Jan. 3, 2005
Remembering Walter Brown Arena
by Scott Weighart/Hockey East
Reporter
BOSTON — Boston University played 528
hockey games in over 33 years at Walter Brown Arena, and legendary
coach Jack Parker can't recall missing a single one.
However, he did not see what he
acknowledges to be the most memorable moment of all those games.
On October 20, 1995, a sellout crowd
roared as BU's fourth national championship banner was raised to the
rafters. Playing against North Dakota, the Terriers lifted spirits
even higher when Chris O'Sullivan scored a goal on his first shift.
But when O'Sullivan celebrated by pretending his stick was a gun and
"firing" toward the net, Parker quickly pulled him down the runway
behind the Terrier goal for some rather animated constructive
criticism.
While that was going on, BU freshman
Travis Roy raced in on
the right-wing side after the ensuing faceoff, only to glance off
Sioux defenseman Mitch Vig, falling headfirst into the boards behind
the North Dakota goal. Roy cracked his fourth vertebra and remains
paralyzed, the tragedy occurring just 11 seconds into his collegiate
career.
"I was upset with Chris O'Sullivan for
showing off a little after the goal," Parker. "I was talking to him
down the runway here when Travis got hit, so I never saw the original
hit — never saw it live."
Watching from section four of the
stands, I remember watching Roy intently, awaiting a groggy movement
of a leg or arm. There had been any number of times I saw a player go
hard into the boards at that rink; I must have seen it happen to Jon
Coleman about three times. Usually the outcome was a separated
shoulder, maybe a concussion. So I wanted to believe that Roy had been
knocked cold or that they were telling him not to move as a
precaution. It didn't seem possible that something serious had
happened.
It turns out that the same feeling
prevailed on the BU bench through the first two periods.
"It was dead quiet in the building
after Travis went down, but you never think the worst," Parker said.
"You think you're going to take him to the hospital; he's going to be
out for the year or have a bad shoulder injury or something — he'll
get some feeling back when he gets to the hospital. So it wasn't until
the end of the second period when Dr. Schepsis came back and told me
how bad it was, and that's when I realized 'Oh, [expletive]. That's
it.'"
One chilling memory from that night: A
season-ticket holder behind the bench told me that O'Sullivan ended up
sitting back on the bench while medical professionals attended to
Travis on the ice. O'Sullivan hung his head at one point, revealing a
scar from the neck injury he had suffered earlier in his career —
another early-season accident that resulted in the Massachusetts
native missing the rest of the 1992-93 season shortly after he arrived
as a January freshman.
"Which is now what's got him out of
hockey," Parker said of the former BU star's neck injury. O'Sullivan
played 62 NHL games with three teams before hanging it up after the
2002-03 season. "That's why he's not playing any more."
The Roy injury hung over the season,
but there were other vivid memories. I remember Terrier captain Jay
Pandolfo carrying out Roy's jersey for every game that season, always
an emotional sight for everyone involved. Then there was the streak of
times that someone won the 50/50 raffle, only to donate their winnings
to the Travis Roy Fund.
Before too long, the Travis Roy Fund
had enough money to ensure that Roy's own financial needs would be met
for life, and eventually Roy began the
Travis Roy Foundation, which still raises money for assisting
spinal cord injury survivors as well providing research money for a
cure. Roy's No. 24 ultimately became the first uniform number to be
retired — a tribute not to his injury but to the character he showed
when confronting this incredible degree of adversity.
But if Roy's tragic accident ranks as
the most-remembered moment, it's harder to pin down the best game ever
in the Walter Brown Arena era. Everyone has their favorites, but
Parker cites the days when ECAC playoffs and even NCAA tournament
games were played right on Babcock Street.
