{"id":24131,"date":"2001-10-01T11:35:31","date_gmt":"2001-10-01T16:35:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2001\/10\/01\/200102-north-dakota-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:54:17","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:54:17","slug":"200102-north-dakota-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/2001\/10\/01\/200102-north-dakota-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2001-02 North Dakota Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
The same people that aren’t giving North Dakota much of a chance to win a fifth WCHA regular-season title in six years probably also didn’t give the Sioux much of a chance to force overtime late in last year’s national championship game.<\/p>\n
Say all you want about Minnesota and Colorado College. Talk about the high level of talent on the Gophers’ and Tigers’ rosters. Say they’re the teams to beat this season.<\/p>\n
But don’t rule out tradition.<\/p>\n
North Dakota has won the MacNaughton Cup so many times in recent memory that the school could consider making a permanent statue outside the new Ralph Engelstad Arena out of it.<\/p>\n
It is now a tradition that commissioner Bruce McLeod hands over the hardware to Dean Blais at the end of the season. It is for that reason, if absolutely nothing else, that the Sioux have to be listed as one of the favorites this season.<\/p>\n
It’s a yearly occurrence that roughly coincides with the tradition of the North Dakota coach underselling his team and its chances before the season. By now, everyone knows what to think when Blais says the Sioux are in a rebuilding year.<\/p>\n
“Don’t believe him,” said Minnesota-Duluth coach Scott Sandelin, one of Blais’ former assistants.<\/p>\n
Blais speaks cautiously this year, though, making no bold claims of championship prowess or certain shortcomings.<\/p>\n
He’ll let his team do the talking. He may be as interested as anyone to find out what the Sioux have up their sleeve this year.<\/p>\n
He says youthfulness is the word of the season for North Dakota. The Sioux will have to take their time with many new faces.<\/p>\n
“Patience is the key this year, especially with the schedule we have,” Blais said. “We have Minnesota in the Hall of Fame Game, and then Colorado College, Wisconsin and Maine our first three series here. They’re tough opponents and we don’t have a lot of time to get ready.”<\/p>\n
The Sioux are going to have to be patient because, at least at the beginning, they won’t have the firepower of years past on offense. Jeff Panzer graduated and Bryan Lundbohm, a free agent, jumped ship early — “Sometimes when the money’s there, you have to take it,” Blais said.<\/p>\n
That’s the league’s top two scorers from last year suddenly missing. That’s 150 points gone from the lineup, and thinking that others will simply step into those roles is lunacy.<\/p>\n
The Sioux will have to craft a different way to get things done with the players they have. Ryan Bayda is the only member back from the nation’s top line last year, and he’s more of a playmaker than a goalscorer.<\/p>\n
“We’re counting on him to be one of the top players in the WCHA up front for us,” Blais said. “He’s capable, certainly, of scoring between 20 and 30 goals.”<\/p>\n
For the third season in a row, Bayda finds himself working with a new pair of linemates. In the national championship season two years ago, he was paired with Lee Goren and Jason Ulmer, making one of the nation’s top lines. Last season, he set up Panzer and Lundbohm.<\/p>\n
Blais said he isn’t sure with whom Bayda will play this season, but some safe bets would be Jason Notermann, Kevin Spiewak and Tim Skarperud.<\/p>\n
The Sioux offense, while packed with NCAA experience, is young in years. The Sioux list only one senior forward on their roster, Adrian Hasbargen, who scored only four points in 25 games last season.<\/p>\n