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New role, new level of success for Niagara’s Haczyk

Talk about saving your best for last.

Through his first three seasons at Niagara, Bryan Haczyk had recorded a total of 18 goals while mostly skating on a checking line and serving as a short-handed specialist. This year, as team captain, the Nutley, N.J., native had hit the 18-goal mark by the middle of January and provided the Purple Eagles with much-needed new scoring punch.

Brian Haczyk of Niagara (Niagara Athletics)
Niagara's Brian Haczyk uses his speed to create scoring opportunities (photo: Niagara Athletics).

“I’m seeing some power-play time for the first time, and that’s helped in putting up points,” said Haczyk, who has nine power-play goals to date. “Being captain is an honor and a responsibility, and it’s my job to make sure everyone’s on board and acts best for the team.”

“It’s been quite a story,” said Niagara coach Dave Burkholder. “He played on some good offensive teams his first three years, behind some guys who are now in the pros, and he played his role on the third line and killing penalties.”

Haczyk, 23, has set personal career highs in goals, assists and points this season, and has not missed a game for the Purple Eagles since he began his college career in October 2007. Following a four-goal performance in a split at Air Force on Feb. 11-12, plus another goal the following weekend against Canisius, Haczyk stood atop the overall NCAA Division I scoring scroll with 27 goals.

“It definitely feels good to know,” Haczyk said at the time. “I want to contribute and help the team be successful; and as long as we win, that’s what I care about the most.”

“I would say he’s one of the fastest skaters in Division I,” said Burkholder. “He makes problems for our opponents, and then you add his skill set and his playmaking ability. He’s the real deal.”

A four-time selection as Atlantic Hockey Association Player of the Week, and a two-time Niagara student-athlete of the week so far this season, Haczyk (pronounced HA-chek) was also chosen as national player of the month for January by the Hockey Commissioners Association after tallying 12 goals and 15 points in eight outings. He also concluded a personal 21-game scoring streak with a goal and an assist in a 6-5 loss to Robert Morris on Jan. 28, the same night that he also ended an eight-game goal-scoring string.

He was tied for ninth in the nation with 44 points by the end of February, while long-time linemate and best friend Paul Zanette ranked second with 53 points and was first with 29 goals. Haczyk remarked the two have played together for so long, they even look to create offense while Niagara (18-12-4, 15-10-2 Atlantic Hockey) is shorthanded.

“The chemistry between Paul and I is fantastic,” said Haczyk, who has also collected 11 career game-winning goals. “We know where to find each other on the ice, and most of the success I’ve had this year is from playing with guys like Paul, and an incredible team.”

“We wanted to know where our offense was coming from this year, and what he and Paul have done is remarkable,” said Burkholder, whose team lost its top three scorers from a year ago.

Niagara’s leading returning scorer last fall was Haczyk, a 5-foot-9, 175-pound forward who was born in Secaucus, N.J., and learned to skate in Jersey City at age 3. When he was 7, he moved to Nutley, where he skated in a local park that froze over in the winter. He also played youth hockey for a variety of organizations until heading off to Seton Hall Prep, where he helped the Pirates to a pair of state titles and also earned Gordon Conference MVP honors.

He then played three years of junior hockey, first at home with the New Jersey Hitmen, and then with the USHL’s Green Bay Gamblers for former Harvard coach Mark Mazzoleni.

“I realized I needed a scenery change,” Haczyk said of his decision to leave home. “It was probably one of the better decisions I’ve made, as far as hockey is concerned.”

He subsequently chose Niagara over Rochester Institute of Technology, Brown and Princeton after a visit to campus. A Dean’s List student, he earned his bachelor’s degree in accounting in December while maintaining a 3.9 GPA. He managed to graduate early by taking advantage of summer classes over the last few years.

“It made it easy for second semester my senior year, just in case something came up hockey-wise,” said Haczyk, who is enrolled in graduate courses.

His first semester was something to discuss. Niagara’s No. 22 began his 21-game scoring string on Oct. 29 with a goal against Mercyhurst, and scored a goal in six straight games to begin the streak. By the time it ended two months later, he had posted 22 goals and 14 assists for 36 points, including a hat trick against Holy Cross.

“We asked him to shoot more,” said Burkholder. “He has an NHL one-timer and a great release, and he uses his speed to take the defense wide. If he shoots more, he’s more dangerous, and he’s done that.”

The Purple Eagles have made the NCAA tournament three times, the last in 2008 when Haczyk was a freshman, after they edged Bemidji State for the CHA championship.

“It was something I’ll never forget,” Haczyk said of that 3-2 win at NU’s Dwyer Arena. “It was definitely the best experience I’ve had so far at Niagara.”

The Purps moved over to Atlantic Hockey this season after the four-school CHA disbanded.

“It’s definitely been challenging,” Haczyk said of the shift to a 12-team league. “It’s nice to see more teams and play against different teams.”

One of a handful of Americans on Niagara’s predominantly Canadian roster, and the only one from the Garden State, Haczyk has blended in — except, perhaps, where MTV’s “Jersey Shore” is concerned.

“I used to watch it, but it’s kind of getting old,” he chuckled. “You don’t see too many players come out of New Jersey, so I guess it’s still a novelty.”

Despite growing up a New York Rangers fan in Nutley, which he still visits a few times every year, Haczyk attended a New Jersey Devils prospect camp at the Prudential Center in nearby Newark last summer.

“They needed a couple of guys to fill out some roster spots,” he said. “It was nice to go out and see how I measure up with the future of the NHL, and I saw first-hand what a first-class organization the Devils are.”

He hopes to parlay that experience into playing professionally, and his coach is firmly in his corner.

“He will play at the next level,” said Burkholder. “He has national league speed for sure. Someone will give him a chance at the AHL level, and then it’s where does he go from there.”

For now, Haczyk and his classmates would like nothing better than another shot at the NCAAs, which would make them the first class in Niagara history to get there twice.

“It’s something we’ve set our sights on since we’ve been here,” he said. “It would be something nice to leave here with, and it’s definitely our goal.”

ECAC West wrap: Feb. 28

And then there were two.  The top two seeds were victorious in the semifinal round of the ECAC West playoffs and have moved on to the championship game on Saturday night in Elmira.
Elmira defeated Hobart in rather convincing fashion, 5-2, on Saturday.  Soaring Eagles coach Aaron Saul left the team midweek to be with his brother Adrian, who also played four years at Elmira, who injured his neck while playing hockey in Germany.  Assistant coach Dean Jackson took the reigns and the players rallied around their missing coach.
“We played well for the 60 minutes,” said Jackson.  “Our guys were very focused and prepared heading into the game.  The guys didn’t want to let this game slip away knowing that coach Saul would want to come back and coach the following weekend.  We made a point as a team to get this win for Aaron and Adrian, so the guys were prepared.”
The second period was the turning point of the game, as the offenses kicked into high gear.  The Soaring Eagles were able to tally three goals in the stanza, and keep Hobart off the board, and that proved to be the difference.
“The second period was very even,” said Jackson.  “Hobart was pressing on us.  There was some time where we were struggling to get out of our zone.  We were fortunate enough to capitalize on our opportunities, which gave us some room to enter the third period feeling pretty confident.”
Trailing 4-0 entering the third period, Hobart became even more desperate and threw everything at Elmira.  The Statesmen outshot Elmira 16-7 in the final stanza and notched two goals in the middle of the period, but couldn’t pull any closer than the 5-2 final score.
“Hobart played a very strong game,” said Jackson.  “Goaltender Darren [McDonald] made some huge saves for us.  Hobart really stepped it up a couple notches in the third period.”
Neumann also won its semifinal game 5-2 over Utica, but it was a much more back-and-forth type game.  Each team scored a goal in the first period before the Knights ripped in a pair of power-play goals in the second period to take control.
Special teams were truly special for Neumann, as the Knights went two-for-eight on their power plays while killing off all nine Utica power plays, including killing off three five-on-three advantages.
“Special teams had a major impact on the outcome of the game,” said Neumann coach Dominick Dawes.  “Our penalty killing guys especially stepped up and killed off some big penalties.  Our power play buried a few too.”
Utica trailed by only a goal heading into the third period, but Neumann held on, scoring a pair of goals late in the game to finish off the Pioneers 5-2.

