The Goalie Guru blog, and all its linked materials, is offered as a one-stop resource to assist ice hockey goaltenders, their coaches and parents (realizing that the latter two are often one and the same) in gaining a better understanding of this truly unique position. Comments, questions, and suggestions welcomed! Reach me at 978-609-7224, or brionoc@verizon.net.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Lessons from The Heights, and the NCAA championships



Hi gang,

This post gave me a chance to reflect on a great college hockey season, which I covered for ESPNBoston.com, and the remarkable run that the Boston College Eagles put together this spring. At the heart of BC's stunning 19-game winning streak, which culminated with yet another national championship for the Eagles, was junior netminder Parker Milner. This young man underwent a mid-season transformation unlike any I've ever seen. Which made him a worthy topic for The Goalie Guru column I wrote for the May issue of the New England Hockey Journal

Lessons from The Heights, and the NCAAs


You've heard it here before, but it bears repeating: goaltenders can't be afraid to admit when they mess up. The best thing a goalie can do after letting up a soft goal is to tell teammates, "Hey, gang, that one was my bad." And since coaches should hold themselves to the same standards, I need to admit when I'm wrong. And I was wrong about Parker Milner.

See, in my "other" life, I'm fortunate enough to cover college hockey for ESPNBoston.com. That gig gives me a chance to watch some of the nation's best college goalkeepers, guys like Boston University's Kieran Millan, Merrimack All-American Joe Cannata, Lowell's Doug Carr, Maine's Dan Sullivan, and New Hampshire's Casey DeSmith (even got a peek at Union All-American Troy Grosenick).

I also got to see Milner, the Boston College junior from Pittsburgh, PA, play early and often for the Eagles. I worked with Milner, briefly, while he was part of BC's tandem with stalwart John Muse. And though my time with Parker was limited, I could see he was an athlete, capable of playing at the D-1 level. But ability and performance, as most coaches know, can be two very different things.

Following Muse's graduation, Milner was the consensus starter this pre-season (though the Eagles also recruited two highly touted freshmen). His early returns, frankly, were underwhelming. Against Denver on Oct. 14, Milner looked shaky, nervous. He had happy feet, and seemed jittery. Denver coach George Gwozdecky acknowledged after the 4-2 Pioneer win that he wanted to test Milner: "That was one of the things we emphasized tonight; get the puck on the net, and get after the rebound."

Sometimes, the Pioneers didn't need a rebound. Denver took a 2-1 lead when Beau Bennett snapped a quick, bad-angle shot that beat Milner high glove side and snuck under the crossbar. It was not a goal that inspired confidence.

By the semester break, Milner was mired in a three-goalie rotation, the very antithesis of coach Jerry York's preferred approach. And the Eagles were struggling through a 2-4-1 slump. The low point for Milner came in a 3-2 loss to Notre Dame, when he surrendered a soft, last-second overtime goal to the Irish, and two losses to archrival Boston University (giving up nine Terrier goals on only 34 shots).

Milner saw the ice just once in the next nine games, and not at all during a two-game sweep at the hands of Maine in late January. That's when Milner's story takes a dramatic turn, for the better.

"We were really in a hard situation … through the middle of the season with stopping pucks," said York. "We sensed at the time we had a lot of 'B' goaltenders. It's hard to win championships without an 'A' goaltender. It just doesn't happen. We challenged our goaltenders, and Parker stepped up."

Somewhere, deep inside Milner's psyche, the young netminder owned up to his shortcomings. He didn't pout; he took responsibility. And he made up his mind that he wasn't going to be satisfied with simply being a D-1 goalie, riding a three-goalie carousel on a top-flight team. Milner decided he would be the man.

"He's really come on strong lately," said Cross of Milner after BC won the Beanpot, 3-2, in overtime over BU. "We've got competition at every position on our team, and goaltender is no different. Those guys push each other every day, and I think it's made Parker better, and his attitude has remained very positive. I think he took it upon himself personally to take over that spot."

