{"id":31009,"date":"2010-02-08T21:36:27","date_gmt":"2010-02-09T03:36:27","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2010\/02\/08\/beanpot-championship-notebook\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:57:52","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:57:52","slug":"beanpot-championship-notebook","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/2010\/02\/08\/beanpot-championship-notebook\/","title":{"rendered":"Beanpot Championship Notebook"},"content":{"rendered":"
Boston College’s first goal, from freshman Steven Whitney, with assists by Cam Atkinson and Brian Gibbons, extended a hot streak by the two assist-men. In the seven games before tonight, Gibbons has a total of 14 points, and Atkinson 13.<\/p>\n
Steven’s older brother Joe, who is linemates with Atkinson and Gibbons, isn’t doing so badly, either, as he has 11 points in the last seven games.<\/p>\n
Ten different Eagles ended up on the scoresheet.<\/p>\n
“Anytime you win, it’s not four, five players that do well,” said Boston College coach Jerry York, who was very pleased with the balanced scoring. “You have to have a whole team of players playing well. You can’t win a championship with just the Gibbons line playing well.”<\/p>\n
The short-handed goal scored by BU’s David Warsofsky was his fourth goal on the penalty kill this season, and second in as many games. He has twice as many short-handed goals (4) a power-play goals (2) this year. Both power-play goals came against BC.<\/p>\n
“He’s just a great skater, he has great skill,” said Jack Parker, his coach. “This one, he got to his backhand and flipped it in. The last one he stole a pass. He’s got a lot of different skills. He’s one of the most gifted players in all of college hockey, not just among defensemen.”<\/p>\n
This year’s Beanpot MVP and Eberly Award winner was BC netminder John Muse. The Eberly Award is given each year to the goalie that has the highest save percentage in the two Beanpot games.<\/p>\n
Muse stopped 64 of 67 shots, good for a 0.955 save percentage, which narrowly beat out Northeastern’s Chris Rawlings’ 0.953 save percentage.<\/p>\n
“He wants to win, he wants to get those games, he wants to play those minutes,” said BC captain Matt Price. “I thought he did really well. Especially coming off that surgery, he worked really hard last summer and put in those extra hours, working on all those things that he needed to do to get back to that shape he wants to be in.”<\/p>\n
The award was especially sweet for Muse, who won a national championship as a freshman two years ago, but has been recovering from hip surgery performed in the offseason. Muse struggled to start the season, but has been consistently getting better as the season progresses.<\/p>\n
“Muse tells me all the time, ‘I feel great. I feel flexible,'” said York. “So hopefully we’re past the worst of it.”<\/p>\n
This year, the Travis Roy Foundation and the Mark Bavis Leadership Foundation are matching all donations made to Matt Brown, up to $20,000, given between February 6th and February 14, 2010.<\/p>\n
Brown, a high school hockey player from Norwood, Mass., received a serious neck injury after crashing into the boards earlier this year. A similar injury led to the paralyzation of BU’s Travis Roy back in 1995.<\/p>\n