ECAC Northeast and MASCAC wrap and playoff preview: Feb. 28

An upset-free weekend will see the top four seeds in the ECAC Northeast meet in the semifinals on Wednesday night.
Fourth-seeded Becker used three unanswered goals following a 2-2 first period to down visiting Nichols, 5-2, Sunday. Branden Parkhouse had two goals and an assist for the Hawks, while Korby Anderson added two assists.
Western New England kept it close in the day’s other quarterfinal game, but four third period goals by Johnson and Wales turned a 3-1 lead into a commanding 7-1 advantage
Jason Piestrasiak had two goals for the Wildcats, while ECAC  Northeast Player of the Year Jeremiah Ketts turned in three assists.
With the loss, WNEC finishes 8-17-1, a five-win improvement over last season.
Both teams will hit the road Wednesday, with Becker set to take on Curry at 7:35 and JWU facing Wentworth at 8:00.
MASCAC Quarterfinals
With a lack of upsets in the Northeast, can the MASCAC deliver any?
Quarterfinal action begins Tuesday night. Here’s a breakdown of those games. All stats referenced are from conference play only.
No.6 Westfield State at No. 3 Plymouth State, 7:00
It’s the second meeting in less then a week for these teams, as Plymouth’s 7-4 win on Saturday closed out the regular season. The Owls lost the bookends of the regular season series, but grabbed a 4-0 win on freshman Eddie Davey’s first collegiate shutout.  Davey will need to replicate that performance and not the one he turned in Saturday (seven goals on 32 shots) if Westfield is to advance.
For the Panthers,  Jack Astedt  emerged as one of the top goaltenders in the conference during his sophomore year.  The Owls, led by Dennis Zak (14-19), have the firepower to challenge Astedt, but need to stay out of the box after being the second-most penalized team in the country during the regular season.
If Davey can stand on his head again, Westfield State should have a shot, but the Panthers have a lot of talent starting from the net  out,  so an upset appears unlikely.
No. 5 Worcester State at No. 4 Fitchburg State, 7:30
The first time these teams met, the Lancers used a 3-2 overtime win to propel them to one of the program’s most impressive weeks ever to close out 2010.
Things have slowed down since then, as Fitchburg took the remaining two games in the series.  However, neither team enters the playoffs on anything resembling a hot streak.
Despite struggling down the stretch, the Falcons boast the conference’s top goaltending duo in Robert Vorse and Bobby Leiser. Whoever draws the start will face a grind-it-out kind of Lancers team led by forwards Nick Asterito (5-10), Chris Wallin (7-8) and John Cahalane (10-5).
In net, Bryan Kalcynski has drawn the majority of the starts, although it was freshman Taylor Fant’s 38-save effort that gave the Lancers a 3-2 win over Salem State in Saturday’s finale.
The Falcons have eight players with 10 points or more in conference play, led by Chris Riggs (9-11) and Kris Threlkeld (8-11).
With a strong duo in goal, and a number of threats on the ice,  it’s hard to call an upset against Fitchburg State. Look for the Falcons to prevail here.

Weekend wrap up 2/28/11

The playoff picture is now set with Air Force and Connecticut securing the remaining byes in the final weekend of the regular season.

Here are the playoff matchups:

#6W Canisius at #3W Niagara
#5W Mercyhurst at #4W Robert Morris
#6E American International at #3E Army
#5E Sacred Heart at #4E Bentley

Byes went to #1W RIT, #2W Air Force, #1E Holy Cross and #2W Connecticut. Because the teams are re-seeded by overall standings after the initial playoff round, there’s a chance at UConn will be on the road for its quarterfinal playoff series. RIT, Air Force and Holy Cross will  be at home for sure.

To recap the weekend:

Air Force needed three points against Robert Morris to claim a bye, and the Falcons did one better, sweeping the Colonials in Colorado Springs. Scott Kozlak had three assists in a 4-2 win on Friday, and the Falcons scored three third-period goals on Saturday to pull away with another 4-2 win. Derrick Burnett had a goal and two assists.

UConn wrapped up the other bye with a pair of one-goal wins over AIC. The Huskies took Friday’s contest 2-1 and needed a four-goal comeback to erase an early 3-0 deficit in a 4-3 win on Saturday. Matt Grogan got the win in relief for UConn.

Niagara continued its dominance of RIT, taking three points. The Purple Eagles ended the Tigers’ 18 game home unbeated streak in AHA play on Friday with a 5-2 win. It was the first time RIT had lost a conference game at home since Jan. 30, 2010. The teams tied 3-3 the next night at Niagara. Paul Zanette had four goals on the weekend.

Holy Cross solidified its hold on third place overall and first in the East pod by taking three points from Bentley. The Crusaders got the game winner from Jay Silvia midway through the third period on Friday for a 4-3 win, and then held off a Bentley comeback on Saturday to settle for a 3-3 tie.

Mercyhurst and Canisius split their series, each winning on home ice. The Golden Griffins got a pair of goals from Cory Conacher in a 3-2 win on Friday, but the Lakers opened a 3-1 lead and crusied to a 5-2 victory on Saturday.

Sacred Heart avoided the AHA basement with a split against Army. The Black Knights dominated on Friday, putting 54 shots on net in a 4-1 win. But on Saturday in a game played at the Arena at Harbor Yard in Bridgeport, the Pioneers pulled away with three third-period goals en route to a 5-1 win.

How’d I do?

I went 6-4-2 with my picks, as did my guest analyst Seth Dussault. I end the regular season 102-66-25 (.593) and 9-6-2 in head-to-head competition with my guests.

Check back tomorrow for a more detailed look at the final standings.

Weekend of Feb. 25-27

Well, I never like to call things before they happen (unless I’m made to predict weekend series, of course), but it turns out Tyler was right – it ended up being a foregone conclusion and North Dakota did clinch (at least a share) of the MacNaughton Cup.

As for what else happened this past weekend? Well let’s see here.

Colorado College took three from Minnesota-Duluth
– Special teams ended up being a big part of this series – seven of the 15 goals scored in the series were on the power play.
– On Friday, the Tigers scored goals 18 seconds apart in the third to pull out a 5-4 win.
– Coach Scott Owens also gave freshman Josh Thorimbert his second straight start in goal; reason why? Apparently Owens wanted to kick start Joe Howe’s performance as Howe’s numbers have been pretty awful lately.
– On Saturday, the teams battled to a 3-3 tie.
– I also got to see the Bulldogs in action for the first time this weekend and yes, the Connelly-Connelly-Fontaine line is just as exciting as advertised. The line ended up combining for a total of 14 points on the weekend.
– Saturday also included an awesome goal by Jaden Schwartz – kid skated end-to-end and, surrounded by three defenders, got off a shot from the high slot that beat UMD’s Kenny Reiter. Pretty amazing.

St. Cloud State swept Wisconsin
– The Huskies have seemingly found their scoring touch, as they scored a total of 11 goals last weekend to beat the Badgers 4-2 and 7-3.
– Good thing, too, as SCSU is 11-0-1 when it scores four or more goals.
– Also good for the Huskies: Garrett Roe scored four goals in the series, making a late push to become the school’s all-time leading scorer.
– That, and they seem to be peaking at just the right time.
– Unfortunately for the Badgers, it seems like they’re sliding at exactly the wrong time, as the team is winless in its last six games (for perspective, that’s the entire month of February).
– Of note: SCSU wore a late-1960s throwback jersey on Saturday night. Not sure if I like it or not …

Minnesota swept Michigan Tech
– In which Minnesota may have guaranteed itself home ice in the playoffs. Haven’t had a chance to look at all the tiebreakers (as it is possible after next weekend for three teams to be tied with 28 points for home ice) yet …
– Nick Bjugstad scored two power play goals in the third to help propel Minnesota to a 5-2 victory on Friday.
– On Saturday, the Gophers won by an identical 5-2 victory in a game marked with penalties … particularly in the second period. The teams combined for 79 PIMs in the second frame and 101 total.
– It was the Gophers’ first sweep since they swept MTU way back on Nov. 19-20.

Denver and Nebraska-Omaha split
– The teams flip-flopped spots in the standings, with UNO taking over second on Friday and DU taking it back on Saturday.
– UNO took advantage of two short-handed goals to win 5-2 on Friday.
– One highlight for the Pioneers was Drew Shore’s 20th goal of the season.
– On Saturday, DU earned the split, winning 4-2, thanks in part to two goals by Jason Zucker.
– The win, the Pioneers’ 20th of the year, meant that this is their 10th straight 20-win season.
– Also notable: DU scored the opening goal for the first time in nine games.

Alaska-Anchorage split Alaska
– Due to the nature of the Governor’s Cup (kind of like the Gold Pan, if I understand it correctly), Alaska retained the Cup thanks to winning it last season.
– On Friday, the Seawolves scored the first goal of the game, but then surrendered five straight to lose 5-1.
– On Saturday, UAA opened with a three-goal first period en route to a 4-1 victory.

