Wisconsin 3, UAH 2

With the Chargers having played one of their best periods of the season, I started to think of what UAH’s season was looking like at this point.  I came down to it: we’re Gipsy Danger in Pacific Rim.  In amongst all the various imagery of that mighty Jaeger, it’s the one at the breach that does it for me: left arm ripped off, right arm wielding a sword, bent down on one knee, sword in the sea floor, weathering the storm.

That’s what last night felt like.  It’s what tonight felt like.

The Badgers scored two goals just :49 apart in the first five minutes of the game, and you could just feel it coming on.

It didn’t.  Carmine Guerriero (42 sv) just wouldn’t quit in this one.  When he saw them, he stopped them.  The boys did a fantastic job of guarding the house and keeping the Badgers from slicing through the slot for goals.  Many of those 45 shots-on were from well outside the prime real estate.  That’s exactly what they’re doing: weathering the storm.  Take all the shots you want from outside, guys: we’ll get Carmine and Matt lanes to see the pucks, and they will stop them.

The Chargers’ first goal came when Chad Brears found a little time and space near the net on a 5×3 power play.  The goal is his team-leading fourth of the season.

Now after pitching a phenomenal game, you’d hope that it would be a one-goal deficit in time to pull Carmine and get the extra skater on.  Unfortunately, Chase Drake found Tyler Barnes right near the net with time and space, and Barnes found a small 5-hole opening to put the Badgers up 3-1.  A few seconds later, Mike Corbett took his timeout and put a sixth skater on the ice.

It worked!  While the Fox Sports Wisconsin cameramen were too busy listening to the announcers’ non-pertinent commentary about one of their skaters trying to extend a goal-scoring streak to 7, Jack Prince sliced through the defense and beat Landon Peterson (18 sv).  Suddenly it was :18.4 left and a one-goal lead facing down six blue jerseys.

Alas, it was not to be.  But if you watch Pacific Rim, you’ll see that Gipsy Danger takes a beating, gives a beating back, and eventually wins.  That “eventually wins” isn’t going to be this year, but you can see it coming.  With the team struggling to score goals, it’s all about supporting Guerriero and Larose in net, keeping pucks to the outside, and punching back when you can.

I’m sure that nobody in that locker room believes in moral victories.  I know that I believe in the victories to come.  You can see them off in the distance.

[I tried vainly to find screenshots and video clips, but the studios have it locked down.]

Your Favorite Charger Hockey Memory Is …

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

Pretty sure this is CJ Groh’s bucket.
Photo credit: Timothy Burns

It’s been a hard fall for UAH Charger hockey.  But we all know that the ship is turning around, and we can rest our hopes in the future, which we all know is bright.

But with this off week between the 18-game fall and 20-game spring, it’s time for us to ask: What’s your favorite Charger hockey memory?  Mine isn’t the 1998 national championship game, which happened my freshman year.  It’s not Keenan Desmet’s overtime, game-winning goal in the last CHA tournament in 2010, a game that propelled the boys to their second NCAA appearance in four seasons.

No, my favorite Charger Hockey memory was UAH’s 5-4 overtime defeat of now-conference-foe Ferris State University at the 2002 UConn Ice Classic.  “You’re crazy!” is probably what you’re saying.  Hear me out, though:

  1. Everyone loves an overtime game winner.  The radio crew loved Gerald Overton, and to see him bang that one in?  Come on.
  2. Go look at the box: two runs of three straight goals.  That game was exciting, end-to-end, barnstorming hockey!
  3. Two goals by Ryan Leasa!  I love that guy!
  4. ONE OF THOSE GOALS WAS SHORTHANDED!!!  Tell me the last time that you saw a defenseman score shorthanded.  That team was lousy with guys who liked to put shorties in the net — yeah, you, Charlebois — but seeing a defenseman put one in was quality.  Nine Chargers scored a man short in 2002-03, including Jeremy Schreiber, another defenseman, which I had forgotten until I looked at the scoring table.
  5. Two goals for the Zirnis-Ross-Bushey line, which is by numbers the most successful line of the modern Charger era, even if Igor was only on that line for part of a season.  They were clicking that night, as was Charlebois-Hawes-Bresciani.  That was quite the 1-2 punch.
  6. The best player on the ice got just one point — Chris Kunitz, whom you now see starring in Pittsburgh.  He wasn’t a happy camper after that one.

