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Northeastern reinstates Cronin, O’Connell but expects major violation ruling

Northeastern coach Greg Cronin and assistant coach Albie O’Connell will both be reinstated following an internal investigation into potential NCAA violations related to the men’s hockey team’s recruiting processes, the school announced Monday.

The school also announced that assistant coach Sebastien Laplante, who took the reins for Cronin during the suspension and led the team to a 2-2-2 record in the six-game stretch, also will shoulder responsibility for the violations and will serve his own six-game suspension at the beginning of the 2011-12 season.

Northeastern athletic director Peter Roby said that the initial investigation found that Cronin and his staff violated NCAA rules regarding both text messaging recruits and contacting recruits during a period when communication with the potential student-athletes was not allowed.

“We want to put this incident behind us to the extent we can without losing sight of the significance of the issues at hand,” said Roby. “What we came to understand is that [the men’s coaching staff] was using texting, which is no longer allowed by the NCAA, until such time that your perspective student-athlete signs a National Letter of Intent. And then, there were phone calls that were either above the limit or that came before the dates that were allowed by the NCAA.”

Roby said that the violations, which come at a time that Northeastern is already on probation with the NCAA for a recruiting incident involving men’s basketball, will likely constitute a major violation when the full investigation is complete. Because of that, the university will self-impose additional punishments.

“The advice we’ve gotten from our all-sport conference (the Colonial Athletic Association) is that it’s hard to rationalize or have it seen as a minor violation,” said Roby. “We’re proceeding with the expectation that this will rise to a major violation status and, as a result, the self-imposed sanctions that we will need to implement and recommend to the NCAA will be reflective of the expectation that is considered major.”

Roby said he has yet to figure out what those self-imposed sanctions will be. They could range from as little as limitations on recruiting and reduction on the number of coaching staff members allowed to contact potential student athletes to high-impact sanctions such as a reduction in scholarships or a ban from the postseason.

Cronin, who met with members of the media prior to rejoining his team on the ice for practice on Monday, said he hopes that the sanctions he and his team receive do not reach the most severe of punishments.

“I hope it’s not a loss of scholarship,” said Cronin. “In hockey, [losing scholarships] is a dent. It’s out of my area. But the scholarship reduction would be the biggest one to manage.”

Cronin and O’Connell were suspended by the team on Feb. 18, prior to the beginning of a weekend series with then-No. 1 Boston College. Since that time, Cronin hasn’t been allowed to have any contact with his players or coaching staff, something he admits was very difficult particularly given the point in the season at which this occurred.

When asked if he felt vindicated by Monday’s reinstatement, Cronin said that was not the case.

“As I always tell the players, if you do things the right way every day, you’ll have success down the road,” said Cronin. “We made mistakes. You can’t put any conditions on them. They’re mistakes. The school did what they felt they had to do.”

Cronin credited the school and its compliance staff on being completely professional throughout the process. That, though, didn’t take away the anxiety of not being with the team.

“We had to be patient,” said Cronin. “That’s the worst part about it. Waiting to find out what your penalty is.

“I felt like I was tethered to the school but I couldn’t go into the school because of the suspension. A part of you wants to get away from it all because it’s painful to watch your team play on a small computer at the best time of the year. But I couldn’t go away because I kept waiting for the answer.”

Cronin rejoins his team just three days before it will open a best-of-three quarterfinal series against Boston University in the Hockey East playoffs. Cronin said he’s thrilled to get back behind the bench and has confidence in his team’s focus heading into the weekend.

“I don’t know if we have the same talent level as [BU],” said Cronin. “But I went down to [the locker room] and said to them right away, ‘This is a big series here’ and gave them some things to think about.”

While Monday’s announcement will return Northeastern and its program to some level of normalcy entering the postseason, it is hardly the end of the process in dealing with the NCAA.

Roby said that the school will make its recommendations to the NCAA in the coming weeks on exactly what sanctions it recommends are imposed on the men’s hockey program. Then the waiting period begin as the NCAA evaluates the complete report.

“Over the next few weeks we’ll pull all of our findings together and send it along to the NCAA with our self-imposed sanctions,” said Roby. “The Committee on Infractions will review what we send in and make a determination as to whether or not they feel what we’ve done is appropriate and enough, or if they feel they need more information or if they feel that there is more that has to be done. If they want more sanctions put in place, they will let us know that.”

Home ice, schmome ice.

So much for the “coveted” home-ice advantage, as seeds Nos. 10, 11 and 12 each upset their seventh, sixth and fifth-seeded hosts. Just another week in our wacky little league.

First-round round-up

No. 8 Quinnipiac 2, No. 9 Brown 0

The Bobcats cut Bruno down with twin 4-0 decisions, as junior Dan Clarke stopped 22 shots on Friday, and sophomore Eric Hartzell saved 26 on Saturday. Sophomore Jeremy Langlois and senior Zach Hansen each had a pair of goals on the weekend, though Hansen was the only player to boast a multi-point game in either of the wins, with a goal and assist on Saturday. Brown had only been shut out once all season heading into the series, and QU had only registered one shutout all year as well.

No. 10 Harvard 2, No. 7 Clarkson 0

Friday night’s tight 2-1 final bred a frantic Saturday finale in Potsdam, as the Golden Knights and Crimson combined for 10 goals in the game’s final 38 minutes in a 6-4 Harvard victory. Ryan Carroll may well have been the hero of the series, as the senior goalkeeper stopped 32 of 33 shots on Friday and turned away 29 more on Saturday. The Knights went 0/4 on the power play this weekend, harkening back to early-season issues with the advantage, while the visiting Ivy scored on two of nine PP opportunities to win its fourth and fifth games in a row (and seventh in eight).

No. 11 St. Lawrence 2, No. 6 Princeton 1

The Saints overcame a dismal 4-1 loss on Friday to win back-to-back matinee games in the Garden State, dispatching the Tigers with timely goals and stellar defense and goaltending. Rookies led the way, as Matt Weninger stopped 96 of 100 Princeton shots after taking over in Game 1 for junior Robby Moss, fellow frosh Greg Carey led the Saints with three goals, and classmate Kyle Essery joined the party with two goals as well.

No. 12 Colgate 2, No. 5 Rensselaer 1

The Raiders rolled into Troy on Friday with a lot of hope, but rolled out of Houston Field House with another loss on their record. Somewhere between Friday night and Saturday afternoon, Colgate regrouped and pulled off a deceptively tight 5-2 win in Game 2 (with two empty-net goals). The Raiders surrendered an early 1-0 lead in the pivotal Game 3, but after 90:06 and one and a half overtimes, sophomore Robbie Bourdon dashed the Engineers’ season with the double-OT, 2-1 winner. Thus the Chase Polacek era at RPI likely ends despite the senior’s three-goal effort in the series, while on the other side freshman goaltender Eric Mihalik is starting to make a name for himself, stopping 69 of 72 shots in Games 2 and 3 for the Raiders.

Round 2

One week out from Atlantic City; who wants to play? All games this weekend are scheduled for 7pm sharp.

No. 12 Colgate at No. 1 Union
No. 11 St. Lawrence at No. 2 Yale
No. 10 Harvard at No. 3 Dartmouth
No. 8 Quinnipiac at No. 4 Cornell

More thoughts on these series coming up later this week.

My top 20

1. North Dakota
2. Union
3. Yale
4. Boston College
5. Merrimack
6. Denver
7. Minnesota-Duluth
8. Miami
9. Michigan
10. New Hampshire
11. Dartmouth
12. Notre Dame
13. Western Michigan
14. Wisconsin
15. Nebraska-Omaha
16. Rensselaer
17. Boston University
18. Colorado College
19. Maine
20. Cornell

