sign is up for every opponent, and not just hockey.  It really needs to be taken down. Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

To be fair, this sign is up for every opponent, and not just hockey. It really needs to be taken down.
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Joakim Broberg Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Joakim Broberg
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Alex Allan Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Alex Allan
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Jack Prince Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Jack Prince
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Here’s Timothy’s shots:

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Kyle drops the puck. Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Kyle drops the puck.
Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Whip it. Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Whip it.
Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Pep Band Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Pep Band
Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Celly — hockey hugs! Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Celly — hockey hugs!
Photo credit: Timothy Burns

There's the cat. Photo credit: Timothy Burns

There’s the cat.
Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

It's ref season! Photo credit: Timothy Burns

It’s ref season!
Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Pretty sure this is Matt Larose's bucket. Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Pretty sure this is Matt Larose’s bucket.
Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Doesn't that look great? Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Doesn’t that look great?
Photo credit: Timothy Burns

IMG_0106

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

Photo credit: Timothy Burns

This was a tough weekend for the boys, with only one goal for.  UAH has yet to score a goal 5-on-5 this season; if the disallowed goal from Friday night been good, that statement would be false.  The team has struggled to score for the last few seasons, but the good takeaway from the weekend is the great team defense on Saturday night.  Carmine Guerriero looked great in net, but his defense gave him a lot of help: intercepted passes, checking players in the crease, sticks in the way, shins in the way.  Bemidji State only had a handful of Grade A chances on Saturday, which is something that you can’t say about Friday.

We can hope that this progression continues next weekend into Ferris State.  Everyone enjoy your week: we’ve got more good information for you starting with Michael’s look around the WCHA on Monday.

#hateweek Dénouement

So #hateweek was fun, yeah?

I still can’t believe that the official Bemidji State University Twitter account re-tweeted the following:

You should look at the chirp-fest that ensued from there.  Our Twitter timeline has all of it on October 23rd, though you’ll have to scroll for a while.  Some choice ones:

and

Here’s the thing: in all the hate that I — and it should be clear that it was me alone, although I think Michael found it funny when he wasn’t cringing — let loose this week to stoke the rivalry, I never said that we were going to dominate the Beavers on the ice this weekend.  Bill Parcells is famous for saying, “You are what your record says you are.”  Anyone that’s read about the program for five minutes knows that we’ve seen some hard times.

But we’re on the way up.

Maybe we don’t beat Bemidji in either game this weekend.  That’s okay: the series would just be 19-15-3 at UAH.  But y’all, they own us in Minnesota.  It’s bad — 8-22-1 bad.  And it’s not just there, either: the Beavers have gone 23-3-3 in meetings since 2006.  Soak that one in.  As rivalries go, this has been like the hammer and the nail of late.

But.

Michael said it best at the end of his retrospective of the rivalry:

Now it will, to the delight of both the fans in Huntsville and Bemidji. We expect great, loud crowds at Propst Arena on Friday and Saturday, letting Bemidji know that UAH hockey is indeed back, and that the Chargers intend to swing the series record back in their favor, no matter how long it takes.

And they can hate on that all they want.

It’ll take us some time.  We have to build our identity.  But the boys are going to lay that foundation this season.  You’ll see it.  It’s coming.

Right now, the best reason for #hateweek is that they have our number.  Lucky for us, it’s 867-5309

“There ain’t a lot of one-shot goals.”: Mike Corbett on perseverance and process

We all know Mike Corbett’s story by now: stepped into the Air Force top AC job when Derek Schooley left to start Robert Morris’s program; became the assistant head coach under Frank Serratore, his old college coach; interviewed at Anchorage before their AD was fired; came to Huntsville, loved it, and committed to being here.  So what kind of guy is Corbs?

“I’m a players’ coach more than anything,” he told me in his office one afternoon in late September.  He’s got to create an identity for this program, one that we all know full well has seen four coaches in five seasons.  What will his Chargers look like?  “We’re gonna be disciplined, we’re going to have attention to detail.  Competing hard, winning races, winning battles — that’s going to be the basis of our success.”

