Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Resume

Andrew Sorensen
Objective
Dedicated and hardworking student bringing a strong work ethic and willingness to learn to contribute to journalism projects and gain industry experience.
Education
Mankato, MN
Bethany Lutheran College
Class of 2012
BS, Communication (Major), History (Minor)

Won 2008 NTA scholarship, member of College Hockey Weekend broadcast which reaches 4 million homes across parts of ND, SD, NE, and MI along with MN and WI.

Experience
Mankato, MN
Sep 2010 — Present
Bethany Lutheran College
Videographer

Sets up and records audio recordings of musical events on campus.

Mankato, MN
Oct 2010 — Present
Charter Communications
Social Media Director

Run social media pages and live blogs during MSU hockey games.

Mankato, MN
Mar 2009 — May 2010
Bethany Lutheran College
Writer

Wrote game summaries for softball, basketball, and tennis teams to be posted on the athletic website.

Rochester, MN
Sep 2006 — May 2008
Rochester Instructional Television System (RITS)
Anchor/Camera Operator

Anchored weekly public access news show and recorded various school district events ranging from concerts to sporting events.

Additional Information

Software Experience — Microsoft Office, Open Office
Languages — Spanish

The WCHA Playoff Picture Explained

The WCHA Playoff Picture Explained

Expansion for the WCHA now means six teams as opposed to five earn home ice for the first round. However, one thing that hasn’t changed is the fluidity of the playoff matchups in the final weekend as only one playoff seeding (#12 Michigan Tech) has been assured. With that squared away, let’s illustrate the WCHA playoff picture going into the weekend:

Four teams (North Dakota, Minnesota-Duluth, Denver, and Nebraska-Omaha) have clinched home ice. North Dakota has already clinched a share of the WCHA championship. A win at McInnis this weekend gives the Sioux the MacNaughton Cup outright. The Pioneers look to defend up the MacNaughton with a sweep over St. Cloud and a sweep by Tech. I put it in here because it’s possible, I’m not saying a two win Michigan Tech team will go out and sweep the #1 team in the country, but I’ve been wrong before. Meanwhile, up in Duluth, Nebraska-Omaha and Minnesota-Duluth look to go as high as second in the conference as they scrap at AMSOIL Arena.

Three additional teams (Minnesota, CC, and Wisconsin) have a shot at the final two home ice spots this weekend.
o Minnesota gets the 5th seed with at least three points this weekend against Bemidji State. They get the 6th seed with anything less than a three point weekend and a three point weekend from the Tigers moving CC to the 5th seed.
o 6th seed is also straightforward; CC stays put with a split with Wisconsin in Madison. The Badgers can host a playoff series at Kohl Center with at least a three point weekend over CC.

Your next question might be: Who fills spots 8-11? This is where things get more complicated as teams 8-11 can hypothetically end up in any combination. Here’s how it shakes out team by team in order of WCHA standing:

St. Cloud State
Current Standing: 8th
This weekend’s opponent: at Denver
What they need to do to maintain their spot: Attain at least two points at Magness this weekend.
How to improve: They can’t. The highest they can go is 8th.

Alaska-Anchorage
Current Standing: 9th
This weekend’s opponent: at MSU-Mankato
What they need to do to maintain their spot: Split with MSU-Mankato
How to improve: Get a three point weekend in Mankato and root for Denver.

Bemidji State
Current Standing: 10th
This weekend’s opponent: vs. Minnesota
What they need to do to maintain their spot: Split with the Gophers
How to improve: Root for Denver and MSU. The Beavers, although tied with the Mavericks in the standings, hold the tiebreaker over the Mavericks.

Minnesota State
Current Standing: 11th
This weekend’s opponent: vs. Alaska Anchorage
What they need to do to maintain their spot: Have anything less than a split against the Seawolves.
How to improve: At least split against Anchorage, and swallow a tough pill for many Maverick fans and root for the Gopher sweep or three point weekend. As stated before, Bemidji holds the tiebreaker over MSU, so if the Mavericks want the 10th spot, they need to outpoint the Beavers this weekend.

It’s going to be another great weekend of WCHA hockey; enjoy the games and I’ll be back tomorrow with a preview of the Seawolves/Mavericks series.