Weekend work-up: CCHA playoffs, Round 1

Sometimes, all I can say is, “Wow.”
Congratulations to the Nanooks, Lakers and Falcons for advancing to the second round of the CCHA playoffs. Congratulations, too, to the teams on the losing end. The Spartans did not go gently into that good night, the Buckeyes showed some life before it was over and it took three games to end the Wildcats’ season.
Alaska and Lake Superior swept their opponents in two games at home, but Bowling Green? The team that had eight wins going into the weekend? The Falcons took Northern Michigan two three games – and double overtime – and came away from Marquette with a trip to Ann Arbor.
Wow.
Alaska over Michigan State, 3-2 and 4-3
It took the Nanooks two overtime games to beat the visiting Spartans, and Nik Yaremchuk was the OT hero in both games.
In Friday’s contest, the teams exchanged goals in the second and third periods, with the Spartans scoring first in each. Jarret Granberg had the game-tying goal at 12:45 in the third for Alaska, and Yaremchuk scored the winner at 19:40 in OT. The MSU bench hotly protested the game-winner because the net came up from its moorings before snapping back into place before the puck crossed the line; the Spartans wanted a whistle.
In the second game, the Spartans led 2-1 at the end of one but came from behind in the second to tie it on Brett Perlini’s goal at 19:19. After two scoreless periods of hockey, Yaremchuk found the net at 3:18 in the second OT.
Cody Kunyk had the second assist on each game-winning goal. Scott Greehnam had 56 saves in the two contests. Drew Palmisano stopped 34 in the first MSU loss; Will Yanakeff had 30 saves in the second.
Lake Superior over Ohio State, 4-0 and 3-2
The Lakers dispensed of the Buckeyes fairly easily, shutting out OSU for five of the six periods of play. Playoff hockey can be star-making hockey, and LSSU freshman goaltender Kevin Kapalka – good and promising but a little inconsistent for much of the Lakers’ regular season – emerged a force to be reckoned with after this weekend. Kapalka stopped 48 shots in the shutout and another 28 in the 3-2 win.
Six different players scored for the Lakers, with senior Rick Schofield registering two goals – including the marker that held up to be the game-winner in Saturday’s contest. Schofield also had an assist, bringing his career points total to 102, making him one of two Lakers to hit the 100-point mark in the last 10 years. Troy Schwab is the other.
Buckeye seniors Sergio Somma and Danny Dries scored early in the third. OSU goaltender Cal Heeter finished the weekend with 67 saves.
Bowling Green over Northern Michigan, 3-6 (L), 2-0 and 2-1
Remarkably, the Falcons scored more than two goals for the first time since Dec. 30 and lost the game – and then rebounded with two wins. The two wins also increase BGSU’s win total on the season by 25 percent.
Six different Wildcats scored in the 6-3 win, an easy one for NMU as the Wildcats led 4-1 on Brian Nugent’s goal at 6:06 in the second. NMU outshot BGSU 21-5 in the first period of that contest alone, and poor Andrew Hammond – the Falcons’ steady, reliable goaltender – left the game when Nugent scored that fourth goal. Nick Eno came in for Hammond and allowed one more on 15 shots, but BG could not recover.
The second and third contests were very different. Hammond was in net for the rest of the weekend but allowed just one goal – in spite of being outshot in each contest. In the two wins, Hammond had 73 saves, 29 in the shutout and 44 in the double-OT win. In those two games, the Wildcats outshot the Falcons 74-50. Jordan Samuels-Thomas and Ryan Viselli had the goals in the shutout; Chad Sumsion scored for BG in the second and Andrew Cherniwchan for NMU in the third in regulation of the deciding game.
It was Bryce Williamson who gave the Falcons the deciding win, though, 34 seconds into the second overtime, picking up a rebound of Jake Sloat’s shot and lifting it over NMU netminder Reid Ellingson for BGSU’s first playoff series win since 2007-08.
The loss for Northern marks only the second time since the 2002-03 season that the Wildcats will not advance to Joe Louis Arena. NMU has made an appearance at the CCHA championship tournament seven of the nine years Walt Kyle has been head coach.
Epic fail
As the kids say, that is.
I predicted the series in Fairbanks and Sault Ste. Marie to go to three games, with the visitors winning. I also predicted the series in Marquette to be done in two, with the home team winning. I guess I should save my money on those lottery tickets this week.
Last week: 3-4 (.429)
Season (and postseason) to date: 111-72-26 (.593)
The picks are for actual games played, not for the folly of my predicting three-game series in two places where two games were played. I gave myself a loss for the third BG-NMU game.
Next up
There are four second-round, best-of-three quarterfinal CCHA series this weekend: Michigan hosts Bowling Green; Notre Dame hosts Lake Superior State; Miami hosts Alaska; Western Michigan hosts Ferris State.
One last note
There was a confrontation between fans and MSU head coach Rick Comley after the first game in Alaska. Comley and Michigan State are declining to comment on it. I will write a few observations about it in Tuesday’s blog.

Selection Sunday

I’ve been covering college hockey for USCHO since 2006. Since I live in Colorado and cover Denver and Colorado College, I’ve become very familiar with both the WCHA and its rabid fanbase. Since the all-WCHA Frozen Four in 2005, fans of the league have enjoyed pumping out conspiracy theories about how the NCAA is determined, at all costs, to avoid having too-heavy a WCHA representation in the men’s tournament.

Boys, let me tell you, you ain’t got nothing on the girls.

How else to view today’s selection and placement of teams for the final eight in the NCAA tournament. No. 1 Wisconsin, riding a 24-game unbeaten streak and winner of a dramatic overtime game with No. 3 Minnesota, one of the hottest teams in the country, draws defending national champion Minnesota-Duluth in the first round. Should they win that, they will most likely face Minnesota in the semis, barring an unlikely not-by-seed-but-by-paper upset of the Gophers by Boston College.

On the other side, No. 2 Cornell draws No. 8 Dartmouth in the first round. No disrespect to the Big Green, who were the only ECAC team to beat Cornell this season, but Dartmouth is not in the same league as Minnesota-Duluth, and has an RPI that is .300 lower than the Bulldogs.

The last bracket features Mercyhurst and Boston University, two teams that have struggled of late. The Terriers lost in the Hockey East tournament to Northeastern and have gone a pedestrian 4-4-1 since the beginning of February. Mercyhurst has only lost two games since January, but they were to Cornell and Wisconsin, and they didn’t look good in winning the CHA tournament.

Several things are at work in this tournament field that probably makes all the WCHA coaches upset. First of all, the NCAA only seeds the top four squads. The rest of the teams are placed by geography, so that the NCAA doesn’t have to pony up funds to fly teams all over the country for what they view as a money-losing tournament, and to hell with bracket integrity.

More important however, is the flawed nature of the PairWise when it comes to women’s hockey. For all the griping about the PairWise when it comes to men’s hockey, there are usually some out-of-conference games between top teams that can form a basis for comparison. For instance, Boston College played two against Denver and one against Notre Dame this year, North Dakota played two against Notre Dame, Boston University played Notre Dame and Wisconsin, Michigan played Nebraska-Omaha, Colorado College, New Hampshire, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, and Miami played New Hampshire and St. Cloud.

Contrast that to the women’s game. Cornell played two games against Mercyhurst and none against WCHA or Hockey East squads. Boston University played North Dakota, and Mercyhurst, to its credit, played Wisconsin (and lost 7-4). Boston College played no WCHA squads, picking off ECAC teams for its out-of-conference schedule.

To get a better PairWise, top eastern squads need to start playing games against the WCHA. It would create a far more accurate base of comparison than what is currently in place.

I don’t think you can watch the intensity of the Wisconsin-Minnesota WCHA final and doubt that when it comes to the top squads in the conference, the WCHA is stronger in the women’s game. It is also deeper. In addition to the big three of Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Minnesota-Duluth (the only teams ever to win an NCAA championship), there are teams like North Dakota and Bemidji State who can threaten the top squads, and would probably have a shot at a championship in any other division. Ohio State won only eight WCHA games, but went 6-0 against the CHA.

Looking at the tournament, I see several things at play. Mercyhurst is the host. They finished fourth in the PairWise, but were not seeded, and instead get to play BU, a team they likely can beat and advance to the Frozen Four, with a likely shot at the final. If they had been seeded fourth, they would have had to go through Wisconsin to get to the final, a far more daunting proposition than Cornell, whom they have beaten this year.

If the committee had simply gone by the PairWise, Wisconsin would play Dartmouth, Cornell would play Minnesota-Duluth, Boston University would play Minnesota, and Mercyhurst would play Boston College, with, if seedings held, semis of Wisconsin-Mercyhurst and BU-Cornell. That tournament seems a far more accurate representation of the women’s game as it is now than what the tournament actually is.

Weekend recap: Mar. 4-5

The Hockey East regular season went out with a bang.

Commissioner Joe Bertagna was prescient enough to once again schedule the Boston College – New Hampshire home-and-home series on the final weekend, a move that paid handsome dividends.

Boston College, which opened the weekend one point down, leapfrogged UNH on Friday with a dominating performance.  Scoreboard: 4-0.  Shots: 42-12. You name it, the Eagles did it.

(However, they also lost forward Chris Kreider for four-to-six weeks with a broken jaw.  The best case scenario, then, is for him to rejoin the team at the Frozen Four.)

One night later, UNH appeared poised to hold serve back at the Whittemore Center, leading 2-0 early in the second period.  However, BC rallied to take a 3-2 lead and after the Wildcats tied it, the Eagles got the game-winner and their first regular season title since 2005.

Boston University put itself in position to steal the number two playoff seed from UNH (based on winning the tiebreaker) by defeating Northeastern on the road on Friday night, but couldn’t seal the deal back at Agganis Arena on Saturday.

The split in that series opened the door for Merrimack, which had locked up home ice on Friday with a decisive 6-1 win over Providence, to overtake BU for third place.  The Warriors, however, also had to settle for a split and finished in fourth.

