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No more moral victories for Maine after potential turning point

Two weekends ago, the Maine Black Bears walked into Merrimack a confident team. They were returning two key players — Jeff Dimmen and Will O’Neill — from injury and were ready to tackle the league schedule down the stretch.

That Black Bears team left Lawler Arena dejected and shaking its collective heads after losing, 7-1, to the Warriors. What should’ve been a day for Maine to jump start its second half turned not into just a loss, but a disaster.

Brian Flynn (Maine - 10) - The University of Maine Black Bears defeated the visiting University of North Dakota Fighting Sioux 7-3 on Friday, October 22, 2010, at Alfond Arena in Orono, Maine. (Melissa Wade)
Maine hopes that Brian Flynn's overtime goal against Providence will be a turning point (photo: Melissa Wade).

“I think guys thought it was going to come easy,” Maine coach Tim Whitehead said. “Those little things are really big things. The effort, the focus and the intensity they need to play in these situations in league games, we didn’t have those that night.”

Thus, last weekend, when the team returned to Orono for two games, facing an upstart Providence club and white-hot Boston College, redemption was one of the first things on the minds of the Black Bears players.

Redemption seemed to be in Maine’s grasp on Friday. A 3-1 lead through two periods for a team that is solid when carrying a lead to the third quickly disappeared as the Friars scored twice to force overtime.

Whitehead knew that a goal against in overtime could be a backbreaker — not just for that game, but for the season.

“Sometimes you can do everything right and still not win. You get moral victories there,” said Whitehead. “But I don’t think a moral victory would’ve been enough. We’d have lost some confidence.”

Instead, Brian Flynn, the team’s leading goal scorer, scored what Whitehead deemed as a perfect goal.

“We won the draw, got it deep and kept grinding away there,” said Whitehead. “Finally, one of the shots, the rebound presented itself and Brian Flynn collected it on his skate and lifted it up.”

The overtime goal and victory gave the Black Bears back a good amount of confidence. That translated to a dominating 4-1 victory over then-No. 3 Boston College. Suddenly, what could’ve been a path of disaster for the Black Bears is beginning to look like one of hope.

Should the Black Bears continue that success down the stretch, it will be easy to look back at Flynn’s OT winner on Friday as a major turning point in the season.

“Any time you have success in key moments of games, it builds confidence,” said Whitehead. “As long as it doesn’t build overconfidence, you’re in a good situation. This team won’t get overconfident because we’ve been through so much this year. The last loss we had [to Merrimack] really crystallized that. We’re running out of time here and we need to start winning some games and leave it all out on the ice.”

If there is any hurdle that Whitehead’s Maine team still has to cross, it may be goaltending. The inexperienced staff has looked brilliant at times this year and also struggled. Last Sunday, Whitehead decided to shake things up and give the start to Shawn Sirman, who had played just twice since the opening month of the season, despite a decent 2-0-2 record.

Whitehead had believed in his two freshmen goalies — Dan Sullivan, who made 12 starts, and Martin Ouelette, who started six games. But in an attempt to shake things up, Whitehead gave the start to Sirman, noting his confidence in his sophomore netminder, even if he might have been alone in that confidence.

“Myself and Shawn Sirman were the only people who thought he might win on Sunday,” laughed Whitehead. “It’s been a real interesting ride with the goalies, but we kind of expected that. We expected the goaltending to be what it is, which is young and inexperienced.

“We’ve tried not to use that as a crutch and give each of them the opportunity to succeed. They’ve had some gems. But protecting those goaltenders is a major focus.”

So now the question becomes just which goaltender will be Maine’s starter down the stretch. That’s not a decision Whitehead is even close to ready to make.

“In our situation, [choosing the starter] is difficult,” said Whitehead. “We’re not in the situation to [have a No. 1]. There hasn’t been enough consistency. It’s absolutely wide open.

“The good news is we’re excited about all three. We’re way ahead of where we were with our team last year.”

Lowell’s MacDonald: ‘Worrying solely about UMass-Lowell’

Very similar to Maine, Massachusetts-Lowell entered last weekend in need of victories. Facing their rival and sister school, Massachusetts, the River Hawks were desperate. Lowell hadn’t won a game since Nov. 5, a 3-1 win over Vermont, and in the meantime had assembled an 11-game losing streak.

Unfortunately, things continued to get ugly against the Minutemen as Lowell lost in the closing seconds of Friday’s opener (a game for which the team resorted to a marketing gimmick of “firing its mascot,” citing the only way for Rowdy the River Hawk to get its job back would be to sell 2,000 tickets — something that was supposedly accomplished) and then got manhandled in Saturday’s rematch, extending the losing streak to 13.

Things won’t get too much easier for Lowell this weekend as it’ll be prey for a streaking Merrimack team and Boston College, which will be hungry after Sunday’s loss to Maine.

But according to coach Blaise MacDonald, neither the Warriors nor the Eagles are his or his team’s focus at this point. Instead, the only concern about UMass-Lowell is, well, UMass-Lowell.

“Quite frankly, our focus is solely on UMass-Lowell,” said MacDonald. “We clearly know how good Merrimack and BC are, particularly at home. We can’t necessarily control how they play. We can impact our outlook.”

It’s been a challenge, according to MacDonald, to keep the team’s morale up. His coaching staff has tried to remain positive and keep things as light as possible around the team.

