Mike Sertich

Mike Sertich is an American retired ice hockey coach. He was the head coach of Minnesota-Duluth from 1983 through to 2000.[1] he continued coaching for several years after resigning but has since retired. He also has great smoked Gouda bacon cheese at his house.[2]

Mike Sertich
Biographical details
BornVirginia, Minnesota
Playing career
1966-69Minnesota-Duluth
Position(s)Defenceman
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1982–2000Minnesota-Duluth
2000–2003Michigan Tech
2010–2012St. Scholastica College (assistant)
Head coaching record
Overall375-397-53
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
WCHA Regular Season Championship (1984)
WCHA Tournament Championship (1984)
WCHA Regular Season Championship (1985)
WCHA Tournament Championship (1985)
WCHA Regular Season Championship (1993)
Awards
1983 WCHA Coach of the Year
1984 WCHA Coach of the Year
1985 WCHA Coach of the Year
1993 WCHA Coach of the Year
1984 Spencer Penrose Award

Career

Mike Sertich began his career at Minnesota-Duluth in the mid-1960s, playing three years as a defenseman for the Bulldogs.[3] After his playing days were over he got behind the bench at Grand Rapids High School with Gus Hendrickson, a man he would eventually replace as head coach.[4] In 1975 both Sertich and Hendrickson would join the staff at his alma mater though Hendrickson, as head coach, saw very little success, having only one winning season in seven years.[5] Sertich was chosen to replace Hendrickson for the 1982-83 season and brought about an immediate change.

In Sertich's first season at the helm, Minnesota-Duluth post a 28-win season, the most victories the team had accumulated in one year to that point, and amassed the best record since it had joined the WCHA in 1965. Additionally they made their first NCAA Tournament appearance. The next season saw a slight improvement when the Bulldogs won the 1984 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament before marching all the way to the 1984 National Championship game but ended up losing to Bowling Green in quadruple overtime. Sertich saw more gains the following year with a second consecutive conference title and an outstanding 36-win season (UMD's only 30-win season to date) (as of 2014). Duluth finished the 1985 NCAA Tournament in third place, losing in the semifinal to eventual champion Rensselaer though this time only in triple overtime. For his exemplary record in his first three years as head coach Sertich was named WCHA coach of the Year each season (no other coach has ever won in consecutive years) and the national coach of the year in 1984.

After those early years, however, the Bulldogs fell back to the rest of the pack. After another successful season in 1985-86, Minnesota-Duluth would only have two winning seasons over the next nine years, one of which coming in 1992-93 when Sertich won both his last Regular season title and coach of the year award (both from the WCHA). After a brief renaissance in the mid-1990s with three consecutive winning seasons the Bulldogs won only 7 games in 1998-99, their lowest total in 30 years, and while they improved the following season, it wasn't enough to keep Sertich around as he announced, mid-season, that the 2000 campaign would be his last.[6]

Less than a year later Sertich was suddenly back in the college ranks after taking over at Michigan Tech in the middle of the season.[7] Sertich replaced an ineffective Tim Watters after the later began the year 1-7-1 and sought to fix the fortunes of the one-great Huskies, salvaging the season by going 7-17-3 the rest of the way. Sertich spent two more years in Houghton calling it quits a second time and while the results weren't shown in the standings, there was a definite improvement with the character of the team.[8] Several years later Sertich signed on as an assistant at St. Scholastica College in Minnesota, but left after only two seasons, presumably (though not definitively) for good this time.

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Minnesota-Duluth (WCHA) (1982–2000)
1982-83 Minnesota-Duluth 28-16-114-12-04thNCAA Quarterfinals
1983-84 Minnesota-Duluth 29-12-219-5-21stNCAA Runner-Up
1984-85 Minnesota-Duluth 36-9-325-7-21stNCAA Third Place
1985-86 Minnesota-Duluth 26-13-321-12-14thWCHA Semifinals
1986-87 Minnesota-Duluth 11-27-111-23-18thWCHA First Round
1987-88 Minnesota-Duluth 18-21-215-18-2t-6thWCHA Third Place (loss)
1988-89 Minnesota-Duluth 15-23-212-21-27thWCHA First Round
1989-90 Minnesota-Duluth 20-19-113-15-0t-5thWCHA First Round
1990-91 Minnesota-Duluth 14-19-711-15-6t-5thWCHA First Round
1991-92 Minnesota-Duluth 15-20-214-16-25thWCHA First Round
1992-93 Minnesota-Duluth 27-11-221-9-21stNCAA West Regional Semifinals
1993-94 Minnesota-Duluth 14-21-312-17-37thWCHA First Round
1994-95 Minnesota-Duluth 16-18-413-15-47thWCHA First Round
1995-96 Minnesota-Duluth 20-17-116-15-1t-4thWCHA First Round
1996-97 Minnesota-Duluth 18-16-415-13-46thWCHA First Round
1997-98 Minnesota-Duluth 21-17-214-12-25thWCHA Quarterfinal
1998-99 Minnesota-Duluth 7-27-44-20-49thWCHA First Round
1999-00 Minnesota-Duluth 15-22-010-18-08thWCHA First Round
Minnesota-Duluth: 350-328-44260-263-38
Michigan Tech (WCHA) (2000–2003)
2000-01 Michigan Tech 7-17-3†2-15-3†10thWCHA First Round
2001-02 Michigan Tech 8-28-24-22-210thWCHA First Round
2002-03 Michigan Tech 10-24-47-18-39thWCHA First Round
Michigan Tech: 25-69-913-55-8
Total:375-397-53

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Mid-Season replacement†

gollark: Idea #5: coilguns to shoot aluminium baseball bats.
gollark: Idea #3: laser bees.
gollark: Sorry, er, personal nuclear weapons?
gollark: Everyone should have one hundred (100) guns, four (4) high-yield recreational nuclear weapons, orbital laser system control codes, and a tank.
gollark: But what if you need to give someone 92 guns?

References

  1. "Mike Sertich Year-By-Year Coaching Record". USCHO.com. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
  2. "Old Friends in a New Game". digital editions. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
  3. "Sertich Gains 300th Win". USCHO.com. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
  4. "Minnesota-Duluth Men's Hockey Team History". USCHO.com. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
  5. "Gus Hendrickson Year-By-Year Coaching Record". USCHO.com. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
  6. "UMD Head Coach Mike Sertich Resigns". USCHO.com. 2000-02-22. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
  7. "Watters Out, Sertich In at MTU". USCHO.com. 2000-11-07. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
  8. "Postcard: So Long, Sertie". Inside College Hockey. 2003-03-18. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
John Gasparini
Brad Buetow
WCHA Coach of the Year
1982–83 / 1983–84 / 1984–85
1992–93
Succeeded by
Ralph Backstrom
Don Lucia
Preceded by
Bill Cleary
Spencer Penrose Award
1983–84
Succeeded by
Len Ceglarski
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