{"id":31039,"date":"2010-02-17T09:22:08","date_gmt":"2010-02-17T15:22:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2010\/02\/17\/commentary-in-intensity-blais-is-this-generations-brooks\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:57:53","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:57:53","slug":"commentary-in-intensity-blais-is-this-generations-brooks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/2010\/02\/17\/commentary-in-intensity-blais-is-this-generations-brooks\/","title":{"rendered":"Commentary: In Intensity, Blais is This Generation’s Brooks"},"content":{"rendered":"
Dean Blais is good for college hockey. <\/p>\n
Having now broadcasted 11 of his games this season (between Team USA at the World Junior Championship and Nebraska-Omaha) I have come to appreciate what he is all about. I had a chance to get to know Herb Brooks a bit during my time at the Minnesota Hockey Camps and I see a lot of Brooks in Blais.<\/p>\n
Brooks is best known for his ability to make a team believe in itself at his own expense. That was the 1980 Olympic Team, the one Brooks convinced was better than any other team in Lake Placid — or the world, for that matter. He never let them breathe, he intimidated them into being winners and he got them to buy into a team-first, high-octane style that carried them to a gold medal and into American immortality.<\/p>\n
Blais did what Brooks did this past Christmas break. He coached a U.S. team to a gold medal in a major international hockey tourney, the World Junior Championship. That is the second-toughest gold medal to win in hockey after the Olympics, and the WJC is a yearly event that the whole hockey world watches. <\/p>\n
His job performance in Saskatoon with the American entry to the WJC was nothing short of masterful. He went in with an attitude, a belief and a goal, and from day one of the evaluation camp in Lake Placid it was clear to everyone that this would be different. <\/p>\n