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Ben
McGrath, who is majoring in ethics, politics, and economics, covers
hockey for the Yale Herald. The son of Charles McGrath '68,
he is also the captain of the Saybrook hockey team, which finished
this season undefeated and untied.
A
former member of the editorial board of the Yale Literary Magazine
and, from 1988 to 1995, deputy editor at the New Yorker,
Charles McGrath is the editor of The New York Times Book Review.
He is also the father of Ben McGrath '99, and plays defense, of
a sort, for the Terminal
Hockey Club in Monsey, NY.
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Amazin' Blades
The
men's hockey team was supposed to finish at the bottom of the Ivy
pack. Instead, despite a critical injury to the leading scorer and
a late stall against old foes, the squad turned in the best season
in Yale history.
May
1998
by Ben McGrath '99
Yale's
hockey tradition is more distinguished for its longevity than its
success.
In 1896, Malcolm Chace captained Yale's team against Johns Hopkins
in the country's first collegiate ice hockey game. But in the 2,014
games it has played since then, the Yale men's hockey program has
picked up just 953 wins. So you can imagine my anticipation two
years ago when I attended the home opener against St. Lawrence University.
After all, the team was coming off an exhibition win against the
Canadian school Dalhousie, and two convincing victories over Division
I independent Air Force. An avid hockey fan (and an aspiring player)
all my life, I was excited by the prospect of finally rooting for
a winning team. But after only one period, my hopes were dashed.
St. Lawrence was bigger, faster, and a whole lot better -- they
won the game 7-2. The next night Yale faced Clarkson, and the result
wasn't much different: Yale lost 3-0. That first weekend was a sign
of things to come, as the Elis went on to lose a school-record 23
games and failed to make the playoffs for the third consecutive
season.
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"Taylor
himself said that 'it would be stretching our positive outlook
to say we'd be where we are now.'"
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This past
November, after disposing of another Canadian school (this time
McGill) in an exhibition contest, and once again defeating Air Force,
Yale played host to the same two squads from upstate New York. But
I was older and wiser; my expectations this time around were low -- and wrong. The Bulldogs defeated defending champion Clarkson
2-1, and disposed of St. Lawrence 3-0 the following night. Four
months later, Yale had won its first-ever, regular-season ECAC championship
with a 23-9-3 record (17-4-1 within the league itself) and gone
on to become the winningest team in Yale history, breaking the record
of 20-10 set by the 1985-86 squad, and earning a place in the NCAA
tournament for the first time since 1952.
The season
was not an unalloyed triumph -- two losses to Princeton and Harvard
in the ECAC Final Four at Lake Placid and a first-round loss against
Ohio State in the NCAA West Regional destroyed the hopes of postseason
glory for the Blue. And the team managed to score just one goal
in its final eight periods after leading scorer Jeff Hamilton '00
went down with a separated shoulder several minutes into the start
of the Princeton game. Nonetheless, the achievement of this year's
squad couldn't be dimmed. At season's end, captain Ray Giroux '98
was honored as the ECAC Player of the Year (the first Eli ever to
win the award); Alex Westlund '99 brought home the Dryden Award,
given to the league's top goaltender; and Tim Taylor was named ECAC
Coach of the Year (for the third time). No team since Malcolm Chace
brought collegiate hockey to Yale has achieved so much.
I'm
not the only one whose early expectations of the Bulldogs were wrong.
In fact, the 12 ECAC coaches who participate in a preseason poll
each year had the Elis pegged for tenth. Given that Yale had finished
no higher than tenth over the previous four seasons (and only once
that high at all), this seemed a safe bet. Nobody, including Taylor
and the players themselves, expected Yale to be looking ahead to
the NCAA tournament at the beginning of March, when most Yale teams
of the recent past have hung up their skates. After his Elis picked
up their 20th win in a 7-2 shellacking of St. Lawrence, Taylor himself
admitted that "it would be stretching our positive outlook -- which
we did have -- to say that we thought we'd be where we are now."
The low
esteem in which Yale's team was held heading into the season turned
out to be a mixed blessing. It's often easier to play as the underdog,
and the Elis most likely benefitted in the early games from opposing
teams' low opinion of their abilities. (They probably suffered towards
the end for the opposite reason.) But because of Yale's undistinguished
recent past, even the first Yale victory ever at Harvard's 18-year-old
Bright Hockey Center (3-1 on November 15) wasn't enough to convince
some skeptics, and it took an 11-0 drubbing of traditional powerhouse
Cornell at Ingalls Rink in early February to put an end to talk
of a "fluke" season.
Suddenly,
the skeptics and naysayers fell silent, and the not-so-pretty past
faded into distant memory. (Says Giroux: "In a way those losses
helped strengthen the guys.") The last Yale team to have a winning
percentage this high was the 1950-51 squad, coached by Murray Murdoch -- now, at 95, the oldest living New York Ranger -- to a 15-2-1
mark. Students, alumni, and local hockey fans alike responded by
filling Ingalls Rink beyond capacity for eight consecutive games
(a school record) at the end of the season.
