Wednesday, October 25, 2006

The Difficulty of Being The Don

Nobody likes hearing multi-millionaires complain about all the "difficulties" their money brings. The same is true in college hockey. Nobody wants to hear about how difficult it is coaching a team stocked with future NHL players. But though he'd never admit it, Don Lucia does not have an easy job trying to coach the University of Minnesota.

Last year, the Gophers season was almost a nightmare. From the Blarney's drinking scandal, to the persistent rumors of laziness in practice, to the rumors of unrest in the lockerroom between a certain star player and his teammates, to the embarassment at the Final Five, to the unceremonious exit from the NCAA tournament thanks to Holy Cross, Minnesota had a mostly miserable year. Yes, they did win a league regular season championship, but with the football and basketball programs being in an embarassing state, Don Lucia is head of the cornerstone college program in the state, and just a league championship isn't good enough.

This year, Coach Lucia seems to be working hard to make those changes. He's still got the same young, talented lineup, but things seem different for Minnesota this year.

Issue number one was the discipline problem that last year's team had. The week before the season started, starting goalie Kellen Briggs was suspended for the first three games of the season for an undisclosed violation of team rules. Then, senior Tyler Hirsch was late for a meeting prior to the season opening game against Maine. Hirsch did not dress that night, no questions asked. Some may have thought it was a stiff penalty, but Lucia wanted to send a message, and his message seemed to be received by his team.

The second issue Lucia had to deal with was the lack of hard work from his team. Freshmen Jay Barriball and Michael Carman have earned a lot of ice time so far this year, mainly because of their willingness to drive hard to the net and work hard in the corners. Lucia has also worked to try and turn big forward Blake Wheeler into a hard-driving power forward rather than a perimeter player like he was last season.

A third, and perhaps most important, issue Lucia is dealing with is a lack of contribution from the upperclassmen. The story of the Gopher's season last year became all about Phil Kessel and his other talented teammates. The Gophers senior class was pushed into the background, and ultimately, they disappeared on the ice as well. Minnesota did not get a goal from a senior in their last 15 games of the season. Captain Gino Guyer scored his last goal on November 4th.

This season, it's tough to talk to Lucia without him working the importance of upperclassmen into the conversation. Whether it was before the season when he told CSTV's Eliot Olshansky, "you hope you have not just role-players left who are juniors and seniors, that are front-line players, because teams that win at the end are not freshman-and-sophomore teams." Or after the loss to Maine when Lucia told reporters that the Gophers lacked a go-to upperclassmen in the loss. Or after last Saturday's win when Lucia told Dean Spiros of the Star-Tribune, ""I said before the game I hoped to see the seniors have a big game, and they did. They were the difference tonight."

It's impossible to completely ignore the contributions of the freshmen, and Lucia has also mentioned them when necessary. But the overall message from Lucia has been pretty clear this season. Yes, this team has three freshmen first round draft picks, including the first overall pick. But the Gophers need their seniors to keep contributing to be successful.

All in all, I think Don Lucia deserves a lot of credit for the coaching job he's doing at Minnesota right now. He may not be restoring a dormant program like Jeff Jackson at Notre Dame, but he's had a difficult coaching job of his own to do at Minnesota, and so far, he seems to be making all the right moves.

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

Even for us that are not Gopher fans, you have to give a lot of credit to Lucia for what he has been able to do for Gopher Hockey. First, he abandoned Woogy's crazy philosophy of recruiting only Minnesotans, and he went out and got a Vanek,a couple of Potulny's, an Irmen, etc., but at the same time the bulk of his team has always been from Minnesota. This year they only have one out of state player.....and they probably wish he would go home (Briggs). In addition, he was able to lead them to two titles, and continues to get recruiting classes that rank near the top in the country every year.

Anonymous said...

i think lucia is a better coach than a recruiter...yes, i know that umtc has 15 picks or whatever. BUT...when you bring in guys like kessel(obviously) and perhaps others that ruin team chemistry. it just seems like he picks the people that other people say are good, rather than picking more guys like what barriball is turning into(even though he was talked about).

Anonymous said...

that was motzko that got those non-minnesotan recruits...especially vanek.

Anonymous said...

Good point on Motzko....He's now continuing to do that at St. Cloud.

Donald Dunlop said...

Donnie has something no other head coach in D-1 has ...

His own personal shoe shining waterboy ...

Anonymous said...

Poor Lucy has it so rough. Almost literally the pick of any top talent he wants, and still those pesky Holy Cross walkons not only would not genuflect everytime they skated by the Goofies bench, but they had the audacity to score more goals against Brigsieve than "the Dons" all star crew could.

Anonymous said...

A few things to mention.

1. Motzko did not recruit the most important non-MN player that the Gophers have had since Lucia took over. That being Grant Potulny. Vanek was certainly an important player but Potulny was the biggest reason those Gopher teams won championships. "Pops" was the leader and he was the guy that set the tone. Lucia also played the major role in recruiting Kessel (not Motzko).

2. Lucia may not be rebuilding the hockey program at Minnesota (although it wasn't as strong as usual when he took over) but he certainly did rebuild the program at CC. He didn't do that alone (no coach does) but he certainly played a big part in where CC hockey is today.

3. While recruiting at Minnesota does not always require as much of a sales effort, it would be a disservice to say he isn't one of th best recruiters. Just because you are head coach of the Gophers, it doesn't mean a coach doesn't have to put out the effort in general. Kessel is a great example. You don't nab the best talent to ever come out of Madison without knowing how to recruit. Lucia goes out and does the leg work as much as any head coach does. Of course, he is fortunate that he can do most of it within his home state borders but he is out at the rinks and scouting quite a lot. It is ridiculous to say he simply goes by what others say. The guy does his homework. Whether at his own hockey camps in the summer, scouting various national hockey events, or attending games, he does his "homework" on players just like any other head coach.

4. Get over it Drop the Puck.

Anonymous said...

Swammy....guess again.

Donald Dunlop said...

Gee ...
Some people just don't know how to accept a compliment...

Chris,
Blogs that take comments rock. Huh?

Anonymous said...

There are plenty of forums for people to say whatever they wish. Either their own team's message board or USCHO. If none of that is available to them, it isn't my problem.

I didn't create mine to provide a forum for others to opine. If others decide to provide it, they certainly have the right to do so. If you don't like that I don't, I don't care.

Anonymous said...

hammy...why are you giving praise to kessel? nobody likes him, and its rumored that he is the reason that they fell apart. wisco was lucky to not get him...yes, i said lucky. they won a title without him and they would have had to replace him when he left after one year.

Anonymous said...

Here we go again....

Anonymous said...

Lucia is damned if does, damned if he doesn't. I'm sure some of the haters will find a way to slam Don based upon today's Strib article that details Don's putting a stop to off-ice shenanigans and poor work efforts in practice. Some people are simply too petty to give credit to other programs, and instead instead on wallowing in a Jan Brady state of mind. Hate is a fairly pathetic emotion to emit when it comes to a friggin game.

Anonymous said...

thats not true, if he is trying to stop the off ice crap that the players do, then i have more respect for it. i just said that im tired of people saying hes a god at recruiting, when hes in minny at the u its not as hard as other programs have to. i do give him a lot of respect for what he did at cc though. but at minny, it looks a lot better when you follow woog.

Anonymous said...

but at minny, it looks a lot better when you follow woog.


There's always a but....

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