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1983–84 Bowling Green Falcons men's ice hockey season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

College ice hockey team season
1983–84Bowling Green Falcons
men's ice hockey season
National champion
KeyBank Tournament, champion
CCHA, champion
NCAA tournament, champion
Conference1stCCHA
Home iceBGSU Ice Arena
Record
Overall34–8–2
Conference22–4–2
Home18–2–0
Road11–4–1
Neutral5–2–1
Coaches and captains
Head coachJerry York
Captain(s)Mike Pikul
Wayne Wilson
Bowling Green Falcons men's ice hockey seasons
«1982–83 1984–85 »

The1983–84Bowling Green Falcons men's ice hockey team represented theBowling Green University incollege ice hockey. In its 5th year under head coachJerry York the team compiled a 34–8–2 record and reached theNCAA tournament for the fifth time.[1] The Falcons defeatedMinnesota–Duluth 5–4 in the fourth overtime to win the championship game at the1980 Olympic Arena inLake Placid, New York, the longest title game in NCAA history.

Season

[edit]

Early season success

[edit]

Bowling Green was champing at the bit after being left out of the1983 Tournament despite winning theCCHA and having a better record than the team picked ahead of them,Minnesota–Duluth. The Falcons got off to a good start with a sweep of visitingClarkson but when they opened their conference schedule the following week they could only manage a split withLake Superior State. Losing to an inferior team appeared to galvanize the team and the Falcons proceeded to win the next 17 contests, the longest streak in program history.[2] Through two months Bowling Green scored no fewer than 4 goals in each of their games and though they started out withWayne Collins in net (their only goaltender with NCAA experience)Gary Kruzich soon became the go-to goalie. Even when Bowling Green was limited to 2 goals the defense showed up and allowed the Falcons to win theKeyBank Tournament. The streak finally ended with a 5–6 overtime loss atMichigan and a week later the team ended up with a tie againstFerris State.

Defensive cracks

[edit]

The Falcons regained their footing when they played at home for the first time in over a month againstNorthern Michigan and after earning 3 points againstIllinois–Chicago in early February Bowling Green guaranteed themselves their third consecutive CCHA title.[3][4] With little to play for Bowling Green played a bad game againstWestern Michigan, allowing a season-high 8 goals against before earning a split. The following weekend they welcomed inDivision IIIMichigan–Dearborn and dominated the obviously outmatched Wolverines but the lack of a challenge did not help BG right the ship and the squad split their final weekend against cellar-dwellingMiami.

CCHA tournament

[edit]

With the program record for wins in sight (37) the team appeared to get back to normal when they opened the tournament with a home win against Lake Superior State but they were back in the losing column after game 2. Fortunately the first round was a total-goal series and the close loss in the second game didn't cost BGSU too much. In the semifinal at theJoe Louis Arena Bowling Green faced Western Michigan and the Broncos showed no fear in facing down the Falcons and the two teams fought to a 3–3 tie through regulation. Kruzich kept the Falcons in the game but futureNHLerGlenn Healy couldn't be beaten and in the second overtime WMU scored to end Bowling Green's chance at the conference championship. The Falcons had a chance to redeem themselves in the consolation game but against fell in overtime, this time toOhio State.

NCAA tournament

[edit]

Even with losing three consecutive games Bowling Green still had the second best record in the country and the selection committee gave them an at-large bid, slotting them third in the west. As a lower seed, BGSU started the tournament on the road againstBoston University and the Falcons still could not break out of their losing skid, dropping the game 3–6. With the team needing to win the second game by 4 goals to advance they had their work cut out for them but Gary Kruzich played one of his best games, holding BU to a single goal while the Falcons scored 4 goals in regulation, and added the series winner in overtime.

The miraculous turnaround sent Bowling Green toLake Placid for the second time that season where the Falcons faced the #1 offensive team and the only squad with more wins (33),Michigan State. Once more the defense was instrumental in Bowling Green's win, shutting the Spartans down and winning 2–1.

