Category: Recap

#d1dores Is Dead, Long Live #d1dores

Sophomore Daniel Hogue described last Saturday night’s game versus the University of Alabama-Huntsville as, “A dream come true … for a night.” The result, an 11-0 loss, would have been considered a nightmare in any other circumstance, but this evening was different. Vanderbilt, an ACHA club team, was facing the South’s only NCAA D1 hockey program, a club fresh off a narrow loss to the #1-ranked team in the country Boston College. Yes folks, that Boston College, the one whose coach Jerry York just notched his 925th win to become the all-time winningest coach in NCAA history … against UAH.

“You know, it was a great day in the history of hockey,” recalled Hogue. “Our boys in the U.S.A. red, white, and blue took home the gold at the World Juniors – beating those hosers from up north before topping the Swedes – then we made history by reaching ‘The Show.'”

Here is the story of how the ultimate David faced off against the monster of all Goliaths, got crushed into a mangled pulp in the process, and emerged with an unforgettably fun experience that will be sure to bore their grandkids someday.

The Backstory

So how does a club program get the opportunity to play an NCAA D1 hockey power? Easy. Take geography, throw in a dash of brand equity, a hint of reputation, and a whole heaping helping of urgency to an open slot on the calendar. Let that marinate for two or three days over some discussion and then bam, you have yourself a hockey opportunity beyond comparison.

Translated, the game arose out of a confluence of factors that placed Vanderbilt at the top of a list of teams that might be able to fill a hole in UAH’s calendar. According to the Chargers’ administrators, their original opponent, NCAA D3 Adrian College, had to cancel one of their two games versus UAH at the last minute because they needed to keep their total number of games for the season below 25. (It’s something you’d think they would have managed earlier on in the process, but hey, our boys weren’t complaining.)

Forced to fill the slot with short notice, UAH’s Athletic Director Dr. E.J. Brophy looked to teams in the southeast to fill in. With a recognizable SEC brand and a hockey team that has been making some noise over the past couple of years in club circles, Dr. Brophy placed a call to Coach Bernstein to extend the invitation.

“It was about the last call I expected,” said Coach. “I was flattered that we’d even be on their radar let alone receive an invite to play.”

Ultimately, Coach put the decision to play (or not) to the players. “I wanted to make sure that if we accepted the challenge that it would be our boys making the call, not me. I was a little surprised when nearly every single player signed on without hesitation. Were I their age in that position, I’m not so sure I would have jumped at the opportunity.”

It’s Good To Be Part Of “The Show”

Game day was a special one for the club as the UAH administrators treated the Vanderbilt team like any other opponent. Their hospitality was first rate and the experience was akin to what the pros enjoy.

“We grabbed a quick hour skate at the [Von Braun Center] at noon several hours prior to game time,” said senior captain Kyle McCann. “It was the first time I’d ever done that which was cool. We don’t always have the chance to just walk through systems, think through breakouts and stuff, because we have so little practice time. It really got me thinking about my game and I think it helped the other guys a lot.”

In the locker room, the UAH staff had laundry service tee’d up for towels and uniforms, tape and gum laid out in the middle of the room, and coffee for the coaches. They even put the team up in a nice Marriott property, expenses included.

“No Magnolia Inn and Suites for Cory Reno this trip,” vented Cory Reno in the third person. A law school student who is returning to the team this spring after taking a semester off to focus on classes, Reno is still fuming over the bed bugs he nestled up with during a trip to Memphis last fall. “Seriously, it was the most disgusting thing I’ve ever experienced in my life. It almost made me retire from the sport.”

Sealing the aura of the “big day” event, the club organized a nice little surprise for the boys: new pant shells. Sporting the “star V” on their right thighs, the team never looked so sharp ahead of taking the big D1 stage versus the Chargers.

Recap Of The Carnage

The numbers from Saturday, January 5th, 2013, were what you’d charitably call on paper ghastly. Putrid. Frightful. If you were attending in person, however, you’d simply say (as VU hockey fan @jeancwilson tweeted), “Sigh.”

tweet

76 shots for UAH. 7 for Vanderbilt. A collective -55 for the Commodores club. Face-offs won? 10. Lost? 37. You can view the full autopsy report here.

To quote Vanderbilt hockey dad Foster Gibbons who made the trip down from New York City for the game, “The boys can just be glad no NHL scouts were in the crowd for that one.” It was perhaps the understatement of the evening, no question.

