Matty Thomas Named Assistant Coach

Matty Thomas Our coaching staff is complete.  Gavin Morgan will be the lead assistant, and Matty Thomas is joining the program:

Following two seasons working with the illustrious University of Denver hockey program, Thomas joined the Chargers in the summer of 2013 to work with the UAH defensemen and penalty kill this upcoming season.

Thomas served as the volunteer assistant coach for the seven-time NCAA champion Denver Pioneers from 2011 to 2013, appearing in the national tournament in both of his seasons. While at Denver, he contributed in numerous aspects within the program; including video, practice planning and individual on-ice instruction. Prior to his arrival in Denver, Thomas served as assistant coach with the United States Naval Academy hockey program (ACHA) from 2009 to 2011.

A 2005 graduate of the Naval Academy, Thomas was commissioned as a Surface Warfare Officer in the United States Navy. He then completed three wartime deployments during tours aboard USS MONTEREY (CG 61) and USS ELROD (FFG 55), serving as Tomahawk Strike Officer and Damage Control Assistant, respectively. During his final tour of duty at Military Sealift Command Headquarters in Washington D.C., Thomas rejoined Navy hockey as an assistant coach. While there, he was responsible for recruiting, video coordination, special-teams strategies, classroom sessions, team-building development and off-ice conditioning.

I missed Matty when I went to the hockey office earlier this week, but I can tell you that everyone’s excited to have him. I’ve also spoken with some DU fans who speak very highly of him.

Editorial: Dear Dr. Altenkirch, Hire Lance West

Dr. Altenkirch —

You saved this program from extinction.  You clearly made the last coaching decision in bringing in Kurt Kleinendorst.  It’s clear that you’ll play a large part in deciding who be the next coach behind the Chargers’ bench.  That’s why we’re appealing to you.

headshot_2_west1024x1280Please hire Lance West, UAH ’95.  You may not know much about him, but that’s why we’re here.

Lance had success here as a player.  As a right wing, Lance amassed 43 goals and 65 assists for 108 points in 106 games (1.02 ppg) as a Charger, which finds him at 20th on our all-time scorers list. He was on the top line for UAH in the 1994 NCAA Division II championship series.

Lance had success here as an assistant coach.  He was a volunteer assistant from 1995-98, which means that he was around for both of our Division II national championships.  He was a full-time assistant from 2000-07, a period of time during which the Chargers went 118-103-22, winning two College Hockey America regular-season titles and our first NCAA Division I tournament appearance.  He recruited most of those players, and when he wasn’t recruiting, he was doing the hard work of running practices, fundraising, scheduling non-conference games, managing travel, handling administrative duties, and more.  We would often see Lance sharpening skates outside of visiting locker rooms, too, when we were on the road.

Lance has deep roots in Western Canadian hockey.  He’s from Penticton, British Columbia, and he has consistently recruited top Chargers (and later Nanooks) from there.  As a Western team, we will do very well to increase our recruiting out west, because our student-athletes will be seeing their old friends and rivals wearing other WCHA sweaters, and our guys will want to play as close to their parents as possible.  That’s hard here in Huntsville, but we’ve seen so many BC, Alberta, and Saskatchewan kids become Alabama men that it’s not even funny.  And as you know, many of those young men set down roots here and have a continued impact on our community.

Lance has had success at Alaska.  After Doug Ross retired in 2007, Lance went to coach at one of our now-conference-mates in Fairbanks.  The Nanooks have gone 89-102-28 with Westy behind the bench, with a first season of 9-21-5 under one-year coach Doc DelCastillo dragging that record down — and in that season, he was only a volunteer and obviously didn’t have any impact on recruiting with a class in place by the time he got there.  He again brought in fine classes of young men that resulted in an NCAA berth for Alaska in 2009-10.  That’s a quick turnaround for a program, and that’s the kind of turnaround that we need at UAH as we restore this program’s winning tradition.


We agree that talking to everyone who’s interested in our opening is worthwhile, especially the “name” guys.  It was great for us to bring in George Gwozdecky, even though he declared it a bad fit within 48 hours.  It will be great for us to talk with whoever else is interested.  Among many names, we see Mike Corbett of Air Force coming up the most.  Corbett certainly has a great record in Colorado Springs, and we’ve seen Derek Schooley do well at Robert Morris after time spent coaching under Frank Serratore’s tutelage.

