Oct. 26, 2004
Terrier Alums, Varsity Skate For Charity
by Scott Weighart/Hockey East
Reporter
BOSTON — This was one
game that Boston University was sure to win.
National Hockey League
Fans lamenting this year's labor impasse enjoyed a healthy fix of
first-rate professional talent Sunday, as BU's star-studded alumni
team beat the current varsity, 9-5, in an exhibition game at Walter
Brown Arena. The contest's proceeds are designated for charities
inspired by two of the school's most noteworthy alumni,
Travis Roy and Mark
Bavis.
In this season
dominated by constant penalties thus far, fans also could relish a
game that featured all of three penalties. The game proved to be
highly entertaining, combining some startling exhibitions with skill
and speed, along with several light-hearted moments — most of them
courtesy of alumni goaltender Rick DiPietro, who repeatedly attempted
to stickhandle out to the blue line and even wound up in the attacking
zone in the game's last minute.
When all was said and
done, Chris Drury notched a
hat trick for the victors, while Dan Lacouture added a pair of goals.
Chris O'Sullivan added a goal and two assists. For the present-day
varsity, Chris Bourque scored a goal and looked quite at home with the
opposition thanks to several flashy moves. John Laliberte led the
scorers with a goal and an assist, and John Curry fared the best of
the three goalies, surrendering two goals in the third period after
entering a 7-2 game.
"I said to Chris Drury,
‘Well, you got a hat trick — nothing's changed here.'" Terrier Coach
Jack Parker said. "And he said, ‘Yeah, it's the only rink I can score
in.'"
"It was a great time,"
Drury said. "I've been looking forward to it for a while, especially
since Walter Brown is not going to be used for much longer. ... The
hockey part was great but also catching up with people I haven't seen
for a while."
Those people included
former teammates and current NHL players Jay Pandolfo, Mike Grier, Tom
Poti, Shawn Bates and Lacouture, along with Terriers from other eras,
such as Scott Young, Scott Lachance, Mike Sullivan, Shawn McEachern,
Adrian Aucoin and DiPietro.
The assemblage of
talent made it a special afternoon for the Terriers of today.
"It was awesome,"
Bourque said. "It was a really good experience playing against all
those guys — fun for us, probably fun for them and the fans, too, so
everyone had a really good time."
"It was fun," David Van
der Gulik said. "It was amazing just playing against those guys and
watching them, and I think that's what happened: We got caught
watching them too much."
Indeed, the young
Terriers gave up three goals in the first ten minutes and were outshot
20-12 through one, trailing 4-1 after 20 minutes.
"Once we got going, we
played much better," Parker said. "Obviously, that's a pretty good
team; we learned some lessons watching them play: how they moved the
puck and how effortlessly they jumped into plays and they knew to go,
the passing and timing."
Playing in net the
whole 60 minutes, DiPietro entertained the crowd with his
stickhandling and passing, although he finally paid for his wanderlust
in the game's final minute. After evading Brad Zancanaro with a slick
move, the New York Islander netminder coughed up the puck at the blue
line, and Zancanaro buried a goal. That didn't deter the flashy
DiPietro, who went away all the way into the opposing slot to set up a
teammate for a shot in the game's waning seconds, much to the delight
of the crowd.
Afterwards, DiPietro
was asked if he enjoyed playing offense a little bit.
"A little bit?' he
replied. "I was trying to get Bates in net for the third period, so I
could go and play forward, but he wasn't caving."
"He's nuts," Bourque
said, complimenting DiPietro.
"You can always count
on Ricky for some comic relief," said Travis Roy, who wheeled on the
ice with the alumni for the pregame introductions.
"It's a lot of fun,"
Roy said of the event. "If you think about all of the BU grads that
are playing in the NHL and to have them come back and put them in one
group, it's an impressive group of players. Good guys: they've always
treated me well and are looking out for me and the foundation. It's
fun to see them play together, and it was really a high-caliber game."
The Travis Roy Foundation —
co-beneficiary of the event along with the Mark Bavis Leadership
Foundation — has been helping to make strides against paralysis in two
primary ways.
"The
Travis Roy Foundation started a couple of years after my accident,
in 1997," Roy told USCHO. "Half of the money we raise goes toward
spinal cord research, and I'm very hopeful that we'll come up with a
cure, and I'll get out of this chair.
"The other half goes
toward individual grants: Trying to support spinal cord-injured
survivors with wheelchairs, voice-activated computers,
wheelchair-accessible vans. So we've done a lot of great things. It's
a small foundation, but I think it's had a very positive role. I'm
grateful to Coach Parker and the BU alumni."
The game also gave some
overdue competition to a group of NHL players contending with a
lockout
"I haven't really
skated that much, so this was real good to get out there and compete
and play some hockey," Drury said.
Asked to speculate on
the length of the impasse, Drury didn't sound optimistic.
"I don't know. We're
not budging, and we're not too interested in listening to what they're
offering. If they want to add a salary cap and no guaranteed
contracts, it's going to be a while."
Appeared on
US College Hockey
Online, October 2004 |