Lohrei saw immediate results in the move, which, when made, was more about helping a team and getting more playing time than altering the path of his future.
Things changed in a hurry.
âThe coaches never even knew that I had played D for two games in a spring tournament,â Lohrei said. âI knew we were short on D, so I just thought I should give it a try. I jumped in on a two-on-one drill and did pretty well in the drill and that was it.â
Lohrei kept playing defense in what turned out to be an extended season with a trip to the Chipotle-USA Hockey National Championships. After being cut the year before as a forward, he made the national camp out of the Central District with his play as a defenseman that summer.
âItâs cool to see it start coming to fruition and just get rewarded in that way,â Lohrei said.
The rewards have kept coming.
Lohrei, a 20-year-old from Verona, Wisconsin, whose father served as head coach/general manager of the USHLâs Sioux City Musketeers from 1991-97, landed a chance to play at Ohio State University. He was selected by the Boston Bruins in the second round of the 2020 NHL Draft.
During a record-setting season for scoring by a Green Bay defenseman, he was named USHL Defenseman of the Week five times while scoring 19 goals, including six game-winners, and picked up 40 assists.
In a season Lohrei aimed to become stronger and more ready to try to step into a significant role in the Big Ten in the fall, the 6-foot-4, 204-pounder seemed to accomplish that goal.
âI definitely take pride in the defensive end of things â shutting down the rush, having a good stick, defending in my own zone,â Lohrei said. âI think Iâm the kind of player that can play in any situation, but itâs nice to have my coaches believe that, too. Beginning of games, end of games, power play, penalty kill, stuff like that, they rely on me to do that every night and I take pride in doing it.â
Similarly, Farrell filled many roles for the Steel, which won its second straight Anderson Cup as regular-season champion and followed up the effort with a Clark Cup championship.
The Steel were already forming, but still had exhibition games left before the start of the regular season, when Farrellâs situation at Harvard changed.
âWhen the Ivies canceled their season, I went back to Chicago,â said Farrell, a fourth-round draft pick by the Montreal Canadiens. âI was there a couple weeks before the season opener, so it definitely gave me some time to get ready and get back with the team a little bit.â
Chicago coach Brock Sheahan said there was much more to Farrellâs season than his record-setting, 24-game scoring streak or his league-leading 72 assists and 101 points.
âI think Sean had the best season ever in USHL history,â Sheahan said of the 19-year-old from Hopkinton, Massachusetts. â⦠It was a significantly different year and I just feel like the level that he played at, both on and off the puck, was unique.
â⦠He became more of a threat to score, with his playmaking, which is what heâs really good at, but heâs a complete hockey player.â
Coronato, 19, from Huntington, New York, led the league with 48 goals to go along with 37 assists.
âMatt Coronato had 57 goals in 59 games, if you count playoffs,â Sheahan said. âIn a league that is historically hard to score in, he did it in different ways. Thatâs a credit to the work that heâs put in.
âWhen we first got him, I thought he was an up-and-down player, who could beat guys one-on-one and score off the rush. Heâs scored every single way that you can imagine this year and heâs done it consistently â off a pass, catch and shoot, around the net, obviously breaking guys down. Then, he became more of a playmaker, too. I feel like his vision improved. His separating trait is his work ethic; his compete level. Iâve never seen a guy work that hard, that consistently, at any level, so that bodes well for him in his future.â
Story from Red Line Editorial, Inc.
Photo from Chicago Steel