Under-18 team always a threat to pull upset
Three seasons ago, Brandon Gentile donned a red, white and blue jersey while playing for the U.S. National Team Development Program Under-18 Team.
Three seasons ago, Brandon Gentile donned a red, white and blue jersey while playing for the U.S. National Team Development Program Under-18 Team.
In the No. 8 MSU hockey team's 3-2 loss Sunday at Western Michigan, head coach Rick Comley's fears about the depth of his team proved to be accurate. "It's thin right now, "Comley said.
Kalamazoo MSU hockey head coach Rick Comley summed up the No. 4 Spartans' 3-2 loss at Western Michigan on Sunday as a "reality check." But Comley also knows that championships are not won in October. "We're still developing," Comley said.
If there's one thing MSU head coach Rick Comley likes about his No. 4 Spartans this early in the season, it's the strength of his best players. The top two forward lines juniors Jim McKenzie, Chris Mueller and Bryan Lerg, and the sophomore trio of Tim Kennedy, Tim Crowder and Justin Abdelkader have already proven themselves. But sometimes, the most difficult job a coach has is rounding out those third and fourth lines to get the most out of everyone. "The top part of our team is pretty darn good," Comley said.
It's the moment the No. 4 MSU hockey team has been waiting for ever since it was eliminated from the NCAA Tournament by Maine last spring. Starting Friday, the Spartans will embark on a new season and attempt to get to the Frozen Four a goal they felt they were talented enough to achieve last season.
Freshman defenseman Mike Ratchuk couldn't sleep during his pregame nap before Friday's exhibition game against Wilfrid Laurier.
After a subpar performance in Tuesday's Green and White intrasquad scrimmage, the message from MSU head coach Rick Comley to the junior forward line of Jim McKenzie, Bryan Lerg and Chris Mueller was loud and clear. "He obviously wasn't happy with how we played," Lerg said.
It didn't take long for MSU head coach Rick Comley to say what everybody at Tuesday's Green and White intrasquad hockey scrimmage was thinking when the final horn sounded at Munn Ice Arena. "I thought (sophomore goaltender) Jeff Lerg played really well," Comley said smiling.
For the 2006-07 Spartans hockey season, two different student-ticket packages are being offered. The packages are similar to those for football and allow for an upgrade into the official MSU hockey student section, Slapshots. One package offers admission to all 17 regular-season home games, excluding the CCHA playoffs, should the Spartans host a home series.
The trees' leaves are starting to change colors, the weather is becoming a little more frigid, a would-be promising football season is once again down the toilet and the 2006-07 MSU hockey team is just about ready to kick off a new season in defense of a CCHA playoff championship.
By the slimmest of margins, the No. 5 MSU hockey team was picked as the early favorite in the CCHA Coaches Poll, which was announced Wednesday at the league's Media Day. Although the Spartans had the most first-place votes in the media poll, No.
Chris Lawrence only scored two goals last year on the MSU hockey team's fourth line. But because of his blue-collar work ethic and leadership, Lawrence's teammates unanimously voted him team captain this May. "I just kind of took it upon myself to step up and be a leader (last season)," Lawrence said Monday at Media Day.
If there's one big question mark for head coach Rick Comley and the 2006-07 MSU hockey team, it's the status of the team's defense after the key offseason losses of Jared Nightingale and Corey Potter. "I think our talent's fine at that position, but it's not proven," Comley said Monday at Media Day. The No.
Rick Comley might be the only coach in the world who takes a pen and pad of paper with him while kayaking on vacation. After a successful 2005-06 campaign that included a CCHA playoff championship and No.
The MSU hockey program scored a verbal commitment this summer from Matt Duchene a 15-year-old Ontario native who scouts are already predicting to be the province's next hockey prodigy. Although Duchene won't be able to sign a letter of intent for about 18 months, he's already being considered as a Top 5 pick in the 2009 NHL Draft. "There's a lot to like," said Dennis MacInnis, the International Scouting Service's director of scouting. "The kid's got tremendous acceleration and a great set of hands.
MSU head coach Rick Comley knows that it's always a possibility to lose players early. This offseason, the question marks surround junior captain Drew Miller. Miller was drafted by the Anaheim Mighty Ducks in the sixth round (186th overall) in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft.
Albany, N.Y. The hockey team's 5-4 loss to Maine in the NCAA East Regional Finals was a complete turn of emotions from what the Spartans felt nearly one week prior after clinching the CCHA playoff championship. Instead of smiles and hugs, there was an abundance of long faces for anyone wearing green and white after the game. After they watched Maine celebrate on the Pepsi Arena ice they skated over to the MSU fan section that made the trip from East Lansing and saluted the fans with their sticks the same way they salute fans after every home game win or lose. And as the players' sticks hit the ice for one last time this season, the careers of the four regularly dressed seniors David Booth, Corey Potter, Colton Fretter and Jared Nightingale came to an end. "It's pretty sad right now," Fretter said, at a loss for words following the game. The only thing that could have prevented the sadness was a national championship and even then there would still be tears, although they would've been associated with another emotion. But in a few days when the seniors have had time to reflect on their college careers, each will realize they were part of something special. Before this season, the seniors had to field questions from the media on why they weren't in the national tournament, why they couldn't win the CCHA or why they couldn't get two weekend wins. This year, they accomplished all of that and converted critics of MSU hockey into fans.
Albany, N.Y. The NCAA Tournament is a bad time to stop having bounces go your way. That's exactly what happened to MSU on Sunday evening at Pepsi Arena in the regional final game. On the defensive end, it was tipped shots from Maine that found their way into the back of the net. On the offensive end, the Spartans rarely found themselves on the positive end of any scrums in front of Maine goaltender Ben Bishop. By the time the bounces starting slowing down for Maine, the Spartans found themselves down 3-0 late in the first period. "The goals they got were good goals, but they were tip goals the tough ones for a goaltender to see and react to with a lot of guys in front of them," junior captain Drew Miller said. The Black Bears' first three goals came off tip-ins in front of MSU freshman goaltender Jeff Lerg.
It doesn't matter if it's a freshman, sophomore, junior or senior getting the job done for the Spartans because each of the classes for the MSU hockey team have stepped up at various times in the season. "The strength of this team is the balance and the depth," MSU head coach Rick Comley said.
After an MSU hockey win in January, a team of youth hockey players, no older than 13, huddled together outside of the Munn Ice Arena locker room area in hopes of getting autographs from some of their favorite Spartans players. As a player passed through the team, one of the kids politely asked which player he was before signing his name across some souvenir memorabilia. The player smiled and answered, "Bryan Lerg." He was met with the excited reply, "Oh, the goalie's cousin." Here was Bryan Lerg, who's been with MSU for a year and a half currently second on the team in scoring being overshadowed by his cousin, freshman goaltender Jeff Lerg.