That post-game atmosphere was fun.  The two CHA invitees (Findlay, UAH) had taken down the home school (UConn) and the top-five ranked school.  Remember, this was the Ferris State that won 31 games and made the NCAA tournament, the school’s first appearance in the dance.  Joel Bresciani was grinning ear-to-ear.  Even Coach Ross was in a good mood.  It was a good time.  I have a huge smile on my face just thinking about it.  I was in the building for it, and it was glorious.

What’s your favorite Charger Hockey memory?  Sound off in the comments on Facebook, tweet us back, or send an email to g@uahhockey.com.  We want to know!

Never Question Our Heart

In a piece about BG being embarrassed and in disarray, Ryan Satkowiak wrote the following:

And where was that fire Saturday? Did BG just assume it would run over Huntsville? Has it learned that its still is not a team that can look at anyone as an “easy win”? Huntsville entered Saturday’s game with 13 goals in 15 games. That’s .86 per game. BG proceeded to allow more than FOUR TIMES their season total. Huntsville increased their season goal totals by 30 percent. With one game.

I mean, seriously. The last time Huntsville beat a Division-I team, I was still a college student. And not in that farewell, applying for jobs not really paying attention to school phase. It was last November, specifically Nov. 16 against Lake Superior. In the time since, Huntsville had lost 26-straight D-I games.

But if you’ve read anything I’ve written the last two months, you’d know how bad they are. I’ve been sure to let you know. In fairness to them, I exaggerate for effect. They’re like BG in 2009-10. Most nights they’ll lose handily, but every third game or so they’ll put out a good effort and give the opposing team a scare. This season they’ve had one-goal losses to Bemidji, Ferris, St. Cloud and Western Michigan.

To quote Bill Parcells, you are what your record says you are.  At 1-15-0, I think that it’s fair to say that we’re just not that good of a hockey team this season.  Stakowiak’s second paragraph makes that case pretty clearly.  Some people were wondering if we’d go winless.  Everyone on the message boards always said that that first win would happen, but it was clear that no one wanted to be the first.

BG was the first team to lose to us in 2013-14.  You are what your record says you are.

What I’m really mad about, though, is this one sentence, which I’ll quote again for effect:

Most nights they’ll lose handily, but every third game or so they’ll put out a good effort and give the opposing team a scare.

I went round and around with Satkowiak about this on Twitter.  Here are two important pieces in that discussion — but please, click on that linked sentence to see the whole thing for yourself.

I believe that the following people have a right to question our heart: our coaches and our players.  They’re the people that really know what’s going on.  If you want to say that we’re not very good, that’s factual.  If you want to say what Inside College Hockey’s Mike Eidelbes said:

I saw UAH play Notre Dame a couple weeks ago. You guys know the talent’s not there. That’s a byproduct of being in college hockey limbo for two years. But the effort and attention to detail are there even on nights they know they’re going to be outmanned. To me, it seems like everyone has bought in to what Mike Corbett’s selling. It might be 2-3 years before the program turns the corner, but it appears that day will come.

… then you’re welcome to say that, too.  There’s a big, big difference between what Satkowiak stated and what Eidelbes stated.  The following are paraphrases of the arguments.

Satkowiak: “UAH is not good, and some nights, they don’t put forth the effort to win.  Some nights, they do, and you can see what that’s gotten them.  BG is not a program that can afford to ‘assume it would run over Huntsville’.”  While Satkowiak states that it’s poor wording (see above tweet), he then said:

Eidelbes: “UAH is not good, but they work hard and have great attention to detail.”  Since Eidelbes said nothing about whether BG should or should not have lost to UAH, it has to stop there.

I am never going to question our players’ heart and effort.  I will let the coaches do that.  I will let the players police that on their own.  I’m not going to do it myself, and like hell I will sit by and watch someone else do it.

But guess what, Ryan, you did say it.  Your words are there.  You even admitted that you used poor wording, so I’m not sure why you’re back-pedaling from that if you really meant it.

See y’all Friday.  I’m sure that the effort will be there to match those who doubt it.