"There were a lot of great ECAC games
here — one game where you're in or you go home," Parker said. "In
those days, if you didn't make the final of the ECAC, you didn't make
the Final Four. A home game here was so pressure-packed all the time:
You had to win. We had some amazing games here. Two years in a row we
played BC — I think it was '76 and '77 — two unbelievable games, I
think it was 4-3 [actually 6-5] and 8-7. And then we had an
unbelievable game in '75 against Brown University [a 5-4 OT win for
BU]. Those are the games that jump out at you because they were so
important. The season was over when you lost."
Of course, the playoff games also
resulted in some memorable lows. In 1983-84, the NCAA used an oddball
format: a best-of-two series with most goals winning in the event of a
tie. In the first game, the Terriers beat Bowling Green, coached by
current Boston College coach Jerry York, 6-3 in the first game. I went
to the second game, which felt almost like a formality from a fan's
perspective. But after 60 minutes, the Falcons had not only won but
matched the three-goal margin, 4-1. Then Bowling Green won in
overtime, going on to win the national championship.
"But we were in the national tournament
at least," Parker recalled. "That was the national tournament. We'd
already had a successful regular season."
Another famous low point was No. 8 seed
Merrimack beating BU in a best-of-three Hockey East quarterfinal
series in 1997-98. Games two and three were particularly exciting, as
Terrier alum Ron Anderson — a lame-duck coach at the time — managed to
pull off a remarkable feat despite, or maybe because of, giving two of
his ostensible four lines an incredible amount of ice time.
As for regular-season games, it's hard
to know where to begin. I reminded Parker of a great BU-BC battle in
the mid-nineties, a game that as much intensity as you could possibly
want in a December game. With under 90 seconds remaining, Parker
called timeout and pulled the goalie with the faceoff in the Eagle
end. Mike Sylvia scored a goal right off the faceoff, and the arena
erupted. I remember looking over at the BU bench, though, and Parker
simply strolled calmly behind the BU bench, looking down at his shoes
with his hands behind his back.
"That was a great game," agreed Parker.
"All of the other regular-season games pale in comparison with the
emotion involved between BC and BU."
If anyone needed a reminder of that,
they got one last month in another December classic. After falling
behind and then tying it, BU won it when the smallest player on the
ice — centerman Brad Zancanaro — picked up the puck when an Eagle
defenseman fell down, skating in before pinpointing a high corner for
the game-winner.
Going back to the 1970s, Parker
remembered another BU-BC classic when Rick Meagher scored a hat trick
in the third period to lead a comeback victory. For many fans, another
favorite might be another come-from-behind win: a 6-4 triumph over
Michigan State in 1989-90. Freshman Tony Amonte scored two
eyebrow-raising goals, and the game heralded BU's return to form as a
national contender.
Although some mid-1990s games would not
be considered great, there were dazzling displays of high-octane
offense. In 1995-96, the Terriers scored ten goals or more on five
occasions, including a game in which Jay Pandolfo notched a hat trick
of shorthanded goals. Listening to the band almost became dizzying as
the goals piled up and the "sieve" chants became longer and longer.
How about the strangest moment in
Walter Brown Arena history? That was an easy one for Parker.
"The measles game, for sure," Parker
said, referring to a late-season game in 1984-85 against Lowell. "We
played a game with nobody here. There was a measles outbreak around
campus and around some other campuses. So it was the press, the
referees, the timekeepers, and us — no fans whatsoever. It was a real
eerie feeling, a very bizarre game." Bizarre enough, in fact, to merit
mention in Time magazine on March 11, 1985.
Beyond that, I have happy memories of
many small moments at WBA, most of which came over seeing almost every
game over the last 11 seasons: Dan Ronan's signature hip checks; Rick
DiPietro's amazing pinpoint passes from the goal line to a teammate
standing just outside the opposing blue line; Carl Corazzini's bizarre
knack for scoring goals off the opening faceoff of the third period;
Mike Grier's booming hits as an overweight freshman. and then his
incredible hands and scoring touch once he turned his physique
NHL-caliber by working with strength and conditioning coach Mike Boyle
over the summer.
