UAHHockey.com is now Charger Hockey Journal

UAHHockey.com is now Charger Hockey Journal. It’s a change we had considered for a while, since the original name implied we were official, which we certainly weren’t.

We were going to rebrand when the UAH varsity program got accepted into a conference, but that obviously didn’t turn out so well. With the UAH club hockey team having big plans to grow this season, now seemed like a good time to finally make the change.

The plan is to provide more coverage of the UAH club team, as well as continuing to follow any efforts to resurrect the NCAA program. I can’t guarantee it will be as prolific as during the Division I days (I still live in North Carolina, after all), but I want to do what I can to help.

The uahhockey.com domain now redirects to uahclubhockey.com. If the NCAA program ever comes back, I will hand over the domain to the university or the program for official use.

As always, thanks for reading and supporting Charger hockey, whatever form it may be.

–Michael Napier

UAHHockey.com is looking for writers!

UAHHockey.com, created to provide in-depth coverage of Charger hockey, runs on the contributions of unpaid volunteers. We’re looking for writing help for the 2017-18 season!

If you would like to help out, here’s what we need. No experience is necessary: All you need just a passion for UAH hockey.

Home game coverage

We need staff writers to attend UAH home games at the Von Braun Center. Responsibilities include:

  • Attending and covering games from the press box in a professional manner.
  • Attending post-game interview sessions with players and staff.
  • Submitting a game story in a timely fashion following the game.

Columns and features

We are open to having regular features or columns on a weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly basis. These can include:

  • Weekend series wrap-ups
  • Recruiting news
  • WCHA and/or NCAA news

If you are interested or have any questions or suggestions, please email Geof Morris at g@uahhockey.com or Michael Napier at m@uahhockey.com.

Hoof Beats: T-minus 30 days

As of this writing, there are 30 days until the boys open the season in Boston against the Northeastern Huskies. It is time to get ready for hockey goodness!

You can probably tell that we’ve spruced up the site a bit. Hopefully you’ll enjoy our changes as we enter this new era of Charger hockey. We’ll be adding more as we get closer to the opening faceoff.

For now, here’s some news and notes about your Chargers, in case you missed it:

Have you ordered your season tickets yet? Prior season ticket holders should re-new your seats by September 24 in order to get our tickets mailed in time for our home opener (vs. Bemidji State on October 25). Also note that season tickets come with memberships to the Blue Line Club. All the information and order forms are on our tickets and Blue Line Club pages.

Huntsville native commits: Ted Rotenberger, a defenseman who grew up in the Rocket City, has a verbal commitment to UAH and is expected to play for the Chargers in 2015. Rotenberger plays for the TPH Thunder AAA U-18 midget program run by former Charger Nathan Bowen.

Gnash is coming: UAH hockey’s ties with the Nashville Predators continue. Gnash, the Preds’ mascot, will appear for the Chargers’ home opener against Bemidji.

In the community: Craig Pierce, Frank Misuraca, and Anderson White spent some quality time reading to kids at Blossomwood Elementary in Huntsville. Check out photos here, here, here, and here.

Brice to wear 57: If you’ve seen the new season’s roster, you’ll notice senior Brice Geoffrion has a new, non-traditional number, a rarity at UAH. But Geoffrion wearing 57 this season is special: The numbers honor his Hall of Fame, Montreal Canadien ancestors.  The 5 is for his grandfather, Bernie “Boom Boom” Geoffrion, and the 7 is for his great-grandfather, Howie Morenz. Before his retirement, Brice’s brother Blake wore 57 after he was traded to Montreal in 2012.

Sebastian in Predators camp: Sebastian Geoffrion, who was at the Predators’ rookie camp last week, was to start training camp with the team today on a tryout agreement.

Going Forward

You’ll have noticed that we’ve been busy in the last couple of weeks in the run-up to our first four home games. Y’all can ready the schedule just as well as I can: it’s seven weeks between home games for us, as the boys start this weekend at St. Cloud State for six straight road weekends. While we’ll be doing Catching the Game posts and some recaps of road games as our schedules permit, things will necessarily slow down here for a little bit.

