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!

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.

Minnesota-Duluth 4, UAH 2

uahvsumdUAH came out of the gate strong, but two power play goals propelled Minnesota-Duluth to a 4-2 win Friday night in Duluth to open the Chargers’ final series of the season.

The Chargers kept the Bulldog faithful quiet throughout most of the first period, and took the first lead at the 8:16 mark. Lasse Uusivirta scored his first goal of the season on a wide-open net, fed with a cross-ice pass by Graeme Strukoff. It was Strukoff’s sixth assist of the season, and Steven Koskey also got his fifth helper.

But it was Duluth who dominated the period with 20 shots on goal to UAH’s nine. Johnny Griggs had to make several sprawling saves, but a big rebound allowed the Bulldogs to tie the game late. Joe Basaraba’s shot bounced off Griggs, then Tony Cameranesi’s knocked in the rebound to even the score at one with seven seconds to go.

Although UMD couldn’t apply as much pressure in the second period, the Bulldogs still came away with two goals.  Chris Casto rifled one just under the crossbar over Griggs’ glove at 2:25 for a 2-1 Duluth lead. Cody Danberg then backhanded a loose puck past Griggs with 3:20 left in the period to make it 3-1 UMD.

UAH cut the lead to 3-2 early in the third, as Doug Reid was fortunate after flipping it on net from an awkward angle closer to the corner.

But the Bulldogs regained the two-goal advantage on the power play. Cal Decowski’s pass across the crease found Justin Crandall on the doorstep.

Griggs got a workout, making 38 saves on 42 Bulldog shots on goal.

The boys face off with UMD tomorrow night at 7:07 p.m. to finish the 2012-13 season.

Catching the Game: at Minnesota-Duluth, March 1-2

uahvsumdAfter another three-week break, UAH finishes up the 2012-13 campaign at Minnesota Duluth on Friday and Saturday. The boys will be looking to send the program into the WCHA on a high note.

The Chargers and Bulldogs met for the first time last season in Duluth. UMD was the defending national champion and top-ranked team in the country, but UAH played them close and lost 2-1 and 4-3.

Duluth isn’t ranked this time around, sporting a losing record (10-17-5) and holding ninth place in its last season in the WCHA. The Bulldogs, who will join the National Collegiate Hockey Conference next season, are winless in their last nine games.

The puck drops at 7:07 p.m. CT both nights. Live video, live stats, and live tweets will be available.

Penn State 4, UAH 3

UAH came up with two equalizers in the third period, but Penn State’s goal with less than five minutes to go gave the Nittany Lions a 4-3 win Saturday and a sweep in the “Independent League Megabowl.”

The physical play that escalated throughout Friday’s game continued into Saturday. Eleven penalties were called on Penn State and seven on the Chargers as Sebastian Geoffrion continued to mix it up with the Lions.

Penn State started the scoring at 8:45 of the first period. Taylor Holstrom centered to Casey Bailey, who fired it far side past John Griggs.

Most of the action was in the UAH zone, including during a Penn State power play that saw Griggs make four saves. The Lions also had a couple of chances on the Chargers’ lone advantage of the period.

David Glen continued his hot hand at 10:45 of the second, scoring his fourth goal of the series with a wicked short-angle shot from the bottom of the right circle to give Penn State a 2-0 lead.

The Chargers finally got on the board as Michael Webley found Kyle Lysaght in the right circle, who slid it past Matthew Skoff to cut it to 2-1 with 2:26 left. It was Lysaght’s fifth goal of the season.

The Chargers started the third with a two-man advantage after two penalties late in the second: as Rich O’Brien got a indirect contact to the head roughing penalty for a hit on Geoffrion with :44 seconds left in the 2nd, followed by a slash by Connor Varley at the horn. UAH capitalized 54 seconds in, as Justin Cseter follows up a rebound on Jeff Vanderlugt’s shot to tie the game at 2. Lysaght got the second assist.

After Kenny Brooks put Penn State up 3-2 at 7:23, UAH tied it up again at 12:20 as Brice Geoffrion got his first goal of the season, tucking it past Skoff on the right post. Anderson White and Graeme Strukoff assisted.

But Mark Yanis, left all alone in the slot, one-times a blast past Griggs with 4:26 left for the game-winner.

UAH will be idle for another two weekends before finally finishing the season with two games at Minnesota-Duluth on March 1 and 2.

Penn State 4, UAH 0

The first round of the “Independent League Megabowl” didn’t live up to the hype if you were expecting a competitive game (or a Charger victory). Penn State rolled 4-0 in the matchup of Division I’s two independent teams,  and the first meeting between the schools as varsity programs.