UAH 4, BGSU 3, OT

Somewhere under there, Frank Misuraca cries for everyone to get off of him because he can't breathe.  (Credit: Todd Pavlack)

Somewhere under there, Frank Misuraca cries for everyone to get off of him because he can’t breathe. (Credit: Todd Pavlack)

Oh, you want to see the man of the hour? Okay.

(Credit: Todd Pavlack)

Wow.  What a game.  That would be an exhilarating game even if it wasn’t that first win all of our young men have been working and working and working to get.  But to have all of the frustration of this season to be decided on a last-second overtime goal?  COME ON.

So how did we get here?  I mean, it was tied at three after regulation time expired.  So there was some fun, yeah?

Yeah.

Sean Walker started off the scoring in the first for the Falcons, flinging a puck through traffic that I’m not sure Carmine Guerriero ever saw.  But after a few minutes, it was a Charger power play and …

… tic-tac-GOAL for Cody Marooney, his first collegiate marker.

The Chargers couldn’t pull ahead even with 1:06 of 5×3 late in the first when Brett Mohler (hooking) and Connor Kucera (boarding) took minor penalties.  Guerriero was still sharp after not a lot of pressure, and he stopped a couple of chances to end the frame.

Unfortunately for partisans in blue and white, the Falcons struck early in the 2nd, with Brent Tate slipping the defense to find a Cam Wojtala pass in the slot for a goal.

A couple of penalties on Marooney left the Chargers scrambling to cover Falcons, but the Chargers were crashing the point pretty hard.  BG countered by taking the puck wide to the boards while looking for cross-ice passes to the bottoms of the circle.  But they took their eyes off the puck for a second, and …

… it’s Matt Salhany time!

Who cares that the Falcons scored 52 seconds later?  Okay, we should all care, but the key thing is that the home side didn’t go up 3-1 late in the 2nd.  Instead, the margin was just one, and the boys knew that they had a very good chance at winning this one.

I will let these two tweets stand to vent my frustration with a broadcaster that was … sub-par but has a career that should have him be better.

Sorry, you mess with my alma mater and I’m gonna say something about it.  Back to hockey!

There were a lot of times where I could’ve tweeted this:

We're calling him CG35, and we're hope that he's okay with that.  (Credit: Todd Pavlack)

We’re calling him CG35, and we’re hope that he’s okay with that. (Credit: Todd Pavlack)

Then at the 12:30 mark of the third, Jack Prince had the puck just outside of the slot.

After that point, the boys were flying all over the ice.  There was a puck that ended up in the net before being taken back out and flipped in the air, but no amount of Prince arguments got the referees to change their mind, even with a review.  Presumably Jack tried a Cockney accent while he was at it.

A late tripping penalty on Brent Fletcher led to a BG power play with just 2:49.  Did the boys quit?  Hell no they didn’t.  Have you seen these guys quit?  Every WCHA coach praises their intensity.  Intensity is what made the PK happen.  The boys were again pressuring the D and looking for breakaways, and Joakim Broberg was tripped up.  4×4 for :31, and the penalty carried into overtime.

Overtime is a bit of a haze for me, but that’s mainly because it was just wide-open, end-to-end hockey, great goaltending at both ends, solid back-checking, strong passes through neutral ice, and good shots.  In other words:

But nothing, nothing, nothing replaces what Frank Misuraca did.

Oh, wait, yeah, this:

That “charge the hashes” stuff was pure Tim Thomas.  Steve Koshey helped out just enough to make sure that the puck was fluttering and rolling past BG sticks.  That the puck didn’t go in told you that this just might be the night.

MisuROCKET.

Good night, everybody.

Bowling Green 3, UAH 0

#28 Ben Reinhardt controls the puck behind the net.  (Credit: Todd Pavlack, BGSUHockey.com)

#28 Ben Reinhardt controls the puck behind the net. (Credit: Todd Pavlack, BGSUHockey.com)

Matt Larose stopped 40-of-43 shots on goal tonight, an effort that I’d rate as his best performance of the season (though his effort against Ferris was also very good). The Friday night blues weren’t played tonight, but the boys never could solve Bowling Green State University’s Tommy Burke, who logged his first collegiate shutout and the Chargers fall 3-0 to the Falcons on a snowy night in northwest Ohio that had many in their fan base missing the game in favor of the MAC championship game for their Falcons.