I also loved watching the development
of initial fourth-liners into valuable contributors — Ken Rausch, John
Hynes, Peter Donatelli, Ryan Priem, and Matt Radoslovich come to mind
as underdog Terriers.
Going into the stands for Sunday's last
game provided an opportune for some devoted Terriers fans to reflect
on their favorite experiences in the arena. Up high in section eight,
I tracked down Brian "Sasquatch" Zive, renowned for stripping his
shirt to expose his ultra-furry physique while the BU band plays "Iron
Man" in the third period.
"My three best memories are three games
against Maine," Zive recalled. "The 0-0 tie back in the mid-nineties,
then the year that Maine had to forfeit a bunch of games, and they
were suddenly in eighth place. BU was in first place, so we had to
play them in the first round of the Hockey East playoffs. There were
questions about whether the Ferraro brothers and Kariya were going to
play, and we beat them, I think 8-5 and 4-1.
"There was so much energy because it
was unfair that we had to play Maine — they were much better than an
eighth-place team — but the team rose to the occasion. Fantastic
games."
Zive also has hair-raising but fond
memories of his role as Sasquatch. "I remember walking behind the net
over to the band section, and the reception was so loud that it just
made the hair rise all over my body-goosebumps. It was a special time.
I remember wearing a Miss Maine sash, and the real Miss Maine turned
out to be here and didn't take kindly to that gesture."
Devoted fan Sean Pickett, whose website
was the first to feature my writing on BU hockey, can't match
Sasquatch in terms of antics or body hair, but he also was quick to
mention the same Maine games.
"They really were a much better team
than a No. 8 seed," Pickett said. "That was a great series. After
that, it's tough. A lot of them are emotional: Travis's injury; the
game when J.P. [McKersie, the goaltender who survived a coma after an
offseason bicycling accident] came back in, and more Maine games — the
0-0 overtime tie in '94 when both teams put on a show but the goalies
didn't let anything by them.
"Really way, way too many to pick one
to be the all-time best. My all-time best probably had to be my second
game here back in '85 when BC beat B in overtime 2-1. It was such a
great game; it got me hooked on college hockey."
Still, Pickett agreed that he feels no
great sadness about transitioning from Walter Brown to Agganis. "Not
anymore," Pickett said. "I've gotten to the point where I want to walk
around the concourse without feeling cramped; I want a
state-of-the-art scoreboard for replays. As I get older, I find that
the new places are nicer."
After the game, the players and coaches
reflected on this end of an era.
"I've never been here before, but I'm
glad that as a coach that I had the chance to come here," Minnesota
coach Don Lucia said. "It reeks of tradition. It's that old throwback
building — the way buildings were when I played back in the seventies
when this was built. It was great for us to be a part of this to close
it down."
"I'll miss the atmosphere," Terrier
goalie John Curry said. "Obviously we'll find out tomorrow what the
new rink is like and everything, but it's just so personal for the
fans, hanging over the glass. It's so exciting with the low ceiling —
a lot of noise, great to play in — but hopefully the new arena will be
the same deal."
Parker echoed Curry's curiosity about
the new building's atmosphere. "It's really not the end of Walter
Brown — we're not tearing this place down," Parker said. "But the
crowd tonight made me wonder about what's it's going to be like
tomorrow night. It'll be interesting to see what it's like tomorrow
night in the new building because that's something we've always liked
here — how it really gets us going, the crowd, how loud it gets. It'll
be interesting to see how it transfers over."
The night began with 15 players and
several coaches from the first Walter Brown team in 1971-72—which
turned out to be the Terriers' second national championship
team—coming out to be introduced on the ice. After the game, a
smorgasbord of former Terriers—including many NHL players, thanks to
the lockout—joined the current team on the ice for a massive photo
opportunity.
BU leaves Walter Brown Arena with a
final record of 362-129-36. Terrier fans leave with fond memories of a
rink that repeatedly proved there was no place like home.
- Appeared on
www.uscho.com
January 3, 2005-
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