>I am in agony! Me too! In the last half of the season Miami is displaying one of the greatest nose dives in college hockey history. They are 5-7-4 in '98 after a 13-3-0 start. Miami has fallen to fifth in the CCHA and out of home ice for the playoffs. They are very close to taking themselves out of a NCAA tournament bid. A recent loss to Bowling Green (last place in the CCHA) occurred when Miami gave up a shorthanded goal with less than two minutes in the game! So what is going on here? Injuries? Doesn't appear to be. Senior defenseman Todd Rohloff has been out of the lineup about 2 months and is lost for the season with a wrist injury. He was a team captain and a solid defenseman. Other than him, they have no significant injuries that I can think of. Some players have sat out a various games due to team violations and such. No major suspensions though. What else could it be? Strength of schedule? Could be. Lately, their schedule seems to be against stronger teams. But they have mixed results against strong and weak teams. Wins against New Hampshire, Michigan, and Northern Michigan and a tie with Michigan St. contrast with loses against Bowling Green, Ferris St., and Western Michigan. This points towards inconsistent play, and that, to me, is a mental thing. Another factor: to win games you have to score more points than the other team. To do that you have to take shots. It is a rare game when Miami outshoots their opponent. Miami's style of play does not generate a lot of shots for them. As a team they are usually smaller in size than other teams and try to rely on quickness to get the puck to the goal. They try a lot of dumping and chasing, and skating the puck around defenseman to the net. Other teams have been successful in neutralizing this with speed and strong checking. When Miami can skate the puck in deep they usually try to dump it back out in the slot, usually to a waiting defenseman. You rarely see much passing or crossing as Miami brings the puck across the blue line. I don't know if Mazzoleni is coaching this style or where it comes from. The limited success they've had with it seems now to be well defended. I'd like to see a different strategy. Could it be they aren't that good after all? It may appear so and it's starting to show in the ratings. Nothing like a fan like me kicking a team when its down. Anyway, Miami has one game with Ohio State and two with Bowling Green remaining. So far they are a combined 1-2-0 against them. I hope they can rebound and finish strong. michael bohler HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.