It Wasn’t Complete Domination …

Actually, if we’re being perfectly honest, it absolutely was complete domination on the part of UAH. But that doesn’t mean there were not a few bright spots for the ‘Dores.

Take the physical play for example. Junior Anthony Bilotta led the way on the front line with some bone-crushing checks that brought a tear to the eye of Assistant Coach Lee Kanouff.

“It was just beautiful and I couldn’t help it. You see a guy fire into the boards, sizing someone up, and that poor unsuspecting guy on the other team crumples like a tent in a hurricane. It just makes you proud. I’ll say it, I’m not afraid to admit: I got a little teary.”

The ‘Dores also welcomed back junior assistant captain and apparent face-off specialist Jack Delehey from semester-at-sea. Despite the team’s 10-37 record at the dot, Delehey managed to split his 10 tries with a 5-5 record. Count on the Energizer Bunny to be seeing more reps in that capacity as the semester progresses.

Vanderbilt almost even scored a goal(!) when senior defenseman Ryan Blatt fired a shot off the crossbar on the ‘Dores only power play of the game. Said junior Ben Ross after the game, “Thank God he didn’t score because seriously, we would have never, ever heard the end of it.”

Finally, and last but not least … oh, not least by a LONG mile … we had the two-headed monster in net that was the goalie play of sophomore Andrew “The Iceman” Keen and senior Mackie Anderson.

Iceman started the game and stood tall against the contest’s first power play stopping a barrage of shops that tallied well into double digits. Keen was able to limit the UAH club to 3 goals in the first period.

Check that, Keen was able to limit the UAH club to 3 goals in the first 19:49 of the first period, not the entire stanza.

Weird, right? Pulling a goalie with 11 seconds left in the first period. What’s the deal? Well, without spelling out the gory details of what transpired before a crowd of 1,181 that included Mrs. Coach, Mr. Gibbons, the editor of the Vanderbilt school newspaper, and our friends at @PenaltyBoxRadio, let’s just say that a certain someone who ate Chipotle for lunch “parted” with said cuisine option at an inopportune time, then had to pull himself out of the contest for the middle 20:00 in favor of his counterpart.

D-1 for a day was about all Keener could stomach apparently.

Looking Back, Looking Ahead

As Coach Bernstein noted following the game, “Once you play a D1 team and put up a respectable fight, it is impossible to go back to your normal schedule and look at it the same way.” The Commodores will take their new perspective with them to Centennial Sportsplex in Nashville this Friday when they face off against in-state rival the University of Tennessee Ice Vols. It will be an SECHC East battle with end-of-season tournament implications so you can count on a spirited game between the two clubs.

The puck will drop at 10:15pm on Friday (at Centennial Sportplex), then again at 8:15pm on Saturday (at A-Game Sportsplex) so be sure to swing by the rink for some solid hockey action.

Happy new year folks and please have a happy, healthy 2013. We appreciate all the support and look forward to a great spring semester!

ANCHOR DOWN!

On The Fly: Quick Recap Of OT Road Thriller Versus Louisville

As we promised on Facebook (post IHOP at 2:30am), here’s a quick recap of last night’s epic comeback win on the road versus the University of Louisville Cardinals.

Facing a 4-goal deficit with 10 minutes remaining in the game, Vandy scored four (Logan Lanier, Jack Gibbons, and two from Alan Leeser) to climb all the way back to tie the game. Then, on the powerplay with 0:09 remaining on the clock, Chad “Nails McGillicudy” Wyatt tapped home a rebound in regulation to score what appeared to be the game winner. In as questionable a call as you’ll ever see, the refs ruled the net off its moorings and waved off the goal. On to OT.

The requisite five-minute stanza came and went with chances for both teams, including a huge break-away stop by sophomore goalie Andrew Keen, but no goals. 4-4 tie. On to shootouts.

Following a narrow stop on Leeser and a stuff by Keen to start the shootout, Gibbons stepped in and rifled home the first goal of the contest, or so the Commodores thought.

Turns out that because Gibbons was in the penalty box at the end of the OT, he was ineligible to shoot.

No goal. Do-over. Exit Gibbons. Enter sophomore Greg Kirk.

With ice water in his veins, Kirk calmly fired home a low snap on the glove-side to put the ‘Dores up in the shootout. The UL captain then answered with his own snipe, going bar-down with some backhand, top shelf cheese on Keen. 1-1, final shootout round to play.

Enter VU Captain Kyle “Moves like Jagr” McCann.