Mike Corbett coaches UAH against Northeastern

Mike Corbett looks to the video board with Cody Marooney, Doug Reid, and Ben Reinhardt seated in front of him.

There are nearly 30 young men on the UAH roster for 2013-14, and that’s going to be different for a team that had just a handful of spare players last season. “When you’ve got the young guys coming in, they know the history, but they really only know what’s in front of them today,” Corbett said of an 11-man freshman class that follows seven returning sophomores.  “Maybe there was only two or three guys in the stands every night [last year].  Now we’ve got the possibility of having nine guys in the stands every night, including a third goalie.”

Any college coach has probably seen a good chunk of the other team’s players before while scouting them in juniors, and Corbett is no different, even though he was only recruiting Americans to a service academy. “With the kids we’ve got, I’ve seen some of them play, but I couldn’t recruit the Canadian kids, so I didn’t focus on them as much unless they were just dominating a game — those games where you’d say, ‘This guy’s pretty good, I don’t care who you’re with.’ ” As such, Corbett didn’t have a lot of pre-conceived notions about his team.  “I came in and told them, ‘Boys, it’s a clean slate.’ ”

Goaltending is a concern for every team, and the Chargers are no different.  Senior CJ Groh has just 12 NCAA games under his belt, and freshmen Matt Larose and Carmine Guerriero both saw time against the season opener at Northeastern.

“Who plays the first night is going to be the guy that impresses us the most,” Corbett said.  “If you look at CJ Groh and add up his ice time, he’s a second-semester freshman.  While he’s only got one year left, we’ve got three guys who are at a freshman level in terms of minutes in game situations.  If one guy grabs and goes with it, that’s great.”  Corbett sees good goaltending as critical: “When you’ve got a good goalie, it seems that you’re always in the game.”

Helping those goaltenders out will be the responsibility of the defensemen, and Corbett likes what he sees along the blue line. “You look at a guy like Anderson White — he’s got all the potential in the world to be a big-time player in the WCHA,” he said.  “Then you’ve got a guy like Graeme Strukoff and our other juniors who play well.  You’ve got a little guy in Steve Koshey who moves the puck very well and has great numbers in junior hockey.  He didn’t get a great opportunity last year to be able to show what he can do.  We’ve got a great mix of everything.  If we’ve got experience, that’s where it lies.”

If you watched UAH games or read the boxscores, you know the sad truth: we didn’t light a lot of lamps last year.  Corbett is optimistic. “I said to [UAH assistant coach] Gavin [Morgan] in practice the other day, ‘We’ve got a lot of guys who put up a lot of points in juniors.’  It’s a gauge.  I’m not one to be a stat-watcher, but I am a big believer in history.”  And it’s not a case of “bad, junior hockey goals”, either.  “You can look at assists and say, ‘Oh, this is a phantom assist,’ but you can’t take goals away.  Goals are goals — they’re right off your stick, pretty or ugly.”  Corbett is ready to go with his players: “We’ve got guys who had history.”

But a team that scored just 24 goals agains NCAA competition is as close to rock bottom as you can get.  “It’s gonna be a process to get some confidence,” Corbett said.  “There ain’t a lot of one-shot goals.  If there are, the goalie isn’t going to be playing for very long.”

Corbett does have some concerns about how his team will get into the offensive zone. “I’m worried about our presence on our line rushes and our breakouts.  If we can get into the offensive zone with good pressure, we’ll get those second-chance shots when we get the puck to the blue.”

But Corbett doesn’t think that he’s alone in that feeling.  “If you listen to the pre-season conference call with the coaches, eight out of the ten guys will tell you the same thing about the offense,” Corbett said.  “The only guys that are probably satisfied with their scoring are Mankato and Tech.”

Mike Corbett with Brice Geoffrion and Doug Reid

Mike Corbett converses with Brice Geoffrion (l) and Doug Reid (r) at at UAH practice. (Photo courtesy UAH Sports Information)

The Chargers have some solid senior leadership in the system. “Brice [Geoffrion] and Alex [Allan] are huge for us,” Corbett said.  “I reached out to Brice right when I got the job and wanted to get information from.  I asked him a lot of questions, and he wrote me about a four-page email telling me the pluses, the negatives, and everything in-between.”