But Dr. Altenkirch, Doug Ross retired in 2007 after 25 years behind our bench.  Since then, we’ve had three coaches: Danton Cole for three years, Chris Luongo for two, and Kleinendorst for one.  Our next coach will be our fourth in seven years.  Our rising seniors will be playing for their third coach after having been recruited for another one.  This revolving door has to stop.  When we talk to players and alumni, that’s the theme that keeps coming up.

Lance is a UAH Charger.  If UAH hires Lance, he will be here until he retires or the University decides that it’s time for a change.  We’ve talked to him about this, and he very much wants to be the head coach here, but we didn’t need to have a phone call to know that.  He was a finalist to replace Ross back then.  I’m sure that the University wanted a new voice at the point that they hired Coach Cole; we got one, and it’s easy to argue that it was a good one.  But it’s just as easy to argue that we need a familiar one right now, and we certainly believe in that.

Lance will move the needle with fundraising.  You know that we’re really ramping up the fund-raising efforts — to do this right, to do right by the efforts you made to continue the program, it’s imperative.  Because Lance is a Charger, and because people know that he’ll be here for the long haul, they’re going to feel good about giving.  Our boosters have to be a little leery of giving right now, not knowing who will be running the program.  Bringing in someone with a UAH pedigree will help, as many of our boosters knew Lance as a player and even more know him from his coaching tenure here.  Hiring Lance stops that revolving door, and that will give donors the confidence they need to invest in the program.

We believe in Lance West, and we think that you should hire him.

Mike Anderson (’05)

Jamie Gilliam (UAH SID 2001-11)

Bud McLaughlin (’82)

Geof Morris (’02)

Michael Napier (’97)

Update: We have heard back from Dr. Altenkirch.  I’ll quote a snippet:

We received a large amount of interest from very qualified individuals, Lance being one of them.  Anyone we have talked to we have indicated that longevity, providing stability, is important, and they would need to make a commitment to that.

We have gotten a lot of good input, from alumni, supporters, the Search Advisory Committee, etc.  Whoever is selected in the end will be stepping into a good situation, and, with some success, will be at UAH for sometime.

Kurt Kleinendorst Resigns

I’m a wee bit blown away:

The University of Alabama in Huntsville Department of Athletics announced today that Kurt Kleinendorst has stepped down from his position as the program’s head hockey coach. Kleinendorst guided the Chargers through the team’s final season as a Division I independent as the program begins play in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association in the upcoming 2013-14 year.

Kurt Kleinendorst has steadied the rough waters during our transition into the WCHA, and we will always be grateful to him for that,” said UAH Director of Athletics Dr. E. J. Brophy. “He has signed nine quality recruits for next fall, and he has done a fantastic job with our program. Now that we have our program on firm footing, we will start the process of identifying the coach who will lead our hockey program into the WCHA.”

Go read the full press release if you like.  The rest of it reads as you’d expect.

Wow.

Say Goodbye to Your 2012-13 Chargers

These guys ran the gauntlet: 10 of 11 Division I weekends on the road, constantly on the road, including six weekends straight. They didn’t know if the team would ever get in a Division I conference again, and there was a lot of uncertainty as to what that might be a program.

What was certain was that these guys didn’t quit.  What’s certain now is that UAH Hockey lives to fight another year.  The boys are in their first stable Division I home after 20 years of life as an independent and in the ill-fated College Hockey America.  Now UAH has made it.  These guys are a big reason why.

2012-13 Team Photo Postseason

So here’s to Steve, Chad, Jack, Anderson, Jeff, Steve, Lasse, and Graeme; to Mike, Frank, Jamie, Ben, Alex, and Mat; to CJ, Craig, Justin, Brice, Johnny, Doug, Curtis, Gregg, and Sebastian; to Kyle, who’s doing work in Atlanta; to Coach Kleinendorst, Coach Garber, Coach Morgan, and Tim Flynn.

Here’s to success not always being measured in wins, and here’s to those successes garnering more wins next year like you know the boys want to see.

Here’s to Charger Hockey.

2013 UAH Hockey Banquet — Friday, April 5th

I am woefully overdue in getting you this information.  Here’s the details on the 2013 UAH Hockey Banquet from Tim Flynn, Director of Hockey Operations:

Our staff wanted to make sure all of our alumni, boosters and loyal fans were included in our invitations to this year’s banquet. It’s an exciting time as we conclude the independent era of the UAH Hockey program and look forward to a new begining in the WCHA next season. We’d love to have everyone come out and see some familiar faces and support the program as we begin to rebuild the great hockey tradition you all helped build at UAH. I have attached this years registration form please fill it out and send back at your earliest convienence. The event details are below.