Overtime Epic

[edit]

In the championship game BGSU only had Minnesota–Duluth left standing in their way but the #1 ranked Bulldogs looked to be a tough test. Bristling with talent and possessingHobey Baker Award winnerTom Kurvers, UMD looked to get the jump on Bowling Green early but it wasGarry Galley who notched the game's first goal with a shot that somehow found its way through a mass of bodies. Duluth responded with their own goal 20 seconds later and two teams remained tied for the next period plus.Bill Watson broke the tie past the mid-way point of the game whileBob Lakso extended the lead at the start of the third period. With the team down by 2 goals with 19 minutes to play, Bowling Green began firing shot after shot againstRick Kosti and eventually the Falcons' leading goal-scorerJamie Wansborough broke through with apower play marker. With over 15 minutes to play the Falcons had plenty of time to tie the score but with Duluth playing in a defensive shell their opportunities were limited. The situation became dire when UMD regained their 2-goal advantage with 8 minutes to play but the Falcons responded immediately and cut the lead back to 1. Bowling Green had a good opportunity to tie the game late on a power play but they couldn't convert and as the clock kept ticking it appeared that Minnesota–Duluth was going to win the national title. With less than two minutes to play, team co-captainWayne Wilson fired the puck into the Duluth zone from the red line. When Kosti went behind the net to play the puck it hit something along the boards and bounced out into the crease and, with three Bulldogs around him,John Samanski poked the puck into the net to tie the game.

With the Duluth faithful screaming that the play should have beenicing the two teams restarted play and fought furiously in the final 90 seconds before heading into overtime. In the first overtime UMD nearly ended the game but Kruzich stopped a semi-breakaway by Lakso and neither squad could find the back of the net. The game became the first title game to need more than one extra frame but it did not stop there. Kruzich and Kosti kept the score tied until deep into the fourth 10-minute overtime. With both teams exhausted leading BG scorerDan Kane foundGino Cavallini alone in front of the net and the sophomore backhanded the puck past Kosti's leg to end the longest championship game in NCAA history (as of 2019).

Awards and honors

[edit]

Gary Kruzich became the third consecutive goaltender to win thetournament MOP as much for his overtime heroics as for holding BU and MSU to single goals in the previous two wins. However, Kruzich had to share hisAll-Tournament team spot with UMD's Rick Kosti, the only time in history that any position was split between two people (as of 2019).[5] Kruzich was joined on the All-Tournament team byDavid Ellett andGarry Galley while Galley and Dan Kane made theAHCA All-American West Team and theAll-CCHA First Team[6] Ellett and John Samanski were named to the CCHA Second Team while none of the individual conference awards went to the Falcons.

The championship was the first for anyCCHA team and demonstrated that the conference could compete with the other major powers of the college hockey world.

Standings

[edit]
ConferenceOverall
GPWLTPTSGFGAGPWLTGFGA
Bowling Green282242.82114695443482228146
Ohio State302190.700155964130101212133
Michigan State*302190.700162904634120241129
Northern Michigan3016140.5331261184017221155161
Western Michigan2813141.4821251144222182187168
Michigan Tech3014160.4671231284119211160167
Ferris State3013152.4671281384118203184184
Lake Superior State3012171.4171031274018202152176
Michigan3011181.3831051483714221134179
Miami3010200.3331161563713231149188
Illinois-Chicago285221.19683162355291106221
Championship: Michigan State
indicates conference regular season champion
*indicates conference tournament champion