North Dakota swept Bemidji State
– The sweep ensured that North Dakota will at least share the MacNaughton Cup.
– It also guarantees the Sioux the first spot in the playoffs (from what I understand, they win the tiebreakers with everyone else) and will be facing Michigan Tech two weekends in a row.
– Matt Frattin scored two power-play goals to help the Sioux win 5-2 on Saturday.
– Which went against BSU’s plan.
“We told our guys, ‘ Don’t let Frattin shoot’,” BSU’s Tom Serratore told USCHO’s Patrick C. Miller. “That didn’t help, did it?”
– According to Dave Hakstol, the win followed the team’s grinding personality of late.
“I thought we ground it out pretty well for 60 minutes,” he told Miller.
– On Sunday (the games were played on the weekend afternoons due to the North Dakota state high school hockey tourneys), Bemidji got the first goal of the game, but that was all they’d get, losing 5-1.
– Four of the five UND goals were scored by the seniors … always fitting on senior day.

WCHA teams in the PairWise
UND – 2nd
DU – 5th
UNO – 8th
UMD – t-11th
CC – 14th
UM – t-19th
SCSU – t-19th
UW – 21st
MSU – 24th
UAA – t-26th
BSU – t-29th

ECAC East/NESCAC wrap: Feb. 28

The quarterfinals are in the books, and as expected, there were some locks, some mild upsets and a couple of shockers.  It comes as no  surprise with all of the ups and downs of the regular season that the first round of the conference tournaments did anything but hold to form, so my 4-4 (.500) percentage maybe isn’t as bad an indicator of my team knowledge as I might think it is.  Regardless of the outcomes of the games, there was a lot of excitement from the very first drop of the puck, and both conferences now have their final foursomes set for a very familiar locale for the ECAC East, as well as a new host for the NESCAC Conference.
In the ECAC East, the top two seeds moved on in convincing fashion while the fifth and sixth seeds joined the party scheduled for this weekend in Northfield, Vt., home of the Norwich Cadets.  Norwich simply dominated an out-manned UNE squad with a 10-2 win that saw the Nor’easters muster just seven shots on net for the game while being assaulted with 50.  Down the road in Rutland, Vt., the shot totals were a bit closer between Castleton and New England College, but the home team broke open a 1-1 tie after the first period with a pair of goals in each of the remaining periods and cruised to a 5-1 win.  Five different players scored for the Spartans, who will be looking to create the rubber game with Norwich should both win their semifinal match-ups.
But let’s not jump to any conclusions about this weekend just yet, as the ECAC East has had its share of lower seeds winning the tournament, including the current fifth seed Babson who won it from the lower echelon twice in the past four seasons.  The Beavers apparently saw their playoff shadow and decided they wa-nted another two weeks of hockey.  On the road at Skidmore, Babson leveraged multipoint games from Matt O’Neill (0-3-3), Ryan Heavey (2-0-2), Ryan Smith (0-2-2) and Jay Hassely (1-1-2) in a convincing 5-0 win against the Thoroughbreds.  It was the four vs. five match-up, so not a big surprise as to the winner, but definitely a surprise as to the dominance and balance displayed by Babson on the road, where they have struggled this season.
The sixth seeded Huskies from USM also made it to the final foursome and a date with the host Cadets this weekend when they defeated the third seeded Beacons from Massachusetts-Boston.  The shocker here was the Beacons outshooting USM by a 61-23 margin and losing the game.  Braely Torris stopped 60 of 61 shots and veterans Paul Conter, Zach Joy and Dan Rautenberg all scored for the Huskies on their way to an improbable victory to extend their season.  Conter’s goal was an empty-netter, but all of the other goals came during five-on-five play.  After a scoreless first period where the Huskies withstood an onslaught of shots (22-6), three unanswered goals built a lead that Eric Tufman and the Beacons could not overcome.  The Huskies have been looking for consistency in the goal all season and maybe after stealing this one, Torris is getting hot at just the right time of the season.
So the match-ups for next week see the top -seeded Cadets facing Southern Maine in one semifinal while Castleton hosts Babson in the other match-up for the ECAC East title.  Predictions from yours truly on both playoff weekends will be upcoming later in the week.
Over in the increasingly volatile NESCAC conference there were lots of thrills and spills in the opening round, including the No. 8 Wesleyan Cardinals upsetting the No. 1 Continentals from Hamilton College.  When Norm Bazin, Hamilton’s head coach, told me just a week or so ago that it was going to be very difficult for teams to have their season end abruptly once the actual playoffs began, I am sure he was not thinking that his team was going to be one the team’s now hanging the skates up.  Yes, Wesleyan beat Hamilton way back in November, but not many people saw this one coming except maybe coach Potter and his Cardinals.
Over a month ago, Chris Potter was looking to see more offensive production, and in the last game of the regular season, Wesleyan laid 14 goals on UNE.  One player who was working very hard but not seeing the positive results was Tom Salah.  Potter noted how Salah was making other contributions on the penalty kill and elsewhere and thought that before the end of the season, Salah would regain his scoring touch and score a big goal or two in a game that would help the Cardinals win.  Well, don’t you know that Salah made good on that premonition by scoring to extend a 2-1 lead in the second and putting the game away with an empty-net goal, his second goal of the game, and just fifth of the season.  The Cardinals outplayed and outshot Hamilton by a wide margin in the first two periods in building a 3-1 lead then held on in the third when Geoff Mucha scored to offset Joe Houk’s power-play goal that had closed the game to 3-2.  This is Wesleyan’s first appearance in the final four since the tournament’s inception.
So with No. 1 gone, Williams had a chance to claim hosting rights if they could get by No. 7 Trinity.  The Ephs came back with two third period goals to erase a 3-2 deficit and won a thrilling quarterfinal by the final score of 4-3 behind goalie Ryan Purdy and forward Ben Contini who setup the tying goal and John Wickman’s game-winner with just over three minutes remaining in the third period.
For No. 3 Middlebury, a trip to the final four and pursuit of their 11th consecutive title game meant having to beat Colby on home ice.  The Panthers got behind early and could not overcome a two-goal deficit in losing to Cody McKinney and the White Mules by a score of 2-1.  McKinney made 37 saves on 38 shots in posting the win, surrendering just one power play goal in the third period to Middlebury.
Yet another one-goal game and we weren’t done just yet with the close games.  The final match-up between Amherst and Bowdoin also saw a one-goal game as well as being the only overtime game of the quarterfinals in either league.
Bowdoin kept answering the bell after falling behind three times by a goal before finally winning the game with just a minute and a half remaining in the first overtime period.  The 4-3 final saw specialty teams on display in the middle stanza, but the seesaw battle was ultimately decided in even strength play on a goal by Colin Downey assisted by Owen Smith.  Bowdoin’s comeback reversed the regular season game where Amherst came from behind to beat the Polar Bears and now sets up a dramatic third game with cross-state rival Colby in the final four this weekend.
Wesleyan will take on the host team from Williams and regardless of the outcomes on Saturday, there will be a new and first time conference tournament champion crowned, as none of the final four have handled the hardware since the inception of the NESCAC tournament.
So it all comes down to one more weekend and hopefully two more games to win the league and play for something more.
Trophies on the line – drop the puck!