-Andy Sorensen, College Hockey Weekend Blogger

First Round WCHA Predictions

It's time for "March Madness" to hit college hockey as the WCHA playoffs kick off this weekend. Here's how I see things going down:
Michigan Tech at North Dakota

In a series that was contested last weekend in Houghton, the Sioux demolished the Huskies in a scoring explosion where the Huskies were outscored 17-3, including Saturday’s infamous 11-2 scoring barrage by the Sioux. The scene now shifts to the Ralph in Grand Forks in what many will rightfully call a glorified bye week for the Sioux before the Final Five. It’s hard to find a positive for the Huskies this weekend, but if there is one, they now have three battle-tested goaltenders to choose from. Corson Cramer, Tech’s 3rd string goalie, saw his first action of the year last weekend against the Sioux.

If there’s something that Dave Hakstol and the Sioux coaching staff could focus on this weekend, it’d be walking the fine line between winning and blowing the opponent out. This might mean bringing in lesser-used players once the game has been won, or by putting Eidsness in net for Saturday night.

Prediction: Sioux sweep

Minnesota State at Denver

To borrow a quote from Forrest Gump: the Mavericks this season are like a box of chocolates, you don’t know what you’re going to get. Their tournament résumé has both quality wins (Norte Dame at a neutral site, Minnesota-Duluth, Denver, sweep of Minnesota, at St. Cloud) and bad losses (Michigan Tech and Bemidji State). Therefore, it’s hard to read exactly how this Maverick team will do. What the Mavericks need to do is two fold:
1. Find a number one goalie and stick with him
2. Play 60 minutes of hockey

Let’s address point one first. The Mavericks have two strong goalies in Phil Cook and Austin Lee. Up until recently, Cook was the starter for most of the games until coach Troy Jutting put Lee in for a series at Colorado College. They split that series and won a crucial Friday night contest against UMD. The next night, without much explanation, Cook gets the start and the Mavericks got slammed by UMD’s offense. This last weekend against Anchorage a similar situation occurred where Cook and Lee split duties. This time, the Mavericks got swept. If you want a team to succeed in the playoffs, a coach should stick with one guy in net as opposed to the game of “Musical Goalies” going on in Mankato.

While the goalie controversy is to blame, it is not the only cause of the Mavericks’ woes. Throughout the Anchorage series and in game two of the UMD series, it seemed that the team had mentally checked out, like these games didn’t matter to them. Careless penalties, lackluster play, and mental errors have been hallmarks of the Mavericks for the last couple series. This team knows what can happen if you aren’t on your game, so they must bring their “A” game to Magness this weekend if they want to pull off the upset and make the trip to St. Paul.

As for Denver, much like UND, their biggest opponent this weekend isn’t their opponent. It’s them. This Maverick team has the potential and the capability to beat you while hanging around against very tough teams. Outside of the Anchorage series, they were competitive in close to every game I saw them play in. Despite this, I have to go with the…
Prediction: Pioneer sweep.

Bemidji State at Nebraska-Omaha

3-0-1 is Bemidji’s record this year against UNO. It may be surprising given that UNO has hung around the national polls for most of the season and they have been one of the surprises of college hockey this season. However, just because the Beavers have had the Mavericks’ number this season doesn’t mean the Mavericks are a bad team: to the contrary as the offense is led by the deadly Matt Ambroz, the defense by Eric Olimb, and between the pipes is John Faulkner, every one of whom are All-WCHA team candidates. Oh yeah, their coach is also notorious around college hockey: Dean Blais.
Prediction: Mavericks in three.

St. Cloud State at Minnesota-Duluth

This could easily be called the “see-saw series” (Say that three times fast!): After being left for dead towards the basement of the WCHA standings at the new year, the Huskies raced to 9th place in the league by playing good hockey against some good teams (Sweeping Wisconsin, splitting against Denver, 3 points against UMD). Conversely, despite the Bulldogs’ offense, they have been sliding down from as high as #2 in the country to 11th, where they currently stand. There’s no question this Bulldog team can play, the question is whether the Bulldog goalies will show up.
Prediction: Huskies in three.

Alaska Anchorage at Minnesota

The Seawolves make their second trip to Mariucci this season in what was a tale of two styles. Friday night was a offensively-dominated 5-1 win for the Gophers. Then, the Maroon and Gold met Chris Kamal as the Wolves won a 1-0 decision, Kamal’s first career shutout. The freshman from suburban Atlanta has been in net for seven of the Wolves’ last 11 decisions. In those, he’s been 6-1-0 with a .940 save percentage and a 1.57 GAA. Despite Kamal’s recent impressive stats, I like the Gophers offense to master the Wolves.
Prediction: Gopher sweep.

