MU hockey identity at stake in 2008-09
Dan Kukla
Issue date: 10/7/08 Section: Sports
Regardless of the outcome, 2008-09 is a defining hockey season in Miami University's program history. This year, the RedHawks can either firmly root themselves among the nation's elite or wither back into mediocrity.
During the past four seasons, seven young men built the Miami program into what it is today. In 2004, a freshman class highlighted by Ryan Jones and Nathan Davis arrived in Oxford along with five others who would soon transform RedHawk hockey.
Their freshman campaign fell far short of spectacular as the early beginnings of "the brotherhood" stumbled to a 15-18-5 record to finish seventh in the CCHA. Three NCAA appearances, two quarterfinal births and one giant 34 million dollar arena later, Miami now stands as a national powerhouse.
Don't believe me? Let's look at the facts.
Fact: The national polls ranked the RedHawks No. 1 in the nation for 10 weeks during their current 26-week run as a top eight team.
Fact: Miami advanced to the NCAA tournament's elite eight in both 2008 and 2007.
Fact: Miami took the defending national champions to overtime in the 2008 NCAA tournament quarterfinals, where it outshot them 10-4.
In just three seasons, the RedHawks launched themselves from a mediocre CCHA team to a national title contender.
Now they must answer an important question: are they just a one-class wonder or are they here to stay among the country's elite ice hockey programs?
Team captain and Hobey Baker finalist Ryan Jones is gone. The dynamic duo of Jeff Zatkoff and Charlie Effinger in net is gone. Along with the seven departed seniors, CCHA defensemen of the year Alec Martinez is gone.
Miami must now prove to the rest of the hockey world that the past three seasons are not a fluke but rather a new norm. In order to establish themselves as a great hockey program and not just a great hockey team, the RedHawks need to carry success beyond the tenure of one individual class. Simply put, the accomplishments of "the brotherhood" must be a foundation, not a peak.
During the past four seasons, seven young men built the Miami program into what it is today. In 2004, a freshman class highlighted by Ryan Jones and Nathan Davis arrived in Oxford along with five others who would soon transform RedHawk hockey.
Their freshman campaign fell far short of spectacular as the early beginnings of "the brotherhood" stumbled to a 15-18-5 record to finish seventh in the CCHA. Three NCAA appearances, two quarterfinal births and one giant 34 million dollar arena later, Miami now stands as a national powerhouse.
Don't believe me? Let's look at the facts.
Fact: The national polls ranked the RedHawks No. 1 in the nation for 10 weeks during their current 26-week run as a top eight team.
Fact: Miami advanced to the NCAA tournament's elite eight in both 2008 and 2007.
Fact: Miami took the defending national champions to overtime in the 2008 NCAA tournament quarterfinals, where it outshot them 10-4.
In just three seasons, the RedHawks launched themselves from a mediocre CCHA team to a national title contender.
Now they must answer an important question: are they just a one-class wonder or are they here to stay among the country's elite ice hockey programs?
Team captain and Hobey Baker finalist Ryan Jones is gone. The dynamic duo of Jeff Zatkoff and Charlie Effinger in net is gone. Along with the seven departed seniors, CCHA defensemen of the year Alec Martinez is gone.
Miami must now prove to the rest of the hockey world that the past three seasons are not a fluke but rather a new norm. In order to establish themselves as a great hockey program and not just a great hockey team, the RedHawks need to carry success beyond the tenure of one individual class. Simply put, the accomplishments of "the brotherhood" must be a foundation, not a peak.
2008 Woodie Awards

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1
Sarah
posted 10/07/08 @ 8:01 AM EST
Great story, well written, I love the 'brotherhood being a foundation not a peak' comment, but isn't it a "quarterfinal berth"? Gives a totally different flavor to the story; I'm wondering who gave birth during the two quarterfinals, and what the babies were named. (Continued…)
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