The Falcons’ best pressure was applied on special teams, whether they had the advantage or not.  Two of those three goals allowed were power-play goals.  One was a multiple-effort goal:

… and the second one came late in the second.

While the goals didn’t come, there was some great effort out there.

But unfortunately, it was a lot of this tonight:

The puck drops again tomorrow at 6:07 Huntsville time, but if you haven’t had enough hockey yet, there’s always more:

Have a great night, everybody.

A View From the Other Side: BGSUHockey.com

BGSU captain Camden Wojtala. (Photo credit: pointstreaksites.com)

BGSU captain Camden Wojtala. (Photo credit: pointstreaksites.com)

Drew Evans of BGSUHockey.com reached out to us before we could reach out to him on an idea that we apparently all had: trading thoughts about our team’s prospects to the other team’s fans.  We know that you’re probably a little tired of hearing from us week-in, week-out, so why not another voice?  Michael and I fired the Falcons guys six questions, which you’ll see below.  If you don’t know, BGSU’s program was under grave threat of closure just a few years for ours.  What you’re seeing in Ohio is a beacon in the light of what we’d all agree are dark times for our program.  Hang in there, everybody.

UAHHockey.com: What’s it like to come back from the brink of elimination as a program to a team strongly competing in the conference?  How did the fan base stay committed to the program during the transition?

It’s honestly been a roller coaster ride. My (very small, probably insignificant) addition to the program’s revival was creating the “Save BGSU Hockey” Facebook page. Thousands of members later I realized how tight knit this college hockey community truly is. Now, that’s not to say that there weren’t growing pains as the team has re-built itself into a competitive team every night. But to have been lucky enough to cover the team from the single digit wins to competing for a conference championship; it’s been truly special.

We have one of the most dedicated fan bases in the country. Even with the team living in the cellar hockey routinely outdrew our basketball team, despite the round ball team having a few decent years. I also want to point out our awesome student section: The Bleacher Creatures. The Creatures got their start back in the late 70s. Unfortunately it’s a tradition that fell by the wayside. But, in the past two seasons a few dedicated students have picked the torch up and ran with it. We truly have a rink that’s very tough to play in thanks to those weirdos.

[Ed.: Blue Crew, you have your aspirational target. —GFM]

UAHHockey.com: Has the student involvement at BG always been as high as it is right now?  What drives that?  Are there other successful sports at the school?

Our student involvement was highest in the 80s as the team was winning conference championships and even the 1984 National Championship. Losing seasons really hurt our student attendance and some nights the arena felt more like a wake than a hockey game. But, like I wrote about above, our Bleacher Creatures have made the “Arena With No Name” a very difficult venue to walk out with a win.

These people are just a little scary.

These people are just a little scary.

Currently we’re experiencing an improving football team that is actually playing the Mid-American Conference Championship Friday night (we’re not expecting a great attendance number Friday). Also, our women’s basketball team has become one of the perennial mid-major powerhouses and seems to be eyeing an NCAA tournament berth again this year. Our baseball team also had a Cinderella year last year as they made the NCAA Tournament.

UAHHockey.com: What do you make of the rumor that BG wants out of the WCHA and in a league with other Division I programs?

I can’t tell you whether there have been any back room talks with other schools about re-creating the CCHA. I do know that before BG accepted the WCHA invitation they were attempting to bring some of the Atlantic Hockey teams on board that had expressed a desire to go to full scholarships. When these teams couldn’t commit that quickly BG was left with no other option than to accept the WCHA bid.

I realize that to you all (or, y’all) complaining about travel will fall on deaf ears. But, for a school that already sponsors 17 other division one sports, two road trips next year to Alaska plus the bus trips out to Bemidji and Mankato are tough to slot into our budget. If I had to take a shot in the dark I’d say the CCHA or something similar will probably be “reanimated” within 10 years due to the travel costs alone.

UAHHockey.com: Beyond the guys making noise on the scoresheet — Williamson, De Salvo, Cooper, Tate, Freibergs — who are the guys that we’ll notice on the ice when we see them?