Corbett is ready to lean on his sturdy forward, who sports a new number — 57 — this season. “Brice’s biggest asset is his leadership.  He’s seeing now as a 23-year-old senior everything possible out of his experience in college hockey.  He’s got to be thinking, ‘I’ve got to take everything that my dad’s said to me, and my grandfather, and my brothers, and I’ll put it to use here in my last college season, before it’s too late to use it.’ ”

As with Geoffrion, Corbett thinks that Allan is a key to the Chargers’ success this season.  “You watch Alex Allan skate around in practice, and you know he can score 20 goals at this level,” he said.  “We want him to not put too much pressure on himself to produce, but at the same time we want him to know that we rely on him to be big for us on the ice, to play on the power play, and so on.  As much as you want guys to score goals, he’s got to be a threat.  If you’re consistently a threat, they’re going to start going in for you.”

All of this doesn’t work unless the players have comfort with the coaching staff.  How is Corbett’s staff managing the turnover?  “We’re still finding the right way that fits our group and fits our school that aligns with the ways that we as a staff think a Division I program should be run,” Corbett said.

“We’re getting those guys to feel comfortable around us — it’s not a dictatorship, it’s not ‘my way or the highway’.  I need those guys more than they need me, because look at the turnover in this office.  But I ain’t going anywhere — that’s my statement.  We’re going to build an identity here, and that takes time.”

Corbett is confident in his ability to coach his team.  “Kids want to learn.  They say that they don’t, but they do,” he said.  “They want to improve, and they want somebody to be there to watch them improve.  I’m not going to say what’s happened in the past.  It may not be the way that we’ve done it here, but it’s the way that we’re going to do it.”

Corbett seeks to be approachable.  “I have an open door.  I want to hear about these guy’s problems off the ice — school, social, whatever.  Because guess what — I’ve got problems, too.  We all do.  I’m just a regular guy just like you.  We want regular guys who want to be a part of something that’s bigger than themselves.  That’s what we’re after.”

And just as much as you have to worry about this season in the college game, you have to always be scouting for the next and the next and the next.  What does Corbett want to see? “Do we want the most talented guy?  Sure.  But we want the right players.”  A new league home will help, but Corbett says that’s just the beginning of the process.  “The WCHA may get us some interest, but we have to build the program that will really attract those players.”

“Do you want to be someone who makes a difference?  Those are the kinds of guys that we’re looking for right now.”  Corbett thinks that UAH is an appealing place for young men.  “Coming here and being the guy has got to be appealing.  Coming to a game and seeing you on the third line at a big-time program isn’t going to catch the scout’s eye.”

Before I went to meet with Coach Corbett, Dr. Brophy told me, “If you aren’t excited about Charger hockey before you go in there, you will be when you leave.”  He was right.

“It seems real.” Dr. E. J. Brophy on the State of UAH Hockey

Courtesy UAH Sports Information

Courtesy UAH Sports Information

Dr. Altenkirch was certainly the leader of the effort to get UAH Hockey back on stable footing, but his right hand man was Dr. E. J. Brophy, our athletic director.  After we talked to Bob, our next visit was with E. J.  If you’ve never met him, you’re going to get a hearty handshake, an anecdote, and a good feeling about the leadership that he provides to the University.  A standout catcher for UAB baseball, Dr. Brophy rose to AAA in the Phillies’ system before returning to his alma mater, getting his Ph.D., and heading advancement with the Blazers.  He next became the AD at West Alabama before being named to replace the late Jim Harris here in Huntsville.

“[Getting accepted] seems real. The part where you had to pinch yourself to see if it was real was in January in Dallas,” Dr. Brophy said.  “Until you get the invitation, you just really don’t know.”

After getting into a new league, Brophy then had to replace Kurt Kleinendorst as head coach, who returned to the professional ranks.  Mike Corbett ended up being the hire.  When asked what Coach Corbett brings to the program, Dr. Brophy said, “The first thing was that he didn’t have to get new towels. Anytime you start talking about the United States Air Force Academy, or any other military academy, you’re talking about phenomenal discipline. Those kids don’t even know the meaning of the word quit.”

