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BU’s icewomen cometh

Go varsity!
By DEIRDRE FULTON  |  March 2, 2006

THE SAME GOALS: Defenseman Amy Levy, goalie Eden Spencer, and Cara Hendry.When Brian Durocher signed on to become head coach of BU’s first-ever varsity women’s ice-hockey team, he already understood that it wasn’t quite the same sport as the men’s version. For one, the mechanics are slightly different: disparities in wrist strength, for example, make renegade pucks a rare sight at women’s games. The chances of post-college play are far slimmer for women, which limits competition among teammates and the stress of dealing with agents. Most important, perhaps, “the emotions are different,” Durocher says. “The caring and the outright show of emotion.”

Durocher should know, since he’s spent time on both sides of the fence: after leading BU’s men’s team to a national championship as captain and goalie in 1978, he more recently served as the team’s assistant coach. He also spent time with women’s Olympic-hockey coach Ben Smith, whose 1998 US gold medalists jump-started the sport’s popularity in the States.

Given Boston’s reputation as a college-hockey mecca, it seemed odd that for 32 years, BU — home of the oft-victorious male Beanpot champions — lacked a varsity women’s ice-hockey team. The cause was fairly simple: lack of space. BU’s Walter Brown Arena opened in the early 1970s in part to house men’s hockey. Meanwhile, the women’s club team, established around the same time, practiced in a space the size of a “cubbyhole,” according to Durocher.

But all that changed last year, when BU opened its brand-new Agannis Arena. The men moved into that space, and BU finally had room to launch a Division I varsity women’s team (joining a full conference that includes teams from BC, Harvard, and Northeastern). They played their opening game in October, and their season ended last week.

Twenty-four young women were on the inaugural roster. Captain Cara Hendry, a junior transfer from Minnesota State University at Mankato, and other well-established talents transferred to BU for the chance to join the lineup. Durocher also recruited high-school players from across the country. And club players, who had waited patiently for the chance to show their stuff, assumed key roles on the team.

“The challenging thing for me, personally, is going from playing club to playing Division I hockey,” says Amy Ley, a 20-year-old junior defenseman who used to figure skate, then started playing ice hockey in high school. “One day I got the bright idea that it would be fun to put on all that equipment and hit people, so I did, and I loved it,” she says, adding of the switch from club to varsity: “It’s much more of a time commitment, and the level of play is much higher.”

Although their season ended last week with a bruising 6-0 loss to top-ranked University of New Hampshire (final overall record: 12-17-4; in the conference: 6-13-2), the female Terriers laid a solid foundation for growth. “I think for a first-year team that is primarily freshman, they did a tremendous job,” says David Riggs, one of two Daily Free Press sports reporters who covered the team this season.

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