We’ve got a talented group of freshman that have slotted in well. Matt Pohlkamp has seen some time on our top line and is already one of our better two-way players. Sean Walker is a punishing defenseman who plays a very physical game despite his smaller size. He’s also a great skater with good hands. Dajon Mingo is also going to be an interesting player to keep an eye on. He scored his first two goals since February of earlier this year this past weekend. He’ll create plays with his speed but at times he tries to do just a little too much. We’re wondering if his two goals will help spark him going forward.

Everybody loves a group celly.

Everybody loves a group celly.

UAHHockey.com: You’ve had a 50-50 goalie situation this season a bit like ours: when you account for the quality of the team’s performance in front of them, there’s not a huge gap between the two of them.  Do you see Tommy Burke pulling away as the season goes on?

We’ll use a “1A, 1B” system all year unless there is an injury or one of our guys tanks. Coach Bergeron really likes the two goal system because it forces teams to game plan for two different goalies. You’ll face Tommy Burke on Friday. Burke has been solid this season and plays with a lot of poise for only being a sophomore. On Saturday Tomas Sholl will be between the pipes. Sholl saw a bit of fame when a video of him making a save on Sidney Crosby during the lockout went viral. Some of his saves are unorthodox and at times he gets a little out of position. But, he’ll make a few saves a game that will make you shake your head.

UAHHockey.com: What do you think your high water mark is for the season?  Are you looking to be at-home in the first round and see if you can ride some hot goaltending?

If you would have asked me two weeks ago I would have told you we’ll be hosting a first round playoff series in any spot from 2-4. With the team’s recent struggles and inability to hold on to leads I think we’ve slipped closer to a 4-6 seed. We’re just a tough team to gauge because of a couple key injuries. Our best offensive weapon Ryan Carpenter has been out all season with injuries and our power forward Adam Berkle went down this weekend with a hip pointer. Carpenter seems to be heading towards a comeback when we travel down your way with Berkle probably out at least a few weeks.

With that said our schedule here on out is home heavy with some of the lesser teams in the conference. It’s possible we make a big run and host a series. I realize this is a wishy-washy answer but with the bipolar performances I’ve seen it’s just too hard to make a call.

[Our replies to their questions are in the BGSUHockey.com weekend preview. —GFM]

Western Michigan 1, UAH 0

Western Michigan certainly wanted the win over Northeastern in the Shillelagh Tournament in South Bend on Friday, but they fell to Northeastern and had to play UAH in the consolation game on Saturday.  I’m willing to bet you that more fans watched that game on the Internet than did inside the Compton Family Ice Arena, and what they saw was a team of Chargers working their butts off to get their first win.  It didn’t come, though, as the Broncos eked out a 1-0 win.

Chase Balisy and Shane Berschbach had to have a little jump in their step as they came to the rink on Saturday morning.  After all, they were part of a Western Michigan team that railroaded the Chargers in 2011-12.  Balisy was 1-4—5 on the weekend, and Berschbach was 3-1—4.  “That team we played two years ago?  They canceled that program?  They’re 0-13-0?”  Sure, you respect your opponent, but …

… but Berschbach only got off two shots, and Balisy didn’t find the net at all, either.  In fact, the Chargers allowed only 29 SOG, the lowest non-conference mark of the season and the fourth-lowest of the year (26 and 24 vs. Bemidji, 28 at Anchorage on Saturday night).

It was a gritty, hard-fought game, and it’s a shame that it was 1) at a neutral site for both teams and 2) up against the Iron Bowl here in Alabama.  But those of us who watched it know the following:

  1. The only goal came on Western’s only power-play on the day, with Kyle Novak leaking out on the back side.  Berschbach got the puck to him, and that was all she wrote as far as scoring.
  2. It was a great day for discipline for the Chargers, who went to the box just twice, with Brandon Carlson’s hooking call coincidental to a diving minor.
  3. The power play was powerless for the Chargers tonight, but they drove the puck hard.
  4. The effort was there all game long, even if it wasn’t always coherent.  One thing that I consistently noticed during the game that the Broncos had a hard time breaking through the neutral zone with passes.  They could do it with one guy finding seams, but tic-tac-turnover was more like it.  That wasn’t the only great effort, either: the forecheck was strong today.
  5. Frank Slubowski — who got a shutout in the Saturday night game against UAH in 2011 — was solid in goal.  He is the reason that the Broncos won that game.
  6. Carmine Guerriero was sharp.  He couldn’t do much about Novak’s goal, and he stopped the rest.  He is the reason that the Chargers could’ve come back to win that game.