McCann, a seasoned breakaway specialist who is widely remembered for the through-the-legs toe-drag he pulled in the 2011 I-40 Face-off versus the Tennessee Ice Vols, cut in towards the UL goalie from the right with speed, deked twice with two quick moves in close, then roofed the puck on the stick side high. The VU bench erupted.

Vanderbilt 2, Louisville 1. One skater remaining versus the Iceman … and the Iceman Cometh with a smothering save (and a cele that he said, “I’d been planning forever!”) to seal the win for the Commodores a second time in the evening.

Back At It Tonight

The ‘Dores will be back in action tonight at 7pm CT versus the Cardinals with hopes of another exciting “W” in mind. Stay tuned to Facebook, Twitter, and vanderbilthockey.com for details.

Thanks for all the support and ANCHOR DOWN!

Epic Comeback Win Sparks Epic Twitter Chatter

Last weekend’s split with Xavier, which included an incredible come-from-miles-behind win on Saturday against a fast and talented Musketeers club, sparked a brushfire of sorts across the series of tubes and internets that make up the Twitter. This is the blog post about the blog post about the fans’ tweets about the fans’ chirping that sparked said five-alarm-er.

First, a Look Back at Friday Night

We stunk. 9-4 loss. Moving on …

Onto Saturday, Armed With Fans

Looking to forget the horror of a miserable Halloween weekend Friday night, the ‘Dores fired into Saturday’s warm-ups with a hopeful outlook on the ice and a crew of energized supporters in the stands. All signs pointed to a rebound game for the Commodores.

A las, dear friends and sports aficionados, it was not meant to be … at least not in the first period.

“We had bricks in our skates, again,” said sophomore defenseman Greg Kirk. “A few odd man rushes, a few snipes on their side, and boom – we were down 4-0 before we knew what hit us. It was embarrassing.”

It was at that point that two things happened to change the trajectory of the game, the weekend, and perhaps even the season. Junior center Brad Pesce stood and delivered, first in the locker room with an impassioned declaration to his teammates that, “We will win this game boys,” then again on the ice with 4 goals, 7 dangles, and 4.5 celes.

And the second spark? The emergence of Vanderbilt hockey’s “7th man,” 25 fans that have earned the collective nickname “Penalty Box Radio” on account of their Preds super-fan status and actual radio show on ESPN’s Nashville affiliate 102.5 FM. You could call them refugees from an NHL season lost, wayward hockey souls looking to feed their hockey fix with any possible ice-related competitive endeavor. While everyone would love to have pro hockey back in action, for at least the time being (and especially in those second and third periods) the Vanderbilt players and coaches alike were extremely thankful for the present situation.

“We went down 4-to-nothing real quick and things were not looking good, just a continuation of Friday,” recalled sophomore Harry “The Flow” Londoff. “But then we rode a serious wave of enthusiasm from our new friends in the stands and popped in 6 genos in the second. It was incredible!”

The final score was 9-7 Vanderbilt, a reversal of fortunes from the night before, and you would have thought that the comeback alone would have been the conclusion to the weekend’s excitement. But like all great dramas it needed an encore to the performance, and boy did the PBR team deliver that extra act with some spirited banter on Twitter focused on an incident that took place in the game that, surprisingly, no one on the Vanderbilt club even noticed.

Apparently, the PBR team’s chirping, which you might consider edgy yet par for the sport by most hockey standards, drove one of the Xavier players so crazy that he launched a few choice expletives, plus a ball of tape(!), at the fans in the stands. Said @BigBenPreds on Twitter following the game, “Anytime, the opposing team comes over and Mouths “#&#$ You” and throws stuff at you. Your doing chirping right, great win.”

If that wasn’t enough crowd engagement for you on the evening, the incident then lead to a wide-reaching retrospective article on fan cheering (and taunting) in general by “The Predatorial,” arguably the most visited Preds hockey blog on the internet.

Titled “What Sports Level Should You Start Taunting?,” Kristopher Martel dove deep with a series of questions that went far beyond the confines of the Centennial Sportsplex, Vanderbilt University, and Nashville, TN, asking, “Is it right to taunt players? Probably not. Yet, it happens, and it happens in most collegiate and professional sports. However, what about sports where the individuals have to pay to play it (or complete fundraisers to raise the money)? Or where they are of an age where it’s essentially an adult taunting someone under the age of 18? Is it right then?”