The Chargers, who hadn‘t played since January 12, came out of the gate sluggish. While they were able to apply more offensive pressure as the game progressed, the action wasn’t crisp enough to produce any goals in the first period. Penn State wasn’t much better, despite a 10-8 shots on goal advantage in the frame.

However, it was Penn State who found the groove in the second period. After a turnover behind the net, Kenny Brook made a backhanded pass through the slot, finding David Glen, who found the net to give the Nittany Lions a 1-0 lead at 1:41.

After Graeme Strukoff was called for tripping, Penn State made it 2-0 on a 4-on-3 power play as Max Gardiner redirected a Mark Yanis rocket from the center point.

It didn’t get better in the third, as the David Glen Show continued. Glen’s spin-move shot from the left circle lifted past Johnny Griggs at 11:20 to make it 3-0. Glen completed the hat trick with a goal with 5:10 left.

Things got feisty with just under eight minutes to go. Lasse Uusivirta fired a shot on Penn State goalie Matthew Skoff after the whistle, which drew the ire of the Nittany Lions. A scrum ensued, drawing several penalties on both sides. Uusivirta received a 10-minute misconduct to go with his 2-minute minor, while Jeff Vanderlugt and Penn State’s Mark Yanis received coincidental double minors for roughing. UAH’s Justin Cseter and PSU’s Casey Bailey also got roughing minors.

Penn State outshot the Chargers 43-23 for the game. Griggs made 39 saves.

Round 2 is tomorrow night at 6:30 p.m. Central.

Catching the Game: Independent League Megabowl! (at Penn State, 2/8-9)

We’re still buzzing over the program’s admission into the WCHA, but this season goes on with four road games to go. The boys play for the first time in four weeks as the head to “Hockey Valley” to face Penn State in a battle between Division I’s lone (temporarily) independent programs. Or, as Nittany Lions forward Tommy Olczyk has dubbed it:

And yes, it is catching on:

https://twitter.com/Johnny_Griggs/status/299635348751929344

https://twitter.com/BriceGeoffrion/status/299378951162298368

Friday’s and Saturday’s games start at 6:30 p.m. with live stats, live audio and live pay-per-view video. We’ll also try to throw in some live tweeting as well (#IndependentLeagueMegaBowl).

PennStateHockeyThis is Penn State’s first season as a varsity program. Its creation made PSU  the sixth Big Ten school with varsity hockey, which made it possible for the Big Ten to have a championship in the sport. The creation of the Big Ten’s hockey conference essentially led to the birth of the National Collegiate Hockey Conference, the demise of the CCHA, and the reconstitution of the WCHA. And that gave UAH the opportunity to find its new home starting next season.

Of course, all that takes effect this fall. Right now, let’s look at UAH and Penn State, two programs with a some similarities and some history together.

The Nittany Lions’ inaugural varsity season features a schedule of opponents similar to UAH: a mix of Division I, Division III, and club teams, although Penn State’s strategy was intentional as they ease to the big leagues from club status.

While it’s the first time UAH and Penn State will meet as varsity programs, the two met six times as club teams in the 1980s.

The first was a 1982 National Club Hockey Championships quarterfinal. The Chargers battled to a 4-3 victory before cruising to their first national championship.

The 1983 rematch was in the championship game, and it was another thriller: 5-4 over the Lions as UAH defended its crown at the Von Braun (then Civic) Center.

Penn State visited Huntsville for a two-game series early in the 1983-84 season, and again the Chargers prevailed 6-3 and 4-3. The Lions finally got a win against UAH at Penn State later that season, beating the Chargers 5-4 after UAH won the first game 9-3.

UAH would still go on to win club national title No. 3 in 1984. However, Penn State, which wasn’t in the national club championship hosted in Huntsville, claims to have won a national title in 1984 as well. So what gives?

Apparently, by 1984 there was another season-ending tournament for club hockey called the National Invitation Tournamet. The Lions won that tourney while the Chargers won theirs. But that was the relative lack of organization in college hockey back then: It wouldn’t be until 1991 when the American College Hockey Association became the umbrella organization of club college hockey.

At any rate, it’s great to see these two schools meet again for the first time in 29 years. Hopefully Penn State will make a return to the VBC in the near future.

But for now, there’s a Megabowl to win.

For more about the Charger-Lion battles of 1983 and 1984, check out the Penn State blog Thank You Terry.

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.

Catching the Game: vs. Oklahoma, 1/11-12

It’s the last home series of the season! Note that the games against Oklahoma’s club team, which were scheduled after the season began, will have no online video. To copy from last week’s recap:

  • Friday is a 7:30 p.m. start at the Municipal Ice Complex (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.

If you can’t get to either game, there’s still live stats and live tweets.