My three stars: Slubowski, Guerriero, Novak.

The boys will bus back to Huntsville tonight to finish up final exams before heading back north to Ohio, where they’ll face the Falcons of Bowling Green State University in a WCHA tilt.  The Falcons are 5-1-1 at home this season.

Northern Michigan 4, UAH 0

Unlike last night, the Chargers had a strong start: it was an 8-4 shots-on-goal advantage early, and the boys were ramping up the pressure.  The team looked to be feeling pretty good going into the break, and then a penalty, and then a power-play goal for the Wildcats with just :26 left, as CJ Ludwig ripped a shot from the point that made it all the way through traffic for a 1-0 lead.

Play was fairly even for the first few minutes of the second period, but the Wildcats scored again with a point shot, as Wade Epp rifled a puck through from the blue line to put the home side up 2-0.  There was some controversy about a possible third goal, but it was waved off after the replay showed that Carmine Guerriero’s mask was loose before the scoring shot was taken.

After two periods, the shots on goal were fairly even, 17-13 NMU with the edge.  Then the wheels fell off, and the advantage ballooned to 33-17 for the final tally.  Another goal was reviewed, but this one was allowed to stand, as it appeared as if a Charger initiated the contact into Guerriero, so Reed Seckel’s goal stood up.  Ryan Daugherty netted the fourth and final goal after Mathias Dahlstrom left his net on a delayed penalty call.

Northern was 1-for-2 on the power play tonight as the Chargers limited their penalties.  The Chargers were 0-for-2.

The Chargers make the long, cold, 20-hour bus ride home from da UP tonight, and they’ll be back on the road on Thanksgiving to South Bend, Ind., for Notre Dame’s Shillelagh Tournament.  The boys are next at the VBC December 13th and 14th.

Northern Michigan 3, UAH 0

So we’re going to think of positive things here.  You have to do these things when you’re recapping the 11th loss of the season.

1.  This was a solid Friday night in our season.  9-1, 6-1, 5-0 3-1, 10-0.  This game is a good comparison to Friday night in Anchorage, minus the shorthanded goal.

2.  While the offense was a little underpowered tonight, the defense was better than it’s been on Friday nights. Yes, the team was shut out, even when Matt Larose was pulled for an extra skater in the last minute.  But the team forced shots to the outside for the most part.  The goals allowed came when the defense didn’t give Larose as much support as he perhaps needed.

3.  Larose looked very good in net.  He had some big leg and glove saves all night.  He made all the positional stops that he needed to make.  All in all, Larose stopped 38-of-41.

But two early goals made it hard for the Chargers to get back in the game.

If we’re going to take heart from tonight, it’s that the consolidated gains of Friday nights to Saturday nights.  If you think that it’s not possible, just remember: UAH had the #3 team in the country tied at 3 in the third period last Saturday night.

It’s going to happen.  Keep the faith.  We’ll link to the box score and any photo galleries that come out.  If you want to read the official Athletics story on the game, UAHChargers.com has it.

“I think that we just need to get that monkey off of our back.” —Doug Reid

Doug Reid Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid stares down Bemidji State’s Charlie O’Connor before a face-off.
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid isn’t a big city guy, so life in Huntsville suits him pretty well.  “I lived there my entire life,” Reid said of Innisfil, Ont.  “Technically I live in Barrie, but it’s more of a country-style town and not a big city.  It’s a pretty quiet town, but it’s getting bigger.”

Family was the foundation of his life growing up. “My family is very close,” Reid said.  “All of my cousins live in the same town.  We do a vacation every year that the whole family would go up to the cottage.”  Sports is a key component, too.  “My whole family is pretty competitive,” Reid said.  His sister, Samantha, was a four-year defenseman at UConn.