When
Harvard came to town for a second-semester rematch on Valentine's
Day, several hundred Yale undergraduates formed a rowdy mob outside
the rink before the doors were opened an hour ahead of the 7 p.m.
start. By 6:05, not a single student seat was available, and by
7:00 the building was filled well past its 3,486 person capacity.
Among the thousands in attendance were veteran sportswriter William
Wallace '45W of The New York Times and a Sports Illustrated
photographer, who had arrived early enough to set up his own personal
lighting devices around the rink. (In its March 2 issue, SI printed
an article about the Cinderella success of the Elis). The masses
were not disappointed. Yale jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first
period, but a Harvard resurgence kept the game too close for comfort
until Hamilton notched another of his league-leading 27 goals in
the third period to seal the victory at 5-3.
Elated
as they were by the results of the Harvard game, the Elis
got a scare when they tied Dartmouth and lost to Vermont, dropping
their lead in the ECAC to one point over second-place Clarkson.
Although the team held on to capture the title with wins against
Union and Rensselaer, another scare soon followed when tenth-seeded
St. Lawrence came to New Haven for the preliminary round of the
ECAC playoffs.
For two
straight nights, Yale needed a last-minute goal just to salvage
a tie against the poorly-ranked Scarlet Knights. In the third and
deciding game, the Blue once again got a couple of late scores,
but this time came away with a 4-1 victory.
That
was the 23rd and last game the Bulldogs would win, and the team's
losing efforts at Lake Placid the following weekend were compounded
by the fact that both losses came against the school's top rivals.
Hamilton's injury against Princeton (a game which Yale eventually
lost 2-1) had shaken up all of Yale's lines and defused its once
formidable power play. Indeed, the team's frustrations boiled over
in the third period against Harvard, and by the end of the stinging
4-1 loss, an ECAC record of 134 penalty minutes had been handed
out.
The Ohio
State game didn't end up any better (a 4-0 loss), but with Hamilton
and defenseman Daryl Jones '98 (who was injured early in the first
period) sidelined, Yale still managed to outskate the Buckeyes for
nearly 30 minutes. The Elis' performance made an impression on John
Markell, the Ohio State coach. Markell said that despite playing
in a conference with such perennial powerhouses as Michigan (which
went on to win the national championship in an overtime victory
against Boston College) and Michigan State, he hadn't seen a team
as fast and aggressive as Yale in a long time.
It's
unlikely that this year's Yale squad can match the 1985-86 Elis
in terms of talent at the top -- Randy Wood '86, Bob Kudelski '87,
and Bob Logan '86 all went on to careers in the National Hockey
League. But even the talent-laden 1985-86 bunch couldn't finish
ahead of all 11 ECAC opponents in the regular-season standings,
as the current group did, nor could it beat out the other five Ivy
League teams, leaving one to wonder about just what lay behind Yale's
terrific season.
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"This
year's chemistry was like nothing I've ever seen. Everybody
would give their right arm for the team."
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To be
sure, the current group does have its share of stars: Giroux was
named a first-team All America defenseman and was selected as one
of ten finalists for the Hobey Baker Memorial Award, given to the
country's top collegiate player (this year's award went to Chris
Drury, of Boston University); Hamilton is on pace to challenge the
record for career points by a Yale player; and Westlund's save percentage
was one of the top ten in the nation, as well as the best in Bulldog
history. But the term that seems to come up again and again when
Taylor and his players talk about their success is "chemistry."
Hamilton says he's heard from his older teammates that in past seasons
the upperclassmen on the team hadn't spoken to younger players much,
but this year, "the team chemistry was like nothing I've ever seen -- everybody would give their right arm for anybody else."
Taylor
agrees with Hamilton's assessment, noting that this year's team
chemistry has been "exceptional." And for Taylor, this season (and
its chemistry) couldn't have come at a better time. When the current
senior class arrived at Yale as freshmen, there was speculation
that Taylor, now in his 20th season as head coach, would not be
returning. He had left Yale the season before to coach the U.S.
Olympic Team at Lillehammer -- a team that had to settle for just
one victory in the eight games it played. Taylor was exposed to
a lot of criticism from the national media afterwards. Says senior
Geoff Kufta '98, "I think he wasn't sure if he'd fit in at Yale
anymore." But Taylor did return, and four years later has been rewarded
with an endowed coaching position, funded by Malcolm G. Chace '56,
the grandson of the captain of Yale's original hockey team. And
in mid-April, he was given the Spencer Penrose award as the NCAA
Division I coach of the year by the American Hockey Coaches Association.
In a
season that includes both Ivy and ECAC division titles, there are
bound to be memorable victories. But one of the most lasting memories
of the year came in a losing effort. With the team playing its final
game, against Ohio State, out in Michigan, Yale 's athletic department
brought in two extra-large television screens and rented a satellite
dish to televise the game at Payne
Whitney Gymnasium. Despite the short notice (word went out to
the campus the morning of the event), hundreds of Yale students
turned out, filling nearly half of the basketball stadium. They
cheered to the very end.