But with that said, we want to know what you want to see from us. Some ideas that are rough plans: catching up with former Chargers; video interviews with current players; interviews with Coach Kleinendorst and Dr. Brophy about the state of the program. You may have ideas that we haven’t even thought of! That’s why we’ve opened this post to comments if you catch us on the Web; I’m sure that we’ll see some traffic on Facebook and Twitter, too. We earnestly request your feedback.

The Program Desperately Needs Your Help

Friends, we’re in a bad state. Interim UAH president Mack Portera has taken it on himself to take the steps to kill our beloved hockey program. It’s certainly expensive, and we all know how tough the going’s been the last few years. We’ve just gotten in the last month the amount of yearly support needed — $500k. That’s a lot of money, and maybe we don’t get it, but until August, we did not know how much we needed to raise. Now Portera sits poised to kill the program before we’ve had the first chance to figure out how to bring in the money.

Tell him no. Tell him to keep the program going until we can figure out how to make this work.

Please tell your friends as well. You can keep up with the Save UAH Hockey movement on the Web, Facebook, and Twitter. There will be more information on how you can help us over the coming days. Your help is truly needed, as your numbers will give rise to the notion that this program should continue on and thrive.

Thank you for your time.

The 2001-10 UAH Hockey All-Decade Team

We told you back in November that we’d do this, and as a new decade for UAH Charger hockey dawns, here’s UAHHockey.com’s 2001-10 UAH Hockey All-Decade Team:

Forward Lines:

Top Line:
LW Karlis Zirnis (46G, 73A, 119Pts)
C Jared Ross (72-86–158)
RW Craig Bushey (45-67–112)

Was there any doubt that Ross would center this first line? Zirnis-Ross-Bushey was a successful line down during Karlis’s senior season, and this combination was certainly the most prolific in the past decade of UAH hockey.

Second Line:
Steve Charlebois (46-33–79)
Jason Hawes (22-64–86)
Joel Bresciani (36-29–65)

This is another line that played together for quite some time. You’d have a hard time slowing these guys down when they wanted to go to the net, and they also played spirited defense and finished their checks.

Third Line:
Bruce Mulherin (49-52–101)
Grant Selinger (33-37–70)
Cody Campbell (15-28–43)

It’s almost criminal to put Bruce on a third line. This is something that I struggled with for a while, but it came to this: Charlie was the scorer on his line, where Bruce was a happy to score and dish. In doing the research on this, I was surprised that Selinger had 70 points in his career. As for Campbell, I feel like he’s the most complete offensive player on the current Charger roster, even if he’s still sidelined with NCAA eligibility issues relating to taking one semester of classes five years ago.

Fourth Line:
Mike Funk (34-40–74)
Matt Sweazey (28-30–58)
David Nimmo (25-38–64)

Funk (6’4″, 220), Sweazey (6’1′, 195), and Nimmo (6’2″, 220) would score and bang with the best of them. Having these guys together means that none of them has to shoulder the physical burden alone, allowing each of them to let their scoring ability shine.

Black Aces:
Andrew Coburn (21–33–54)
Keenan Desmet (11-18–29 through 12/31)

Coburn gives you the flexibility to play a wing or the center, and as for Desmet, how can you deny the man who ended the final CHA tournament and put the 2009-10 Chargers into the NCAA tournament?

2010 CHA Championship: Keenan Desmet Game-Winning Goal from Geoffrey Morris on Vimeo.

Defensemen:

Top Pair:
Tyler Butler (21-60–81)
Ryan Leasa (12-41–53)

As with our top two lines, the top pair is a historical fact. If you watched these two guys play together, you don’t have any doubt that they should be on the ice together. It’s just a shame that their career in Blue and White ended on a turnover. The 2002-03 team seemed destined to get the CHA’s first automatic bid to the NCAA tournament, but it would be four more years before the Chargers attained that accomplishment.

