Bigfoot12 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 5:21 am
I guess there are buses leaving early and fanning out throughout the area every morning to pick up only good hockey players. They looked really hard and found 34 players to try out this year. I hear they somehow have this huge metropolitan area of 150000 people to choose from.
Here it is folks, this comment is a perfect example of why Scott Pionk is a lone voice in the Hermantown hockey wilderness. They truly do believe they are small-town, community hockey, and that being a suburb in an urban area of 120,000 (metro area of 270,000) has
absolutely no effect on the success of their program. As Bigfoot pointed out, they only had a paltry 34 players try out this year, but somehow, some way, the magic of Hermantown hockey was able to turn this small handful of hyper-local kids into a top AA-level team. Open-enrollment and transfers have
nothing to do with it. Those top players over the years from Hibbing, Proctor, Virginia, Ely, Hayward, Colorado, and Duluth sacrificed everything to move to the isolated hamlet of Hermantown, where they arrived as teenagers who barely know how to skate, yet leave as NHL draft picks after the Hermantown magic is bestowed upon them.
This comment is why Coach Andrews can't move his team to AA. The AD and parents live in this fantasy land where all the many doctors who live in Hermantown obviously work in downtown Hermantown at Hermantown General Hospital, and the many former D1 players involved in the program all played at The University of Minnesota-Hermantown. The metropolitan area of Duluth has had
nothing to do with their success. It doesn't matter that it is a million times easier for a player to switch schools or a family to relocate to a large city than it is in a rural community. They truly believe Hermantown has
no advantage over TRF or I-Falls, for example, and the "crappy programs" at these rural schools are the sole reason they can't compete with the Hawks.
And in the same breath they will whine about STA or Breck. "They have so many players to choose from, so their enrollment doesn't matter and it's not fair to a small community program like Hermantown." It is amazing the blind spots people are able to maintain in the name of protecting their cherished beliefs.
(Note: for those unfamiliar with the Twin Ports, there is no downtown Hermantown, no Hermantown General Hospital, and certainly no University of Minnesota-Hermantown. Hermantown is a bedroom community that would not exist if not for being attached to Duluth.)