Been There, But Not Done Yet
For Michigan State coach Rick Comley, one national title is not enough
Jan. 11, 2008
By Dave Starman
Special to CSTV.com
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DAVE STARMAN
Dave is a CSTV game and studio analyst, and contributes regular insight to CSTV.com. E-mail here! |
The Red Cedar River runs through campus no matter how hot or cold it is in
As much can be said for the pulse of Michigan State hockey, which is a year-round passion in the town that produced five Millers (two of whom won a Hobey Baker award) and two national championships going into the 2006-07 season.
A few years ago, that pulse flat lined a bit. The most recognizable face of the program, Ron Mason, had stepped aside to become the athletic director. Several candidates were out there.
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Comley, who has made his fame as a hockey coach despite being a great baseball player as a kid in
Mason was a legend, the all-time record holder for wins by a hockey coach in the history of college hockey. However, he and his protégé, Comley, had the same number of national title rings. Comley's Wildcats of Northern Michigan had slayed the big bad Boston University Terriers to start the 90's. The little guy from the little school on the banks of the Gitchee Gumee in
When Mason hired Comley, it somewhat fulfilled a prophecy for Comley. He figured he and Mason, for whom he played his college hockey for at
The student took over, and now five years later, he has taught everyone a lesson. Like Mike Eaves did at
It also presented him with a challenge, one that he had not dealt with for 17 seasons. He entered the season as the defending national champion. That takes a special mindset to handle, and the challenge was not to downplay it with his team while not sitting there and focusing on being the defending national champion.
"Last year, we weren't the best team over 40 games," said Comley, who is prepping his squad for a mid-season test from Notre Dame in a home-and-home series this weekend. "We were the best over the last four."
MSU put it together at the right time. While not loaded with a roster of NHL players (and having lost David Booth to graduation and Drew Miller to early departure), the Spartans built around a diminutive asthmatic goalie in Jeff Lerg and a dynamic line of three juniors in Tim Kennedy, Justin Abdelkader, and Tim Crowder. Lerg's cousin Bryan, a gifted left winger, became the embodiment of the work ethic that MSU relied on to win it all.
Comley knows the deal and he knows how to run a hockey team. He is not panicking but realizes that Miami, Michigan and Notre Dame have demonstrated that they will be major obstacles in the road. Comley wants to be in a position where he is not looking at an at-large bid. He wants to know in early March that his Spartans will be one of 16 competing for that National Title which he owns at the moment.
Comley's guys have had as good a first half as he has had at
This could be MSU's year again, but
"Who wouldn't use that intangible to get your point across?" Comley asked. "The great thing is when watching film with the players, or in a meeting regarding our play, I can say we did x, y and z when we beat
Comley is not cocky, he is confident. He isn't rah rah, but he is emotional. His best quality is his honesty and his ability to hold people accountable, and that is why his teams have been successful at MSU. He once told me that if players play to the level he thinks they can, there will never be a problem between coach and player. Last April, they did.
He doesn't want to make people forget Ron Mason. He doesn't want people to forget his era of MSU hockey, the era of Kip Miller, Rod Brind'Amour, Joe Murphy and Craig Simpson. What he wanted to do was show the administration that the faith they had in him was justified, and that was most of the smile he flashed on the ice in the aftermath of their dramatic win over
The second half tells a lot about
Comley has achieved what he wanted to at MSU, to an extent. Don't think for one second he is satisfied. His eyes are on a national championship.


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