Second Pair:
Jeremy Schreiber (21-65–86)
Scott Kalinchuk (11-34-45)

I don’t know about you, but I would not want to skate into a zone with Jumbo and Chuk. These guys would complement each other, as Schreiber would be able to jump up the ice as needed to support the offense knowing that Kalinchuk is there to anchor things. While the two were on the roster at the same time during 2005-06, they were never paired by Doug Ross; Schreiber played every game with Jeff Winchester, and Kalinchuk played every game as the third-pair left defenseman. Both men captained the Chargers as well.

Third Pair:
Shaun Arvai (7-47–54)
Brandon Roshko (6-50–56)

Arvai and Roshko would be a good pairing in my book. They can each play the offensive and defensive game, and they’d move the puck well.

Reserve:
Jeff Winchester (4-41–45)

You’ve got Winchester around for three reasons: a big shot, a big body, and the ability to pummel the crap out of another player. You don’t fight in college hockey, but if you needed to take care of someone on the second night of a weekend, you could send Winch out there and know that he’d take care of business.

Goalies:
Scott Munroe (49-36-8, 2.76GAA, .918SV%)
Cameron Talbot (15-44-6, 3.03, .909SV%)
Mark Byrne (42-41-5, 3.01, .900%)

It is easy to look at the unbelievable play of Talbot down the stretch of 2009-10 and want him to be the #1 goalie. If we’re going for peak, it would be hard to argue against him; if you had just the one game to win, I’m not going to argue against you if you take Cam.

In my world, though, you have to go with Scott Munroe. Yes, he was surrounded with arguably better talent. Yes, he played on teams that won more. But Muny came in as a freshman in 2002-03 and wrested the starting job from senior Mark Byrne, who was certainly no slouch in the net himself. Munroe played 31:48 in the team’s second game at Wisconsin, stopping 15 of 16 shots, and then relieved Byrne in the 12-2 rout by Minnesota two weekends later, giving up five goals on 22 shots. Then came his first start: 52 of 56 against the reigning national champions. At that point, you knew that the Chargers had something special.

Byrne certainly shouldn’t be overlooked, as he was quite dependable for the Chargers. When Mark Byrne is your third goalie, you’re doing very well.

If you had to pick a fourth, practice goalie, it would have to be Marc Narduzzi. Why? Easy: the 2OT loss to Notre Dame. Wearing a new helmet, Blake MacNicol gave up two goals on three shots in the first 4:26 of the game. Ross switched goalies—having done this routine each of the three games in the 2007 CHA tournament, which the Chargers entered as the lowest seed—and Narduzzi played the game of his life, stopping 49 shots in the next 90:52. The only way the Irish solved Narduzzi was to get a power play opportunity, their first since the first few minutes of the second period. I can’t think of a singular goaltending feat that topped what Duzzi put together that night in Grand Rapids, in a game so amazing that ESPN2 aired the last hour or so of the game live, taking the feed from ESPNU.

Special Teams:
#1 Power Play
Funk – Ross – Bushey | Butler – Leasa
This combination worked in 2002-03, with Funk able to use his presence in the slot to free Ross to slash around while Bushey dug pucks out in the corner. You could make an argument for Zirnis or Mulherin on Ross’s left wing, as Bushey would be able to provide the grit regardless.

#2 Power Play
Zirnis – Mulherin – Bresciani | Schreiber – Roshko
Picture it: Zirnis and Mulherin cycling around or working behind the net. Bresciani planted in the slot and taking all the abuse in stride. Roshko on the point to move the puck where it needs to be. Jumbo with the big slapshot. I think that might score a goal or two.

#1 Penalty Kill
Hawes – Charlebois | Schreiber – Kalinchuk
One of my favorite things to watch while I was in school and right after I graduated was Zeus killing penalties. He was so tenacious. Charlebois was certainly no slouch, and he’d give you a chance to put in a shorthanded goal or two. Schreiber and Kalinchuk would do the smart, patient work down low, and either could move someone off of the front porch.