Wisconsin at Colorado College

In another series from last weekend that switches venues, the #7 Wisconsin Badgers visit the #6 Colorado College Tigers at the World Arena in Colorado Springs. If last weekend was any indication of how the series will turn out, this will be a very close and competitive series that will make this spot in the Final Five next weekend very much up in the air. On paper, these teams are very similar: they both have a dangerous offensive tandem of players. Justin Schultz, Craig Smith, and Jake Gardiner line up for the Badgers while on the other side of the ice, the Tigers counter with Tyler Johnson, Stephen Schwartz and the Schultz brothers Jaden and Rylan while only one point separated these teams in the WCHA standings.

The big question that comes up for me when it comes to CC defending home ice is the goaltending situation. Joe Howe is their man main between the pipes for the Tigers, but his stats pale in comparison to Wisconsin’s Scott Gudmanson in every major goaltending category from wins to save percentage. Another red flag for Tiger fans is that they finished 11th in the WCHA for goals allowed on the season with 112. If CC wants to get to St. Paul next weekend, they need to play solid and disciplined hockey on both ends of the ice.

Prediction: Wisconsin in three.
-Andy Sorensen, CHW Blogger

Canadian Election Story

When Canadians went to the polls Monday, it was expected that Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party would win their third House of Commons election in a row. However, the margin of victory by the Conservatives was unexpected: they had earned a majority and the New Democratic Party becoming the official opposition, thanks in part to major gains in Quebec by the NDP and major losses by the once-mighty Liberal Party who last held power in 2004. The Liberals now only hold four seats west of Ontario, three of which are in Vancouver. However, they weren’t the only victims; the Bloc Quebecois, Quebec’s separatist party, lost a mammoth 43 of their 47 seats and lost major party status. Both the Liberal and Bloc leaders, Michael Ignatieff and Gilles Duceppe respectively, lost their seats in the House of Commons and resigned their party leaderships. It was also a first for the Green Party as Elizabeth May became the first member to be elected to Parliament, part of the largest female contingent to go to Ottawa.

The Conservative majority was ironic, seeing how the elections were brought on the actions of a coalition between the Liberal, NDP and Bloc. A vote of no confidence in Harper was brought on March 25th, and an election was called for May 2nd. Many saw the vote as Ignatieff’s chance to ascend to become Prime Minister, but instead Ignatieff lost his riding and the Liberals now hold the least amount of seats in their history.

One of the more interesting stories of the campaign came from the riding of Berthier—Maskinongé, an hour north northeast of Montreal. The NDP candidate and winner of the seat, Ruth Ellen Brosseau, is an assistant manager at a bar in Ottawa, 400 kilometers or 165 miles away. That was not the only controversy surrounding Brosseau and her campaign: she took a vacation to Las Vegas in the heat of the campaign, the revelation that her boss did not know she was a candidate, and spoke very little French in a riding where French is the first language for 98 percent of residents. In addition, Miss Brosseau did not campaign for the seat and allegations of election fraud have been brought up by both the Conservatives and Liberals.

While Canadians now have election stability until November 2015, how the minority parties react to the repercussions of the election will be very interesting.

Friday, April 15, 2011

A Blog About Nothing (Or, how this blog is reminiscent of Seinfeld)

The television show Seinfeld needs very little to no introduction. If you're not familiar with it, you either weren't born until the mid to late 90's and afterward or avoid syndicated television like the Plague. Anyway, the show's main character and co-creator Jerry Seinfeld described the show as "being about nothing". In all honesty, the episodes ARE about daily life from overdue library books to the fact that salt does make one thirsty.

This would lead one to naturally ask "Alright then Sorensen, how do you and one of the funniest sitcoms of all-time relate to one another?" Answer? I'm going to be taking the same concept, but I won't be as funny as Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld, I'll let that out now. I'm an aspiring sportswriter and college hockey blogger during the winter months, but commentaries on everything from society to my upcoming internship with (Wait for it, DISNEY!) will also be found here.

If you like what you read, tell a friend. If you don't, tell an acquaintance. Either way, look up Andy Sorensen Journalist on Facebook and become a fan and tell people that way. It's a lot more effective (and productive) than me standing on a street corner with a sign telling people to read the blog. Although people may mistake me for a beggar, and I as a poor college student could rightfully use the money, there are other people and places both domestic and abroad that could use it more.

Next post: How to better the NBA with or without a lockout