Corbett was a great “get” for the Chargers. “He’s well known all over the country, and he was a finalist at Anchorage. Their loss is our gain, as they might have gotten him had they not made a change at the top of their athletic department.”

If you ask Dr. Brophy about his comparison for Coach Corbett, he’ll always say, “Mike to me is the Kirby Smart of college hockey. He was the top assistant in college hockey. Boy, he has brought so much energy here.”

All Charger fans want wins for the team, but Dr. Brophy has off-ice goals for the boys as well. “We want a quality human being who’s a quality student who’s a quality athlete. UAH is about having super people that are super students at our university,” he said.  “Right now they’re doing that — the team GPA has been well above a 3.0, with a 3.2 this past year. Our entire department is above the UAH average as a whole.”  If you’re a UAH student or alunnus, you know that’s not any easy feat.

No college athletic program can survive without help from its boosters. “Anybody that wants to give money to any program at UAH — engineering, hockey, the math department — we’d be happy to have it.”  Dr. Brophy prides himself on being a builder. “This type of program is kinda my cup of tea,” he said of the Blue Line Club.  “I ran the Blazer Club at UAB, and I ran the Tiger Club at West Alabama.

Some fans were a little surprised at the sudden jump to $1,000 for membership in the Blue Line Club.  “We had several levels [at both UAB and UWA], and the $1000 level was always the most popular at those institutions. Here, after evaluating the Blue Line Club and seeing what direction we’re going with a new coach and a new attitude with everything on stable footing, it seemed like it was time. Giving is going very well.”

But if you don’t have $1,000 to give to the program, your contributions are still welcome. “We’d love to have people give whatever they want to give. And when we have Blue Line Club events like the luncheons, we want everyone to come.”  Luncheons will happen every Friday of home weekends during the season, and we’ll have information for you each week as to how you can be a part of it.

“[Corporate sponsorship] is good,” he said.  “Getting into the WCHA opened the gates of heaven.  Any doubts in any recruit’s mind, in any fan’s mind, and in any sponsor’s mind are gone.  We’re playing this fall — it’s real, it’s here.”

There was some — we believe manufactured — controversy this summer about scheduling conflicts between UAH and the Huntsville Havoc, but Dr. Brophy isn’t sure why. “Ever since I got to Huntsville, the VBC and Huntsville Havoc have done nothing but bend over backup to help the Chargers.  We’ve never had a single disagreement — ever.  I don’t know who is trying to manufacture this acrimony, but it’s not there.”

Fans of the whole athletic program know that it can be hard to get to see your Chargers on the court and the ice.  “On the weekends, we seem to get just as good of crowds at basketball if we played at 3:00 as 5:00.”  The University will de-conflict hockey and basketball this season.  “We had talked about even before we got into the WCHA that we’d be playing basketball games on the weekend with the girls at 3 and the guys at 5.  That’ll be different for UNA, of course.”

We asked Dr. Altenkirch about the role of athletics in the University’s ecosystem, so I wanted to ask Dr. Brophy the same thing. “Anytime you have a university, and you just have a university without athletics, it becomes a place to go to school and go home.  That’s very important, but I don’t think that you have a well-rounded university without athletics.  I feel like our athletic programs can, to some extent, be the front porch of our university.  …  I think that our University is important to Huntsville, and I think that we bring a small part of that impact — but an important one.”

Dr. Brophy’s message to the fans?  “Come to our games.  Buy season tickets.  Give us some of your money.”  We can’t say it any better than that.

UAH Picked Last by WCHA Media in Preseason Poll

Jack Hittinger of the Bemidji Pioneer is coordinating the 2013-14 WCHA Media Poll.  I’m one of the 25 voters.  Here are the results of the poll, which I’m not sure that you’ll like:

Minnesota State nearly unanimous; but league has parity

Leitner, Stepan named player, rookie of the year

BEMIDJI, Minn. — With six new teams in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association this season, many predicted more parity in the new-look league.

