USCHO.com: "Worcester State Looks To Build On 2010 Finish"
One of the most historic weeks in the history of the Worcester State men’s ice hockey program was followed by.…nothing
Worcester State looks to build on 2010 finish
January 7,
2011
By Nate Owen, ECAC Northeast/MASCAC Columnist,
USCHO.com
One of the most historic weeks in the history of the Worcester
State men’s ice hockey program was followed
by.…nothing. The Lancers started their final week of play in
2010 by knocking off Fitchburg State, who they hadn’t beaten
since 2003. Following that was a 4–1 win over Westfield
State, who swept the season series last year by an aggregate score
of 19–10. The week ended with a wild 5–4 win over Salem
State, who hadn’t lost to Worcester State since 1971, a span
of 44 games.
The Lancers’ hottest week of the year was followed by their
longest break of the year, as the team was off almost four weeks
for winter vacation.
For coach John Guiney, the almost month-long layoff allowed
Worcester State to savor the wins and serve as a reminder of the
level they needed to get back to once 2011 rolled around.
“It was nice to have a month to enjoy what happened,”
Guiney said. “It’s nice to enjoy, but if we had played
[following Salem State] and lost, it would have been forgotten. But
we’re able to build on [the hot finish] and see how we need
to get back to where we were [prior to the break].”
That three-game stretch to close the first semester helped
Worcester State, a team which hasn’t had a winning record
since the 1997–98 season, end 2010 with a 5–2–3
record, including a 4–1–1 mark in MASCAC play that was
good enough to secure a first place tie with
Massachusetts-Dartmouth.
“From a coaching standpoint, entering that week, we had just
lost to Mass.-Dartmouth but were down 2–0 and ended up making
it 3–2,” Guiney said. “We said we couldn’t
end the semester 0–4 but we tried not to put too much
pressure on the kids. I was hoping to finish out going
1–1–1.”
With a 6–3 win over Becker on Thursday to start the 2011
slate, it appears any the Lancers have shaken off any rust from the
long break.
“I went to [Becker] a little concerned,” Guiney said,
noting that it was Becker’s fourth game since the break while
Worcester State had only had two practices.
“Our first run through the league went very well,” he
said. “We have a lot of new players, 13 or 14 new kids. To be
honest, a lot has to do with the recruits from the Western States
Hockey League. The kids came out with a desire to play. They have
no idea who these teams are, no clue of the history. It
doesn’t really matter to them.”
The new group’s resiliency was apparent against the Hawks.
After going up 1–0 and then falling behind 2–1, the
Lancers showed little panic, scoring three unanswered goals to take
charge.
“From a coaching staff, its so nice just to stand on the
bench and have players with a will to win and play so hard,”
Guiney said.
That work ethic started early, and transcends the whole team, even
those who don’t dress on game day.
“Even at the start of the year, when the trainer was working
with these kids, he was telling me how hard these kids work and how
he hadn’t seen a group like this in a long time,”
Guiney said. “Even the kids that don’t play
aren’t a problem. We just got off the bus [from Becker] and
when the game ended, all the kids that weren’t playing were
in packing up and getting shirts. You don’t see that in every
program. [With kids] that aren’t playing, there’s
usually some moaning, but we don’t have that. They know if
they work hard, they will get an opportunity.”
Guiney said the program had a contact in the Western States Hockey
League who asked them to come out and check out players in the
league. While he wasn’t sure at first how the league and
players compared to the Eastern junior leagues, their adjustment to
college hockey on the East Coast has been essential for
Worcester.
“The kids are very mature and easy to coach,” Guiney
said. “The best part is that they’re all nice kids;
there’s no problems, and that has a lot to do with our
success.”
While Guiney admits Worcester State’s work ethic outshines it
talents, the Lancers have had several individual standouts up to
this point.
Senior captain Chris Wallin is having a career year, already
surpassing his season best in goals, averaging just over a point
per game. All this comes after playing mostly at forward after
shifting between defense and the front line his first three years.
Wallin, the team’s best skater according to Guiney, still
will move to defense at key moments late in games.
“Chris is a great, great captain,” Guiney said.
“He’s been able to talk to every kid at every level.
He’s the right arm of the coaching staff.”
In net, freshman Bryan Kalcynski (2.63 GAA, .934 save percentage)
has been a key cog after coming to the Lancers from Erie Community
College.
“He does a great job,” Guiney said of Kalcynski.
“It’s an old cliche, but every time he plays, he gives
us a chance to win. He gives the team so much
confidence.”
While Guiney doesn’t believe any team took them lightly in
the first half (Worcester State played in only one game that
wasn’t a goal or closer), the target is on the Lancers back
heading in the second half.
“Our conference is just strong,” he said.
“Whether it’s strong in relationship to other
conferences doesn’t matter.”
Even with increased pressure, Guiney is looking forward to the
second half.
“It’s been enjoyable,” he said. “It’s
fun right now, especially with all the new young kids.”