The Reid family had bedrock values for their children. “They always taught me respect, hard work, and to never give up on anything,” Reid said.  “My father always pushed me and used to always say to me, ‘If a job’s worth doing, it’s worth doing right.’  They taught me so much that it’s incredible.  They have molded the person I am today, and I can’t thank them enough for doing so.”

Doug Reid, your UAH Movember captain.

Doug Reid, your UAH Movember captain.

Reid started playing hockey early in primary school.  “I think I was 6.  I didn’t play real, competitive hockey until I was 11 or 12,” Reid said.  “Since day 1, I’ve been a forward.”  Reid has bounced around the ice as a Charger, but he’s made a home at the pivot.  “I like playing center.  It’s a hands-on role, and you get to do more.  Nine times of out ten, I play center during the year, and I’m more used to that mentality.”

After a year with the Couchiching Terriers of the OPJHL, Reid went out west to the Alberta Junior Hockey League’s Grande Prairie Storm, which was an adjustment for him.  “At the time it was kinda tough for me.  I’d lived in the same house for my entire life,” he said.  “Looking back at it now, I’m glad that I did it, because it gave me that escape from my family and being able to live on my own.  I think that it was a great experience for me.”

After a year in the largest city between Edmonton and Fairbanks, Reid returned to Ontario and played two years for the Markham Waxers of the OJHL. “It was great to play out there, but I always thought that I would go away and play school hockey [after juniors], so I figured that I might as well be close to home and spend time with my family.”

Playing college was always the prime option for Reid.  “My older sister had a scholarship to play at UConn,” Reid said.  “Pretty much since I can remember, my dad put that thought in my head that it’s what I was going to do.  I got drafted into the OHL, but that was the path that they wanted to take, and it’s obviously worked out well nicely for me.”

Doug Reid Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

What brought Doug to UAH? “I think it was the change to start off,” he said.  “It’s so much different than back home.  I like snow, and I like everything back home, but it’s nice to be down here for a few years in this weather.  I thought that it would be a good opportunity for me.”

Reid is a junior business management major. “I’ve never been a huge school guy, but I’ve got a pretty good GPA, so I’m doing pretty well.”  There you go, Mr. Reid.  You’ll understand that we didn’t lead with that quote.

I asked Reid to assess his development in his first two-plus years as a Charger. “I would hope to think that in all aspects of hockey and as a person that I’ve developed,” he said.  “I’ve gotten physically stronger and more confident on the ice.  Having different coaches has given me a look at a lot of different systems and ways to play.  I feel that I’ve learned quite a bit since I’ve been here.”

Reid was a solid scorer in juniors, netting 75-106—181 in 213 GP over four seasons, but in 64 games in Blue and White, he has just two goals and six assists for a team that has truly struggled to score during his tenure.  “It’s in the back of your head every single game,” Reid said.  “I had no trouble scoring in juniors, but I’m not sure what it is.  I think that we just need to get that monkey off of our back and let the flood gates open.  It’s not just me.  A lot of the other guys put up some big numbers in junior hockey, so hopefully we can get the ball rolling.”

As with our other upperclassmen, it was impossible to interview Reid and not talk about the coaching carousel. “It’s pretty up and down,” Reid said.  “In juniors, you get used to it in a sense, but at the same time, you come to school and think that you’ll have one coach and be stable.  It’s nerve-racking because every year you’ve got to come in and earn your spot again.  You don’t know what the coaching staff is thinking.  But I like where we are now with our coaching staff, and we’re going to succeed with them here.”

If you believe in the future of this team, and we do, then the focus starts with Reid, the team’s captain.  Reid is the fourth consecutive junior to be named captain, following Curtis deBruyn (2011-13), Ryan Burkholder (2009-11), and Scott Kalinchuk (2007-09). “I’m a leader with the way I play,” Reid said.  “I play my physical game and get the guys energy.  I lead by example, and I know that the coaches and the guys in the room make sure that it’s not all on me.”

It’s a tough spot right now, as the standings show “UAH — 0-10-0”.  But five minutes in a room with Doug Reid leaves you feeling that things will change, and that a large part of the load will rest across his broad shoulders.

Doug Reid and Anderson White Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan

Doug Reid and Anderson White
Photo credit: Jazzmine Jordan