Essentially, Milner proved how special an athlete can be when he fuses talent with hard work. He accepted York's challenge, and rededicated himself to getting better. He started skating extra morning sessions, working with BC goalie coach Jim Logue and assistant coach Greg Brown.

"We've all been impressed. He's really elevated his game," said Brown. "He looks so much more confident now than he did earlier in the year."

That was pure understatement. Through his own grit, Milner orchestrated one of the most stunning midseason improvements I can recall.

"He's our backbone," said BC's All-American defenseman Brian Dumoulin after the Eagles knocked UMass out of the Hockey East playoffs. “That gives us tons of confidence, knowing that if we make a mistake, it's not over. He's going to make a big save like he has in these last couple games, and he has the last couple months

"That's just huge going on these runs in the playoffs, sometimes it's going to be a goaltending battle, sometimes it's just going to be a scoring battle. And knowing we have a good goaltender behind us is awesome.

Still, I was unconvinced. In press-row conversations during the Hockey East semifinals, I told colleagues that if BC had an Achille's Heel, it could very well be Milner. My thinking was this: Boston College would only go as far as Parker Milner could carry them.

But Milner finished what he started in late January. He was between the pipes for every one of BC's 19 straight wins, culminating in a 4-1 victory over Ferris State in the NCAA championship game. Ironically, he was the only goaltender of the Frozen Four starters who wasn't an All-American. And Milner left Tampa not only with another national championship on his resume (though he didn't play in 2010), but was also named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

In the NCAAs, Milner gave up two goals in four games, whitewashing both Air Force and Minnesota-Duluth in the Northeast Regionals. During BC's 19-game win streak, he posted numbers (1.09 goals against average, .960 save percentage) that would make any All-American jealous.

"Maybe I was trying to do too much," Milner said of his early season struggles. "There's been some incredible goalies here, and maybe I was trying to live up to that too much. But I'm not John Muse. I'm not Cory Schneider. I'm Parker Milner. And I'm going to try to do the best I can to be a part of this story that we're writing for the 2012 team."

It was a tale with a storybook ending, thanks in large part to Milner's efforts. So, my apologies to Parker. And congrats. You earned every one of the accolades that came your way this season. See you next year.

FINIS

Friday, May 11, 2012

The boys and girls of summer

Putting a young goalie in "time out" ...

Hi gang,

Nothing like a little hip-replacement surgery to force me to take some much-needed down time, and get The Goalie Guru current. This is always an interesting time of year for me, as spring represents such a transition time for the hockey player.

The following is a recent Goalie Guru column for the New England Hockey Journal, on the benefits (and myths) regarding summer camps, inspired by my own experiences over the past 10 years. Let me know what you think ...

WHAT A GOALIE CAMP WILL - AND WON'T - DO FOR YOU


Full disclosure. I often feel uncomfortable lobbying for summer hockey camps. It appears self-serving, since I spend a good chunk of my summer working for them. I understand that. However, that fact also keeps me honest, and I always make every effort to give every child my full attention. I've never mailed it in.

But my allegiance to summer camps goes beyond that. The reality is, I'm a fan of good sports camps of any kind, and my daughters are proof. My eldest, Maddi, attended an overnight volleyball camp in my wife's home state, Kansas, and came home with the tools to jump-start a terrific freshman season. My youngest, Brynne, is a 13-year-old hockey player, and she's benefited greatly by the "immersion" that a weeklong summer camp provides, and she'll be going back to a skating and stickhandling camp this summer. That's when she's not at soccer camp.

So, while I work for camps, as a parent I can appreciate the positive impact they can have. As long as kids also get a break. Booking your young goalie for eight weeks of camps over the summer is begging for burnout. On the other hand, the "concentrated dose" that a weeklong camp offers is invaluable, because it provides essential building blocks. Just like a good diet – you need to establish a solid foundation, which supports future development.