Talk about missed opportunities!  But hey, that’s why they play the games.

Providence’s win created extra drama in the battle for the final playoff berth. That win put UMass in the unenviable position of needing at least a tie on Saturday with the suddenly red-hot Maine Black Bears.

The Minutemen pulled that off, though, resulting in an excruciating finish for the Friars.  They finally got their first league win since Nov. 5, which they might have expected would be enough to get them into the playoffs.  But no.  That’s a rip-your-heart out ending.

Vermont, which locked up a playoff berth with a tie against Massachusetts-Lowell on Friday,  finished up a three-of-four points weekend on Saturday to take seventh place.

As a result, Providence and Lowell are done for the season.  The playoff matchups look like this:

#1 Boston College hosts #8 Massachusetts

#2 New Hampshire hosts #7 Vermont

#3 Boston University hosts #6 Northeastern

#4 Merrimack hosts #5 Maine

Northeastern women have bright future

As the Boston College women’s hockey team celebrated their first-ever Hockey East championship on Sunday, you could almost notice the team across the way was taking careful notes.

The Northeastern women’s Huskies, having struggled through the league season with a 6-10-5 record, played the role of Cinderella throughout the postseason. The Huskies upset Connecticut and top-seeded Boston University to reach the title game and, when Casey Pickett gave the Huskies a 1-0 lead in the first period Sunday, it looked like Cinderella’s ride might continue.

In the end, justice prevailed and the heavily-favored Eagles gutted out a 3-1 win. The Huskies struggled to generate offense once they fell behind, a factor that coach Dave Flint attributed to fatigue.

“We battled as hard as we could,” said Flint, who returned behind the NU bench this season after coaching the U.S. Women’s Olympic team last year with Wisconsin’s Mark Johnson. “I think we just ran out of gas down the stretch and couldn’t mount a good attack in the third.”

The Huskies depth was a major factor throughout the season, and came to a head on Sunday. Northeastern dressed just 11 forwards, and that number shrunk to 10 when senior center Kristi Kehoe injured her ankle midway through the game.

“Losing [Kehoe], she’s a very good defensive forward, but she can also make things happen offensively,” said Flint. “After we played so hard yesterday and everybody was tired today, the emotion can only take you so far.”

While Sunday’s loss will provide a temporary sting, Flint hopes that it will be a stepping stone for experience as a program.

“The big thing is that we can get here,” said Flint. “That was a big step for us. The last two years, losing in the first round and this year going into the playoffs, I felt like some of the kids were doubting.

“Once they got a little bit of confidence, they started to roll with it. I told them let’s learn from the experience. I thank the seniors for all they’ve done, but for the underclassmen, I told them remember how this feels.”

Flint also knows that success breeds success, particularly in a women’s game where blue-chip recruits aren’t exactly available at a dime a dozen, and most recruits look at a team’s ability to win in clutch situations when making decisions. Reaching Sunday’s final might help address the team’s depth through recruiting.

“To get the better kids, they want to go to the programs that can win,” said Flint. “We’ve put together two pretty good seasons here. So we can show that we can compete with the upper echelon.

“We’ve been in and out of the top 10 for the last two years. That definitely helps in the recruiting process.”

What certainly would help would be if the Huskies can carry their playoff success into next year. Northeastern loses its two captains in Alyssa Wohlfeiler and Julia Marty, but forward Casey Pickett and  goaltender Florence Schelling — both selected to the all-tournament team — each return and will be part of the foundation on which this team can build.

And most certainly, the Huskies wouldn’t mind taking a page out of the Eagles playbook. BC isn’t far removed from single-digit, bottom of the league finishes when Hockey East was in its infancy. Even last year, when the Eagles star players Molly Schaus and league and tournament MVP Kelli Stack were playing in the Olympics, BC failed to make the league playoffs. Until Sunday’s win, a Frozen Four bid in 2007 was all the Eagles had to hang their hat on. Now BC will make their third NCAA tournament appearance in five years.

BC coach Katie King sees the Huskies as a team that is on the road to plenty of future success.

“[Northeastern] is a team that never gives up, and that’s a great tribute to their team and their staff,” said King. “They’ve done a great job in getting the program to the final game. It’s setting up for some great hockey in the future for Hockey East.”

Bracketology, Pre-announcement Edition

Congrats to all the conference champions – and to those yet unnamed teams that get a second chance. Here’s the pre-NCAA announcement edition of Division III Bracketology.

To recap: eleven teams will get their tickets punched: seven Pool A teams, one Pool B Team, and three Pool C teams. Pool A consists of the seven teams that will win playoff championships in leagues with an automatic qualifier: ECAC East, ECAC Northeast, NCHA, NESCAC, MCHA, MIAC, and SUNYAC. One Pool B slot is reserved for an independent team or team from a conference that does not have an AQ: ECAC West and MASCAC. Pool C bids will be handed out to the highest remaining teams according to the NCAA rankings. The most recent editions of those were released earlier in the week, prior to this weekend’s action.
USCHO has attempted to mimic the selection process, but, unlike Division I, the criteria are not given equal weight by the selection committee. So instead of a pairwise ranking (PWR), we have a pairwise comparison (PWC) which does not necessarily match what the NCAA may do. I assure you, in fact, that it won’t.
Here are the PWCs for the East and West regions, as well as a combined one.
So without further ado, the Pool A bids went to:
ECAC East: Norwich
ECAC Northeast: Curry
MIAC; Hamline
MCHA: Adrian
NESCAC: Bowdoin
NCHA: St. Norbert
SUNYAC: Plattsburgh
And I’m predicting the following, based on the recent NCAA rankings:
Pool B: Elmira
Pool C: Oswego, Neumann, Castleton
Seedings would be:
E1: Oswego
E2: Elmira
E3: Plattsburgh
E4: Norwich
E5: Castleton
E6: Neumann
E7: Bowdoin
E8: Curry
W1: St. Norbert
W2: Adrian
W3: Hamline
Now, what to do about Adrian? The Bulldogs are in the West region but closer in distance to Elmira than to either St. Norbert or Hamline.
In theory, the first and second round pairings are supposed to be in region. According to the 2011 NCAA handbook:
“The Division III Men’s Ice Hockey Committee will rank the teams selected within each geographic region using the primary and secondary criteria.The highest-ranked teams in each region will be given consideration as preliminary first-round and quarterfinal sites, assuming they meet the requirements of Bylaw 31.1.3.2.3.The committee will pair the teams regionally, based on geographic location of all participants and final seeding. Flights will be kept to a minimum.”
So what does “paired regionally” mean? It sounds like Adrian must be paired within the West region. If you go by seeding that would mean flying Hamline to Adrian, or busing Adrian to St. Norbert, which would hurt the integrity of the seedings. And even then, should the Bulldogs win, Hamline would still have to fly in the quarterfinals.
A way out would be to send Adrian to Elmira, which is just under 500 miles. This would give all three West teams a bye to the quarterfinals.
Let’s look at possible brackets.
Regional and seeding integrity would have:
First Round:
W3 Hamline at W2 Adrian
E8 Curry at E5 Castleton
E7 Bowdoin at E6 Neumann (just under 500 miles)
Quarterfinals:
Hamline/Adrian at St. Norbert
Neumann/Bowdoin at Oswego
Curry/Castleton at Elmira
Norwich at Plattsburgh
If they abandon seeding integrity in the West, then it’s:
First Round:
W2 Adrian at W1 St. Norbert
E8 Curry at E5 Castleton
E7 Bowdoin at E6 Neumann (just under 500 miles)
Quarterfinals:
Hamline at Adrian/St. Norbert
Neumann/Bowdoin at Oswego
Curry/Castleton at Elmira
Norwich at Plattsburgh
Of if the committee abandons region integrity, we could have:
First Round:
E8 Curry at E3 Plattsburgh
E7 Bowdoin at E4 Norwich
E Neumann at E5 Castleton
Quarterfinals:
Hamline at St. Norbert
Adrian at Elmira
Neumann/Castleton at Oswego
Bowdoin/Norwich at Plattsburgh
Don’t stay up late looking for an announcement. Reliable sources indicate that it won’t come until tomorrow morning. Check back after for reactions.

