Wednesday, September 22, 2021

UND's Zajac Retires from NHL

Travis Zajac (North Dakota) has called it an NHL career.

Zajac, 36, signed a one-day contract earlier this week to retire as a New Jersey Devil, the team he spent almost all of his 15-year professional career with. Traded to the New York Islanders at the 2021 trade deadline, he played in 13 regular-season and 14 playoff contests with the Isles, notching two goals and four points in all, while helping them to within a game of the Stanley Cup Final.

The 6-foot-2 center from Winnipeg was drafted 20th overall by New Jersey in 2004 and made his Devils debut in 2006-07, their final season playing in the Meadowlands. In 1,037 regular-season NHL outings, he posted 203 goals and 349 assists for 552 points and 334 penalty minutes, to go with 12-18—30 points and 26 PIM in 71 Stanley Cup Playoff contests. 

Zajac was also a member of New Jersey's 2012 Eastern Conference championship team, and is among the Devils' all-time leaders in games played, goals, assists, and points. He also owns the franchise record for most consecutive games played (401), established from the start of the 2006-07 season through the close of the 2010-11 campaign.

Zajac, who earned a silver medal with Canada at the 2019 World Championship, played two collegiate seasons at UND, where he tallied 38-48—86 points in 91 games with the then-Fighting Sioux. He helped UND to the Frozen Four in both of his NCAA campaigns, including the 2005 national championship game in Columbus, Ohio. His brothers Darcy (North Dakota), Kelly (Union) and Nolan (Denver) also played college hockey.

Zajac is now expected to join the Devils organization in an as-yet undefined capacity.

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Former NCAA Players Keep Going Places


 Former NCAA hockey players keep going places as the 2021-22 season approaches.

Zach Parise (North Dakota), who was released by Minnesota this summer after nine seasons with the Wild, has signed with the New York Islanders, his father's old NHL club.

Jordy Murray (Wisconsin) has joined Notre Dame as its new volunteer assistant coach, while Mike Jamieson (Northeastern) has returned to his alma mater as its men's hockey director of operations, and R.J. Enga (Colorado College) is joining St. Cloud State as its new men's hockey director of operations and video coordinator.

Former NCAA and NHL standouts Paul Holmgren (Minnesota) and Peter McNab (Denver) will both be inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame later this year.

Lastly, current/former NHL head coaches John Hynes (Boston University), David Quinn (Boston University), Todd Reirden (Bowling Green) and recently-retired NHL goaltender Ryan Miller (Michigan State) will serve as assistant coaches to Pittsburgh Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan (Boston University) for the 2022 U.S. men’s hockey team that will compete at the 2022 Olympic Winter Games in China in February.

In other college-related hockey news, the NCAA has added an extra day between games to the men's regional round of the national tournament starting in 2022, while Colorado College officially opened its new on-campus Ed Robson Arena this weekend with the Tigers also taking the ice there for the first time.

Saturday, September 11, 2021

20 Years After 9/11: Remembering Mark Bavis



Re-presenting and revising a story I first published years ago. Rest in peace, Mark, you'd be 51 now - R.

I remember when I met Mark Bavis during my one and only year with the North American Hockey League. He was an assistant coach with the Chicago Freeze franchise, while I was working in the league office in southeast Michigan. I immediately took a liking to him, even though I was a Boston College graduate and he had attended rival Boston University. (He was a real hockey player, mind you—while I was and still remain strictly a recreational one, except for maybe that one minute skating with NHL players at Michigan State in 1995.)

I once told him I remembered the name "Bavis" from the 1991 Beanpot Tournament championship game at the now-demolished Boston Garden, which BU won by an 8-4 score. BC had taken an early lead and then fell behind, but was just two goals down late in the second period. The next goal would be huge, and BU got it with just one second left before intermission to effectively put the game away.

I asked Mark who exactly was the Terrier player who got that goal, and he replied with a sheepish grin "me".

Mark was a genuinely good, down-to-earth guy, right down to his Boston accent as a native of Roslindale, Mass. I saw him again at the 2000 NAHL All-Star Game outside Chicago that season, and once more at the league office later that year before I returned to New Jersey in late August 2000. I didn't know when I'd see Mark again, but I'd figured I'd cross paths with him again at a rink somewhere along the way.

After graduating from BU in 1993, where he helped the Terriers to four NCAA tournament berths and three Beanpot titles, Mark played professional hockey for three seasons in two different leagues in Fredericton, Providence and South Carolina. He retired as an active player in 1996, and tried his hand at coaching, first at Brown University and then Harvard University before joining the Freeze.

