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2010 - Mark Madden Editorial - March

Posted by Jeff Mauro at Apr 5, 2010 5:00PM PDT ( 0 Comments )

Guest Post -  Mark Madden

 Besides Dejan Kovacevic, no one has been a bigger booster of area high school hockey than myself. So I feel I'm qualified when I say, much as I did on my radio program earlier this week, that this was a farcical, shameful episode that illustrated why VERY FEW PEOPLE, ESPECIALLY IN THE MEDIA, TAKE HIGH SCHOOL HOCKEY SERIOUSLY. Nor should they.

Tonight's result compounds that. Certainly gloating over it is childish and shows that few are able to look at the big picture. The WPIAL made a basketball team play twice in one day to complete its schedule and preserve the integrity of its standings and playoff seedings. That's why WPIAL sports are viewed the way they are compared to hockey, which has always been run in haphazard fashion w/plenty of deal-making behind the scenes. The excuse that ice wasn't available is absurd. I was at two rinks last week, and all I saw was empty ice.

Plum got cheated. There's no other way to describe it. Shame on USC and State College for being directly complicit; shame on the PIHL for facilitating. Had the skate been on the other foot and USC, a favored son, been victimized, you can be damn sure that a Plum-State College game would have been played.

I'm told Ben Hanus was academically ineligible but might have been eligible next week. Even more reason to say Plum got cheated. Things like that are part and parcel of the advantage achieved by earning a bye.

Apologists for what happened will say that Plum, at home, lost to a #12 seed. Nonsense. You can't lose a game you don't play. Plum should not have had to play that game.

I will not be talking about the PIHL playoffs for their duration. I usually give them ample plugs, especially when the games go to Mellon Arena. If I attend games, I will pay to get in. I will not benefit from the largesse of a crooked organization. This incident has irreversibly tainted this year's playoffs. It is shameful and deceitful; anything unfair to kids always is.

The PIHL got lucky in one respect; the fiasco got underplayed in the media BECAUSE NO ONE CARES. If the WPIAL had pulled a stunt like this in, say, basketball, it would have been on the front page of the daily sports, not buried in the suburban editions.

After all these years...and attempted guidance from those who do, legitimately, know better...high school hockey simply doesn't get it. Such long-term stupidity is literally unbelievable. Think about it...the Penguins have unleashed a hockey boom in Pittsburgh: Ice hockey, street hockey and roller hockey programs are sold out. The sport's popularity actually rivals football in one of the nation's football capitals. And yet high school hockey is still small-time. Can't figure out a way to take advantage.

Wanna know why? Consider leadership that would allow this to happen.

This will be my only post, ever, on this board.

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2010 - Mark Madden Editorial - March

Posted by Jeff Mauro at Apr 5, 2010 5:00PM PDT ( 0 Comments )

Guest Post -  Mark Madden

 Besides Dejan Kovacevic, no one has been a bigger booster of area high school hockey than myself. So I feel I'm qualified when I say, much as I did on my radio program earlier this week, that this was a farcical, shameful episode that illustrated why VERY FEW PEOPLE, ESPECIALLY IN THE MEDIA, TAKE HIGH SCHOOL HOCKEY SERIOUSLY. Nor should they.

Tonight's result compounds that. Certainly gloating over it is childish and shows that few are able to look at the big picture. The WPIAL made a basketball team play twice in one day to complete its schedule and preserve the integrity of its standings and playoff seedings. That's why WPIAL sports are viewed the way they are compared to hockey, which has always been run in haphazard fashion w/plenty of deal-making behind the scenes. The excuse that ice wasn't available is absurd. I was at two rinks last week, and all I saw was empty ice.

Plum got cheated. There's no other way to describe it. Shame on USC and State College for being directly complicit; shame on the PIHL for facilitating. Had the skate been on the other foot and USC, a favored son, been victimized, you can be damn sure that a Plum-State College game would have been played.

I'm told Ben Hanus was academically ineligible but might have been eligible next week. Even more reason to say Plum got cheated. Things like that are part and parcel of the advantage achieved by earning a bye.

Apologists for what happened will say that Plum, at home, lost to a #12 seed. Nonsense. You can't lose a game you don't play. Plum should not have had to play that game.

I will not be talking about the PIHL playoffs for their duration. I usually give them ample plugs, especially when the games go to Mellon Arena. If I attend games, I will pay to get in. I will not benefit from the largesse of a crooked organization. This incident has irreversibly tainted this year's playoffs. It is shameful and deceitful; anything unfair to kids always is.