#2 Penalty Kill
Ross – Mulherin | Arvai – Roshko
It’s almost a shame to put two of your great scorers out there to kill penalties, but Ross was indefatigable and Mulherin had the speed and hands to disrupt things and put fear in the opposing goalie if a turnover happened. Arvai and Roshko aren’t going to make many mistakes.

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2010-11 UAH Hockey Captains

I won’t bury the lede: Ryan Burkholder returns as captain for his senior season. The alternate captains are defensemen Matt Baxter and Curtis DeBruyn and forward Chris Fairbanks.

Burkholder, a senior from Newmarket, Ontario, played in junior hockey for his hometown Newmarket Hurricanes. Over three years in Huntsville, Burkholder has been a defensive defenseman, registering just two points in his collegiate career while anchoring the Chargers’ blueline. Burkholder is the second straight two-year, defenseman captain, following in the skate trails of Scott Kalinchuk, and was awarded a Bronze Scholar Award at the 2010 UAH Athletics Banquet for having a GPA in the 3.0-3.5 range.

Baxter, a senior from Courtice, Ontario, played junior hockey for the now-defunct Bowmanville Eagles. Over three years in a Charger uniform, Baxter has netted two goals and nine assists while patrolling the Charger blue line. Baxter has also proven to be a stellar student, making the College Hockey America All-Academic team as well as being awarded a Silver Scholar Award at the 2010 UAH Athletics Banquet for having a GPA in the 3.5-3.8 range, majoring in psychology and sociology.

DeBruyn, a sophomore from Calgary, Alberta, played junior hockey for the Olds Grizzlys. In his first season in Huntsville, played in 32 of the team’s 33 contests, netting one goal and six assists. DeBruyn is majoring in finance at UAH, and was awarded a Bronze Scholar Award at the 2010 UAH Athletics Banquet for having a GPA in the 3.0-3.5 range.

Fairbanks, a senior from Milford, Michigan, is the nephew of former Charger Mike Fairbanks and played junior hockey with the Mahoning Valley (now Youngstown) Phantoms. Fairbanks is fifth among returning scorers from the 2009-10 team, and has netted eight goals and six assists in 70 games for the Chargers and was awarded a Bronze Scholar Award at the 2010 UAH Athletics Banquet for having a GPA in the 3.0-3.5 range.

I know all four young men well, and they have shown themselves to be true Chargers, setting their foundations for success on and off the ice with character and discipline. Their work ethic shows both in their play on the ice and their performance in the classroom. Each has made significant strides each year in the Blue and White, and every Charger fan can be proud that they represent this program, our university, and the city of Huntsville. They will lead the team well this season. (Photos courtesy of Doug Eagan.)

Helping One of Our Own

If you’ve ever been to a game, you know who Geof Morris is. He’s the loudest voice in the VBC, head rabble-rouser in the former Section 24, and the only man to ever get tossed out of a game by an over-zealous, one-legged Zamboni driver. He’s the driving force behind SaveUAHHockey.com, UAHHockey.com, and the president of the Blue Line Club. But more than all those things, Geof is my friend.

Geof is in a tough place right now. I won’t trespass into the details of what exactly has transpired, but suffice it to say, he could use some words of encouragement right now. Therefore, I humbly ask that you take a moment to consider sending a note to our beloved loud-mouth. It needn’t be much, but any kind words you have for Geof would appreciated.

Please send anything you may have to say to jamie.gilliam@uah.edu, and Jamie will see to it that those words are hand delivered to our friend.

Thank you,
Will

Official UAH Hockey Facebook Fan Page and Twitter

Last night, Will and I met with Coach Luongo, and he asked that we start an official Facebook fan page for UAH Hockey. Being the willing and capable folks that we are, this is now up and running. If you’re on Facebook, we’d encourage you to Like us there to show your support for your Chargers. You can find links to find us on Facebook over in the sidebar.

We’ve separated this from the Save UAH Hockey page on Facebook, because that’s been more of a national effort of college hockey fans in general to keep our now-independent program afloat.

If you’re a Twitter user, @UAHHockey is us, too.

37 days until the Ferris State game!