MCHA, MIAC and NCHA wrap: Feb. 28

With little surprise, two favored teams – Milwaukee School of Engineering and Lawrence — advanced to the Harris Cup Four by sweeping their respective Midwest Collegiate Hockey Association quarterfinal series during the weekend.
MSOE (21-5-1) meets Marian (18-7), which received a first-round by finishing on top of the Northern Division, in the second semifinal at 6 p.m. Saturday at Arrington Ice Arena. Host and No. 5-ranked Adrian (21-3-1) takes on Lawrence (14-12-1) in the first  semi at 2 p.m.
Winners will meet for the Harris Cup championship at 2 p.m. Sunday at Adrian’s Arrington Ice Arena.
MSOE had little trouble disposing of Lake Forest, 6-1 and 6-3, on Saturday and Sunday while Lawrence dispatched Northland, 2-1 and 3-1, Friday and Saturday.
The Vikings’ Josh DeSmit scored midway in the second period to break a 1-1 stalemate in Friday’s contest. The LumberJacks’ Colin Moberly answered with a goal at 6:44 of the first period after Jonathan Bellotti’s opened Lawrence’s account with a goal one minute in.
In Saturday’s rematch, DeSmit notched his second game-winner in as many days after the Vikings (Huck Saunders) and Northland (Nick Hewko) traded goals in the second period. Sam Johnson added an empty-netter with 30 seconds left.
Evan Johnson (13-10-1) stopped 52 of 54 shots during the series to earn victories.
MSOE scored five unanswered goals to break a 1-1 deadlock in Saturday’s quarterfinal game against Lake Forest. Kyle Smith scored twice, including the game-winner, while Steven Shaffroth scored a goal and added three assists.
Austin Grosvenor, Todd Krupa and Michael Soik also had MSOE goals. Zak Borowski’s goal at 16:05 tied the game after Shaffroth opening the scoring at 5:25.
On Sunday, Wes Bauman netted two goals while Michael Thompson, Nick Gorup, Grosvenor and Soik also had Raider goals. Chad Thompson scored twice and Michael Violette added a goal for the Foresters (5-21-1).
Connor Toomey (18-5-1) made 45 saves to earn two playoff victories.
St. Norbert, UW-Superior advance
Nick Tabisz’ second-period goal help lift No. 2-ranked St. Norbert to a 5-3 victory over visiting Wisconsin-River Falls Saturday to send the Green Knights to their second consecutive the Northern Collegiate Hockey Association finals.
St. Norbert (21-4-1) hosts Wisconsin-Superior (16-11-1) in the Peters Cup final on Saturday. The Green Knights are 12-0 at their Cornerstone Community Center home this season.
In the semifinals, Kyle Stroh scored twice while Cody Keefer and Kurt Astle added single markers. Ben Beaudoin, Jason Yuel and Alec Hagaman replied for the Falcons (12-14-2), which forged a 1-1 tie in the first period.
“The fifth goal that Kyle scored — he’s the only player on the roster who’s got the ability to score that goal,” St. Norbert Coach Tim Coghlin told the Green Bay Press Gazette. “That puck should have ended up in the corner, but he’s got that really long reach and incredibly soft hands and scored that goal.”
B.J. O’Brien (18-2-1) stopped 12 of 15 shots to earn the playoff victory.
St. Norbert’s Peters Cup opponent parlayed a three-goal second period into a 4-2 semifinal victory over visiting Wisconsin-Stevens Point (13-14-1) Saturday. Kyle Leahy, Tyler Klein and Talon Berlando scored in the second frame for the Yellowjackets, who outshot the Pointers, 25-19, in the first 40 minutes.
Justin Faryna unassisted goal at 3:53 into the contest opened the scoring. Kyle Politz tied the game with a goal at 14:55 of the first. UW-Steven Point’s Chade Boeckman scored to narrow the host’s lead to 3-2 at 4:44 of the second period. Berlando’s 11th goal of the season restored the Yellowjackets’ two-goal margin.
Drew Strandberg (10-8-1) made 31 saves, including 14 in the third period, to preserve the victory.
MIAC showdown set
No. 15 Hamline (15-6-5) blanked Gustavus Adolphus, 3-0, in a Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference semifinal Saturday, sending the pre-season favorite to next Saturday’s final against Concordia (Minn.). Gustavus (15-10-2) entered the semis having survived a double-overtime playoff less than 24 hours earlier, outlasting Augsburg, 4-3, on Friday. Zach May scored 1:07 into the second OT session to settle things.
Jordan VanGilder, Brett Burgau and Brian Arrigoni scored for the Pipers while Beau Christian stopped all 36 Gusties’ shots to earn the shutout.
Ben Payne scored twice while Brian Kang and Aaron Wheeler added goals as Concordia (12-10-4) knocked off host St. Thomas, 4-2, in Saturday’s other semifinal.
Payne’s second goal broke a 1-1 tie in third. Kang scored three minutes later to open a two-goal before the Tommies’ Chris Hickey replied at 16:52. Wheeler’s empty-netter capped off the Cobbers’ three-goal outburst. Andrew Kappers also scored for St. Thomas, (14-10-2), which outshot the visitors, 29-18.
“The biggest part of the game was the second period,” Concordia Coach Chris Howe told the The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead. “(St. Thomas) had us on the ropes outshooting us 12-2, but we played smart in the third period and took advantage of opportunities.”

The regular-season that was

Usually, my first post of the week quickly recaps last weekend’s action… but if you’re even remotely interested in the league, you’ll know that Saturday’s games concluded the ECAC Hockey regular season, and that every team is again 0-0 and looking ahead to the playoffs.

Dutch reign supreme

Congratulations are in order to the Union Dutchmen, who won the Cleary Cup for the first time, and in doing so set a program record for wins in a season (25 and counting) and raised the bar for Union’s D-I success with a .750 winning percentage.

These Dutchmen are only one class removed from a team that finished dead last in the ECAC (in 2006-07), and a few years beyond a miserable ’04-05 campaign in which the Dutchmen went 13-22-2 – a .381 winning percentage – in head coach Nate Leaman’s second season at the helm.

Since that 12th-place finish in 2007, Leaman has led Union to an unprecedented four straight winning seasons. Before that, Union had never experienced so much as consecutive winning campaigns since jumping to D-I for the 1991-92 season. The little school from Schenectady looks poised to make its first-ever NCAA appearance (after taking care of business in the ECAC tournament, of course), and will be no small task for its big-stage draw, either.

Here’s to the Union Dutchmen, your 2010-11 ECAC Hockey Cleary Cup champions.

News and notes

• Harvard head coach Ted Donato earned his 100th career victory in Saturday’s 4-3 win over St. Lawrence. The Crimson had a lackluster regular season, without a doubt, but like Colgate has finally found the on-switch entering the postseason with three straight wins and a 5-1-1 record over its last seven outings.

• In totally atypical Cornell fashion, the Big Red rocketed back up the standings after a 2-4-0 start to league play, going 9-3-2 in their following 14 conference contests. But, rather than seal the deal on an impressive regular-season rebound, the Ithacans backed into a first-round bye with two road losses last weekend.

• And on that note, how disappointing is it that between Cornell (24 points entering Saturday night’s finale), Princeton (same) and RPI (23 points), not one of the three could muster a win to claim fourth place outright? Now that’s obviously easier said than done, as Cornell played at Yale and Princeton at Union, but if anything I would’ve expected Rensselaer to take advantage of a heck of an undeserved opportunity after losing at home to Princeton the night before.

• Don’t let anyone tell you that Yale didn’t make the most of its home games: The Bulldogs finished the scheduled campaign 15-0-1 at home overall (10-0-1 in league play, with a sole draw against Colgate on Friday), a feat unmatched since Cornell’s 15-0-1 record at Lynah Rink in 2004-05 (also 10-0-1 in league play, with the lone blemish – the tie – also coming against Colgate).

• RPI senior Chase Polacek and Yale sophomore Andrew Miller finished tied for the league scoring race at 27 points in 22 games apiece. Cornell senior Joe Devin edged Yale junior Brian O’Neill for league goals, 13 to 12, in the full complement of games, and Harvard sophomore Danny Biega wears the crown among blue-liners as the league’s highest-scoring defenseman. Princeton’s Andrew Calof earned the rookie scoring title with 23 points, but SLU’s Greg Carey and Union’s Daniel Carr led the class with 11 goals apiece.

• Since goalies deserve their own category: Union soph Keith Kinkaid’s 1.90 goals-against average led the league, but Dartmouth junior James Mello boasts the ECAC’s best save percentage, at .938.

• Finally, in a bullet-point all his own, Brown’s Harry Zolnierczyk was truly a terror on skates this season. Not only did he share Bruno’s overall scoring title with junior Jack Maclellan (31 points, though Maclellan played three fewer games than HZ), but he also earned the zebras their paychecks with 40 penalties for 126 minutes overall, 30 for 87 in ECAC Hockey action. Nobody else in the league comes anywhere close to those minutes – the next-highest number is Clarkson’s Mark Borowiecki (23 penalties, 65 minutes overall), and Borowiecki played one more game than Zolnierczyk. The program’s former single-season penalty-minute record-holder, Aaron Volpatti (’10), finished with 115 PIM last year in his benchmark-busting campaign, but that was over 37 games. Harry Z has only played 28 so far. Unfortunately for the robustly rambunctious Zolnierczyk, he is still 78 solid minutes shy of Brown’s career record… a mark that, from here at least, appears safe.

My top 20

A little juggling all over the place, and – you all may notice – Union gets the edge over Yale for the first time. They’ve earned it.