The PIHL got lucky in one respect; the fiasco got underplayed in the media BECAUSE NO ONE CARES. If the WPIAL had pulled a stunt like this in, say, basketball, it would have been on the front page of the daily sports, not buried in the suburban editions.

After all these years...and attempted guidance from those who do, legitimately, know better...high school hockey simply doesn't get it. Such long-term stupidity is literally unbelievable. Think about it...the Penguins have unleashed a hockey boom in Pittsburgh: Ice hockey, street hockey and roller hockey programs are sold out. The sport's popularity actually rivals football in one of the nation's football capitals. And yet high school hockey is still small-time. Can't figure out a way to take advantage.

Wanna know why? Consider leadership that would allow this to happen.

This will be my only post, ever, on this board.

Pennsylvania Cup: Latrobe beats Downingtown East for AA title
Friday, April 02, 2010

At last fully dressed and all their equipment packed into their burgeoning hockey bags, Jayson Angus and Zach LaDuke were the final two Latrobe players to walk out of what usually serves as the visiting NHL team's locker room at Mellon Arena late Thursday afternoon.

"Lets go home, Jayson," LaDuke said to his longtime friend and linemate.

"Let's go home," Angus concurred, and with that, the two together squeezed their way through the cramped, dingy bowels of the old arena.

It was the third time those two got to go home together as state champions.

Angus scored twice and LaDuke once, and LaDuke set up Angus for the winning goal with 6:28 left in the third period as Latrobe won its third consecutive Pennsylvania Cup with a 3-2 victory against Downingtown East (24-1-1).

"A three-peat? This is unbelievable," said LaDuke, a junior. "It's been great, the whole way through. It's been incredible. You can't ask for more."

It was fitting that in their final game as Wildcats teammates (the two also play amateur hockey together) Angus, a senior, and LaDuke played pivotal roles.

Two of four players to play on all three title-winning teams -- senior defensemen Tyler Ridder and Josh Harris are the others -- Angus and LaDuke have developed remarkable chemistry along with linemate Josh Singley, who had two assists Thursday.

LaDuke skated with speed down the left wing, beating three Downingtown East defenders and sending a pass to Angus in the slot. Angus slid it between goalie Ryan Lord's pads for what would be the winner.

"I know Jay goes hard to the net all the time," LaDuke said. "You kind of have that sense you know that he's going to be there and you can just throw it. But I saw him out of the corner of my eyes, too."

LaDuke and Angus finished 1-2 in Class AA playoff scoring with 14 and 12 points in four postseason games. They also finished in the top six in the classification's regular-season scoring race.

"He's obviously a great player, and he made a great play," Angus said.

"It started with Singley in the neutral zone getting a chip-in, and Zach made a great play going around two guys. I just went hard to the net, put my stick down, and he did all the work for me."

Freshman Shane Brudnok made 32 saves for Latrobe (21-3-1), which has won 10 consecutive games overall and 12 playoff games in a row, dating to 2008.

"To win a championship, you have to have great defense, and it starts with great goaltending," Wildcats coach Dan Ridder said. "And Shane was just outstanding, especially with us giving up all those penalties."

Latrobe killed off five of Downingtown East's seven power plays.

It was the second consecutive year the Wildcats scored the winner to break a tie in the state title game in the final seven minutes.

"It hit me how special this team is as soon as the buzzer went off," Brudnok said. "When we were all jumping up and down and I was attacked by my teammates, I realized how special this team is."



Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10092/1047402-364.stm#ixzz0jwTBlXAj
Pennsylvania Cup: Mars defeats West Chester Rustin, claims A title
Friday, April 02, 2010

Tyler Stepke still recalls the predictably hostile Philadelphia-area hockey crowd a year ago at the Pennsylvania Cup Class A state championship game.

They chanted his name and generally got underneath the skin -- and inside the heads -- of Mars players in a 5-0 loss to West Chester Rustin at its home rink.

Home in a more familiar place this season, Stepke got his revenge.

Stepke made 35 saves and Robbie Sigurdsson scored twice and added an assist as Mars won its first state title hockey title with a 4-1 win against Rustin Thursday at Mellon Arena.

"We worked so hard for this all year long," Stepke said while shaking his head slowly in disbelief standing in the runway leading to what is usually the visiting NHL team's locker room at Mellon Arena moments after hoisting the Pennsylvania Cup.