Now, is it right to taunt players? Probably not. Yet, it happens, and it happens in most collegiate and professional sports. However, what about sports where the individuals have to pay to play it (or complete fundraisers to raise the money)? Or where they are of an age where it’s essentially an adult taunting someone under the age of 18? Is it right then?

Keep in mind, the ‘Dores started the evening expecting a standard hockey crowd of Coach Bernstein’s lovely wife Betsy plus a smattering of Xavier parents, a challenging and largely clean game – hopefully a win for Vanderbilt, and finally a quiet coast into the remainder of the weekend sans post-game drama and debate. What they got was the exact opposite … and man is that awesome.

PBR Back In The House

The Commodores will be back in action this evening versus a tough Georgia Tech club, and so will the Penalty Box Radio faithful along with several hundred brothers from the esteemed Sigma Chi house at Vanderbilt. Game time is 10:15pm at Centennial and tickets are free so definitely come down and check out some great hockey action.

Can’t make it tonight? That’s OK because the ‘Dores play another game on Sunday versus SECHC rival the University of Georgia Ice Dawgs at 6pm CT at A-Game Sportplex in Franklin, TN.

We can’t thank our fans and supporters enough and look forward to a great weekend. Take care and looking forward to seeing you at the rink!

Alabama Totally Ruins VU Hockey Alumni Weekend

NASHVILLE, TN – In what should have been a weekend marked entirely by revelry and triumph on account of seventeen former Vanderbilt hockey greats returning to campus for the first ever VU Hockey Alumni Weekend, things soured considerably when the University of Alabama Frozen Tide unceremoniously dispatched the Vanderbilt Chille’dores 4-3 at the Centennial Sportsplex in Nashville. Outshot, outskated, and out-conditioned by a large margin, Vanderbilt just didn’t bring it against its rival to the south. The score did not reflect the lop-sided play in the game, nor did it capture the disappointment held by the Vanderbilt club’s alums following the contest.

“Call me crazy but I just thought the boys were going to win one for us old guys,” said a mildly despondent and reflective Jotham McCauley (’01). “You can’t win ‘em all. Of course, in our day we did, but that’s ancient history at this point.” Our staff writers found this claim of former glory to be a bit suspect, however a fire in the athletic department archives in the summer of 2002 destroyed all records of the team’s history from 1991 through the 2001/02 season. We are therefore left to take former club president Justin Seibert’s (’99) word for it when he says that the Vanderbilt hockey club “used to dominate everybody back in the day. Everybody.”

The loss leaves the current club sitting with a record of 2-3 heading into a weekend set versus Xavier on Friday and Saturday, 9/26 and 9/27.

Practice Makes [for a] Perfect [Reunion]

The weekend kicked off with a practice at Centennial and the start of a reunion of alumni representing all eras of the club. Nashville native and resident Wade Cowan (’78) joined as the weekend’s most distinguished participant while reunion chair Brenden Oliver (‘12) clocked in as the youngest. There were guys from as far away as Idaho and Germany, West Virginia and Texas, New York City and Brentwood. From the start, the stories were flowing as freely as the libations.

“It was amazing to hear the tales from the old days,” said current assistant coach Jonathan Holston. “You could tell that some of their best friendships in life, even to this day, are the ones they made through the team. It’s fun to see and it’s even cooler to think about the fact that our guys are hopefully forging those same types of connections today.”

The practice was a big success as the guys were able to shake off some rust, in some cases literally. Several of the alums mentioned they hadn’t dusted their equipment off in years, perhaps since their last Vandy game some ten years ago.

“Let’s just say I didn’t arrive in mid-season form,” said former team enforcer and current Houston native Nolan McDougal (’01) who spent a portion of practice huddled over a garbage can, no doubt fighting off a case of food poisoning. Fortunately, he was able to exorcise the demons en route to a strong performance in Saturday’s alumni tilt versus the undergrads.

The prize for biggest, or should we say loudest, arrival was awarded to Stu Wick (’00), a PhD graduate who starred for the Commodores for seven years from 1993-2000. Cheers of “Stuuuuuuuuuuuu!” erupted upon his return and they only continued when he stepped onto the ice. Stu also took home the weekend’s style award for sporting a Messier-Oilers-era Cooper helmet and some solid vintage VU hockey gear.

“It felt like the old days,” said Wick. “People cheering my name, me racking up a few goals and throwing a few elbows. It was like returning home.”

The Big Stage

Thanks to the help and support of our friends at the Nashville Predators, the club was able to host the Alumni Game at Bridgestone Arena as part of a lockout-be-damned hockey doubleheader. (The Knoxville Bears took the ice against the Huntsville Havoc shortly after the Vanderbilt skate.)

