I think we can officially declare it hockey season. With a full arena Friday night, lines out the door and campus abuzz with watching the No. 1 team in the nation take down a difficult non-conference opponent in St. Cloud State, optimism and expectations have never been higher. Two seasons ago, the team was primed for its first Frozen Four appearance behind Ryan Jones and Nathan Davis. That team was stopped short, in overtime no less, by Boston College. Then last year, with a team that was supposed to struggle, the team came within a minute of being national champions (sorry to bring it up again, it kills me too). And while there is an entire season to be played, and Miami is 2-0, you can't help but feel the excitement.
The national respect has clearly come. Knocked the past few years for easy non-conference schedules, the RedHawks won their opening series with the nationally ranked Huskies, and now travel to Durham to take on Hockey East powerhouse New Hampshire, which is looking to rebound after a devastating tournament loss to you guessed it, Boston University. Also in the out of conference schedule is Bemidji State, who Miami defeated in the Frozen Four last season, and big bad North Dakota. Often teams are measured by who they play, which is why Miami has received criticism in the past few seasons. But North Dakota is one of those teams that if you play, and play well, it is like a rite of passage.
In addition, this season has already showed the coaching talent of Enrico Blasi. Clearly, no one questions the leader of the RedHawks, but Miami consistently brings in freshman classes that are unranked. In college football you often hear about whether or not the quarterback is a function of talent or a result of the system. This happens pretty much every year at Texas Tech, as pundits wonder if the signal callers are as successful as they are because of Coach Mike Leach's offense. Rico continues to bring in freshmen that can succeed right away.
Devin Mantha, Curtis McKenzie and Reilly Smith were all part of the Miami class this season. Even with this talent, the 'Hawks did not have a top 15 class according to Inside College Hockey. In fact, McKenzie was the only ranked in the top recruits as the No. 16 forward coming to college hockey this season. All three freshmen had points in the first weekend. And even if they hadn't scored, the freshmen made their presence known with the way they were hitting this weekend.
Add that to a maturing core of RedHawks that went to the national championship in 2009, and you can see why expectations are so high. Andy Miele, who is outstanding with the puck, showed the ability to dish this weekend with three assists. Also, Jarod Palmer stepped up with two points on the weekend, and Carter Camper, with the overtime winner in game one, showed why he is Hobey Baker material. Here is the most impressive stat - eight returning RedHawks were on the scoresheet this past weekend. The RedHawks may not have the standout player, but they have the depth that wins championships.
If you are half as excited for this season as I am, you won't miss a game (unless you have swine flu, and if you do please stay home and listen on WMSR). But keep in mind that like any season there will be ups and downs. The 'Hawks will win a lot of games. But they'll drop a few too. Keep the faith. Keep supporting the team. Because if this team fulfills its potential, I'll be writing my column in April from Ford Field as I, with many of you, watch the 'Hawks hoist the first national championship trophy in the history of this university.







