{"id":27783,"date":"2005-11-29T13:55:12","date_gmt":"2005-11-29T19:55:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2005\/11\/29\/tuesday-morning-quarterback-west\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:22","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:22","slug":"tuesday-morning-quarterback-west","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/2005\/11\/29\/tuesday-morning-quarterback-west\/","title":{"rendered":"Tuesday Morning Quarterback: West"},"content":{"rendered":"
Wisconsin remained the hottest team in college hockey last weekend, beating Michigan State and then-No. 1 Michigan at the College Hockey Showcase to extend its unbeaten streak to 12 games. The victories earned the Badgers, who have not lost since Oct. 8, the top spot in Monday’s USCHO.com\/CSTV Networks Division I men’s poll.<\/p>\n
The 3-1 win over the Spartans was characteristic of a veteran Badger squad, which scored three goals in the final 10 minutes of regulation to erase a 1-0 deficit. Wisconsin, which has gotten stellar goaltending from Brian Elliott (11-1-2, 1.41 GAA, .942 SV%), has not allowed more than two goals in a game all season.<\/p>\n
Elliott has played every minute in net this season, and for his efforts last weekend was named the WCHA Player of the Week for the third time.<\/p>\n
Saturday’s win was more of the same, as Adam Burish broke a 2-2 deadlock with the game winning goal with just 1:58 to play in the third.<\/p>\n
“[That] is the cumulative effect of having an upperclassmen team. They have been in a lot of situations like that, so their leadership takes over naturally,” Wisconsin coach Mike Eaves said after Friday’s victory.<\/p>\n
After a rocky first season, Eaves has led the Badgers back to national prominence. Wisconsin made the NCAA tournament for the first time in four seasons in 2004.<\/p>\n
In 1970, Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori hypothesized the concept of the “Uncanny Valley,” which postulates that human empathy towards nonhuman entities grows as the object becomes more humanlike, until a sudden drop into repulsive emotional response.<\/p>\n
That repulsion occurs when the robot becomes sufficiently human — almost, but not quite perfect — that its remaining nonhuman peculiarities stand out, producing a sense of strangeness and dissatisfaction in human viewers.<\/p>\n
The notion of the Uncanny Valley has been used to explain the negative, even horrified reaction of many movie critics and fans to Tom Hanks’ 2003 Christmas film “The Polar Express,” in which high-tech animation was used to create realistic characters who nevertheless looked a little off. “Creepy” was the word used repeatedly by some observers to describe the movie’s animation technique, especially the characters’ flat, lifeless eyes.<\/p>\n
The basic point of the Uncanny Valley is that when something is almost perfect, we as observers often fail to appreciate that, and instead focus on its imperfections. So what in the world does this have to do with college hockey?<\/p>\n
Just this: that Michigan head coach Red Berenson is trapped in college hockey’s Uncanny Valley.<\/p>\n
Berenson, who took over the moribund Wolverines in 1984-85, rebuilt Michigan into the national powerhouse we recognize today. After a few hardscrabble years, Berenson’s Wolverines have enjoyed 18 consecutive winning seasons, 10 30-win campaigns, eight CCHA regular-season championships, seven CCHA playoff titles, an NCAA-record 15 consecutive national tournament appearances and nine Frozen Fours, including the 1996 and 1998 national titles.<\/p>\n
Despite all of that, Berenson has never won the Spencer Penrose Award as national coach of the year. Ironically, Berenson is a former recipient of the NHL’s highest coaching honor, the Jack Adams Award, which he won with the St. Louis Blues in 1980-81.<\/p>\n
So what gives? Recently, of course, Berenson has been the victim of his own success. The goal at Michigan is always the NCAA title, and most seasons it’s a realistic one. A coach whose team is always that good eventually falls into the trap of never being able to exceed expectations.<\/p>\n
And it probably doesn’t help that Michigan, while among the best-loved programs in college hockey, is also among the most hated. (For college basketball’s analog, see Duke, a perpetual leader in both national merchandising and opponents’ disdain.) Michigan’s large, loud, loyal and occasionally profane fan base makes the Wolverines even easier to detest.<\/p>\n
For that matter, who can forget 1997 Hobey Baker Memorial Award winner Brendan Morrison’s legendary crack that “the best team doesn’t always win,” coming after the favored Wolverines lost to Boston University in the national semifinals that season?<\/p>\n
Not that I’m suggesting that the American Hockey Coaches Association, which hands out the national coaching hardware, is susceptible to that kind of thing. But it wouldn’t seem amiss for Berenson to get the accolades his success suggests. This season, despite losing both its games at the Showcase last weekend, Michigan is again highly-touted, with a 9-3-1 record and the No. 3 national ranking.<\/p>\n