INCH Coach of Year: Keith Allain
The following article appeared April 14 on the Inside College Hockey (INCH) Web site.
As Inside College Hockey considered its INCH Coach of the Year
candidates, we evaluated characteristics that coaches look for in
their teams - matching or exceeding its talent level, playing with
consistency, and making the right moves at the right time. As the
examination continued under those criteria, the choice became quite
simple. Yale’s Keith Allain is the INCH National Coach of the
Year.
Allain’s Bulldogs recently completed the best season in the
program’s 100-plus year history by winning the ECAC Hockey
regular season and playoff titles as well as the Ivy League
championship. Yale returned to the NCAA Tournament for the first
time since 1998 and just the second time in program history. All of
this was done by a roster that included just one returning
all-league player - forward Sean Backman, who was on the All-ECAC
Hockey Third Team in 2007-08. Yale was picked to finish seventh in
the regular season by both the coaches and media in preseason polls
and ended up going 15-5-2 over 22 league games to win the league
title.
Consistency? No team was more consistent. The Bulldogs lost two
games in a row just twice all season, and never went three straight
without a win. Aside from an 8-3 loss to Nebraska-Omaha, Yale never
lost by more than three goals, and that only happened twice. Allain
often credited his players for putting in the effort it took
throughout the season and in preparation for the season, turning
the spotlight away from himself.
Allain also pulled the right strings at the right time. When he
sensed that Yale was in a midseason malaise following a home series
against Clarkson and St. Lawrence, he took the advice of his
daughter and scheduled a practice outside on a frozen pond at the
campus golf course. The re-energized bunch from Yale rattled off
eight straight wins in league play and took over the top spot in
the standings. During that streak, Yale trailed 4-0 in the third
period during a game at Colgate. Allain pulled the goalie with 13
minutes left, the Bulldogs scored their first goal, and eventually
went on to tie the game and win it 5-4 in overtime.
The right mix of preparation, intuition and management makes for a
successful season and Yale and head coach Keith Allain did
everything it took to be successful.












