PASSION AND PRIDE The B and Junior College Divisions rocked at the 2010 NCRHA championship finals.

Posted: April 11, 2010 2:00PM; Updated: April 14, 2010 12:21PM by Richard Graham
Showing passion and pride, players in the B and
Junior College Divisions proved their skill and heart at the 2010
National Collegiate Roller Hockey Association national championships in
San Jose, California.
B Division
In a B Division elimination game, UC Santa
Barbara defeated West Chester, 3-2, in overtime, despite being outshot
34 to 26. During the game, Michigan State coach Frank Caliguri gave an
axle to Gauchos’ forward Bobby Burns, who scored the winning goal in
overtime, and as the Santa Barbara players came off the rink after the
game, several yelled, “We love you, coach. Go MSU!”
In the elite eight, Penn State shut down St.
Charles Community College, 4,-0; before dispatching Lindenwood, 8-3, in
the final four. That set up a championship match up with the Central
Florida Knights. The Knights had closer games on their way to the
final, holding off Arizona State by a score of 5-3 before squeezing
past the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos, 4-3.
In the championship final, Penn State drew first
blood at 9:34 of the first period on a power play after Central
Florida’s John Duhe was sent off for tripping. It was the second period
where the Nittany Lions took over, scoring four straight goals, two by
Jesse Patnesky. At the beginning of the third, Penn State’s Jason
Bogert made it a 6-0 lead just 32 seconds in. The Knights scored two
quick goals, at 4:38 and 4:53, making it 6-2, but it was too little,
too late, and that’s how the game ended.
“The game plan didn’t work,” said Knights’
defenseman Craig Hughes, a freshman. “They came out with the box, they
came out strong, and we couldn’t score. They didn’t tire us out; we
just couldn’t get decent shots off. We were taking shots from the point
and we couldn’t get them through. They’re a great team. There’s not
much we can do about it. We played a great tournament. We had a great
season; we played a lot of DII and upper-level teams. We came in
strong, we played our best, and we got as far as we could.”
“In pool play, we weren’t doing so well, so we
had a meeting right before the elimination round started,” said Penn
State Coach Bryan Ollendyke, who captained the team the previous three
years. “We changed our system completely, changed up our lines, and we
threw a completely different look at every team that was here; no one
knew how to read us. Fortunately, they didn’t pick it up in this game,
either.”
Ollendyke gave props to Penn State’s veteran players.
“The senior class this year has been huge –
Bryan Reel, Eric Kleinberg, Jason Bogert… and Jesse Patnesky,
especially,” Ollendyke said. “He’s the offense, by far. We stuck to a
system; we made sure our guys didn’t jump up into the play. We let them
come to us, and they got exhausted. Our whole system was built around
keeping our guys fresh, jumping off turnovers and just took it from
there. We had faith in our scorers that they could pick any goalie.”
“We learned the new system yesterday afternoon
in the hotel,” said Bryan Reel, a Nittany Lion forward. “We played it
against St. Charles, and it worked against Lindenwood and again today.
We kept them to the outside and made sure our goalie could see all the
shots.”
Lions’ defenseman Jason Bogert said that the three-days of Penn State’s tournament were some of the best days of his life.
“The game against Lindenwood was incredible.
They’re always the top dogs of the league. We were kind of joking
around, saying we were like Team USA [of the 1980 Olympic Games] – beat
the Soviets and take home the gold at the end.”
Comparing Lindenwood to that great Soviet team
was not really a stretch – since the inception of the NCRHA, Lindenwood
B had won every single championship – until this week.
“This was my first season on the team,” said
Penn State’s Nick Sirera. “It’s a pretty big way to go out. It’s
definitely the best time of my life.”
“The B Division teams are here to play,” said
NCRHA tournament staffer Ned Farkas. “They want to win and they want to
play hard, and it’s been fun for them. They also seem to have deeper
benches, so each shift means a whole lot more to each guy. Division I
teams may only have eight or nine guys; these are all showing up with
12 plus.
Junior College Division
The Junior College Division final, pitted St.
Charles Community College against Citrus College of Glendora,
California, in a 9:15 a.m. tilt. St. Charles narrowly defeated
Saddleback College, 5-4, to get into the championship game, while
Citrus doubled up on St. Louis Community College, 10-5, to earn the
right to play the Cougars.
St. Charles sandwiched two power-play goals
around a tally by Joshua Bryson to take a 3-0 lead 9:03 into the first
period. David Tolson scored for Citrus to bring the score within two
goals, but Jaron Lutz scored an unassisted goal late in the period to
reestablish the Cougars’ three goal cushion.
In the second period, St. Charles again scored
the first two goals of the period, Citrus answered, and Jaron Lutz
closed out the scoring with another late goal for the Cougars, making
it 7-2 at the end of the second. The teams traded goals in the third
for a final score of 8-3.
“We felt like we had the talent to do what we
needed to do,” said St. Charles’ Coach Pat Ramshaw. “We just needed to
stay disciplined and focused from start to finish, take it one game at
a time, one shift at a time. The boys brought it together and stayed
out of the box. When we’re four-on-four and not in the box, we can
skate with anybody.”
Ramshaw said that playing Citrus College
earlier in the tournament prepared his team for the final: “We knew
that we got on them early in round-robin play, so when we were getting
ready for the championship game, we stuck with our game plan – take
care of the puck, don’t force it, stay out of the box, back check hard
and take care of our opportunities. Once we got one, we started
chippin’, kept going and hammered a way at them, and it worked out.”
“They came out hard; it seemed that they wanted
it a little bit more,” said Chris Scharrar of Citrus College. “We came
out a little lazy. We started to pick it up, but they got off to a 6-1
lead, and it’s hard to win a game after that.
“We came out a little flat,” said Georgie
Barber, Citrus’s captain. “We could have worked a lot harder. We just
fell apart really early in the game.” |