Here's another reason I'm a fan of summer goaltending camps. They are all about goalies. Period. Not shooters, not defensive schemes, power plays or penalty kills (though those topics are covered extensively, from a goalie's perspective). This is just the opposite of almost every youth hockey program I've seen, where goalies are treated like some sort of mildly intriguing appendage.

Campers will get plenty of work, likely more than they bargained for. But the workload is designed to make the goalies stronger, quicker, smarter, instead of simply running them into the ground (which, as best I can tell, is the end-product of roughly three-quarters of the shorting drills I see in youth hockey these days).

Still, don't be fooled into thinking all camps are equal. There's a well-known shooting and stickhandling camp (which will remain unnamed, to protect the guilty) that offers free spots for goaltenders. When I inquired, I learned there was no instruction. Absolutely none. Zero. They wouldn't even consider having a goalie coach on the ice. These camps simply wanted targets (and, in reality, should have been paying those poor kids). The lesson? Be sure to ask beforehand.

So, with all that said, here are a few persistent myths about camps I'd like to dispel:

You'll get better by just showing up. OK, there's some truth to this. We will make you a better goaltender. But if you think the ability of Mom and Dad to pay for a camp will miraculous make you an NHL All-Star, you're misinformed. Playing goal takes work. Sweat and exertion. There are no shortcuts.

Nice gear makes a better goaltender. There's an old saying, which I repeat often during my goalie sessions: "A good craftsmen doesn't blame his tools." Mommy and Daddy might be able to afford this camp, and all the really expensive gear that the position requires, but if you don't bring the requisite effort, it will all go for naught. Bank on it.

Camps are to get in shape. Wrong. Anyone showing up to camp "to get in shape" is going to miss half the benefit, because they'll be spending half the time trying to keep lunch down, or trying not to huck a lung. The kids who benefit most from camps are the ones who show up ready to roll on Day One. You are reading this in April (or at least the April issue). You have no excuses. Get in shape now.

We will hold your hand. Hockey is a great game because it not only teaches self-sufficiency, but also because it treats that concept as one of its bedrock principles. We – your councilors and instructors – are not getting between the pipes. You are. So it's our job to make sure you're ready to do your job. If you think you're going to get pampered, think again. That would be a disservice to your folks, your team, and ultimately, to you. Our job is to make sure you get in the pool without drowning. And we'll show you how to get faster. But whether you actually get any better or not is really, at the end of the day, up to you.

We will tie your skates, and put on your pads. See the previous paragraph. Throughout the week at camp, we'll offer advice, particularly when it comes to ill-fitting or inadequate gear. My colleague Kevin Morrison at Bertagna Goaltending loves to remind youngsters to cut the boot straps on their pads to an appropriate length, to avoid tripping on them if they come loose. We talk about proper gear care (don't leave it in your bag; hang it in front of a dehumidifier), and gear fit. But we're not nannies.

We are your parents. Not even close. But we understand that Mom and Dad are laying out a pretty penny for you to attend, and we're going to make sure they get their money's worth. But if you talk back or throw temper tantrums at home, and expect to get away with the same behavior at camp, you're in for a shock. There are, at a minimum, 14 or 15 other campers sharing the ice with you. My experience has been that about 75-80 percent of them will dig deep and work hard. If you don't, simply because you can't adjust your attitude, you'll get left behind.

It's all about competition. The objective of these camps is to improve. But far too many kids treat it like a competition, and as a result default to old, comfortable habits, even if those habits prevent them from getting better (the classic example is a kid who stays on the goal line because he's a afraid of getting caught out of position, even though he's giving up half the goal. The solution is becoming a better skater, not staying deep). I remind my campers that I'm not the one picking their teams, or their team's starting goalie. They don't have to worry about impressing me. I only want them to get better. That means getting out of their comfort zone, and push their limits. To quote Brian Daccord of Stop It Goaltending: "In season, it's about results. In the summer, you're working on improving technique, improving quickness, working on your strategies and your technical game, so you know how you want to play every situation. You want to work on your weaknesses, try new things, try to implement new facets to your game, new techniques."

So bring it, but have fun with it.

FINIS