MCHA, MIAC and NCHA championship round-up March 6

In collecting its fourth-straight Harris Cup, Adrian made a statement about the next step in its journey as an NCAA tournament-bound team.
The fifth-ranked Bulldogs skated to a 5-0 victory over Marian on Sunday in the Midwest Collegiate Hockey Association title game at Arrington Ice Arena.
Seniors Shawn Skelly and Zach Graham led the Bulldogs with two goals each. Jordan Watts supplied the game’s other goal while Brad Fogal stopped 30 shots to secure the shutout.
The milestone victory also marked Adrian’s 100th win in only four years as a Division III program.
In capturing the league crown, Adrian earned its second trip to the NCAA tournament where the team crashed out 4-3 to St. Norbert in the first round last year.
This time is different, said Fogal, who earned his first shutout of the season. The senior netminder also shared in a 3-0 shutout with teammate Jeremy Cross in the team’s highly publicized outdoor game against Concordia (Wis.) at University of Michigan Stadium Dec. 4.
“This year, we know what to expect,” Fogal said. “Last year, we went into it sort of blind and didn’t know what to expect in terms of what it takes to prepare for it. This year, we’re taking the right steps and peaking at the right time.”
Adrian (23-3-1) maintained a 2-0 lead going into the third period, killing a hooking penalty to Mike Dahlinger before going on a three-goal rampage. Marian (19-8) was 0 for 4 on the power play as MCHA leading scorer Dakota Dubetz (15 goals, 34 assists, 49) and fellow triggerman Brendan Hull (22-21-43) were held pointless.
Hull (3 goals and 2 assists) and Dubetz (a goal and 3 assists) combined for nine points in the Sabres’ 9-2 thrashing of No. 3-seed and No. 9-ranked Milwaukee School of Engineering in the semifinal Saturday. The spigot was shut tight a day later.
Adrian outshot Marian, 40-30.
“We just couldn’t sustain any pressure and get pucks to the net,” Marian Coach Jasen Wise said. “I thought defensively that was one of the best games I’ve seen from Adrian in a long time.
“They took away our time and space in their D-zone and really didn’t give our forwards any scoring chances.”
Defensemen Quinn Waller and Jeremy Klaver got the assignment to keep the Sabres’ scoring duo in check. Klaver finished with two assists and was plus-2 while Waller was plus-one.
“We just played smart defensively, clearing pucks out,” Adrian Coach Ron Fogarty said.
The offense took its cue from the rearguards.
Skelly earned MCHA Tournament MVP with his 8 points on 2 goals and 6 assists during the weekend.
The senior right wing had five assists in Adrian’s 9-2 win over No. 4-seed Lawrence in Saturday’s semifinal. Left wing Eric Miller cashed in for 3 goals and 3 assists for 6 points against the Vikings (14-13-1).
Skelly scored Adrian’s first two goals on Sunday while assisting on Graham’s second marker with 6:37 left to make it 5-0.
Skelly, who is one shy of 100 career goals, credited his line mates Graham and Miller for the superlative performance.
“We want to be recognized as big-time players and big-time players step up in big time games,” said Miller, who is one point away from amassing 200 career points. “A lot of us haven’t gotten respect outside of the MCHA. “This (fourth-straight title) may have done it or may not have done it. We don’t care about that. It’s about helping our team  win.”
St. Norbert repeat NCHA champs
St. Norbert captured its ninth Northern Collegiate Hockey Association Peters Cup by scrapping out a 2-1 win over No. 2 -seed Wisconsin-Superior on Saturday at the Cornerstone Community Center.
As NCHA champs, the No. 1-ranked Green Knights return to the NCAA D-III tournament where they finished as runners up after losing 2-1 to Norwich in double-overtime in last year’s championship game.
Johan Ryd’s goal at 15:41 of the second period stood as the game-winner as No. 1-ranked St. Norbert held a 2-0 lead entering the final frame.
Nick Tabisz opened the Green Knights’ account with his seventh goal at 7:18 of the first period. Brandon Hoogenboom and Ryd assisted on the power-play tally.
With the goalie pulled for an extra attacker, UW-Superior’s Derek Stauber scored with 45 seconds left. The Yellowjackets couldn’t convert in the final 25 seconds with freshman goalie Drew Strandberg off for a sixth skater.
B.J. O’Brien stopped stopped 30 of 31 shots, including 11 in the third period, to earn the victory. UW-Superior (16-12-1) outshot the hosts, 31-22.
“(Superior) was good,” St. Norbert coach Tim Coghlin told the Green Bay Press Gazette afterwards. “I thought they played one heck of a game — they really did. I just feel like we have more to give. It feels like we have more gas in the tank and we’re going to have to bounce back next week and we need more bodies to be at their peak.”
Hamline captures MIAC crown
Jordan VanGilder, Brett Burgau and Brian Arrigoni scored during a three-goal barrage in the first period, which propelled No. 11-ranked Hamline to a 5-2 victory over visiting Concordia (Minn.) in the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference title game Saturday.
With the win, the Pipers (16-6-5) earned an automatic invite to the NCAA tournament, which starts Wednesday.
Arrigoni finished with a hat trick, adding two goals in the third period – the last one an empty-netter with 34 seconds left.
Caleb Sunderman and Aaron Wheeler scored for the Cobbers (11-11-4), who pulled to within two, 4-2, with 9:51 left.
Piper netminder Beau Christian (14-4-3) made 19 saves to earn the win. Concordia goalie Kelly Andrew was replaced at 8:54 of the first period by Chris Neamonitis, who was tagged with the loss.
VanGilder’s scored 52 seconds into contest while Burgau bagged a goal four minutes later. Arrigoni struck for the first of three goals at the 9:03 mark of the period.

Gallery: Boston College women win their first Hockey East title

The Boston College Eagles defeated the Northeastern Huskies 3-1 in the Hockey East championship game at Walter Brown Arena in Boston. Northeastern was playing in its first final while the victory was BC’s first. BC will host Minnesota on Saturday, March 12, in the NCAA quarterfinals. Hockey East will also be represented by Boston University who will host Mercyhurst.

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ECAC Northeast and MASCAC Championship Wrap: March 6

Two championships. Two overtimes.

This is the last year before the MASCAC receives an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament, but that hasn’t led to any letdowns in its first two championship games.

For the second year in a row, Fitchburg State and Salem State went to overtime. And for a second year in a row, the lower seed prevailed.

After being upset last year, the fourth seeded Falcons returned the favor to the No. 2 Vikings, knocking them off 6-5  after blowing an early lead, and then rallying to tie it.

“It was a great game,” Fitchburg State coach Dean Fuller told the Fitchburg Sentinel and Enterprise. “We jumped out to an early lead and we couldn’t hold it, but we knew that was a great team we were playing. They went up 5-3 in the third period and we battled back. … It’s a great experience for the kids, the whole program and the university.”

Thomas McAleer had two assists for the Falcons, including one on Travis Bertolloti’s game-tying goal midway through the third period. It was McAleer’s strike that gave Fitchburg a 4-3 double overtime win Thursday night against top seeded Massachusetts-Dartmouth.

Check out the full story here.

Saturday’s other championship game appeared poised to headed to double overtime, but Payden Benning’s second goal of the game helped the Colonels walk off the ice as back to back ECAC Northeast Champions.

When talking to Curry head coach Rob Davies after the game about there Colonels early penalty troubles, Davies paused for a second and said “Boy that seems like a day ago.”

Gotta agree on that one- between that marathon of a game and much of the prior week spent at various high school gyms for the the state basketball playoffs- my brain turned to absolute mush trying decipher almost four full periods worth of notes and turn them into something readable.

But back to those penalties.  Curry took seven of them in the first period, although some of those were offest by three Wentworth infractions, a including a facemask major against Patrick Rice.

But the Colonels settled down, and after two penalties early in the third, remained out of the box the rest of the night.

“We tried making it  a key point that we were going to come out and play physical,” Benning said. “Guys were overstepping their boundaries a little bit. I thnk we just took astep back and played a little smarter.”

Neither team was whistled during the overtime period, although I have to wonder if some of that was due to the refs calling a looser game given the circumstances.

Following the presentation of the the championship trophy, the conference announced the All-Conference teams, which consisted  of  forward Jeremiah Ketts (Johnson & Wales),  defenseman Shaun Jameson (Wentworth),  goaltender Chris Azzano (Wentworth),  defender Joshua Pineiro (Curry), defender Mike Kavanagh (Curry) and Benning.

