Error during command authentication.
Error - unable to initiate communication with LISTSERV (errno=111). The server is probably not started.
>At 04:18 AM 3/16/96 -0400, Sean Pickett wrote: > >>The ice did affect BU, as several Terriers had trouble and >>occasionally slipped during the game. However, I did not notice any >>PC, UML or Maine players having trouble. > Deron Treadwell wrote: >I would imagine that bad ice does not help the Terriers, and would slow them >down. However you wouldn't know that by looking at a great Hockey East >Player of the Year Encore by Jay Pandolfo, or the great third period flury >by the Terriers. I'm not saying it didn't have an effect, because it >affected all the teams. It's just a question of making the adjustment, and >not making this adjustment could be another reason Terrier fans can't point >to for the disappointing performance last night. Then again, Walter Brown Arena has a notoriously BAD ice surface; it takes longer to hold after being cleaned by the Zamboni, and is very uneven in many spots. Over the years many visiting coaches (usually the ones who from from the western conferences) have complained to the point of blaming their losses in the ice surfaces, most notably in 1989 when (I believe) then #2-ranked Michigan lost to a quite average BU squad by a score of 1-0. Both coaches and players were quoted the next day in the Globe (and on monday in the Free Press) as saying that the ice conditions were "horrible," and that in the third period, their players couldn't skate well enough and that the puck was "too bouncy." If there was anything that threw the Terriers off in their games at the New Garden it was the size of the ice, as Walter Brown remains one of the smaller rinks in Boston. greenie S P O O N ! ! (go BU) HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.