According to members of the WCHA media, that prediction should hold true — although most think Minnesota State will finish on top a year after a fantastic season and an NCAA tournament appearance.

The Bemidji Pioneer WCHA Preseason Media Poll shows the Mavericks as a near-unanimous choice to win the league, garnering 22-first place votes. A panel of 25 members of the WCHA media voted on a predicted order of finish, as well as individual awards.

Despite nearly everyone in the media selecting MSU to take first in the league, the disparity between the Mavericks (who earned 244 total points) and the second place team was just 26 points.

Ferris State earned two first place votes and 218 points for a solid second place finish.

Alaska was picked to finish third with 68 points.

The teams in the middle of the pack were separated by 12 points. Bowling Green (149 points) was picked to finish fourth, followed by Michigan Tech (144) and Northern Michigan (137).

Lake Superior State (117) was chosen to finish seventh, Bemidji State eighth (108) and Alaska Anchorage ninth (54). Alabama-Huntsville, who was an independent last season, was picked to finish 10th out of 10 teams with 36 points.

The media also selected the league’s Preseason Player and Rookie of the Year, as well as an All-WCHA team.

Minnesota State swept the Player and Rookie of the Year awards. MSU forward Matt Leitner was the league media’s near-unanimous pick for preseason Player of the Year; while Mavericks’ forward Zach Stepan was the media’s pick for preseason Rookie of the Year.

Leitner was also named to the All-WCHA team as a forward along with Bowling Green’s Ryan Carpenter and Michigan Tech’a Alex Petan.

Defensemen named to the All-WCHA team were Minnesota State’s Zach Palmquist and Ferris State’s Jason Binkley.

MSU’s Stephon Williams was voted the goaltender on the All-WCHA team.

Results

Team (First-Place votes) Total Points

1. Minnesota State (22) 244

2. Ferris State (2) 218

3. Alaska 168

4. Bowling Green 149

5. Michigan Tech 144

6. Northern Michigan 137

7. Lake Superior State 117

8. Bemidji State (1) 108

9. Alaska Anchorage 54

10. Alabama Huntsville 36

Preseason Player Of The Year

Matt Leitner, F, Minnesota State

Others receiving votes: Garrett Thompson, F, Ferris State; Stephon Williams, G, Minnesota State

Preseason Rookie Of The Year

Zach Stepan, F, Minnesota State

Others receiving votes: Tomas Sholl, G, Bowling Green; Brendan Harms, F, Bemidji State; Mathias Dahlstrom, G, Northern Michigan; Cliff Watson, D, Michigan Tech

Preseason All-WCHA Team

Forwards

Matt Leitner, Minnesota State; Alex Petan, Michigan Tech; Ryan Carpenter, Bowling Green

Others receiving votes: Cody Kunyk, Alaska; Reed Seckel, Northern Michigan; Stephan Vigier, Northern Michigan

Defensemen

Jason Binkley, Ferris State; Zach Palmquist, D, Minnesota State

Others receiving votes: Matt Prapavessis, Bemidji State; Ralfs Freibergs, Bowling Green; Colton Parayko, Alaska; CJ Ludwig, Northern Michigan

Goaltender

Stephon Williams, Minnesota State

Others receiving votes: CJ Motte, Ferris State; Andrew Walsh, Bemidji State.

The following media members took part in the Bemidji Pioneer WCHA Preseason Media Poll:

Justin Bradford, ESPN Radio Nashville; Bruce Cech, KCBF 820/UAF play-by-play; Dave Danis, Northern Michigan play-by-play; Erik Drygas, KCBF 820 AM/UAF color analyst; Drew Evans, BGSUHockey.com; Casey Ford, ESPN Radio UP; Shane Frederick, Mankato Free Press; Kevin Gordon, Bowling Green Sentinel-Tribune; Kurt Haider, KENI News/KTZN Sports/UAA hockey play-by-play; Dirk Hembroff, 93.5 FM/MTU play-by-play; Dominic Hennig, 97.3 FM/FSU Play-by-Play; Jack Hittinger, Bemidji Pioneer; Dan Kowalski, 97.3 FM/FSU Color Commentator; Budd McLaughlin, AL.com hockey writer; Geof Morris, UAHHockey.com; Kevin Meyers, Bowling Green Radio Sports Organization; Tim O’Donnell, Fairbanks Daily News-Miner; Rob Roos, Sault Evening News; Martin Slagter, Big Rapids Pioneer; Jerry Taylor, ABC10 UP; John Wagner, Toledo Blade; Matt Wellens, Marquette Daily Mining Journal; Kevin Wells, KT UU-Channel 2; Scott Williams, Lakeland Public Television/KBUN Sportsradio, Brandon Veale/Michael Bleach, Daily Mining Gazette.

Here’s my ballot: 1. Mankato 2. Tech 3. Ferris 4. Alaska 5. BG 6. NMU 7. Lake State 8. Bemidji 9. UAH 10. Anchorage

Why do I have UAH one spot above the bottom?  It’s pretty simple: we’ll play fourteen league games at home, and last year, we took a point off of the Mavericks in our building.  As unsettled as the situation at UAH is, the situation in Anchorage was worse (again, in my opinion), given that they changed ADs mid-stream.  This is belief in the Chargers and not disdain for the Seawolves.

I hope that I’m wrong.  I hope that we’re playing on the road March 14th and 15th.  I just don’t see it happening, not with a squad this young starting from the bottom.

Michael or I will put these media polls out every week, and I’ll always be willing to tell you what my votes are.  For this initial one, I went with my gut in going Tech over Ferris.  We shall see how this goes.  Also: who the hell voted Bemidji #1?  Come on now.

Interview: Dr. Robert Altenkirch

Photo credit: encyclopediaofalabama.org

Photo credit: encyclopediaofalabama.org

We could have had all the support in the world to change the fate of our beloved hockey program, but only one man could make the decision: Dr. Robert Altenkirch. He signs his emails as “Bob”, and I can confirm that he reads his own emails. When I sent a message to set up our interview, he responded at 8:00 p.m. on a Monday night. That should tell you a lot about the man right there.

So what made Dr. Altenkirch reverse Chancellor Portera’s decision? “There was a lot of interest from external constituents, and a lot of interest from internal constituents as well.”

Obviously, deciding to keep the varsity program was just the first step on the road to stability. “Our focus was getting in a conference. We knew that we probably wouldn’t survive as the only independent among 59 teams. That left us with two options: the western with the WCHA, and the other was the Atlantic [Hockey Association].” Of the risk, he said, “We basically shot the dice. We focused on the western.”

UAH had been in this place before with the CCHA before it folded.  Just because the WCHA had nine teams didn’t necessarily mean that they’d take any old 10th team that came along. That said, there are hangups with taking any team to D-I these days — which is, in my eyes, a big mistake driven by football and basketball that hurts the other member sports. For the WCHA, expansion to 10 meant poaching from another conference, staying at nine schools, or picking UAH.

As such, UAH had some selling to do. “I think that we made the right arguments. Our research classification would be the highest in the conference. We bring a long tradition. It’s a nice place to visit — it’s no more difficult to get to Huntsville, Alabama than it is to get to Fairbanks, Alaska.”

As you might expect, travel was a big concern for the member schools.  The new WCHA has two teams in Alaska (Alaska and Alaska-Anchorage), one in Alabama, two in Minnesota (Minnesota State-Mankato and our hated rival, Bemidji State), one in Ohio (Bowling Green State), one in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan (Ferris State), and three in the UP (Michigan Tech, Northern Michigan, and Lake Superior State). To call the WCHA “far flung” would be an understatement.  However, the nature of travel gave us an advantage that we exploited.

“If you look at the schedule, ten teams works better than nine teams,” Altenkirch said. “Ten teams reduces the frequency of double trips to Alaska substantially. There is a cost savings involved.” To drive the point home, he developed a spreadsheet that showed how UAH would reduce those travel outlays — he even showed it to me in the UAH presentation to the WCHA. “The number of double-trips to Alaska in any given season is reduced by 22% with us in the league. One of those trips runs about $40,000, so if you can avoid that, you’re doing good.”