It was as a scout soon after, however, that he found his true calling, scouring the globe for up-and-coming hockey talent. By 2001, he had quickly become one of the rising stars in the scouting department of the National Hockey League's Los Angeles Kings.

He was 31 years old, single, and succeeding at hockey's top level in the NHL. He had his whole life ahead of him—and then he boarded United Airlines Flight 175 at Boston's Logan Airport the morning of Sept. 11, 2001.

That was the second hijacked jetliner to strike the World Trade Center, as it collided with the South Tower at 9:03 a.m. All 65 people on board, including Mark and Wayne Gretzky's former mentor, Garnet "Ace" Bailey, the Kings' Director of Scouting, were lost.

It was certainly a surreal day, especially for all of us here in the greater New York City area. I remember my father telling me before he went off to Princeton that morning that a plane had struck the World Trade Center, and I didn't think too much of it at that time. Like many people probably did, I thought it was a small prop job that had somehow gotten off course and collided with one of the towers—not a commercial jumbo jet commandeered by terrorists.

The first thing I did after getting out of the house was drive over to the Union Public Library on Morris Avenue, from where you could always see the Twin Towers on a clear day. On 9/11, however, the sky was choked with billowing black clouds of smoke that looked as if they'd never dissipate, the Towers never again to be seen from that or any other vantage point in my hometown—or anywhere else.

I was on my way to work in the athletic department at Montclair State University not long after, listening to the radio as I made my way north up the Garden State Parkway, when the towers crumbled. I still remember the shock and horror in the voices of the broadcasters, as if what was happening before them could not possibly be real.

My office at the time was in a house just off-campus, which itself was largely barren that day. So was Willowbrook Mall in nearby Wayne—in recent years it's been better known as a flood zone, but that day its doors were actually open. It's just that it was a real ghost town. No one was there, everyone having closed up shop to go home and be with their loved ones in the wake of the terrorist attacks. I've never seen an active mall like that, so eerie in its stillness and emptiness, and I hope to never see one like that again.

I didn't really get much, if anything, done at work that day, as I was still trying to comprehend what had taken place across the Hudson River, in Pennsylvania, and at the Pentagon. The hardest jolt of all was yet to come that evening, though, when I saw the crawl at the bottom of the screen while watching ESPN. It confirmed in bold white letters that Mark Bavis and Ace Bailey had indeed been passengers on United 175.

I was a zombie for the next two days straight.

I've tried to contemplate what Mark must have seen or felt that morning. Did he know right after takeoff that his flight had been hijacked? Did he know his Boeing 767 was on a collision course with the World Trade Center? Who or what did he think of just before the plane's impact with the South Tower? Sadly, no one will ever know.

I got another jolt months later when I accompanied the Montclair State women's basketball team to a tournament at Emmanuel College in Boston in November. We had already played our first round game (a win) when I snuck off to Boston College (with permission) a few miles away to watch the Eagles play BU in men's ice hockey at Kelley Rink. It was the first time I had gotten to see a game at BC in more than seven years, having spent most of the time in-between working in Michigan, and I remember I was downright giddy at the prospect of seeing the two rivals face off again like I did many times before when I was an undergrad from 1987 to 1991.

That euphoria lasted about as long as it took me to climb the stairs to the second level of stands at Kelley Rink, where I turned to see Mark's brother, Mike, an assistant coach with BU—and his twin.

He looked exactly like Mark, of course, and I'm sure I probably stared at him like an abject moron for several seconds. If he noticed me, though, he didn't acknowledge it.

To this day I still feel guilty I didn't say anything or offer any words of condolence to Mike on Mark's loss, but in truth I'm still not sure I would have found the right words. Maybe one day I will. I still hope to, all this time later.

Two decades later, it's still hard to believe that Mark is really gone. He might have been a husband and a father by now, might have been part of the Kings' 2012 and 2014 Stanley Cup title runs with players he recommended they draft into their system. For a while I even wore a BU Hockey t-shirt under my gear when I played, to honor Mark, until it just got too beat up. I may bring it out again for a special appearance one day, though.

Mark's family refused to settle their legal case for any monetary gain, as they wanted Boeing, United Airlines and other involved parties to admit they made mistakes and/or were generally lax in their screening procedures, even before 9/11. A settlement was reached in 2011 with United Airlines and its security contractor, Huntleigh USA.