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

Weekend work-up: Feb. 28, 2011

Congratulations to the Michigan Wolverines, the 2010-11 CCHA regular-season champions! Hear them sing the fastest version of “Hail to the Victors!” ever.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XejrStE8z0
As UM head coach Red Berenson says, “That’s hockey.”
Entering the weekend one point behind first-place Notre Dame, the Wolverines took care of what they needed to by sweeping Northern Michigan on the road. Now they owe Western Michigan a big muffin basket; it was the Broncos’ 2-0 shutout of the Fighting Irish in South Bend that provided the room for the Wolverines to move into first place.
Michigan-Northern Michigan. The Wolverines never trailed in the weekend, winning 3-2 and 5-0. Carl Hagelin had yet another game-winning goal at 13:15 in the first period, his sixth of the season. With six minutes left in the game, goaltender Shawn Hunwick told the bench he wanted out so that senior Bryan Hogan could play part of the last game of the regular season. Since Hogan made three saves, Hunwick’s gesture was especially noble – he lost a shutout because of it. Says a lot about the kid. Michigan gets a bye in the first round. The Wildcats finish in sixth place and will host a first-round playoff series.
Notre Dame-Western Michigan. The Fighting Irish were one team in control of their own destiny going into the weekend. After beating the Broncos, 3-2, on the road, all the Irish had to do was come home and win a game. They didn’t, and they finish in second place, two points behind Michigan. They still earn a bye in the first round – as do the Broncos, who will host fifth-place Ferris State in the second round. WMU goaltender Jerry Kuhn had 51 saves on the weekend and 16 in the final period of the shutout, including stopping ND’s T.J. Tynan on a penalty shot.
I need to clarify something here, too. In last week’s picks blog, I reported that Wolverine Carl Hagelin said that WMU head coach Jeff Blashill told him in the handshake line that the Broncos would get a win against the Irish this past weekend. What Hagelin said, after the Wolverines beat the Broncos 5-4 in overtime Feb. 19, is this: “Talked to the Western Coach after the game and he said that they’re going to get a win next weekend.” That came directly from the post-game press conference, and I was told by another reporter that it was meant in context of the post-game handshake. Blashill contacted me to tell me that he’s never spoken to Carl Hagelin. Both Blashill and Hagelin are class acts, and it would be unfortunate for anyone to construe otherwise based on a strange little tidbit that made its way into one reporter’s blog.
Miami-Lake Superior. The RedHawks – who couldn’t have finished anywhere but third place – went to Sault Ste. Marie and manhandled the Lakers, winning 8-1 and 4-1. Carter Camper, Reilly Smith and Justin Vaive each had two-goal nights on Friday; Smith added a goal on Saturday and Andy Miele scored each night. Multiple RedHawks had multiple-point games. Cody Reichard and Connor Knapp split time, each allowing a goal. Kevin Kapalka and fellow freshman Niels Erik Ravn each allowed four goals in the 8-1 game, with Ravn replacing Kapalka in the third period. Miami, who has a bye in the first round of playoffs, is peaking at the perfect time. The Lakers finish eighth place and will host the Buckeyes next weekend.
Ferris State-Ohio State. The Bulldogs did what they needed to do, too, in Columbus last weekend – while the Buckeyes did not. Heading into the weekend, FSU was in sixth place with 38 points; OSU was in ninth place with 36 points. Five points would have propelled the Buckeyes into fourth place. Instead, OSU finishes in ninth and will travel to Sault Ste. Marie to face the Lakers for a best-of-three, first-round series. The Bulldogs took two points from the Buckeyes on Thursday with a win and extra shootout point. Friday, FSU won 3-1, with Kyle Bonis’ game-winning goal coming at 18:02 in the third. OSU’s Cal Heeter had 65 saves for practically nought in two games.
Bowling Green-Michigan State. Perhaps the most boring series I’ve seen all season. Competent hockey by both teams; the Falcons didn’t capitalize on chances. When BGSU head coach Chris Bergeron called a timeout near the end of the third period Friday, I cursed him for prolonging the game. Oh, and the Spartans swept, 2-1 and 2-0, their only weekend sweep of the season. Saturday’s game was better than Friday’s, mostly because MSU’s team wanted to send out head coach Rick Comley with a good one. Neither Will Yanakeff nor Drew Palmisano were tested; each stopped 16-of-17. Poor BGSU goaltender Andrew Hammond. Really good player who gets no help – made 54 saves on 58 shots on the weekend. The Spartans knew they’d finish in 10th, the Falcons knew they’d finish in 11th. Now they know where they’re going: MSU travels to Alaska and BGSU plays Northern.
Alaska vs. Alaska-Anchorage. Congratulations to the Nanooks for successfully defending the Governor’s Cup. UAF won 5-1 at home Friday and lost 4-1 in Anchorage Saturday, so the hardware came down to a shootout – something familiar to the Nanooks, not so much to the Seawolves. Freshman Colton Beck and sophomore Andy Taranto each scored in the shootout that the Nanooks won 2-0 following Saturday’s contest. No surprise that UAF went with those two, plus Kevin Petovello, when it came down to it. In Friday’s game, Petovello scored the tying goal in the second period, and UAF netted four unanswered in the third – two from Beck, one from Taranto and another from Petovello. Scott Greenham didn’t have his best night in regulation Saturday, allowing four goals on 15 shots, but he was solid when they needed him.
How did I do?
Last week, Friday and Saturday only: 8-3 (.727)
Season to date: 108-68-26 (.599)
Still better than a coin flip.

Weekend recap: Feb. 25-26

Just a few weekends ago, we were writing the eulogy for Maine’s season.

The Black Bears had brought an ugly losing streak into a Friday night game against a struggling Vermont team. The only glimmer of hope in that game was the return of Dan Sullivan. In his absence, Maine’s goaltending went under the microscope. Nothing was working and in the previous six games pucks were going in the Maine net like basketballs.

Sullivan returned to action on February 11 against Vermont but gave up three goals in nine shots before being pulled in the first period. Martin Ouellette replaced him and allowed four more goals to an offense that was ranked near the bottom nationally.

Maine was in a full goaltending crisis.

So pardon me and many others who may have been a little surprised this past Saturday night – less than three weeks after the Vermont fiasco – to find out that Dan Sullivan was the new shutout king in Orono. After two shutouts last weekend against a Massachusetts-Lowell squad (given the River Hawks struggles, this didn’t come as too much of a surprise), Sullivan blanked one of the nation’s hottest teams, Merrimack, on Friday and then extended that shutout into the second period on Saturday night.

Sullivan’s shutout streak of 202 minutes, 48 seconds set the Maine record for longest ever, passing the mark of former standout Jimmy Howard by more than nine minutes.

So what’s this about a goaltending crisis? Oh, and how about a season of life support?

Maine, with back-to-back weekend sweeps and a five-game winning streak overall, suddenly is a lock for at least a fifth-place finish, could possibly get home ice and now is relevant again in the NCAA tournament picture. The Black Bears rose to a tie for 15th with Boston University and Dartmouth in the PairWise Rankings. If they can swing just a single comparison in the next few weeks – a chance they’ll likely get in the Hockey East quarterfinals – you may be able to punch a ticket to the dance for this up-and-down Maine club.

At the same time, Maine’s sweep ended an impressive run for Merrimack, which had climbed to fourth in both the USCHO.com poll and the PairWise. The Warriors dropped into a tie for sixth in the PairWise but, more importantly, lost any chance at their first regular-season title. Home ice, in fact, is up in the air as Merrimack will need to take at least two points from Providence this weekend (something that shouldn’t be difficult given that the Friars could barely get just one point of four from lowly Lowell this weekend).

The only other team to sweep a weekend series besides Maine was Boston College, which took two one-goal victories against Massachusetts. That, combined with New Hampshire taking three-of-four points against Northeastern brings us to the final weekend of the season with the top teams facing off for the league title.

BC and UNH are the only teams with a shot at the title. The Wildcats have a one-point lead and will square off in a two-game set with the Eagles beginning Friday at Chestnut Hill.

That, though, will hardly be the only series anyone watches next weekend. The only team to clinch their final position is Northeastern, which will finish sixth no matter what happens. Vermont, UMass and Providence, as most expected, will fight it out for the final two playoff spots. The Friars, who haven’t won a league game since November 5, will have to pull off a miracle, though, and take at least three points against Merrimack. For the record, the Nov. 5 win for Providence came against none other than Merrimack.

For a complete list of scenarios that will play themselves out in the final weekend, click here.

Weekend Rewind Feb. 27 – The Playoff Push

The Playoff Push

Postseason hockey got underway this past weekend and as always there were a couple of upsets; including one top-10 team and perennial powerhouse going down.

After making three straight trips to the frozen four, the Elmira College Soaring Eagles had their playoff dreams abruptly halted at home in the ECAC West Play-In round with a 2-1 loss to Utica on Saturday afternoon. The Pioneers’ freshman stud Megan Myers outdueled Elmira’s rookie sensation Tori Charron as Myers netted both Utica goals to lead the Pioneers to the shocking upset.

Utica advances to the ECAC West semifinals where the Pioneers will try to continue their cinderella run against top-seeded and No. 2-ranked RIT. Neumann survived in double overtime to down Oswego 2-1 and punch its ticket to Rochester and a date with second-seeded Plattsburgh in the semifinals.