Athletics conferences are about academics as well as athletics.  The Big Ten started off as a conference of academic peers that wanted to play each other in varsity sports.  That also explains their judiciousness in expansion, as they do not want to dilute the brand.  UAH played that card in the pitch. “But before [making the travel arguments], we showed them that our hockey players are good students, too.” This fits right in with the GPA goals of all UAH student-athletes, who as a group hold a GPA in excess of 3.00, which is no mean feat at UAH.

UAH’s academic ability is well-known, but playing high-profile Division I opponents will help more prospective students and employers know that UAH is here for the challenge. UAH has a classification of “very high” research activity by the Carnegie Classification of Institutes of Higher Education, joining 16 other D-I hockey programs: Boston University, Brown University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Harvard University, Michigan State University, The Ohio State University, Pennsylvania State University, Princeton University, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, the University Connecticut, the University of Massachusetts, the University of Michigan, the University of Minnesota, the University of Notre Dame, and Yale University. The chances are that you’ve heard of most of all of those schools, often through their athletic exploits. UAH is one of 106 schools classified as “very high”, and 29% of those are D-I college hockey schools.

Asked if the CCIHE classification made a difference, Altenkirch said, “I think so. They always say that you’re judged by the company that you keep. It’s nice to be next to company that accomplishes something. Eighty to 85 percent of our total expenditures are on research.”

I asked Dr. Altenkirch where Athletics fits in the larger scope of the University’s mission. He said, “I think that Athletics is part of the overall student experience. It provides a little campus life and gets the community excited about the institution. It helps us recruit students. Not all of our student-athletes are on full scholarships. Many of them are paying customers, and to me, [athletics] is a good character builder. Those hockey players don’t do well in the classroom because they’re good hockey players. They do well in the classroom because they’re well-regimented.”

I then turned the discussion to UAH’s new head coach, Mike Corbett. Dr. Altenkirch is confident in what Coach Corbett will bring to the program. “He spent ten years at the Air Force Academy,” he said. “If they’re not the most successful program from winning percentage in the country in the past few years, they’re close. Obviously, they’re recruiting good students, and there’s discipline there. All those pieces fit for us.”

Of the University’s mid-term goals for the hockey program, he said, “I think that what you’ll see is a phenomenon where we’ll win the conference and play for something. Right now, we’re realistically at the bottom. I think that will change, because a lot of young men will look at things and say, ‘I could go to one of the top-ranked schools and might not get to play. But if I go to UAH, I’ll play.’ These things cycle. I’m looking for the team to win a lot more than they have these past few years. I think that the program within a five-year period will be at least at a .500 record.”

Is hockey a way that we remind that UAH exists? “I think that all of our teams are like that,” he said. “We build a sense of community. Let’s face it: there will be a lot more teams that come to a basketball game or a hockey match than will come to hear a highly-technical research lecture. It’s a connection with the community, especially the kids.”

What’s Dr. Altenkrich’s top priority for our fans? “The first is to come to the games. It’s not very attractive to an athletes to come to and empty house.”

Are you excited yet about hockey? The Bemidji State series is coming sooner than you think!

Quick Update

We’ve got two short things to throw your way:

  1. We’re interviewing Dr. Altenkirch about the past, present, and future of the program. We’ve got a list of questions that we’re thinking of asking, but you might have some ideas that we haven’t thought of.  So: if you could ask Dr. Altenkirch one thing about the program, what would it be?
  2. We put out a call on Facebook the other day for writers and photographers.  We’ve already had great responses with the photographers (although we welcome more interest), but we’re still hoping to hear about writers and/or editors.  We’re planning features, short pieces, and recaps during the season, and we’d love to bring along bright young hockey minds for the ride.  We pay in high fives, bylines/credits, and your copyright on the material.  We will also give recommendations to future employers.  If you’re interested, drop me an email at g@uahhockey.com and we’ll trade ideas.