Mark's memory still lives on, primarily in the Mark Bavis Scholarship Foundation at his prep school alma mater, Catholic Memorial. The Mark Bavis Arena in Rockland, Mass. bears his name. He and Bailey have also both been immortalized in the lyrics of "Your Spirit's Alive" by Massachusetts' own Dropkick Murphys. A Kings' 2012 Stanley Cup Champions hat was also placed at Ground Zero that year, between Mark's and Bailey's names. Thanks to whoever did that.

As I've have every year since, except when I vacationed in Michigan in 2007, I will be home in New Jersey for 9/11. I will also wear a commemorative homemade badge for that day, which showcases Mark in his BU uniform, to honor his memory. One year I even pinned it to a BC polo shirt while I attended 9/11 remembrance gatherings.
I think Mark might have even approved. Maybe just a little. Rest in peace, my friend.

Monday, September 6, 2021

Alaska's Parayko Re-Ups with Blues

Colton Parayko (Alaska Fairbanks) will remain a St. Louis Blue for the foreseeable future.

The 6-foot-6 defenseman, who helped the Blues to their first-ever Stanley Cup title two years ago, re-upped with St. Louis late last week for eight years and $52 million, or an average annual value of $6.5 million. According to NHL.com, he has one season remaining on the five-year deal he inked with the Blues in 2017.

Parayko, 28, from St. Albert, Alta., made the Blues roster for good beginning with the 2015-16 campaign, after turning pro the previous season. He has scored 41 goals and tallied 130 assists for 171 points in 418 NHL regular-season outings to date, to go with 119 penalty minutes and a plus-54 plus-minus rating. In 70 Stanley Cup Playoff contests, he has recorded a further 8-19—27 points and 18 PIM.

Parayko skated for UAF from 2012 through 2015, and served as team captain as a junior. In three seasons with the Nanooks, he notched 17-49—66 points, a plus-16 rating and 55 PIM, and was a two-time NCAA (West) Second All-America selection and a two-time WCHA First All-Star Team choice. 

A linchpin on three Governor's Cup championship teams while with UAF, He was also a member of the 2015-16 NHL All-Rookie Team, and helped Canada to a World Championship silver medal in 2017.

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Canada Claims 2021 IIHF Women's World Championship

 

Alex Carpenter (Boston College) scored both goals for the United States, but Marie-Philip Poulin (Boston University) notched the game-winner in overtime to lift Canada to a 3-2 victory in the gold medal game of the 2021 IIHF Women's World Championship on Tuesday night in Calgary.

Brian Jenner (Cornell) and Jamie Lee Rattray (Clarkson) scored in the second period for Canada to tie the contest, after the U.S. had taken a 2-0 lead in the first 13 minutes of play. Jenner also assisted on Canada's other two goals, while Ann-Renee Desbiens (Wisconsin) made 23 saves in net for the Canadians. Nicole Hensley (Lindenwood) had 29 stops for the Americans.

It was the first Women's World Championship gold medal for Canada since 2012, its first on home soil since 2007, and its 11th such title overall. The U.S., which had won the last five Women's World Championships, has claimed nine titles since the event began in 1990. The 2018 competition was not held due to the Olympic Winter Games that year, while last year's tournament was canceled by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Finland won the bronze medal this year with a 3-1 win over Switzerland in the third-place game.

Marie-Philip Poulin

UAA Seawolf Hockey Reinstated

The University of Alaska Anchorage is scheduled to return to play in 2022-23. Men's hockey has reached the university's $3 million fundraising goal to have the 40-year-old program reinstated.

According to saveseawolfhockey.com: "To the 1,100+ individuals, promoters, corporate donors, alumni and hockey fans that assisted in reaching the $3 million goal! The coach selection process is underway and the Seawolves will be ready to play for the 2022-23 season!"

UAA suspended hockey operations for the 2020-21 season due to COVID-19, and for the 2021-22 campaign while working to meet the fundraising deadline of Aug. 31. 

The Seawolves now need to find a successor for head coach Matt Curley, who left UAA to return to junior hockey with Des Moines (USHL), and to fill out a roster, with previous players having transferred to other schools, turned pro, left hockey or gone back to juniors. UAA will also need to seek a conference affiliation, as the men's side of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association has disbanded, and will likley play again as an independent in the meantime.

UAA made the NCAA tournament as an independent from 1990 to 1992. Two former Seawolves have lifted the Stanley Cup, in Mike Peluso (New Jersey-1995) and Jay Beagle (Washington-2018).