In the ECAC East, Manhattanville is breathing a sigh of relief as the “Valiant Killer” Teraysa White and New England College were upset by Southern Maine 1-0 in overtime in the ECAC East Quarterfinals on Saturday. Southern Maine advances to the final four where they will face top-seeded Norwich who easily disposed of Nichols in its quarterfinal matchup. Manhattanville will face UMass-Boston, who beat Salve Regina 3-2 in overtime to punch its ticket to Kreitzberg Arena for the ECAC East final four.

All the top seeds won in the NESCAC and now Trinity, Amherst, and Bowdoin will all travel to Middlebury’s Chip Kenyon ’85 Arena for the NESCAC final four weekend. Bowdoin will face the Panthers and Trinity will take on Amherst in the other semifinal. The two-time defending national champion Lord Jeffs have their backs up against the wall entering this weekend and more than likely will need to end up winning NESCAC Tournament to have a chance to defend their national championship.

In the NCHA, top-seed and unbeaten Wis. River Falls got a scare on Friday night from St. Norbert as the two teams fought to a 2-2 tie. However, the Falcons responded in Game 2 of their first-to-3-points series with a 7-1 win over the Green Knights and advanced to the semifinal round. Fifth-seeded Concordia (Wis.) pulled off a mild upset of Wis. Eau Claire as the Falcons rallied to win Game 2  on Saturday, 5-4 after they lost to the Blugolds 5-3 in Game 1. Sam Meuwissen played the hero scoring in sudden death overtime in the minigame to lift Concordia (Wis.) to its first appearance in the NCHA final four. Adrian and Wis. Superior will meet in the other semifinal.

The MIAC wrapped its regular season over the weekend and once again, Gustavus Adolphus finished as the regular season champions and earned the top seed for the MIAC final five tournament. St. Thomas beat out Bethel and St. Olaf in a three-way tie for second place with 24 points each. The Tommies earned the No. 2 seed, followed by Bethel and St. Olaf.

St. Olaf will have to play the fifth-seed Concordia-Moorhead on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the MIAC play-in game. The winner will move on to St. Peter, Minn. on Thursday and take on Gustavus Adolphus, while St. Thomas hosts Bethel. The winners of the two semifinals will meet on Saturday at the highest-remaining seed to duke it out for the MIAC Championship and the auto bid into the NCAA Tournament.

Nineteen new teams join the nine from last week that have played their final games in the 2010-11 season.

Thank you seniors: Plymouth State, Chatham, Cortland, Buffalo State, Potsdam, Marian, Finlandia, St. Scholastica, Wesleyan, Nichols, Castleton, Salve Regina, New England College, Elmira, Oswego, St. Catherine, St. Mary’s, St. Benedict, Hamline, Augsburg, Wis. Stevens Point, St. Norbert, Lake Forest, Wis. Eau Claire, Conn. College, Hamilton, Colby, Williams.

Player of the Week – Sarah Luberda, Concordia (Wis.)

Sarah, a senior forward from De Pere, Wis. scored the game-tying and game-winning goals in Concordia (Wis.)’s 5-4 comeback win over Wis. Eau Claire in Game 2 of the NCHA Quarterfinals. Luberda also added an assist in Saturday’s game and then scored a goal in Friday’s game as well. Luberda has 12 goals and 20 assists for 32 points on the season.

Rookie of the Week – Megan Myers, Utica

Megan, a freshman forward from Las Vegas, Nev. scored both Utica goals in the Pioneers’ 2-1 upset win over Elmira in the ECAC West play-in round. Myers has 21 goals and 13 assists on the season for 34 points, which ranks third in the nation for freshmen.

Co-Goalies of the Week – Emily Michelin, Adrian and Marissa Hotaling, Utica

Emily, a freshman goalie from Highland, Mich. backstopped Adrian to a pair of 3-1 wins over Wis. Stevens Point to advance to the NCHA final four for the second straight season. Michelin made 22 saves on Friday and then responded with 33 saves on Saturday to lead the Bulldogs to the next round. Michelin is 14-5-2 on the year with a 1.76 goals against average and a .931 save percentage along with seven shutouts.

Marissa, a sophomore goalie from Whitesboro, N.Y., stopped 52 shots, including 20 in the third period to backstop Utica to a 2-1 upset win over nationally-ranked Elmira in the ECAC West Play-In round. Hotaling is 7-10-0 on the year with a 2.53 goals against average and a .932 save percentage.

Faber, Cranston win top NCHA women’s honors

The NCHA has announced that Wisconsin-Eau Claire forward Kristin Faber has been voted the women’s player of the year and Wisconsin-River Falls’ Joe Cranston is coach of the year.

“Kristin has been a dominant player in this league since she started four years ago,” said UW-Eau Claire head coach Mike Collins in a league release. “She has been a great team leader and she makes everyone around her a better hockey player.”

Faber scored 16 goals in conference play had five multi-point games on the season, four of which were multi-goal games. She had a hat trick against Wisconsin-Stevens Point on Jan. 21 and a two goal, one assist outing against Concordia-Wisconsin on Feb. 4.

UW-River Falls had an undefeated regular season and the greatest win total in school history at 22-0-3 to give Cranston his fourth top coach honor.

ALL-NCHA TEAM
Kristin Faber, Sr, F, Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Sarah Luberda, Sr, F, Concordia-Wisconsin
Erin Marvin, Jr, F, Wisconsin-Stevens Point
Kait Mason, Fr, F, Wisconsin-River Falls
Lauren Straus, Fr, F, St. Norbert
Jessica Thompson, Sr, F, Wisconsin-River Falls
Kayleigh Bell, Sr, D, Wisconsin-River Falls
Lauren Conrad, Sr, D, Wisconsin-River Falls
Allie Pullar, Sr, D, Wisconsin-River Falls
Kelly Salis, Jr, D, Adrian
Kaley Gibson, Fr, G, St. Norbert
Emily Michelin, Fr, G, Adrian

ALL-NCHA HONORABLE MENTION
Katie Flanagan, Jr, F, Wisconsin-River Falls
Stacey Kempson, Sr, F, Adrian
Melissa Kravich, Sr, F, Lake Forest
Sam Meuwissen, So, F, Concordia-Wisconsin
Olivia Rork, Jr, F, Adrian
Chelsey Wierschem, So, F, Wisconsin-Superior
Emma Agen, Fr, D, St. Norbert
Kelli Johnson, Sr, D, Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Bailey Lane, So, D, Wisconsin-Superior
Samantha Scheving, Jr, D, Wisconsin-Stevens Point
Cassi Campbell, Sr, G, Wisconsin-River Falls
Shanley Peters, Fr, G, Wisconsin-Superior

NCHA ALL-ROOKIE TEAM
Kait Mason, F, Wisconsin-River Falls
Lauren Straus, F, St. Norbert
Allie Tanzer, F, Wisconsin-Stevens Point
Emma Agen, D, St. Norbert
Sheryl Kaskiw, D, Wisconsin-Superior
Emily Larson, D, Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Emily Michelin, G, Adrian

Herb Brooks to be honored by Hobey Baker foundation

The Hobey Baker Memorial Award Foundation has announced that its 2011 Legend of Hockey recipient is the late Herb Brooks.

Brooks’ greatest claim to fame was guiding a group of college hockey players to the gold medal in the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, N.Y. That “Miracle on Ice” team was named by Sports Illustrated as “the greatest sports moment of the century.” 

Brooks also led Minnesota to three national titles (1974, 1976 and 1979) and also coached the 2002 U.S. Olympic team to a silver medal at the Winter Games in Salt Lake City, Utah and the French team at the 1998 Olympics.

Brooks also helped St. Cloud State elevate their hockey program from Division II status to the Division I level and was their head coach during the 1986-87 transition season.

At the pro level, Brooks coached the NHL’s Minnesota North Stars, New York Rangers and Pittsburgh Penguins, Davos (Switzerland) and the AHL’s Utica Devils (AHL).

Tragically, Brooks was killed in a car accident in August 2003 at the age of 66. He has been inducted into three Halls of Fame – U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame (1990), International Hockey Hall of Fame (1999) and Hockey Hall of Fame (2006).

Brooks will be honored along with this year’s Hobey Baker Award winner at the Hobey Baker Award banquet June 23, 2011 in St. Paul, Minn.

St. Cloud State hires Gasparini as special advisor

St. Cloud State has announced that Gino Gasparini has been appointed special advisor to the president for athletics and will start his new position March 1.

Gasparini, who played (1964-1967) and coached (1978-1994) at North Dakota before taking over as the commissioner of the United States Hockey League (1994-2009), will work with the existing athletics staff and the Athletic Advisory Panel to create a new and expanded vision for the future of Husky athletics.