Schedule

[edit]
DateOpponent#Rank#SiteResultRecord
Regular Season
October 14vs. Clarkson*BGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 5–2 1–0
October 15vs. Clarkson*BGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 5–3 2–0
October 21vs. Lake Superior StateBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 7–2 3–0 (1–0)
October 22vs. Lake Superior StateBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioL 1–2 3–1 (1–1)
October 28vs. Michigan TechBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 6–5 4–1 (2–1)
October 29vs. Michigan TechBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 5–1 5–1 (3–1)
November 4at Michigan StateMunn Ice ArenaEast Lansing, MichiganW 7–4 6–1 (4–1)
November 5at Michigan StateMunn Ice ArenaEast Lansing, MichiganW 5–3 7–1 (5–1)
November 11vs. Illinois–ChicagoBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 8–3 8–1 (6–1)
November 12vs. Illinois–ChicagoBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 7–2 9–1 (7–1)
November 18at New Hampshire*Snively ArenaDurham, New HampshireW 6–5 OT10–1 (7–1)
November 19at New Hampshire*Snively ArenaDurham, New HampshireW 4–3 11–1 (7–1)
November 25vs. MiamiBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 5–3 12–1 (8–1)
November 26vs. MiamiBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 6–3 13–1 (9–1)
December 2at Ohio StateOSU Ice RinkColumbus, OhioW 4–2 14–1 (10–1)
December 3vs. Ohio StateBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 8–6 15–1 (11–1)
December 9vs. Western MichiganBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 5–4 16–1 (12–1)
December 10vs. Western MichiganBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 4–3 17–1 (13–1)
KeyBank Tournament
December 29vs. Cornell*1980 Olympic ArenaLake Placid,New York (Tournament Semifinal)W 6–4 18–1 (13–1)
December 30vs. Clarkson*1980 Olympic ArenaLake Placid,New York (Tournament championship)W 2–0 19–1 (13–1)
January 6at MichiganYost Ice ArenaAnn Arbor, MichiganW 8–2 20–1 (14–1)
January 7at MichiganYost Ice ArenaAnn Arbor, MichiganL 5–6 OT20–2 (14–2)
January 13at Ferris StateEwigleben ArenaBig Rapids, MichiganW 5–2 21–2 (15–2)
January 14at Ferris StateEwigleben ArenaBig Rapids, MichiganT 5–5 OT21–2–1 (15–2–1)
January 20vs. Northern MichiganBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 4–2 22–2–1 (16–2–1)
January 21vs. Northern MichiganBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 4–2 23–2–1 (17–2–1)
January 27vs. Ohio StateBGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 4–3 OT24–2–1 (18–2–1)
January 28at Ohio StateOSU Ice RinkColumbus, OhioW 3–2 OT25–2–1 (19–2–1)
February 3vs. Illinois–ChicagoFranklin Park Ice ArenaFranklin Park, IllinoisW 5–3 26–2–1 (20–2–1)
February 4vs. Illinois–ChicagoFranklin Park Ice ArenaFranklin Park, IllinoisT 5–5 OT26–2–2 (20–2–2)
February 10at Western MichiganLawson ArenaKalamazoo, MichiganL 3–8 26–3–2 (20–3–2)
February 11at Western MichiganLawson ArenaKalamazoo, MichiganW 4–2 27–3–2 (21–3–2)
February 17vs. Michigan–Dearborn*BGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 10–3 28–3–2 (21–3–2)
February 18vs. Michigan–Dearborn*BGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, OhioW 10–2 29–3–2 (21–3–2)
February 24at MiamiGoggin Ice ArenaOxford, OhioW 11–4 30–3–2 (22–3–2)
February 25at MiamiGoggin Ice ArenaOxford, OhioL 2–6 30–4–2 (22–4–2)
CCHA tournament
March 2vs. Lake Superior State*BGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, Ohio (CCHA Quarterfinal game 1)W 7–3 31–4–2 (22–4–2)
March 3vs. Lake Superior State*BGSU Ice ArenaBowling Green, Ohio (CCHA Quarterfinal game 2)L 6–7 31–5–2 (22–4–2)
Bowling Green Wins Series 13–10
March 9vs. Western Michigan*Joe Louis ArenaDetroit,Michigan (CCHA Semifinal)L 3–4 2OT31–6–2 (22–4–2)
March 10vs. Ohio State*Joe Louis ArenaDetroit,Michigan (CCHA Consolation Game)L 2–3 OT31–7–2 (22–4–2)
NCAA tournament
March 16at Boston University*Walter Brown ArenaBoston,Massachusetts (National Quarterfinal game 1)L 3–6 31–8–2 (22–4–2)
March 17at Boston University*Walter Brown ArenaBoston,Massachusetts (National Quarterfinal game 2)W 5–1 OT32–8–2 (22–4–2)
Bowling Green Wins Series 8–7
March 23vs. Michigan State*1980 Olympic ArenaLake Placid,New York (National Semifinal)W 2–1 33–8–2 (22–4–2)
March 24vs. Minnesota–Duluth*1980 Olympic ArenaLake Placid,New York (National championship)W 5–4 4OT34–8–2 (22–4–2)
*Non-conference game.#Rankings from USCHO.com Poll.
Source:

[1]

