{"id":26802,"date":"2004-11-04T23:34:46","date_gmt":"2004-11-05T05:34:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2004\/11\/04\/this-week-in-the-ccha-nov-4-2004\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:55:48","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:55:48","slug":"this-week-in-the-ccha-nov-4-2004","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/2004\/11\/04\/this-week-in-the-ccha-nov-4-2004\/","title":{"rendered":"This Week in the CCHA: Nov. 4, 2004"},"content":{"rendered":"
Directive. Imperative. Green light. Carte blanche. Order. Command. Commission.<\/p>\n
This week, the word mandate<\/i> has been redefined against new criteria. Here’s how the word now applies to the CCHA.<\/p>\n For the past few months, we’ve heard that a high voter turnout can be bad for an incumbent, that a Washington Redskin win the Sunday before an election can be bad for an incumbent, that no president has gone to the White House without Ohio in umpteen years, blah, blah, blah.<\/p>\n We know how all those intangibles — the ones that don’t include actual votes — affect an election. What we don’t realize is how much a presidential election affects the outcome of the D-I men’s season it inaugurates.<\/p>\n When a Republican maintains the White House, it’s good news for the ECACHL.<\/b> The last Republican to win reelection was Ronald Reagan. Rensselaer won the national championship in 1985, the start of Reagan’s second term of office. Harvard won in 1989, during the first year in office for the elder George Bush — who was, of course, elected after serving as Reagan’s vice-president. It’s clearly St. Lawrence’s year.<\/p>\n I know what you’re saying. Boston College won during George W. Bush’s first year in office, so shouldn’t another Hockey East team win this year? The answer to that is no, of course not, and don’t you watch CNN and FOX?. Boston is in Massachusetts. John Kerry was from Massachusetts. The Red Sox won the World Series this year only because the series was played before<\/i> the election.<\/p>\n Oh, oh, oh — then there were the back-to-back WCHA victories following Nixon’s inaugurations, in 1969 and 1973. It doesn’t matter if he didn’t complete his second term.<\/p>\n And upon further examination, Kerry’s involvement in this presidential race may doom any team from the northeast in 2005. For safety’s sake, let’s call it North Dakota’s year.<\/p>\n We’re not going back to the Eisenhower era. As my college-level writing students will tell you, what happens before you were born clearly doesn’t count. I was born in 1964.<\/p>\n When a Democrat wins reelection, it’s total chaos.<\/b> Maine won in 1993, during the first year of Bill Clinton’s first term. North Dakota won in 1997, during the first year of his second term. Had Kerry prevailed in the election, it would absolutely be St. Lawrence’s year. Or maybe Air Force would be a shoo-in.<\/p>\n When a Republican takes the White House, the country is divided.<\/b> In the years following a Republican presidential victory, dating back to Richard M. Nixon’s first year in office in 1969, half the teams capturing a national championship were from the east (Rensselaer 1985, Harvard 1989, BC 2001), half from the west (Denver 1969, Wisconsin 1973 and 1981).<\/p>\n Ford’s inauguration in 1974 doesn’t count. He wasn’t elected, took office in August, and the whole thing happened during an even-numbered year. Any hockey player will tell you that because his presidency didn’t follow the norm, because his presidency indicates a Michigan bias, and because he varied his post-touching routine after allowing a goal, we can throw him right out.<\/p>\n (For the record, Michigan Tech won in 1975. See what I mean?)<\/p>\n No matter who’s in office, it always looks better for the west.<\/b> Given the west’s dominance of the national championship since 1963 — 32 national titles to the east’s 10 — it doesn’t seem to matter who’s in office. Teams from Boston seemed to fare better under the Republicans, but the east was more competitive during the Clinton years.<\/p>\n The 2005 Frozen Four is to be played in Columbus, a city that went 2-to-1 for Kerry, even though Ohio went for Bush. And even though BC won in Bush’s first year in office, factor in the Kerry jinx, throw in Ohio’s swing-state status, always put your left equipment on before your right and skate counterclockwise three times during warmups, and the CCHA may just have an outside shot at a national champion this year.<\/p>\n Unless Air Force gets in the way. <\/p>\n Spartan alum Jason Woolley is a new volunteer assistant coach at his alma mater, thanks to the NHL lockout.<\/p>\n Woolley, an All-American defenseman for the Spartans (1988-91), brings 13 years of NHL experience back to East Lansing. “This is a perfect situation for me,” Woolley told Neil Koepke of the Lansing State Journal<\/i> this week. Woolley said that the lockout “isn’t a lot of fun” and described the opportunity to coach at MSU as “special.” He replaces former Spartan Damon Whitten, who is a new assistant coach at honorary CCHA member Wayne State.<\/p>\n Woolley, currently on the roster for the Detroit Red Wings, has played with the Washington Capitals, Florida Panthers, Buffalo Sabres, and Pittsburgh Penguins, and lives in East Lansing with his wife and children. <\/p>\n D-I hockey is also providing an attractive alternative to idleness for Philadelphia Flyers head coach Ken Hitchcock, who has been volunteering at Princeton at the request of Tigers head coach Guy Gadowsky, in his first year at Princeton after leaving Alaska-Fairbanks.<\/p>\n The Western Michigan Broncos are unbeaten in 19 of their last 27 games against ranked opponents in Lawson Arena, a five-year-old trend that continued last week with WMU’s 6-3 Friday win over then-No. 13 OSU. That’s a record of 16-8-3 for a win percentage of .648 — a clear indication that things are moving forward for Jim Culhane and the Broncos.<\/p>\n The injury bug continues to plague several teams, including Alaska-Fairbanks, Miami, Northern Michigan, Ohio State, and Nebraska-Omaha. Most of those teams have guys who are playing banged-up after missing time because of injuries, but some men are out for the long haul. UAF defenseman and assistant captain Jordan Hendry and Nebraska-Omaha defenseman Phil Angell are out for the season, and OSU forward Kenny Bernard is out until December with a broken leg.<\/p>\n Buckeye Bryce Anderson returned to the ice in style last weekend after sitting out several weeks with a broken wrist. Anderson earned an empty-netter in OSU’s 5-2 win over WMU.<\/p>\n The seven BGSU players suspended for allegations surrounding an April, 2003, party will not dress for the Falcons’ series against Notre Dame this weekend, though they will be allowed to return to the team.<\/p>\n\n
Why Not Ask What Your Country Can Do for You?<\/h4>\n
Welcome Back<\/h4>\n
Just Call Them David, Collectively<\/h4>\n
Just Call Them Hurt, Collectively<\/h4>\n
And Just Call Them Gone, For Now<\/h4>\n