Gasparini will focus on Division I programs, the expansion and redevelopment of the National Hockey and Event Center, the anticipated changes in the WCHA, fan, donor and sponsor experience and the connection between Husky athletics and the community.

“We are engaging Gino, who has decades of experience with first class-athletic operations, as we’re building a new and renovated facility,” said SCSU president Earl Potter in a statement. “We will seek his insight and he will work with us to help shape the future of Husky hockey and our overall athletic programs.”

 St. Cloud State is in the planning stages of a $31.1 million renovation and addition project for the National Hockey Center. The 20-year old building will be renovated and expanded into a regional events center and multipurpose venue for hosting sporting events, concerts, family shows and other campus and community events.

Massachusetts-Dartmouth Captures MASCAC Title

With a 4-1 win over Fitchburg State Saturday, UMass Dartmouth captured the 2011 MASCAC title.  This season was a turnaround year for the Corsairs, who finished 18-6-1 overall after posting their first losing season since 1976-77.
Salem State finished second after grabbing the regular season title last season, and will join UMD with a bye in the first round.
The schedule for Tuesday’s quarterfinals:
No. 5 Worcester State at No.4 Fitchburg State, 7:30
No. 6 Westfield State at No. 3 Plymouth State, 7:00
Check back later for a playoff preview as well as a wrap up  of today’s ECAC Northeast quarterfinals.

Gallery: Denver at Nebraska-Omaha

Photographer Michelle Bishop captured these images Saturday at Qwest Center, where Denver beat Nebraska-Omaha 4-2:

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Elmira coach leaves team to be with injured brother

The Elmira College men’s team will play without head coach Aaron Saul when it takes on Hobart College in the ECAC West semifinals tonight.

Saul is in Germany to be with his brother, Adrian, who broke his neck while playing in a hockey game there, according to the Star Gazette.

Assistant coach Dean Jackson will run the Soaring Eagles Saturday night.

Julia Saul, Aaron Saul’s wife, said Friday that Adrian broke vertebrae in his neck after colliding with another player, but is not paralyzed.

Adrian Saul is a 2000 Elmira graduate and is among the top scorers in school history with 136 points.

ECAC update: One game to go!

Here’s the quick, 12:25am rundown (EDIT: now 1:22am, upon completion) on the playoff potentialities facing ECAC Hockey following Friday’s results and entering Saturday’s final regular-season contests. Here are this second’s standings.

EDIT: Upon further, well-rested review, the SLU/Harvard/Colgate situation has been amended. Tip of the cap to @WHRBSports for pointing out my error.

1. Union – If the Dutchmen win, they take the regular-season crown and the top seed. Lose, and they might lose both. If they tie and Yale wins, or if they lose and Yale ties – giving the Bulldogs and Dutchmen identical records – they share the title and Yale takes the No. 1 seed by virtue of record-vs-top-four.

2. Yale – The Bulldogs can wrest first place at the tape by winning, combined with a Union loss. Anything short of that, and the best they can hope for is a co-championship and perhaps a No. 1 seed… see the Union post for those breakdowns.

3. Dartmouth – Cornell holds the potential tiebreaker over the Big Green, but Dartmouth has Princeton, and a two-point lead on each. Should Princeton tie Dartmouth, the Green hold the No. 3 spot regardless… but should Cornell catch them, Dartmouth falls to fourth. In the case of a three-way tie, Dartmouth falls to fourth, but retains a first-round bye. Any way you slice it, it appears the Big Green have earned a week’s respite.

4. Cornell – The Big Red split the season series with Princeton, but will take the tiebreaker (if necessary) with a stronger record against the top four teams in the league. Read Dartmouth’s rundown for that matchup… the long and short of it is, if Cornell wins, they’ll earn a week off.

5. Princeton – The Tigers can’t climb higher than fourth, and they’ll need a little help to get that far (see above). They can fall as far as sixth, if they finish with the same record as RPI (or worse, of course). To get that coveted bye week, Princeton will need to finish ahead of Cornell and Rensselaer.

6. Rensselaer – The Engineers still have an outside shot at the bye, believe it or not: If they can catch or pass Princeton (they can) and pass Cornell (also possible), they’ll have some unexpected free time next week. Should RPI, Cornell and Princeton tie at 24 points (with idential 11-9-2 records), Cornell finishes fourth, followed by the ‘Tute and Princeton because the Red finished with the best head-to-head record within the trio, then RPI has the top-four tiebreaker over Princeton.

7. Quinnipiac – The Bobcats can’t improve on their current position, but they could definitely tumble: Current ninth-placer Brown holds the tiebreaker (there has to be an unambiguous synonym for that, right? This is killing me…) over QU, as does eighth-place Clarkson. If the Bobcats win, they’ll hold seventh. If Clarkson catches them, they fall to eighth; same if Brown wins, QU and Clarkson lose – Brown finishes seventh, QU eighth, Clarkson ninth. In the case of a three-way draw at 18 points, Clarkson gets the bump to seventh, Brown takes the home-ice spot, and Quinny falls into the road-trippin’ quartet at the bottom.

8. Clarkson – Currently eighth, the Golden Knights could finish a spot higher or lower. See the Quinnipiac analysis for that breakdown.

9. Brown – See Quinnipiac’s breakdown. Bruno could finish as high as seventh, and can finish no lower than their current nine-spot.

10. Harvard – Tied in 10th with St. Lawrence, Harvard has the edge with their first-semester road win in Canton. The sides play Saturday night, and all the Crimson needs is a tie to finish 10th. A loss will land the Crimson in 11th, but they can fall no further than that.

11. St. Lawrence – Simple: Beat Harvard, finish 10th. Lose or tie, 11th.

12. Colgate – The Raiders can not climb out of the basement. Colgate loses tiebreakers with SLU and Harvard, and has no hope of passing either team. The Raiders are finishing last.

Gallery: Bowling Green at Michigan State

Photographer Erica Treais captured these images Friday at Munn Ice Arena, where Michigan State beat Bowling Green 2-1:

