{"id":24180,"date":"2001-10-06T14:49:07","date_gmt":"2001-10-06T19:49:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2001\/10\/06\/200102-boston-college-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:54:18","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:54:18","slug":"200102-boston-college-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/2001\/10\/06\/200102-boston-college-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2001-02 Boston College Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
BC coach Jerry York had planned on trying to replace Brian Gionta, Bobby Allen and the rest of the graduated senior class, but what he hadn’t counted on was also losing Brooks Orpik, Chuck Kobasew and Krys Kolanos to either the pros or junior leagues. Nonetheless, the Eagles have hardly gone from the penthouse to the outhouse. While they are no longer the consensus top team in Hockey East, they still have many of the necessary pieces to the Hockey East title puzzle. The question is whether they can develop the rest of those pieces.<\/p>\n
“We still have an excellent core of players,” says York. “We’re going to get enough goals, I think, but we’re a little untested in goal and on defense. That’s probably my biggest concern early. We’ll have to really concentrate [on our play] from the blue line back.”<\/p>\n
This year’s squad will look very different from recent veteran-laden BC teams. Only two seniors and four juniors populate a roster otherwise filled with 17 freshmen and sophomores. Mindful of that, York will be focusing on developing that young talent in the early going as opposed to staking a claim to first place as in recent years.<\/p>\n
“Our goal is to be a much better team in January than we are when we start,” he says. “So I think in our second half we’ll see a team that’s matured a lot and is much more confident. We’re going to try to learn a lot that first semester.”<\/p>\n
The biggest challenge will come on defense, where sophomore J.D. Forrest heads a returning class that also includes fellow sophomore Brett Pederson and junior Bill Cass. Forrest, nicknamed Mini-Motts for the way his playing style resembles former BC Hobey Baker winner Mike Mottau, actually tied seniors Bobby Allen and Rob Scuderi for the team scoring lead among blueliners with 23 points. He’ll quarterback the power play and could possibly log substantial playing time like Mottau did. <\/p>\n