Plattsburgh wins 20th SUNYAC Championship

The Plattsburgh Cardinals are the 2010-11 SUNYAC champions, beating Fredonia, 4-1. Plattsburgh never allowed the Blue Devils a glimmer of hope for another playoff upset.
Plattsburgh outshot Fredonia in the first, 13-4, and the second, 12-6. Only in the third period, when Plattsburgh was preserving the lead and Fredonia was getting desperate, did the Blue Devils outshoot Plattsburgh, 11-10. Josh Leis made 20 saves for the win while Mark Friesen stopped 31 shots.
The game was put away in the latter part of the second period when Plattsburgh scored twice within 1:06 to open a 4-0 lead.
Ryan Farnan banged in a rebound at 14:14 after Kyle Taylor’s initial shot was saved. The final goal for the home team was perfectly executed. Cody Adams, from the right point, passed it to Barry Roytman on the left point. Roytman fired a slap shot which Dylan Clarke, while having a defender draped on his back, deflected from the slot just enough to elude Friesen.
Fredonia pulled their goalie with 2:09 left in the game to try and salvage something. They succeeded at breaking the shutout with 1:22 left. They brought the puck into the zone quickly down the left side before losing control of it. However, the loose puck wound up in the slot, where Ben Waldman quickly wristed a shot over Leis’ glove for the final score of the game.
Plattsburgh got things started with a power-play score at 15:15 of the first on an Eric Satim slap shot from the right side. Adams make it 2-0 with 18.7 seconds left in the period. From the top of the left circle, he one-timed a pass from Patrick Jobb.
Fredonia came out strong in the second period, but Plattsburgh’s two quick goals squashed any comeback hopes.
Leis was rightfully named the Tournament’s Most Valuable Player. He said after the game on Primelink’s live videocast, “The team played great tonight and that’s what we needed to do to win. My team kept a lot of shots from the outside. Made it really easy for me.”
Three of Leis’ teammates joined him on the All Tournament team — Ryan Craig(F), Eric Satim(F), and Cody Adams(D). Two Fredonia players made it — Ben Waldman(F) and Steve Rizer(D).
Plattsburgh (20-7-1) gets the automatic qualifier into the NCAA tournament. If they play in the play-in round, they will most likely get to host a game. They await to see when and who they face.
Oswego is a lock for an at-large bid as well as a home playoff game next Saturday.
Fredonia’s season ends at 14-13-1.

BC’s York turns to Belichick for help capturing elusive regular-season title

DURHAM, N.H. – When you take a look at this year’s senior class for Boston College, you can sum up their success in one word: championships.

The three seniors – John Muse, Joe Whitney and Brian Gibbons – have combined for three Beanpot titles, two Hockey East tournament titles and, most impressively two NCAA national championships.

But until Saturday, the one title that has eluded the Eagles seniors was the Hockey East regular season crown. Three times in the last five years BC finished runner-up by a single point. And for the bulk of the first two periods on Saturday it looked as if that might happen once again.

The Eagles, though, impressively rallied from two goals down, took an early third-period lead and then responded after New Hampshire tied the game with 10 minutes to play with a Pat Mullane game winner to give the Eagles their first regular-season title since 2005.

“It’s quite an honor to win this trophy,” said BC captain Joe Whitney of the regular-season crown. “There’s a reason we haven’t won it in the last couple of years. It’s a hard trophy to win.”

While BC head coach Jerry York has had some wonderful success in his career, to prepare his team for this weekend’s series with UNH, one in which the Eagles needed a minimum of three points against the Wildcats to capture the title, he called upon a man who York says “knows plenty about winning.”

That man was New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick.

The three-time Super Bowl winning coach last addressed the Eagles seven years ago. Since that time, York maintained the friendship and this past Tuesday asked the coach to come speak to his players.

“It really was a factor in how we prepared for this championship event,” said York of Belichick’s speech. “He hit on some issues that were so important in all of athletics.”

Belichick joked that he didn’t know much about hockey but knew a little about winning. He then went on to deliver a number of analogies that the Eagles used throughout the weekend sweep of the Wildcats.

One of those analogies was comparing the responsibility for carrying the team on the ice to borrowing your parents’ car.

“Back when Bill and I were growing up, there was one car in the family,” said York. “You had responsibility. You had that key and you better bring that car back. Momma’s expecting it the next morning.

“Belichick said, ‘When you go over the boards Friday night and Saturday night, each of you hold the key to Boston College’s success in hockey.’ It was a theme we used during the week. That you’re responsible for your shift, for your contributions.”

On Saturday, there were a number of players who took responsibility for the Eagles success. None, though, did so more than senior netminder Muse.

Muse looked like a goat early when he dropped a bad-angle shot from UNH’s Dalton Speelman that opened the scoring and brought the Whittemore center to life.

Muse, though, bounced back from that goal and played incredible throughout the remainder of the game, frustrating the Wildcat offense. He gave up two additional goals, but that’s when the remainder of the team bailed him out.

Now with the regular-season title in hand, BC can look forward to a series with Massachusetts, a team that salvaged their season on Saturday, rallying from two goals down in the third period to earn a 4-4 tie with Maine to earn the final playoff spot by one point over Providence.

York, ever one to prepare for an opponent, for now is happy to enjoy that regular-season title before thinking about the playoffs.

“I think I might enjoy this one for tonight,” said York. “I’ll wake up tomorrow and start thinking about UMass.”

Kelly Babstock’s scoring presence brought Quinnipiac great success

Forward Kelly Babstock watched her teammate Amanda Colin take a shot. Goaltender Kate Gallagher made a save, but the puck bounced off and Babstock seized the opportunity. She took her own shot and sent the puck past Gallagher before the goaltender had a chance to get into position.

Her second of two goals against Union College on February 12 was her seventh point of the weekend, a new high for Babstock. It was also her 55th point of the season. Despite being only a freshman, Babstock led the team in scoring by over 30 points and is fifth in the country. That is a lot of production for anyone, let alone a freshman new to the dynamics of college hockey.

Babstock started playing hockey in Mississauga, Ont., when she was six. “My older brother played hockey; my dad had taught him how to play, and I kinda wanted to be like my older bro,” said Babstock.

She played on boys’ teams because until eighth grade because that’s all there were, but had no problem fitting in. Even in high school, she played on the boys’ lacrosse team for a year because the school did not have one for girls. Not only did she play on the boys’ team, she was its leading scorer.

“I didn’t think anything of it, because I always play with the guys in hockey and lacrosse,” said Babstock. “It was fun to beat up the boys.”

Having played with the boys for so long may have contributed to Babstock’s intensity and aggressive play on the ice. She has the most penalties on the team with 17, but when you can create scoring opportunities for yourself and your teammates as much as Babstock does, people tend to overlook the penalties.

Babstock has been a part of 56 percent of her team’s goals with 30 goals and 29 assists. She has a plus/minus rating of plus 30; that means Quinnipiac has scored 30 more goals than its opponents have while Babstock has been on the ice.

“There’s no denying her importance to our success,” said Quinnipiac coach Rick Seeley. “Any time Kelly has an off game, it’s a struggle for us.”

One example was in the last weekend of the regular season. Babstock did not record a point in either game for only the second time in the season. The Bobcats lost to Yale 1-0 and tied Brown 3-3, which also marked the second weekend in which they did not win at least one game, though the other losing weekend was not Babstock’s other scoreless weekend.

In many games this season, Babstock has been involved in every goal the Bobcats have scored. The biggest one in the stat book was against Rensselaer on February 11. Quinnipiac beat the Engineers 5-1; Babstock scored two goals and had three assists. The game was close to being the freshman’s fourth hat trick of the season. She scored three goals in a game twice in one weekend in November in a win over Harvard and a loss to Dartmouth and again in January for an overtime win against Clarkson.

“Our team battled back from being down 2-1 going in the third; we tied it up and I scored the third goal in overtime for the hat trick,” said Babstock. “It was the best game of the season, not just because of the hat trick for me but I was really pumped for the team’s win.”

Babstock says she doesn’t pay attention to her personal accolades as they pile up; it’s all about the team winning as a whole for her. However, not even she can deny that there have been many of them: ECAC Hockey/MLX Skates Player of the Week twice, Rookie of the Week five times, and Quinnipiac Female Athlete of the Month in November and December before being named ECAC Rookie and Player of the Year. She was also one of three freshmen nominated for the Patty Kazmaier Award.

“She’s the freshman everyone wants to be and play with,” said captain Jordan Elkins. “Not only does she put the puck in the net, but she gets the puck to our other forwards so that they score more too.”

The rest of the team responded well to Babstock joining them. Not only did she give them assists, setting up goals, but she also took some pressure off. In the past, games had been a struggle and the margin of victory was rarely much more than one point. This season was a different story.

“Just having someone who you know you can count on to be involved in a goal or two a game, it takes some pressure off,” said Seeley. “When you’re not expected to be the scorer, you can just chip in, it’s a lot easier for you. I think that’s why the second tier has stepped up a lot this year.”

Last year, only three players scored more than 20 points for the Bobcats, and they were all seniors. This year, five players are in the twenties. Forward Kate Wheeler, for example, recorded four goals and 10 assists last year compared to 12 goals and 17 assists this year. Last year’s Bobcats scored 79 goals; this year’s scored 105, 75 without Babstock’s 30.

According to Elkins, the team had previously been more defensively focused. They never had a scorer like Babstock to jump start things. Now that they did, things changed, for the better.

“We’ve always been working as a team on our defense,” said Elkins. “We had an awesome goalie, so we knew we had that area of our team tightened up. So it was a relief to know we had someone on the other side of the ice to provide a spark.”