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SUNYAC Semifinal Preview

“It’s not a seven-game series. It’s one game,” Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith said. “That’s what makes college hockey so exciting.
“It’s the end of the season. It’s playoff time. For the most part, most SUNYAC teams have been playing playoff hockey the past month. It’s been great hockey.”
Which, of course, makes this time of year so much fun. Four teams are left in the SUNYAC, as the semifinals take place Saturday night at 7:00 p.m.
We have a very intriguing match up with Plattsburgh at Geneseo and an upset-minded Fredonia traveling to Oswego.
SEMIFINAL PREVIEWS
(All statistics in the previews are for conference play only.)
Plattsburgh (9-7-0, 18-7-1) at Geneseo (10-5-1, 16-7-2)
“Geneseo and Plattsburgh have a lot in common,” Plattsburgh coach Bob Emery said. “For both of us, defense is the key.”
These teams split their season series. In the first conference game of the season for both, Geneseo handily defeated Plattsburgh, 7-3. It began a slow start for Plattsburgh, who went 2-4 in its first six games. It allowed Geneseo to get off to a strong start, losing just once in its first 10 games.
Plattsburgh reversed that trend, and Geneseo ran into some injury problems. When they met again up in Plattsburgh, the Cardinals took a 4-2 win.
Let’s start with the easy premise — if this game comes down to goaltending, the edge goes to Geneseo. The Ice Knights have a superb tandem in Adrian Rubeniuk (2.63 goals against average, .915 save percentage) and Cory Gershon (2.48 GAA, .913 save pct.). Who will get the start is anybody’s guess.
Meanwhile, it’s no secret Josh Leis (2.96 GAA, .874 save pct.) is struggling again.
“We have to play better defensively as a team from the goaltender on out,” Emery said. “Geneseo is a really good defensive team. The only way to beat a defensive team is to play defensive.”
Offensively, Plattsburgh relies on two seniors, Eric Satim (8-12-20) and Dylan Clarke (10-6-16). Yet, despite others helping out, the Cardinals have at times struggled to score. Last week’s game against Morrisville was a prime example of the consequences.
“The fact that we had a 2-0 lead against Morrisville and couldn’t hold onto it really concerns me no matter who we play,” Emery said. “We had really good chances to score in the first period. That’s been our problem all year — taking advantage of our opportunities.”
Geneseo’s top line, which includes three of their top four scorers, Zachary Vit (9-13-22), Jonathan Redlick (8-11-19), and Rich Manley (5-5-10) may not be intact due to injuries. Danny Scagnelli (4-13-17) is the other top scorer in conference games.
Howeverf, defense is the order of the day for Geneseo, which lets up a SUNYAC second lowest 2.62 goals per game. The Ice Knights also have the second best penalty kill percentage at 84.6 percent, slightly behind Oswego. Not that they rely on it too much, because both teams commit very few penalties — 13.1 minutes per game for Geneseo; 9.0 minutes per game for Plattsburgh.
This game may be decided in the first period. Geneseo lets up the least amount of goals in the first period, just eight, than any team in the league. While Plattsburgh allows its opponents to score more goals in the first and third periods than the second. The game which Geneseo won, they took a 3-1 first period lead. The game they lost, it was scoreless after one.
Fredonia (7-8-1, 13-12-1) at Oswego (15-1-0, 22-3-0)
Fredonia comes into Oswego as the sixth, and thus last, seed. Fredonia has been in a similar spot before. Back in 2007, they entered the playoffs as the fifth seed. They beat Buffalo State in double overtime, beat Oswego in overtime, and beat Plattsburgh for the SUNYAC title, all on the road.
The following year, after beating Buffalo State at home, they lost to Oswego on the road.
“They’re defending conference champions, number one ranked team in the country,” Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith said. “We got to play well, and have to take advantage of opportunities.”
Which is what Fredonia did against Buffalo State going two for two on the power play. The Blue Devils have the third best power play in the league at 23.5 percent. They also have the fourth best penalty kill at 78.4 percent.
“Power plays are a funny thing,” Meredith said. “The thing about power plays, sometimes they get streaky. You look at the numbers, and say, wow. Then you look at parts of the season, and there are draughts. You hope this time of year, you are in the streaky part.”
They will have to hope that is the case, because everything about Oswego is tops in the league — most goals per game (4.94), least goals against per game (1.88), best power play (27.5 percent), best penalty kill (84.9 percent). The only weakness for Oswego is they don’t tend to score much in the second period, but they let up a league low of seven goals in that period.
Scoring is balanced for Oswego. Leading the way is Ian Boots (9-19-28) and Justin Fox (8-17-25). Lately, Oswego has not only been playing very well, but selflessly.
“Seems like our seniors stood up, took charge, and raised our level of play,” Oswego coach Ed Gosek said. “We’ve had balanced scoring all season long. Last weekend, the guys played for one another, unselfishly.
“Beckwith looks like he is back on track.”
Paul Beckwith brings his 1.87 GAA and .932 save pct. into the playoffs.
Fredonia will have their second leading scorer, Jordan Oye (10-11-21), back after serving a one-game suspension. He’ll help alleviate some of the pressure from leading scorer Bryan Ross (10-15-25).
“Obviously, Jordan is a key member of our team,” Meredith said. “But, it’s not an opportunity to sit back and say, okay, Jordan is back, let’s have him go and do it.”
Freshman Mark Friesen is fresh off his first playoff win with a conference GAA of 2.43 and .920 save pct.
Oswego won both match ups this year, 3-0 at home and 5-4 in overtime on the road.
Can Fredonia repeat 2007? In a one-game format, anything can happen.
“When you get to this time of year, you have to have everything going right,” Gosek said. “If one of them are off, it’s anybody’s game.”

Four Teams Left
“It’s not a seven-game series. It’s one game,” Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith said. “That’s what makes college hockey so exciting.
“It’s the end of the season. It’s playoff time. For the most part, most SUNYAC teams have been playing playoff hockey the past month. It’s been great hockey.”
Which, of course, makes this time of year so much fun. Four teams are left in the SUNYAC, as the semifinals take place Saturday night at 7:00 p.m.
We have a very intriguing match up with Plattsburgh at Geneseo and an upset-minded Fredonia traveling to Oswego.
SEMIFINAL PREVIEWS
(All statistics in the previews are for conference play only.)
Plattsburgh (9-7-0, 18-7-1) at Geneseo (10-5-1, 16-7-2)
“Geneseo and Plattsburgh have a lot in common,” Plattsburgh coach Bob Emery said. “For both of us, defense is the key.”
These teams split their season series. In the first conference game of the season for both, Geneseo handily defeated Plattsburgh, 7-3. It began a slow start for Plattsburgh, who went 2-4 in its first six games. It allowed Geneseo to get off to a strong start, losing just once in its first 10 games.
Plattsburgh reversed that trend, and Geneseo ran into some injury problems. When they met again up in Plattsburgh, the Cardinals took a 4-2 win.
Let’s start with the easy premise — if this game comes down to goaltending, the edge goes to Geneseo. The Ice Knights have a superb tandem in Adrian Rubeniuk (2.63 goals against average, .915 save percentage) and Cory Gershon (2.48 GAA, .913 save pct.). Who will get the start is anybody’s guess.
Meanwhile, it’s no secret Josh Leis (2.96 GAA, .874 save pct.) is struggling again.
“We have to play better defensively as a team from the goaltender on out,” Emery said. “Geneseo is a really good defensive team. The only way to beat a defensive team is to play defensive.”
Offensively, Plattsburgh relies on two seniors, Eric Satim (8-12-20) and Dylan Clarke (10-6-16). Yet, despite others helping out, the Cardinals have at times struggled to score. Last week’s game against Morrisville was a prime example of the consequences.
“The fact that we had a 2-0 lead against Morrisville and couldn’t hold onto it really concerns me no matter who we play,” Emery said. “We had really good chances to score in the first period. That’s been our problem all year — taking advantage of our opportunities.”
Geneseo’s top line, which includes three of their top four scorers, Zachary Vit (9-13-22), Jonathan Redlick (8-11-19), and Rich Manley (5-5-10) may not be intact due to injuries. Danny Scagnelli (4-13-17) is the other top scorer in conference games.
Howeverf, defense is the order of the day for Geneseo, which lets up a SUNYAC second lowest 2.62 goals per game. The Ice Knights also have the second best penalty kill percentage at 84.6 percent, slightly behind Oswego. Not that they rely on it too much, because both teams commit very few penalties — 13.1 minutes per game for Geneseo; 9.0 minutes per game for Plattsburgh.
This game may be decided in the first period. Geneseo lets up the least amount of goals in the first period, just eight, than any team in the league. While Plattsburgh allows its opponents to score more goals in the first and third periods than the second. The game which Geneseo won, they took a 3-1 first period lead. The game they lost, it was scoreless after one.
Fredonia (7-8-1, 13-12-1) at Oswego (15-1-0, 22-3-0)
Fredonia comes into Oswego as the sixth, and thus last, seed. Fredonia has been in a similar spot before. Back in 2007, they entered the playoffs as the fifth seed. They beat Buffalo State in double overtime, beat Oswego in overtime, and beat Plattsburgh for the SUNYAC title, all on the road.
The following year, after beating Buffalo State at home, they lost to Oswego on the road.
“They’re defending conference champions, number one ranked team in the country,” Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith said. “We got to play well, and have to take advantage of opportunities.”
Which is what Fredonia did against Buffalo State going two for two on the power play. The Blue Devils have the third best power play in the league at 23.5 percent. They also have the fourth best penalty kill at 78.4 percent.
“Power plays are a funny thing,” Meredith said. “The thing about power plays, sometimes they get streaky. You look at the numbers, and say, wow. Then you look at parts of the season, and there are draughts. You hope this time of year, you are in the streaky part.”
They will have to hope that is the case, because everything about Oswego is tops in the league — most goals per game (4.94), least goals against per game (1.88), best power play (27.5 percent), best penalty kill (84.9 percent). The only weakness for Oswego is they don’t tend to score much in the second period, but they let up a league low of seven goals in that period.
Scoring is balanced for Oswego. Leading the way is Ian Boots (9-19-28) and Justin Fox (8-17-25). Lately, Oswego has not only been playing very well, but selflessly.
“Seems like our seniors stood up, took charge, and raised our level of play,” Oswego coach Ed Gosek said. “We’ve had balanced scoring all season long. Last weekend, the guys played for one another, unselfishly.
“Beckwith looks like he is back on track.”
Paul Beckwith brings his 1.87 GAA and .932 save pct. into the playoffs.
Fredonia will have their second leading scorer, Jordan Oye (10-11-21), back after serving a one-game suspension. He’ll help alleviate some of the pressure from leading scorer Bryan Ross (10-15-25).
“Obviously, Jordan is a key member of our team,” Meredith said. “But, it’s not an opportunity to sit back and say, okay, Jordan is back, let’s have him go and do it.”
Freshman Mark Friesen is fresh off his first playoff win with a conference GAA of 2.43 and .920 save pct.
Oswego won both match ups this year, 3-0 at home and 5-4 in overtime on the road.
Can Fredonia repeat 2007? In a one-game format, anything can happen.
“When you get to this time of year, you have to have everything going right,” Gosek said. “If one of them are off, it’s anybody’s game.”

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