"Redemption. That's the word, redemption."

Stepke stopped 15 shots within the game's first 10 minutes and was the biggest reason Mars (24-2) killed off seven Knights power plays. He didn't allow a goal until the final shot he faced, from Brian Christie with less than a minute to play.

"He's like a brick wall back there," Sigurdsson said. "I don't know if we would have won without him. He was making just amazing saves."

Mars withstood an early flurry by Rustin (13-9-2) and seized the momentum by scoring twice in a span of 31 seconds, starting with Sigurdsson's slap shot from high in the right circle off a pass from Mike Mazzotta while on the power play 10:37 into the first.

Nick Blaney was tripped up heading into the left-wing corner moments later and, while laid out on his belly, got a pass through to a streaking Rusty Miller in the slot. Miller made it 2-0 with his third goal of the playoffs.

"Every game there's a five-minute period where the other team has the momentum," said Planets captain Tyler Whiteford, who also assisted on the first goal. "You just need to work through that. It was just that that was the beginning of the game for us. And we got through it."

Sigurdsson scored again 52 seconds into the second period -- slamming home a feed from Miller while standing just to the left of the net -- and Mazzotta when made it 4-0 with 7:33 to play, the Planets knew they were bringing home only the second recognized state championship for a team sport at the school. The 1976 cross-country girls' team won a PIAA title.

"It feels real good for the guys to be able to win the first Mars state title in the last year of Mellon Arena," coach Steve Meyers said. "Winning your school's first state championship in a sport is a feeling not a lot of people get to experience."

The Planets, who have won 11 in a row, are 69-6-1 over the past three seasons, including two PIHL Penguins Cups. They outscored opponents, 22-7, in this postseason.



Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10092/1047403-364.stm#ixzz0jwSb4LSZ
Pennsylvania Cup: Canon-McMillan falls in second overtime to Cardinal O'Hara
Friday, April 02, 2010

Canon-McMillan's overtime magic finally ran out.

The Big Macs beat two higher-seeded teams in overtime during the Penguins Cup Class AAA semifinals and final to win that title, but the law of averages caught up to them in what was a 4-3, double-overtime loss to Cardinal O'Hara in a Pennsylvania Cup high school hockey state championship games at Mellon Arena.

"It was almost magical again out on that ice," Canon-McMillan captain Mario Dalesandro said.

"We were the Cinderella the whole time, you know? We weren't even supposed to be here. And then the clock decided to strike 12."

The clock struck 12 when the Mellon Arena game clock showed 8:47 remained in the second overtime. That is when the Lions' Stephen Falcone scored his second goal of the game, cruising down the slot, turning the puck over to his backhand and lifting a shot underneath the crossbar on Big Macs goalie Brandon Smolarek's glove side just inside the left post.

This overtime was not supposed to end that way for Canon-McMillan (18-8-1), the No. 8 seed in the Penguins Cup playoffs that beat both No. 1 Shaler and No. 4 Seneca Valley in overtime on the same Mellon Arena ice to reach the state title game.

"Twice, yes," Big Macs coach Yuri Kuvokuha said. "A third time?

"It won't happen every time. That's hockey. But what I told the kids is we had a great season, an unbelievable season. Nobody expected a No. 8 seed to be playing in the state final.

"It was close, too. Oh, so close."

Canon-McMillan did not trail until the game ended. The Big Macs got goals from Ryan Thomas and Dalesandro 33 seconds apart starting 5:12 into the second period.

But goals by Cardinal O'Hara's David Smith and Falcone later in the period tied it. Still, when Joe Mottiqua -- the overtime hero in the semifinals against Shaler -- scored with 10:32 left, it appeared as if the Big Macs had some of that Mellon Arena magic left in the final high school hockey game played at the 49-year-old facility.

"I really thought at that point we were going to keep going and put the foot on the gas pedal and just stomp all over them," Dalesandro said. "But they came back strong, give them credit."

Michael Marconi tied it with 4:07 left on what was the third goal off a rebound for the Lions (16-3-3). It set up overtime, which had been so kind to Canon-McMillan in recent weeks.

"I thought all along our guys would pull it out," Dalesandro said.

"Even when they started coming back, I thought we were going to come through again; I really did. I still really can't believe we lost that game. But someone has to lose, and unfortunately it was us."



Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10092/1047400-364.stm#ixzz0jwTmC7pX