What: 2013 UAH Hockey Banquet and Award Ceremony
Where: Holiday Inn – Downtown Huntsville
When: Friday April 5, 7 PM.
There will be both a live and silent auction along with dinner followed by an awards ceremony.

We are also looking for alumni who would be able to present an award, if you are coming and would like to participate please send me an e-mail.

We have set a date for our Annual Golf Tournament, it will be June 8 at 8 AM over at Hampton Cove. We will have more details available at the banquet.

The banquet is always a lot of fun, and I really suggest that you attend, even if all you do is buy dinner and watch.  This is a great way to send off our seniors and celebrate a program that we all believe is on the rise.

If you want to attend, here’s the banquet invitation and banquet flyer that Tim sent the boosters.

I hope to see you there!

Kyle Lysaght Critically Injured in Automobile Crash

Kyle Lysaght
Tough news from Atlanta: MyFoxAtlanta and EastCobbPatch are reporting that UAH sophomore forward Kyle Lysaght was critically injured in an automobile accident on Friday afternoon.

Police said Lysaght was a frontseat passenger in a gray 2007 Lexus heading southbound on Johnson Ferry shortly before 5 p.m. Friday.

As the vehicle approached the intersection of Woodlawn, it was struck by a white 2005 Toyota Tacoma pickup truck turning left onto Woodlawn from northbound Johnson Ferry.

The Lexus then collided with a utility pole in a traffic island, seriously injuring Lysaght, Pierce said.

Our thoughts and prayers are with Kyle.  I’ve been in contact with a couple of his teammates, and they have filled me in on some of his injuries.  I would term this situation very worrisome.  Out of respect for Kyle’s privacy, I believe that the best thing for all of us to do is show our concern for our him and not pass around rumors/facts about how he’s doing.  We should just all focus on a full recovery.

Get well, Kyle.

Update: Coach Kleinendorst has been told by Kyle’s father that Kyle’s “stablilized” and it “looks like the worst is behind him,” according to Budd McLaughlin at The Huntsville Times.

UMD 4, UAH 0

Anyone who’s ever studied calculus — which is most UAH alumni — knows the concept of the inflection point.  It’s the point on a curve where the sign changes.  Tonight’s game against Duluth probably wasn’t an inflection point, but winter 2013 has been.

Anyone who’s looked at the records of this university’s varsity hockey program over the last decade has seen a trend: After a peak in mid-decade, it’s been a steady downward trend ever since, two NCAA postseason trips notwithstanding.  We all know the story by now: league disbands, league denies, independent life, Portera ends it, Altenkirch saves it, league accepts.  It’s easy to see that this should be an inflection point: When we’ve played against a stable conference, we’ve been a good Division I hockey program.  There’s no reason to believe that this shouldn’t be one again.

I think that these last four games are a part of that.  Consider what they are: four final games for the last members of the second tournament team; a chance to play Penn State and measure ourselves against a team that has a one-year lead on building for the future; and a chance to finish strong against Duluth, an opponent of the quality that we’ll likely see in the WCHA next season (although UMD will be in the NCHC).

What did we see?  A tough 4-0 loss in State College powered by a David Glen hat trick followed by a tight 4-3 loss the next night to lose the one and only #IndependentLeagueMegabowl.  Last night we had a 4-2 loss to the Dogs, and tonight it was 4-0.  All of these were well-fought efforts, and the important thing here is that the boys finished strong and didn’t just play out the string.  It would’ve been easy to let up knowing that the clean slate was coming, but they didn’t.  The values they showed, the commitment to the program no matter the pain: maintaining that is the steel that makes that inflection point happen.

Tonight’s in-game inflection point was a major penalty and game misconduct to Graeme Strukoff in the 2nd period.  Duluth would end up scoring twice, taking what was a tight 1-0 game to a wide lead.  Losing the sophomore defenseman also put the Chargers down to five blueliners, and the Bulldogs pressed the advantage with speedy breakouts and tight forechecking.  The boys kept battling and showed flashes, but the puck was never consistently in the UMD end after the major power play.