Going into the playoffs, Quinnipiac needed Babstock to continue her level of play to have a chance at the ECAC title. She did, and the Bobcats upset fourth-seed Princeton in only two games. Babstock had an assist in each game and a goal in the second.

“I’m pretty excited about it,” said Babstock before the series. “I’m just ready to see what playoff play is all about. I’m new to it all, so I’m still learning what the whole league is all about.”

The team may have fallen to Cornell in the semifinals, but if this is Babstock still learning what it is all about, who knows what she can do, how many points she can score, once she understands how the league and playoffs work.

Defense and Special Teams – BC’s Winning Formula

Earlier this week I talked about team defense being the statistic of champions.  Well, if tonight’s game between Boston College and New Hampshire was any indication, you can crown the Eagles now.

They held UNH, the seventh best offense in the country, to only 12 shots (while piling up 42 of their own).  As for grade A chances, the shot charts confirmed what the eye test perceived. Namely, that BC goaltender John Muse wasn’t tested much at all. The shot charts showed almost all white space in the grade A area in BC’s defensive zone.

“They did a good job defensively and just beat us all night,” UNH coach Dick Umile said.

It didn’t happen by accident. BC’s team defense is tied with UNH’s as best in the league, giving up an average of 2.12 goals per game and appears to be ratcheting up the intensity as the postseason nears.

“It started this week in practice,” Brian Gibbons said. “It was something the coaches really harped on, something we worked on.  We realized they have a real good offense and we have to be ready for their transition game.  The guys bought into the game plan and it worked out.”

Not only did the BC penalty killers shut down the league’s second-best power play (22.3 percent in Hockey East games), they scored a pivotal shorthanded goal to extend their lead to 2-0 in the second period.  Then they scored another one — a highlight reel special by freshman Bill Arnold — to seal the game late in the third.

With those two man-down goals, the Eagles have more than lapped their nearest competition in Hockey East.  They now have an eye-popping 10 shorthanded goals.  No other team had more than four entering the weekend. Gibbons and Cam Atkinson, who combined for the first one both pointed to assistant coach Mike Cavanaugh who runs the PK unit.

“He definitely preaches defense first, but we try to put the pressure on and force teams to make mistakes,” Gibbons said.  “When the PK is flying at you, it’s tough on the power play because you don’t have time and space. 

“We try to take that away as much as possible and a lot of times you can get two-on-ones off that.  We’ve done a good job of capitalizing on that.”

Having BC’s personnel certainly doesn’t hurt either.

“We have some pretty fast, skilled guys that are playing on the PK,” Atkinson said.

And to finish off the Defense and Special Teams equation, BC’s power play struck in the first period, yet another no-surprise because as good as UNH’s man advantage is, BC’s is even better (23.8 percent).

Defense and special teams wins playoff games and with the Hockey East regular season title on the line, playoff hockey started one weekend early.

“We’ve got a lot of good players who are playing well at this time of the year,” BC coach Jerry York said.  “It’s good to see from our perspective.”

Bits and pieces on a Friday night

Tonight was senior night for Boston College and once again it was a small class. Small but big. All major performers: goaltender John Muse and forwards Brian Gibbons and Joe Whitney.

Two national championships, two Hockey East titles, and three Beanpots for that class. And counting.

Those will be three huge holes to fill, but if everyone else comes back next year the Eagles could be a preseason number one again. Of course, that’s a big if.

Let’s stick with this year for now.

* * *

New Hampshire coach Dick Umile broke up his big line after last Friday’s 2-2 tie with Northeastern. Phil DeSimone and Mike Sislo remained together but were paired with sophomore Dalton Speelman on left wing. Hobey Baker Award candidate Paul Thompson moved to a line with Austin Block and John Henrion.

The result worked well for one game, a 6-3 win in the rematch with the Huskies, but not so much in tonight’s game, prompting Umile to reunite his dynamic seniors on the top line and his sophomores on the other.

* * *

In action around the league, Vermont’s tie with Massachusetts-Lowell guarantees the Catamounts a playoff berth. The wins by Maine and Merrimack lock the Black Bears into the number five seed. Northeastern was guaranteed to be the sixth seed even before this weekend.

All other positions are up for grabs.

Postseason picks 3/4

Last Week: 6-4-2
On the Season: 102-66-25 (.593)

I already previewed the four first round playoff games in this week’s Atlantic Hockey column, so let’s go right to the picks:

Saturday, February 26
Canisius at Niagara – These schools are sports rivals and never has so much been on the line as they meet in the postseason for the first time as Division I programs. Both teams have high powered offenses so I think it will come down to goaltending. Niagara 4, Canisius 3.

American International at Army – The Black Knights swept the Yellow Jackets two weeks ago and I think history will repeat.  Amy 4, AIC 2.

Sacred Heart at Bentley – I think this will be a close game, possibly needing extra time. But I like the home team to prevail. Bentley 5, Sacred Heart 4.

Mercyhurst at Robert Morris – The Lakers are the only team to have beaten the Colonials at the Island Sports Complex this season, and I’m picking it to happen again in the lone upset of the weekend. This one could go extra long as well. Mercyhurst 3, RMU 2.

MCHA, MIAC and NCHA championship picks for March 5-6

After more than 600 games across the three respective conferences, it comes down to this: the championship finals.
In addition to a conference trophy, winners of the Midwest Collegiate Hockey Association, Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and Northern Collegiate Hockey Association titles advance to the NCAA Tournament’s first round, which starts March 9.
So, without further ado, here are my picks for the MIAC and NCHA title games on Saturday as well as the MCHA semifinals and finals on Saturday and Sunday.
MIAC championship final
7 p.m. Saturday
March 5
Concordia (Minn.) at Hamline: The No. 1 seed and No. 11-ranked Pipers have veteran savvy and a stellar goaltender in senior Beau Christian (13-4-3, 2.41 goals-against, .922 -save percentage), which has help them to grind out wins when necessary. This time should be no different, especially at the State Fair Coliseum where the Pipes are 7-3-1. The Cobbers (12-10-4) have been a revelation this season. Picked to finish sixth in the preseason coaches’ poll, No. 3-seed Concordia has played well above its station, upsetting No. 2-seed St. Thomas last weekend. Their commendable season ends here. Hamline 3, Concordia 1
NCHA championship final
7 p.m. Saturday
March 5
Wisconsin-Superior at St. Norbert: The No. 1 seed and No. 1-ranked Green Knights (21-4-1) have been single-minded in their quest to avenge last season’s 2-1 double OT loss to Norwich in the NCAA D-III Championship Final. Without a prolific scorer – junior Johan Ryd’s modest 8 goals and 15 assists for 23 points leads the team – St. Norbert has relied on lock-down defense with NCHA Player of the Year B.J. O’Brien (18-2-1, 1.65 GAA, .927 save-pct.) in net and clutch goals by Ryd who has 6 game-winners. The team’s impeccable 12-0 record at the Cornerstone Community Center makes No. 2-seed and No. 15-ranked UW-Wisconsin’s mission to dethrone the reigning Peters Cup holders all the more difficult. St. Norbert 4, UW-Superior 2
MCHA Finals
Saturday
March 5
Semifinals
2 p.m.
Lawrence at Adrian: The No. 1 seed and No. 5-ranked Bulldogs (21-3-1) had their first taste of NCAA Tournament hockey last season, losing to St. Norbert, 4-3, in the first round. This time Ron Fogarty’s senior-laden squad is determined to chomp down at the NCAA’s dinner table. The team has overcome a few hiccups in the early going and has gone unbeaten in its last 14 outings (13-0-1). The scoring quintet of Shawn Skelly (16-20-36), Eric Miller (15-19-34), Brad Houston (13-20-33) and Mike Dahlinger (12-21-33) is just too much for No. 4 seed Lawrence (14-12-1) to handle. Adrian 6, Lawrence 2
6 p.m.
MSOE vs. Marian: After losing a pair at home to arch-rival Adrian to close the regular season, the No. 3 seed and No. 9-ranked Raiders (21-5-1) didn’t wilt. They got down to business, easily dispatching Lake Forest,  6-1 and 6-3, in the quarterfinals while displaying the pedigree that has kept them at or near the MCHA summit the entire season. The No. 2 seed Sabres (18-7) endured a four-game losing hitch in November, but bounced back like a trapeze artist on a bungee cord by going 13-2 in their last 15 games. Both teams feature preeminent goal scorers with MSOE’s Jordan Keizer (23-14-37) and Todd Krupa (18-13-31) and Marian’s Dakota Dubetz (14-31-45) and Brendan Hull  (19-19-38). With unflappable Connor Toomey (18-5-1, 1.77 GAA, .930 save-pct.), though, the Raiders have the edge in goal. MSOE 4, Marian 2
Final
Sunday
March 6
2 p.m.
MSOE vs. Adrian: After sweeping the Raiders in their home, the Bulldogs presumably have the momentum in this hard-fought regular season series where Adrian held 3-0-1 advantage.  Adrian senior goalie Brad Fogal (21-3-1, 2.19 GAA, .921 save-pct.) was the difference in the pivotal Feb. 18-19 series at MSOE, sweeping away 62 of 64 shots over two games. He will have to perform similar heroics to keep Keizer and Krupa as well as Bradley Tierney (8-19-27) and Michael Soik (10-14-24) in check. Likewise, Connor Toomey will need to continue his sparkling play to counteract Adrian’s foursome of Skelly, Miller, Houston and Dahlinger. On special teams, it’s loggerheads. The explosive Bulldog power play is a ranked No. 3 in the  nation at 41 of 137 for 29 percent while the Raiders’ flame retardant penalty kill leads the nation at 90 percent (123 of 136). That only leaves home advantage, which Adrian has in cozy Arrington Ice Arena. Adrian 3, MSOE 2

Championship central

ECAC Northeast
No underdog stories this time around.