“The Preds staff marketed the night over social media and in the local papers so we actually had a bunch of fans in the stands to watch our game,” said junior Alan Leeser. “It made for a fun event for everybody.”

The boys kicked things off at center ice with a stick tap/raise to former head coach Ken Murphy, the club’s first coach and financier, who watched with his family from the stands. The moment was an appropriate nod to the history of the team and a particularly special moment for Wade Cowan.

“Murph’s the best,” said Cowan. “It was great to see him back in the rink cheering us on after all these years!”

The game itself was competitive and then some as the undergrads and alumni traded goals, elbows, and chirps throughout a hotly contested 60 minutes. Former club president Mike Viscardi (’98) led the highlight reel with two nearly identical breakaway, glove-side, bar-down snipes on junior goalie Mike Gangemi.

Viscardi beamed afterwards saying, “It’s nice to know there’s still a little life in these hands. It reminds me of the old days when I used to light Seibert up in practice.”

Ultimately, the undergrads would prevail 6-5 on a late goal from assistant coach Lee Kanouff with 0:20 on the clock, but that did not take away from what was by all accounts a phenomenal day and weekend for the alumni squad. For a first ever event, the current club could not have asked for a better experience in terms of attendance and support from the 17 skaters that returned to Nashville. On behalf of everyone associated with the team, our thanks go out to Wade, Roland, Stu, Pepi, Mike, Justin, Christian, Patrick, Jotham, Nolan, Mike, Chris, Nathan, Ben, Matt, Jack, and Brenden. We’re already looking forward to the next one!

And Then The Tide Ruined Everything

Riddle me this, sports fans. What are the key ingredients for a flat game? Well, how about you start with the opponent, in Sunday’s case the New York Yankees of southern club hockey the University of Alabama Frozen Tide. Sprinkle in a 10:30am game slot the morning after an “Ibiza”-theme party, and how about we also fold in a few late season player debuts, just for good measure. There’s your recipe, guaranteed to deliver the way a Hot Pocket does – reliably, but only to a certain level of quality and nourishment.

That said, despite the circumstances the Commodores skated to an early 2-1 lead at the end of the first period. Powered by a mid-ice rocket from freshman Jack Gibbons (apparently his specialty) and a laser from senior Scooter McLaughlin, the ‘Dores were aided in the first frame by a little bit of luck and a whole lot of Keener.

“The Ice Man was a difference maker for us the whole game,” recounted freshman Jack Fogarty. “He stood on his head and kept us in it right til the end. The guy moves like a cat out there, he’s just fun to watch.”

The second period served up a different script for Vandy as the Tide battened down the hatches in net and popped two quick ones in to take the lead 3-2. Then, amidst a slew of Vanderbilt penalties to start the third period that included the seventh dumbest penalty of all time by junior Jim Butler (a 5-minute major for a face wash), ‘Bama widened the lead to 4-2.

Vanderbilt would cut the lead to 4-3 with 2:22 left in the game and nearly tie it in the final 0:30 before ultimately falling to the Frozen Tide by a single tally. Following last season’s narrow loss in the SECHC tournament to the Tide, Coach Bernstein was particularly contemplative after the contest.

“Last season we played our best game and lost 4-2,” he recalled. “This year, we played one of our worst and lost 4-3. Part of me thinks that’s a sign of improvement and progress, and part of me thinks it’s an indication that I failed to deliver from a coaching perspective. I suppose I should focus on the former, but reality has me squarely focused on the latter – what could we have done better heading in, and what do we need to do for the rest of the season to play our very best hockey.”

A final note on the game needs to be extended to the incredible fans that made it out to Centennial to cheer on both teams, especially our Vanderbilt hockey parents (the Kirks, Mr. McCann, and Mr. Gibbons) and the @PenaltyBoxRadio crew who channeled their frustrations with the NHL lockout into some of the best cheering and support we’ve had at a Vanderbilt hockey game in a long time. We hope you can make it out to our next few home games coming up this semester, it’s awesome to play in front of such amazing and passionate fans!

Looking Ahead

On that note, mark your calendars: The ‘Dores will be facing off against Xavier tonight and tomorrow (10/26 and 10/27) at 10:15pm at the Centennial Sportsplex in Nashville. Tickets are free and the hockey will be awesome as the Musketeers roll into town sporting a 7-1 record. We hope to see you at the rink for some great hockey action!