Senior John Griggs picks up 42 saves in his final UAH start.  The senior is joined by Justin Cseter, Curtis deBruyn, and Sebastian Geoffrion in a class that has worked hard to maintain the traditions of the program through the stormy waters of being an independent program.  Gentlemen, we are in your debt.

UAH 3, Oklahoma 1

Coach Kurt Kleinendorst addressed a number of us boosters at lunch today and said, “Our guys will have their hands full this weekend.”  He was right: Oklahoma’s club team is a cut above the SECHC teams.  While the Sooners competed hard, I never felt that this game was in doubt, even with the score knotted at 1-1 midway through the first period.  Indeed, it was a 3-1 UAH victory. [BOX]

Sebastian Geoffrion had quite the night.  The senior from Brentwood scored the opening and closing goals on the night while assisting on the middle one, which was scored by Frank Misuraca on the power play.

The Sooners out-shot the Chargers in the second frame, but their six minor penalties really kept them from making a move in the game.  UAH had a 5-on-3 for :57 with consecutive minors for embellishment—haven’t seen that called in a while; Doug Martinson might have given that one out—and interference late in the second, but the boys in blue couldn’t light the red lamp.

Saturday’s contest will return us to the familiar environs of the VBC at the unfamiliar time of 3:00 p.m.  Hope to see you there for the last home hockey that we’ll see until … October.

UAH 11, Vanderbilt 0

Well, we did what we were supposed to do: we put up double digits in a shutout of a club team while holding back some of our roster.  We dressed just 14 players today: CJ Groh and Gregg Gruehl in goaltender’s gear; Jamie Kendra, Chad Brears, & Kyle Lysaght and Jack Prince, Doug Reid, & Craig Pierce at forward; and Stephen Hickey & Anderson White, Ben Reinhardt & Frank Misuraca, and Steven Koshey & Mat Hagen on defense.  In case you’re curious, most of the defensemen got a turn at play on a wing.

There’s not too much that you can say about a game like this.  What was great?  Jack Prince getting three goals was very nice.  The puck movement was good: nine of the eleven goals had secondary assists, and all of those goals had a point go to a defenseman.  Best of all, the team allowed just seven shots on goal—just one in the third, even with a power play.  You respect your opponent—we’re still thrilled that they came to play!—but taking care of business is key.

The box score is available if you want all the gory details, but in short: 3-3–6 for Prince, 2-3–5 for Koshey, 2-2–4 for Brears (who logged a lot of those centering-defensemen minutes), and 1-2-3 for Hagen.

We’ll see everyone next week, and it’s a bit different given that we’re opposite the Havoc with this unplanned weekend against Oklahoma’s club team:

  • Friday is a 7:30 p.m. start at the Iceplex (3185 Leeman Ferry Road Southwest  Huntsville, AL 35801 if you’ve never been).  Tickets are free on a first-come, first-served basis.  There is not much room at the Iceplex, so make the drive early.
  • Saturday is a 3:00 p.m. start at the VBC.  All tickets are free at any seating level on a first-come, first-served basis.  Sorry, season ticket holders, there’s no way to reserve those seats for you outside of you going to the box office and specifically requesting your seat, which shouldn’t be hard to do day-of.

We look forward to seeing everyone at our last home hockey of the 2012-13 season, and we’ll have big news on our conference search at mid-month.

Adrian 4, UAH 2

What for the hell, y’all.

The Bulldogs and Chargers traded goals in the second period between 9:19 and 13:44, with each Charger marker—first Sebastian Geoffrion, then Chad Brears—unassisted.  But too many penalties made for two Bulldog power-play markers, including the one by Lukas Ciotti at 18:29 of the second that put the Bulldogs up for good.

This was a terrible night for the Chargers.  An early contact-to-the-head minor and misconduct put the visitors down a defenseman, and another one would leave in the third due to injury.  The home team that slept in their own beds the night before should have pressed through and used that fatigue to Adrian’s disadvantage.  We didn’t see that.  Instead, the visitors seemed to pick up energy as the game wore on.

The answer is simple, of course: Adrian is a D-III power looking to answer the question, “So, how far apart are Division I and Division III, anyway?”  Back when we played Finlandia in December, the answer was, “There’s definitely a gap,” but tonight, we got some of the best athletes that D-III has to offer.

They won.

See everyone at the rink tomorrow for some therapeutic baby-seal-clubbing.