A year after sixth-seeded Johnson and Wales roared their way into the championship game, the top two seeds are all that remains in the final contest before the NCAA Tournament.

Top-seeded Curry knocked off Becker, 5-1, while second place Wentworth ousted No. 3  JWU 4-3 in overtime in a rematch of last year’s semifinal game.

“Curry had a little bit better speed, but I think Wentworth plays a very disciplined and controlled game,” Western New England coach Greg Heffernan said.  “Curry is so deep and probably has the best defenseman in the league in Ryan Warsofsky, but Wentworth has some great players as well, led by the Jameson brothers [Skylur and Shaun].”

While each team can roll out a cache of veteran skaters, they’ve both made it to the championship with relatively inexperienced goaltending.
Wentworth freshman Chris Azzano took over for an injured Mike Jarboe in December and has ensured the Leopards haven’t missed a beat, going 10-3 in conference play.

The Colonels have leaned on a duo of freshman Travis Owens and sophomore Robert Dawson, although it was Dawson drew the start Wednesday against Wentworth.

“I like both team’s experience and depth,” Heffernan said. “With younger goaltending, is pressure going to be a factor? I don’t know.”

With each team so equally matched at even strength, Heffernan pointed to special teams as one of the major factors in the game.

Wentworth’s penalty kill and power play units each ranked first in the ECAC Northeast, while Curry’s checked in at fifth and third, respectively. The Colonels’ six short-handed goals in conference play placed them second to Nichols.

“These are two really well coached teams that have some ideas of what to do on the power play,” Heffernan said. “Not only that, but they can execute what they want to happen.”

Quick Hits (all statistics refer to conference play only)
ECAC Northeast Championship: No. 2 Wentworth (10-3-1) at No. 1 Curry (10-2-2); 4:35 at Max Ulin Arena, Milton Mass.
Head to Head: 1-1
Head Coaches: Curry — Rob Davies ( 12th year); Wentworth R.J. Tolan ( 5th year).
Leading Scorers: Curry — Christopher Atkinson (7-10), Payden Benning (10-7); Wentworth — Skylur Jameson (13-7), Mike Paglino (7-13).
Goaltending: Curry — Robert Dawson (.904, 2.18); Wentworth — Chris Azzano (.913, 2.40)
Power Play: Curry — 20-78, .256, third; Wentworth — 19-62, .306, first.
Penalty Kill: Curry — 55-69, .797, fifth; Wentworth — 58-67, .866, first.
Notable: Davies was named the conference’s coach of the year…Jameson is tied for third in the conference in power play goals with six. Curry led the league in goals per game (4.79), while Wentworth boasted the top defensive unit (2.36 goals per game).

MASCAC
It took some extra time, but in the end, it’s a repeat in the MASCAC championship. Salem State and Fitchburg State each held off their respective opponents in overtime to meet in the championship game for the second time in as many years. Salem won last year’s championship, 2-1, in Fitchburg.

The second-seeded Vikings downed upstart Westfield State, 3-2, on a Mike Genovese goal at 3:26 in overtime. The sixth-seeded Owls had tied the game in the final minute on a short-handed goal by Vince Perreault.

For the second year in a row, Salem enters the conference game as the second seed. After missing much of last season with an injury, senior goalie James Lacour has been a stalwart in net for the Vikings this season, ranking third and fourth in goals-against-average and save percentage, respectively.  Salem ranked second in the MASCAC in scoring defense and killed a league-best 90 percent of a penalties.

The Vikings also boast the league’s top offense, led by Giancarlo Capodanno (11-18) and Casey Terreri  (6-13).

It took double overtime for fourth-seeded Fitchburg State to knock off top seed Massachusetts-Dartmouth, 4-3, on Thomas McAleer’s goal at 8:50 in the second overtime.

“That just a phenomenal game,” Falcons coach Dean Fuller said. “Everybody left everything on the ice. It was the longest overtime game I’ve ever been involved in.”

The Falcons closed the season with wins in two of their last three games before beating Worcester State, 3-0, in the opening round of the playoffs. Prior to that, they had lost four in a row in the middle of February.

“We just had a period of some games where we weren’t really scoring; things weren’t really going our way,” Fuller said. “The kids have really kept on working hard and we finished up the season fairly strong.”

While senior Robert Vorse and junior Bobby Leiser split time in net during the regular season, it’s been Vorse leading the Falcons through the first two playoff games, and that will continue tomorrow, Fuller said.

With the Vikings able to consistently roll out a horde of talented lines, Fuller said the Falcons are looking to stay at even strength as often as they can.

“We’ve got to take away their power play,” he said. “They’ve got talent spread through the lineup; it’s hard to concentrate on one line.”

Outside of that, Fuller is content to leave things as they are.

“We’ve been playing pretty well,” he said. “We’re just going to have the kids go out and let them play.”

Quick Hits (all statistics refer to conference play only)
MASCAC Championship Game: No.4 Fitchburg State (9-8-1) at No. 2 Salem State (11-5-2); Rockett Arena, Salem Mass.
Head to Head: Salem, 2-1
Head Coaches: Salem — Bill O’Neill (30th year); Fitchburg — Dean Fuller (27th year).
Leading Scorers: Salem — Giancarlo Capodanno (11-18); Fitchburg — Chris Riggs (9-11).
Goaltending: Salem — James Lacour (.917, 2.19); Fitchburg — Bobby Leiser (.931, 2.42).
Power Play: Salem — 19-100, .19, third. Fitchburg — 20-112, .179, fourth.
Penalty Kill: Salem — 99-110,.90, first. Fitchburg — 84-96, .875, second.
Notable: Don’t walk away while either team is short-handed. Both combined for 10 short-handed goals on the year, and ranked one-two in the conference in that category, with Fitchburg’s Justin Quinn accounting for two of the Falcons’ six. Fitchburg isn’t on the penalty kill very often; they ranked last in the league in penalty minutes per game, while the Vikings were third. Vorse made 36 saves in last year’s championship game, but was undone by a Genovese goal early in overtime.

Loose Pucks
I will be in Milton Saturday, so check for live coverage of the game, as well as updates from Salem. For those who can’t make it, the plan is to post links to live stats and a webcast on the blog tomorrow.

Finally, this is the last traditional column of the year, minus the NCAA previews coming up next week. Special thanks go out to Jim Seavey in the MASCAC and Michael Letzeisen in the ECAC Northeast for providing timely answers to any questions I’ve had through the season.

Also, thanks to each SID I’ve been in touch with through the conferences. As any writer who covers college sports can tell you, the SIDS are often the unsung heroes; whether it’s digging up an obscure stat or getting a coach to call you back, they certainly make a writer’s job much easier.

Enjoy the playoffs!

Hockey East picks: Mar. 4-5

The race between Jim and me is getting close to a mathematical close-out, but I’m still holding out hope that he’ll choke like the New York Yankees.  

