Dan Wishengrad wrote:I don't cast Washington's votes -- that will be done by our Head Coach Fred Wilmot. But if I was voting Ryan Hanavan gets the nod from me for Coach of the Year. I agree that Brent and Jeff are terrific co-coaches and have done a great job at SFU this season. But it is also a fact that the Clansmen have a very, very talented cast of players for Hoskins and Cathrea to lead. What Ryan has done with a much less talented Vandals team is truly remarkable, and I don't say this as a "knock" on the UI players. I sat there two weeks ago and watched an Idaho team that had (at the time) never won a single PNCLL game ever go toe-to-toe with SFU for four quarters in a 14-7 loss. UI plays great team lacrosse, a trait that can only be a product of coaching. UI has a roster of players almost exclusively from their home state, where high school lax is much less developed and competitive against longer-established programs from Washington, Oregon and elsewhere.
What Coach Hanavan accomplished this season, and the incredible one-year improvement in Vandals Lacrosse make the COY award a no-brainer for me.
I have a ton of respect for what Ryan has done with the UI program in the PNCLL. Buillding up a program like Idaho took a lot of work and great coaching, but we're still looking at a two-win team. They're hopefully going to continue to improve (hopefully not at the Broncos expense!).
However, this year's team at SFU is the culmination of a number of years of heavy recruiting and rebuilding of a program from the bottom up by two very talented coaches. They took a 24th ranked team to 5th in the country, along the way upsetting a number of higher ranked teams, including Sonoma State and Oregon. It was a no-brainer to award Joe Kerwin last year for what he did for Oregon in the league and on the National level... I think that what SFU has done in the league and at the national level rivals what Oregon accomplished last year. Let's see if SFU can make the NC game... I don't see how coach of the year could go anywhere else.
I know SFU is considered a traditional power, but in terms of league and national recognition, they have had a terrible past few years while going through a significant rebuilding phase. The talent on this year's team speaks volumes to the work of the SFU coaches both on and off the field. I think that work and progress should be rewarded.