Wednesday, July 9, 1997 - The Michigan Daily - 15 young icers show off dimensions at A2 Ice3 y Mark Snyder aily Sports Editor The Ann Arbor Ice Cube - once just used for recreational and figure skating - has the gurus of the college hockey world sitting in its plastic blue eats this week. And Jeff Jackson couldn't be happier. After one year as the USA national ockey coach and less than eight months after the Cube became hockey's home in the United States, Jackson has brought the nation's top college coaches to Ann Arbor pining for talent. Beginning last Monday, 200 of the top 17-year-old American Wckey players came to Ann Arbor looking to u s A H impress the hordes of SELE college hockey coach- es. Each coach is eager FEST to get a jump on the recruiting trail of the blossoming skaters. Among the dignitaries in atten- dance: Boston University coach Jack arker, Notre Dame coach Dave ulin, Ferris State coach Bob Daniels and Bowling Green coach Buddy Powers. Powers was frank in his assessment of the players - each more than a year from taking the ice for a college team. "All we want is an early read (on their talent)" he said. But "recruiting isn't an exact science." The coaches, while interested in the Bund-robin tournament that pits dif- Terent regions against high-quality competition, still keep in mind none of these players will take the ice in col- lege for at least a year. Each player, under festival require- ments, must have been born in 1980, which makes all of the talent still a full season away from Division I competition. c e E r "Each player is probably the top player on his team at home,' Powers said. "Then he comes here and some- body else might be the best. It's a higher (level of) competition." Each of these coaches has a wealth of experience, however, and they realize that this week will not be totally repre- sentative of each player's true talent. "This is a great competition, but it's summer," Michigan assistant coach Billy Powers said. "You always take this with a grain of salt. These kids are offseason. "Most of these kids have had a grind of a season like our college guys have." Junior league sea- o c K E Y sons - where most of CT 17 these players spent the VAL past season - run *VA L upwards of 70 games. "They compete here because they want to show everyone what they're all about," Billy Powers said. "But some kids haven't skated as much as others." The 1997 USA Hockey Select 17 Festival comes on the heels of last week's Select 16 Festival, which showed players at an earlier stage of development. "This camp is meant to educate our kids, develop our players and start tracking and following their careers," Jackson said. "We follow the players until the age of 20 and hopefully at that point they're either at a Division I college or playing professional hockey." While the idea of bringing the top talent to one location is not new to Ann Arbor, the tournament has bounced around the country in previ- ous years. Hosts in the past include Lake Placid, N.Y., and Colorado Springs, Colo. - definitely hockey hotbeds, but sites lacking the central locality of Boston University hockey coach Jack Parker Isn't just a face in the crowd. The Terriers, who eliminated Michigan In tI semifinals, are focusing on the future, as Parker scouted prospective players at the Ann Arbor ice Cube this week. /- .I southeastern Michigan. Location "is why we chose Ann Arbor," Jackson said. "It's a great place to house our national team and it's also a tremendous facility we have access to (at the Cube). "Once we have the national teams in Ann Arbor, people will start realizing this is something special." Jackson, who won two national titles while coaching at Lake Superior State, has brought dedication and renewed vigor to the position. But the tournament is hardly just an example of Jackson helping out his friends. The national program has an agenda of its own during the seven-day tourna- The top 200 17-year-old American hockey players are in Ann Arbor this week competing in the 1997 USA Hockey Select 17 Festival. The show- case is a chance for college coaches MARK FRIEDMAN/Daly RICHARDSON'S Student discounts on eye exams and eyeglasses Great Brands Polo TommyHilfiger Calvin Klein I ment. From its origins under Jackson, the player development plan has advanced to a contained program in Ann Arbor which will begin this fall. Forty-four of the top players in the United States will live and learn in Ann Arbor, practicing under Jackson's tutelage and living with local families. The Select festivals are the final proving ground before the develop- ment rosters are finalized next week. "This (festival) has always been a well-kept secret because it has always been hidden in Colorado Springs," Jackson said. "Now we are in a hock- ey area. It's called Hockeytown for a reason." While the USA Hockey program has yet to. become acclimated to Michigan culture, Jackson is a veteran who knows the area well. "Detroit is a great city to come to," he said. "There is access to a major airport and also just the city itself. The cultural and social aspects were things I recognized 15 years ago when I was a graduate assistant at Michigan." Buddy Powers couldn't be happier that the tournament has moved closer to Bowling Green and his home. "We always would go wherever it was," he said. "But it used to be a week trip. It's a little more central location than before." 1 Voted Best Test Prep in Ann Arbor!!! L Ao RE What Makes Us So Good? # Every released LSAT and GRE Personal attention: smallest classes, most hours # Experienced, trained instructors Come in to take a FREE exam TrHmBCourses begin in July PRINCETON REVIEW r9- i !