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Speed demons
May/June 2009
by Alex Goldberger '08
Alex Goldberger '08, an Olympics
research assistant at NBC, was play-by-play announcer for Yale hockey during
2007-08.
As the crow flies, the 2008-09 Yale
men's hockey season ended about 20 miles from where it started. But the
distance from New Haven to Bridgeport does not begin to measure how far the
program has come in the last year.
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"We had a reputation as kind of a gutter team." |
Preseason polls predicted that the
Bulldogs would finish seventh in the Eastern College Athletic Conference
(ECAC). Instead, the team ranked as high as No. 5 in the nation during a
charmed season that brought Yale the Ivy League championship, the ECAC
regular-season championship, and the ECAC tournament championship. As a final
prize, the Bulldogs won a spot in the NCAA East Regional competition.
"When I came in, we had a reputation
as kind of a gutter team," says center Mark Arcobello '10, who in 2006 joined a
Yale program that had lost 45 of 65 games during the previous two seasons. "To
turn it around in three years -- it's pretty great."
When Arcobello arrived on campus as
a 165-pound 18-year-old, he wasn't the only new face in the locker room.
Forward Sean Backman '10, a five-foot-eight, 165-pound, long-haired ball of
kinetic energy, was also making his debut, and Keith Allain '80, a former Yale
goalie, was in his first season as head coach.
Allain, who favors a fast,
aggressive style, paired the two freshmen and watched as they led the team in
scoring. Since then he has stockpiled more pint-sized players. "If you look at
our roster, we probably have two forwards over six feet," Arcobello says. "We
have a lot of short guys with speed, so we try to out-quick big defensemen and
win all the races to loose pucks."
This tenacious style began to pay
off this season over a winter break home stand in which Yale beat two of three
nationally ranked opponents -- and suddenly had the ECAC's top-scoring offense. In
January the Bulldogs won at Cornell's Lynah Rink for the first time in almost a
decade. The next day, Yale stunned Colgate by erasing a four-goal third-period
deficit to win, 5-4, in overtime. "That was the turning point in our season
right there," says Backman. Yale won its next six games.
The Bulldogs reprised their Colgate
magic in the ECAC tournament semifinal against St. Lawrence, turning a sure 3-2
loss into a 4-3 win in the span of 22 seconds. The team then walloped Cornell,
5-0, to claim Yale's first-ever ECAC tournament title and to guarantee their
first NCAA tournament appearance since 1998.
It was there, in front of a record
8,478 fans in the Arena at Bridgeport, Connecticut, that the magic finally ran
out. The bigger, stronger Vermont team prevented the frenetic Bulldog forecheck
from gaining any traction in a 4-1 decision. But the loss did little to cloud
Yale's newly burnished reputation. Led by Allain -- who was chosen coach of the
year by College Hockey News -- the Bulldogs are nationally relevant for the first time
this decade.
"I don't know if one year makes a
trend, but one of my goals is for every kid who comes through this program to
have the opportunity to play in a national tournament," says Allain.
It's a long way from seventh place
in the ECAC.  |