BC’s senior class<\/a> on Monday night after BC’s seniors because the first Eagles class to win four straight Beanpots.<\/p>\nThe feat is certainly an impressive one. But when you look ahead to the near future, four Beanpots is just the tip of the iceberg for the history this team could make.<\/p>\n
Last March, BC became the first team to win three straight Lamoriello Trophies as Hockey East’s postseason champs (the Eagles legendary coach likes to refer to this as the Lamoriello Cup, similar to, say Stanley?). This March, these seniors could extend that record to four straight and become the first class in Hockey East history to win all four league tournament titles.<\/p>\n
In late March and April, the seniors also will battle for the NCAA title. Another victory there would be three national crowns in four years. That has occurred just once before, when Michigan won three straight titles from 1951 to 1953 (Denver also won three in four years from 1958 to 1961, but freshman were not allowed to play sports in that era, thus no team member won more than two).<\/p>\n
The fact of the matter is this senior class easily could go down as the most successful class in the history of Division men’s I ice hockey.<\/p>\n
“I’m just so proud of our senior class and what they’ve done in their careers,” coach Jerry York said after Monday’s win. “They’re really model citizens for Boston College hockey.”<\/p>\n
York understands the legacy this team could write. And the golfer in him believes this could be a team to capture yet another Grand Slam.<\/p>\n
“I’ve always thought the college hockey season reflects the PGA Tour in the major tournaments,” said York, comparing the Beanpot, the regular season league title, the postseason tournament and the NCAA title to golf’s four majors. “[The players] want to win Pebble Beach and the Phoenix Open. But we want to win the major tournaments. [The Beanpot] is like the Masters. Each step helps you in the long run.”<\/p>\n
What’s going on with BU?<\/h4>\n When the Christmas break arrived for Boston University, there was plenty of reason for optimism on campus. The Terriers were 10-5 and had milestone victories already against North Dakota, Boston College, Merrimack and New Hampshire.<\/p>\n
But since the break, BU has been a mere skeleton of the team it was earlier in the season. As mentioned above, BU is 3-7-1 since returning to campus and Monday may have been rock bottom as the Terriers finished last in the Beanpot for just the fifth time in the 61-year history of the event and just the third time under coach Jack Parker.<\/p>\n
The Terriers lost 7-4 to Harvard. No disrespect to the Crimson, but it hasn’t exactly been a team on fire itself. In its last 17 games, Harvard has just two wins. In the 15 non-wins, Harvard has scored just 18 goals. But in those two victories — both coming against Boston University — the Crimson has struck for 13 goals.<\/p>\n
For BU’s Parker, there just isn’t an explanation.<\/p>\n
“It’s not the last couple of weeks,” Parker said when asked what happened to his team in the Beanpot. “It’s the entire second semester so far.<\/p>\n
“I loved everything about our team the first semester. Then we come back after Christmas and we have not played anywhere near how we played the first semester.”<\/p>\n
Parker pointed to the locker room, not the skill of his players, saying he’s befuddled by his Terriers’ inability to emotionally prepare for games.<\/p>\n
“There’s something going on in that dressing room,” Parker quipped. “I thought I had my thumb on it. But I do not, obviously, because we just can’t seem to get ourselves emotionally ready to play the way we need to play. We don’t have the discipline or the attention to detail that we need.”<\/p>\n
As mentioned before, BU is going to have to fight for its NCAA tournament life. At the same time, though, BU will have to fight to simply host a first-round playoff series. The Terriers are tied with Providence for fourth place with 21 points but have a game in hand on the Friars. Massachusetts-Lowell, which beat BU earlier and will face the Terriers twice next weekend, sits just three points behind.<\/p>\n
All of this seemed far from realistic back in December when talk around the BU campus was about a Hockey East title and maybe even another NCAA championship.<\/p>\n
That talk is all in the past.<\/p>\n
“[Former NFL] coach [Bill] Parcells says you are who you are and you are who your record says [you are],” Parker said. “This is who we are right now. We’re one game over .500 and that’s a long way from where we were in December.”<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
It was just a few weeks ago that Hockey East fans might have been thinking it would be possible for five league teams to qualify for this year’s NCAA tournament. And while that remains statistically possible, the truth is it is much more possible that the league will get just two teams into the tournament. […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":140328,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[],"coauthors":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
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