{"id":47363,"date":"2012-12-07T10:16:19","date_gmt":"2012-12-07T16:16:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=47363"},"modified":"2020-08-24T21:10:58","modified_gmt":"2020-08-25T02:10:58","slug":"commentary-mason-as-classy-as-ever-as-wins-record-set-to-pass-to-a-friend","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/2012\/12\/07\/commentary-mason-as-classy-as-ever-as-wins-record-set-to-pass-to-a-friend\/","title":{"rendered":"Commentary: Mason as classy as ever as wins record set to pass to a friend"},"content":{"rendered":"
Ron Mason has not coached a college hockey game in over 10 years. He is back in the spotlight this week as he and his successor at Bowling Green, Jerry York, stand tied with 924 wins, tops in men’s college ice hockey. York’s Boston College Eagles beat rival Boston University last Saturday to pull himself even with the standard bearer of success in college hockey.<\/p>\n
York will break the record in the near future, maybe as early as Friday at Providence. Mason will call to congratulate him and probably start the conversation with this type of tongue-in-cheek remark: “You know, you can thank me for some of those wins. I left you a great team at Bowling Green.”<\/p>\n
York and Mason have an extensive history with each other, starting with when York followed Mason at BG. They clashed a ton of times in the 1980s when Bowling Green and Mason’s Michigan State were two of the heavyweights in the CCHA. They are each part of the legacy of the CCHA, which is in its final season.<\/p>\n
[See also: Ron Mason’s coaching history<\/a> :: Coaching wins leaders<\/a>]<\/strong><\/p>\n Mason has been the classy elder statesman in the past couple of weeks as he has done the interview circuit talking about his accomplishments and the legacy he left behind. Mason passed BC’s Len Ceglarski to become the winningest coach in college hockey and the record comes full circle as another BC coach will pass him for No. 1. Through it all, Mason seems to be enjoying talking about it because it allows him to talk about what matters to him a lot: college hockey.<\/p>\n Mason never thought he’d be a college hockey coach despite playing for two men who have had a tremendous impact on the game. The first was Scotty Bowman (who happens to be the NHL’s winningest coach) in the Peterborough Petes organization and Sam Pollack, the legendary multi-Stanley Cup-winning former general manager of the Montreal Canadiens whose system of doing things right is still utilized by all of the NHL execs that went through either the Canadiens or Montreal Junior Canadiens system.<\/p>\n “Sam taught you early on as a player and that was play hard and play with heart,” Mason said last week from his home in Florida. “He always told us [to] do things right and told us why we did what we did. It worked, and I never forgot it.”<\/p>\n It was in his early years that Mason’s philosophy developed as a coach, although he hardly knew it at the time.<\/p>\n “My Pee Wee coach, and I just can’t remember his name, was the first guy who taught me as a center where to go and where to be in relation to where the puck was,” Mason said. “He taught me a system and how to play it. It was a great system. I took it to Lake [Superior State], BG and Michigan State and it worked in all three places.”<\/p>\n Mason laughed when he repeated a story to me that he has told me many times. His coaching career, much like Jack Parker’s at BU, started somewhat on a whim. Parker was selling insurance and decided that the one thing he knew better than anything was hockey. That started his path back to BU and becoming the legend he now is.<\/p>\n Mason was also a student of the game with the passion for teaching it. He was doing work toward his masters degree at Pitt after a terrific playing career at St. Lawrence, leading the Saints to their first national championship game appearance in 1962-63. Then, one day, it hit him.<\/p>\n