While
the season may have had a magical quality that went beyond everyone's
expectations ("I don't know if it could ever happen again,"
Kufta says), freshman right-winger Ben Stafford '01 hasn't experienced
anything else, and he isn't prepared to return to second-rate status.
Asked about the team's ambitions for 1999, he says, "I don't think
anybody's going to be happy with anything less than what we did
this year."
Malcolm
Chace would be proud.
Memories
on Ice
A
hockey-fan-turned-man-of-letters puts Yale's best season ever into
some historical perspective.
May
1998
by Charles McGrath '69
I arrived
at Yale, as a transfer student, in the mid-sixties.
My undergraduate days thus happily coincided with the end of what
became known as the Morrison Era, in honor of Jack Morrison '67,
the brilliant stick-handler who dominated what was arguably one
of the last golden ages of Yale hockey. (Before the 1985-86 season,
that is, and before the present one.) I had by then abandoned my
own marginal hockey career, and I spent much more quality time at
Sterling Library than at Ingalls Rink. Really. But some of my most
enduring New Haven memories, my dreams even, nevertheless unfold
not in the stacks but beneath the soaring carapace of the Whale:
Morrison swinging wide, gathering steam, and then driving for the
net; Steve Holahan '69, between the pipes for the Elis, crouching
and pouncing, and occasionally scurrying into the corner to sweep
away unwelcome pucks.
The term
"power forward" hadn't been invented yet, but that's exactly what
Jack Morrison was: fast, strong, blessed with a wicked wrist shot,
immovable from in front of the net. Together with his linemates,
Warren Gelman '67 and Jack Walsh '67, he was part of an offensive
unit so smooth and synchronous, and so productive, that, had we
only the wit back then, we could have called them the Assembly Line.
Part of their harmony stemmed, no doubt, from the years they had
already played together at the Nichols School in Buffalo, but in
New Haven their on-ice awareness of one another developed into something
like ESP. (Next to spicy chicken wings, in fact, this threesome
may be that city's greatest export ever.)
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In
those heroic days there was less dump-and-chase, more end-to-end
rushing and personal pyrotechnics.
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Yale's
record in those years may not suggest how good the team really was,
because it was also a golden age elsewhere. Not the least thrilling
thing about being a Yale fan then was the dazzling parade of guest
artists who came to town: Harvard's scrappy Mechem brothers, for
example, and stolid Ben Smith (most recently the coach of the women's
Olympic team); and, most memorable of all, the Canadian wizards
from Cornell, backstopped by the future NHL Hall of Famer Ken Dryden.
He had already developed that habit of resting his chin on the end
of his goalie stick, during lulls at his end, and seeming to contemplate
the ice from a lordly and meditative remove.
Golden
ages always gleam brighter in memory, but in grumpy, valetudinarian
moments I'm tempted to think that in those heroic days there was
less dump-and-chase, more end-to-end rushing and personal pyrotechnics.
One explanation, if I'm right, is that this was before organized
youth hockey had, for better and for worse, so thoroughly altered
the game's educational system by emphasizing from an early age team
play and team discipline at the expense of individual skills -- at the expense even of fun sometimes. I'm talking about the sixties,
remember: We were accustomed to doing our own thing. It's also true
that, both at Yale and elsewhere, the difference between the best
players and the rest, between the first line and the third, was
often considerable, and uneven matchups frequently afforded the
truly gifted a fair degree of freedom in which to perform.
This
is not to say that there are no stars anymore. The current
Yale squad has at least three -- Hamilton, Giroux, and Westlund
-- whose skills and creativity are the equal of anything we witnessed
back in the bell-bottom period. But what separates them from the
rest is a notch almost infinitesimal (Yale beat Cornell 11-0 this
year without three of its starters, for example -- something that
could never have happened in the old days), and in spite of all
this team's brilliant accomplishments, the gap separating it from
the rest of the league is equally small. For years now, the ECAC
has maintained a kind of anxious, nail-biting parity, in which on
a given weekend virtually any team can beat any other. This year's
record is all the more remarkable for having been achieved under
conditions of (by the old standards) extreme arduousness, and it's
been fashioned, for the most part, by extraordinary teamwork.
And the
current Elis are superior to their forebears in yet another respect -- in eliciting a level of deafening, roof-lifting fan support that
outdoes anything we sixties guys managed on even our most dope-addled,
testosterone-fueled evenings. Before this year's Harvard game, undergraduates
were lined up an hour early outside the rink, many in costume and
with their faces painted, and once inside, urged on by the Yale
band and its toga-clad percussion section, they kept up a non-stop
din, hurling at the Harvard goalie invective of far more syntactic
complexity than we would have been capable of. And let's not forget
the team, which played its heart out.
The whole
evening, for us old-timers lucky enough to be there, was a reminder
that a good hockey game, when you think about it, is a lot like
youth itself: fast, intense, emotional, punctuated by noisy collisions
and brief intervals of punition, and so vivid that even when it's
long over, it lingers warmly in the mind.
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