Dave last week: 5-2-3
Jim last week: 5-2-3
Dave’s record-to-date: 95-35-28
Jim’s record-to-date: 105-31-26

Here are this week’s picks:

Friday, March 4

Boston University at Northeastern
Dave’s pick: In past years, this would be the type of series that BU would sweep to roar into the playoffs. Not this time, though. The Huskies have taken four-of-eight points the last two weekends against BC and UNH. They get this home-and-home series off on the right foot.
NU 3 BU 2 (OT)
Jim’s pick: I’m with Dave here that NU is playing well enough to win at home in this series.
NU 4, BU 2

Maine at Massachusetts
Dave’s pick: The Minutemen haven’t won since Jan. 22 but in their last six games have recorded three ties and three one-goal losses.  Add one more.
Maine 4 UMass 3
Jim’s pick: Despite the fact that Amherst has been a nightmare for Maine at times, I think the Black Bears are one of the hottest teams in the league right now.
Maine 3, UMass 1

Providence at Merrimack
Dave’s pick: The Warriors need a win to lock up home ice.  They get it. 
MC 4 PC 1
Jim’s pick: Agreed. Merrimack dominates at home.
MC 6, PC 2

Massachusetts-Lowell at Vermont
Dave’s pick: The River Hawks may well split this weekend, but since I think Jim will pick that way I’m going with a Catamounts sweep. 
UVM 2 UML 1
Jim’s pick: Here is where Dave is very wrong. Too much on the line for the Catamounts, so I think they’ll sweep.
UVM 4, UML 1

New Hampshire at Boston College
Dave’s pick: What a finale for Hockey East!  I’m going with the Eagles at home to take temporary residence atop the standings. 
BC 4 UNH 3 (OT)
Jim’s pick: The trophy may be in the building on Friday, but it won’t be presented until Saturday.
BC 5, UNH 3

Saturday, March 5

Merrimack at Providence
Dave’s pick: The Warriors finish off the Friars’ playoff hopes and move back into third place, which could prove significant given their recent trouncing at Maine’s hands. 
MC 4 PC 2
Jim’s pick: I’ll throw Dave a bone here and pick the upset for the Friars. Combined with a Maine sweep of UMass, PC miraculously makes the playoffs.
PC 3, MC 2

Maine at Massachusetts
Dave’s pick: The Minutemen lose but hold onto a playoff berth; Maine wins but remains locked out of home ice. 
Maine 4 UMass 2
Jim’s pick: Maine win spells doom for the Minutemen.
Maine 3, UMass 2

Boston College at New Hampshire
Dave’s pick: The Wildcats come back home for a win and their fourth regular season title in the last five years.  Pleasant UNH fans rejoice; cranky ones complain that it wasn’t in the playoffs.
UNH 4 BC 3 (OT)
Jim’s pick: This year, it’s BC’s turn to claim the top spot and their first Hockey East title in five years.
BC 4, UNH 3

Northeastern at Boston University
Dave’s pick: The safe pick here is to go with BU winning at home, but I can’t go with the safe picks now.  Besides, the Terriers’ mindset bothers me. 
NU 2 BU 1
Jim’s pick: I’m fine with the safe pick.
BU 3, NU 2

Massachusetts-Lowell at Vermont
Dave’s pick: The River Hawks push this one to overtime to extend their season just a few minutes longer but all for naught. 
UVM 2 UML 1 (OT)
Jim’s pick: Vermont finishes off the sweep and earns the seventh seed in the playoffs.
UVM 4, UML 2

Games March 4-5

Last week Theresa: 9-2-1
Season Theresa: 129-74-24

Last week Tyler: 9-2-1
Season Theresa: 131-53-20

Oh hey look, everybody – it’s the last weekend of the regular season which means everybody plays everybody else. This year is also especially fun because we’re essentially deciding spots 2-11. All we know is that UND and MTU will play each other two weekends in a row. Now, onward!

No. 19 Minnesota (15-12-5, 12-10-4 WCHA) at Bemidji State (12-16-4, 8-14-4 WCHA)
Theresa: We all know that each team has a lot to play for this weekend, so I’m going to mention it now and not again so I don’t feel like a broken record again this week. With the exception of last week’s sweep at the hands of a rolling Sioux squad, the Beavers had been picking it up a little again (3-0-2 going into last weekend, along with a few close overtime games prior). The Gophers, on the other hand, may, after all season long, finally have found their stride (4-0-1 in their last five). BSU is a team that has surprised me all season long (hard to predict, in other words) and will probably do so again this week. Why do I mention this? Well, because I think Minnesota wants to for sure, 100% guarantee home ice, I’m calling a UM sweep (which, of course, means BSU will. But I’m sticking with the Gophers).

(and my math is kind of fuzzy (journalism major, duh), but I’m pretty positive the Gophers can still lose out on home ice due to one of the tiebreakers … since said tiebreakers are a tad confusing now that most teams don’t play four game series anymore. regardless, I think all they need is one point to clinch.)

Tyler: The Gophers can lock themselves into the fifth spot depending on what happens Friday. The key for Minnesota is to keep from getting complacent and simply take care of business in the first periods. The Beavers were playing a good stretch of hockey before they went to North Dakota last week so don’t expect BSU to roll over. Minnesota sweep.

Alaska-Anchorage (12-17-3, 10-14-2 WCHA) at Minnesota State (14-14-6, 8-14-4 WCHA)
Theresa: With the way the Seawolves have been playing this season, I would typically automatically call at least a split – if not more – for them here. However, they’re on the road this weekend and their road record isn’t so hot (3-10-0). Luckily for them, they’re playing the Mavericks, who sit just below them in the standings. MSU hasn’t had the best of luck this season and really, this should be a well-matched series. Therefore, I’m still going with the split – MSU Friday, UAA Saturday.

Tyler: The way the pesky Seawolves have taken points from some of the WCHA’s top teams, it’s hard to believe they are fighting for eighth place. MSU has played the WCHA’s top teams tough too, especially at home, but the Mavericks seem to struggle in games they’re expected to win. Split.

No. 12 Nebraska-Omaha (20-12-2, 16-8-2 WCHA) at No. 11 Minnesota-Duluth (19-8-6, 14-7-5 WCHA)
Theresa: In which two of the three teams battling for second play. No matter what happens this weekend, we’ve got two of the 2nd-thru-4th place teams right here, in their first meeting all season. The Bulldogs have been struggling lately, going 1-3-2 in their last six games … all games that they should have arguably won. The Mavericks, on the other hand, had for the most part regained the groove they had earlier in the season. UNO could surprise us here with a sweep, but I think I’ll go with the logical (to me) choice of a split – UNO Friday, UMD Saturday.

Tyler: Probably the best matchup on the docket with two of the best offenses  in the league against average goaltending. Expect a lot of goals from both teams, expect Jack Connolly to win the scoring championship and expect UNO to pepper the Bulldogs’ net. The Mavericks always seem to send a lot of pucks on goal every game. UMD will come away on top this weekend if the Reiter/Crandall platoon stands tall. Split.

St. Cloud State (14-15-5, 10-12-4 WCHA) at No. 5 Denver (20-9-5, 16-7-3 WCHA)
Theresa: Another time two teams meet for the first time all season! SCSU has been fairly inconsistent all season (and highly frustrating for Husky fans), but has played arguably some of their best hockey in the last few weeks. The Pioneers, on the other hand, may quite possibly be falling apart – splits in their last four weekends. Plus, it’s never good when your coach still says there are things to really work on this late in the season. Is it possible Denver peaked too early (again)? All shall be revealed soon enough, of course. As for this weekend, I think a split is probably the most likely result, given both teams right now. SCSU Friday, DU Saturday.

Tyler: Denver is up and down just like it was at the end of the regular season last year and SCSU has caught the Pioneers at the right time. The Huskies are playing their best hockey since the holidays, scoring like they should be and have proven they’re able to skate with any team in any arena. SCSU desperately needed a leader when one of its assistant captains was dismissed/left the team and Drew LeBlanc has been that guy. The junior has 18 points in the 14 games since the New Year. Split.

No. 1 North Dakota (24-8-3, 19-6-1 WCHA) at Michigan Tech (4-26-4, 2-22-2 WCHA)
Theresa: Tech rule. UND sweep.

The Sioux are rolling once again and even though Tech plays teams tough, UND is finding ways to win right now. Coach Dave Hakstol has said his team isn’t taking the weekend off and he’s not resting anybody … which makes things tricky for MTU. Then again, it is the final weekend (senior night and all that) and Tech can surprise. Still, odds are pretty low of any other result. Wait until next week when the series will most likely go three.

Tyler: In a WCHA first round preview, the Fighting Sioux should have no problem getting a sweep as long as they jump on Tech early and don’t let the Huskies hang around. UND sweep.

No. 17 Colorado College (18-15-3, 12-12-2 WCHA) at No. 18 Wisconsin (19-13-4, 11-12-3 WCHA)
Theresa: In which we have the fun series that will most likely decide the final home ice spot (I believe SCSU still has a shot as well … but I think they need a whole lotta help). CC had a huge weekend last week, taking three points from Duluth and has proven they can skate with anybody. The Badgers, on the other hand, have been sliding badly – the team earned only one point the entire month of February. That being said, I don’t think this losing streak for UW will continue – particularly at home – much longer. As much as it will make my playoff-covering life miserable next week (boo hoo, I know), I think CC will get the points necessary to claim the final home ice spot. That’s right, I’m thinking splitsville – CC Friday, UW Saturday.

Tyler: This one’s for all the marbles (of home ice advantage). CC wins Friday and the teams will meet next week in Colorado Springs for the first round of the playoffs. If Wisconsin gets three points, it has the tiebreaker and the teams will meet in Madison. Check the column for keys to the series. CC, only needing two points, will win and lock up the No. 6 spot. Split.

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