Roster and scoring statistics

[edit]
No.NameYearPositionHometownS/P/CGamesGoalsAssistsPtsPIM
7Dan KaneJuniorCPeterborough,ONOntario4324487261
3Garry GalleyJuniorDMontreal,PQQuebec4415526761
22John SamanskiSeniorCOshawa,ONOntario4225356052
4David EllettSophomoreDCleveland,OHOhio4315395496
19Jamie WansbroughSophomoreRWToronto,ONOntario4034165018
23Gino CavalliniSophomoreLWToronto,ONOntario4325234816
12Dave O'BrianSeniorD/WKitchener,ONOntario4412273962
15George RollJuniorWBlue Island,ILIllinois4413253832
5Mike PikulSeniorDRexdale,ONOntario417303736
27Dave RandersonJuniorRWStratford,ONOntario431219316
16Perry BraunSeniorRWSurrey,BCBritish Columbia3812183026
2Wayne WilsonSeniorDGuelph,ONOntario442242660
11Tim HackSeniorCGrenfell,SKSaskatchewan447162328
24Iain DuncanFreshmanLWToronto,ONOntario449112065
21Peter WilsonSeniorRWOshawa,ONOntario436121840
20Nick BandescuSeniorFPort Huron,MIMichigan44981712
8Todd FlichelFreshmanDOsgoode,ONOntario4413412
10Rob UrbanFreshmanFMinnetonka,MNMinnesota140334
29Eddie PowersFreshmanGBowling Green,OHOhio70110
30Randy JohnsonFreshmanGDes Plaines,ILIllinois20000
18John FishSophomoreDParry Sound,ONOntario40000
1Wayne CollinsSophomoreGBurlington,MAMassachusetts120000
6Mike NatyshakFreshmanFBelle River,ONOntario190000
35Gary KruzichFreshmanGOak Lawn,ILIllinois2800014
Total

[7]

Goaltending statistics

[edit]
No.NameGamesMinutesWinsLossesTiesGoals AgainstSavesShut OutsSV %GAA
35Gary Kruzich282152.8962.87
30Randy Johnson215000280.8007.89
1Wayne Collins12
29Eddie Powers7
Total4434821461

1984 championship game

[edit]

(W2) Minnesota–Duluth vs. (W3) Bowling Green

[edit]

[8]

March 24Minnesota–Duluth4–54OTBowling Green1980 Olympic ArenaRecap
Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stBGGarry GalleyBraun and O'Brien5:581–0 BG
UMDMark BaronLakso6:181–1
2ndUMDBill WatsonPPKurvers andLakso33:352–1 UMD
3rdUMDBob LaksoChristensen andWatson40:473–1 UMD
BGJamie WansbroughPPGalley andEllett44:413–2 UMD
UMDTom HerzigBaron andJohnson51:514–2 UMD
BGPeter WilsonPikul andKane52:424–3 UMD
BGJohn SamanskiW. Wilson andRoll58:234–4
4th OvertimeBGGino CavalliniGWKane97:115–4 BG
Shots by period
Team123OT1OT2OT3OT4T
Bowling Green1355
Minnesota–Duluth432
Goaltenders
TeamNameSavesGoals againstTime on ice
BGGary Kruzich284
UMDRick Kosti505

Players drafted into the NHL

[edit]

1984 NHL Entry Draft

[edit]
=NHL All-Star team=NHL All-Star[9]=NHL All-Star[9] andNHL All-Star team= Did not play in the NHL
RoundPickPlayerNHL team
474Paul YsebaertNew Jersey Devils
592Scott PaluchSt. Louis Blues
10193Brent ReganHartford Whalers
10204Daryn FersovichPhiladelphia Flyers

† incoming freshman

[10]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Bowling Green Men's Hockey 2018–19 Record Book"(PDF). Bowling Green Falcons. RetrievedAugust 18, 2019.
  2. ^"1984 National Champions". BGSU Sports. Archived fromthe original on August 19, 2019. RetrievedAugust 19, 2019.
  3. ^"MEN'S HOCKEY ALL-TIME RECORDS". Ohio State Buckeyes. June 26, 2018. RetrievedJuly 11, 2019.
  4. ^"Michigan State Hockey 2018–19 Media Guide"(PDF).Michigan State Spartans. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on January 23, 2019. RetrievedFebruary 27, 2019.
  5. ^"Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners"(PDF). NCAA.org. RetrievedJune 11, 2013.
  6. ^"CCHA Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. RetrievedMay 19, 2013.
  7. ^"Bowling Green Falcons 1983–84 roster and statistics". EliteProspects. RetrievedAugust 18, 2019.
  8. ^1984 NCAA Hockey Championship BGSU vs. Duluth – Final Goal – YouTube
  9. ^abPlayers are identified as an All-Star if they were selected for the All-Star game at any time in their career.
  10. ^"1984 NHL Entry Draft". Hockey DB. RetrievedAugust 18, 2019.
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