“[Times like these] are when you have to do your best coaching,” said MacDonald. “You don’t always see results in wins and losses but your emotional component is very important.

“We’ve tried to keep things fresh. Have new drills and new challenges for our team. Celebrate small victories and always maintain that level of faith, which is believing without seeing it is right around the corner.”

MacDonald compared his season to pumping water from a well. The water might be 200 feet below the ground but you keep working hard to pump the water, hoping something will eventually surface.

“All of a sudden the water starts flowing out,” said MacDonald. “If you stop pumping you’re going back 200 feet down to the bottom.”

And if that mentality doesn’t work?

“You take the team to go meet Mickey Ward and watch the movie, ‘The Fighter.'”

Quote of the week

Quote of the week, maybe of the season, comes from Merrimack coach Mark Dennehy, talking about his team’s victory on Tuesday night over Boston University.

“If we had beat BU four years ago, holy smokes, they’d have had a parade on campus. [Tuesday night] was like any other win. I don’t know if they’re enjoying it enough. You have to relish the victories, too.”

Stacey quits Vermont, will stay in school

Wahsontiio Stacey, Vermont’s leading scorer, will not finish his senior season with the Catamounts as the Burlington Free Press reported today he has quit the hockey program.

“Wahs has informed the coaches (Tuesday) afternoon that he was quitting the team,” Vermont coach Kevin Sneddon told the paper. “He spoke with the team right before practice to let them know.”

Stacey, who has nine goals this year and 31 in his career, had been suspended indefinitely prior to last weekend’s two-game series at Northeastern. Sneddon said the suspension had been imposed because Stacey had missed several mandatory team functions.

“According to Wahs, he wants to stay in school, focus on his academics and graduate, which is a good a thing,” Sneddon added. “He’s not focused on trying to leave school and go to play minor league pro hockey some place. He’s focused at least on the right thing if he’s not going to be with the team.”

Stacey is the second player to either leave or be cut from the Catamounts this year and the fifth in two seasons. Sophomore forward David Pacan was dismissed from the team right before the start of the season. Last year, Josh Franklin, Chris Atkinson and Justin Milo left during the season for various reasons. Milo, like Stacey, was the team’s leading goal-scorer at the time.

Committee makes another change to NCAA tournament selection criteria

For the fifth straight season, the NCAA men’s ice hockey committee has altered the selection criteria for the national tournament.

This season, the list of teams under consideration — those that are compared against each other to form the basis of the PairWise Rankings — has been expanded to all teams with a Ratings Percentage Index score of .500 or better, NCAA associate director of championships Kristin Fasbender said.

In the previous four seasons, the teams under consideration were limited to the top 25 teams in the RPI.

As of Wednesday, the change adds nine schools to the PairWise Rankings, which mimic the selection process used by the committee to select the at-large teams for the NCAA tournament.

Also, recent NCAA championship manuals show that the committee last year quietly removed the line that required both teams to have played at least 10 games against teams under consideration for that comparison to be factored into the overall comparison between schools.

Previous changes to the criteria included a requirement that teams have a winning percentage of .500 or better for at-large consideration; the addition and then removal of a bonus points system for quality non-conference victories; and alterations to the formula for calculating the RPI.

It’s believed that this year’s tweak was made at least in part to remove what could be considered an arbitrary limit of teams under consideration.

The PairWise Rankings replicate the committee’s process in comparing all of the teams under consideration against each other based on four criteria: RPI, record against common opponents, head-to-head competition and record against other teams under consideration.

For each comparison won, a team receives one point, except for the head-to-head comparison, for which each team receives one point for each game victory in the teams’ series. The final order reflected in the PairWise Rankings is based on the number of comparisons won. If two teams win the same number of comparisons, the team with the higher RPI is ranked higher, breaking the tie.

This year’s change makes the number of teams under consideration dependent on performance instead of a fixed figure.

Meanwhile, the women’s ice hockey committee has gone the opposite direction as the men’s committee.

According to the 2011 championship handbook, one of the criteria is record against teams in the top 12 of the RPI; that comparison formerly was made against teams with a RPI of .500 or better.

As of Wednesday, that change eliminated six teams from the PairWise Rankings.

Changes in detail

Here are the recent changes the men’s committee has made to the selection criteria, starting in 2003:

2003: Changed the RPI equation to 25-50-25 from 35-50-15 (all RPI equations listed as winning percentage-opponents’ winning percentage-opponents’ opponents’ winning percentage); added undefined bonus points to a team’s RPI for winning home, road and neutral-site non-conference games against teams in the top 15 of the RPI; adjusted a team’s RPI to prevent losing points for winning conference postseason games against weaker opponents; defined the pool of teams under consideration as those with an RPI of .500 or better.

2007: Changed the RPI equation to 25-21-54; changed the bonus points system to count only for road non-conference wins against teams in the top 15 of the RPI; added all games to the RPI adjustment for winning games against weaker opponents; redefined the pool of teams under consideration as those in the top 25 of the RPI; added a condition that the comparison of record against teams under consideration would be used only if both teams have played 10 or more games against such teams.

2008: Eliminated the bonus points.

2009: Added a requirement that to be eligible for at-large selection, a team must have a winning percentage of .500 or greater.

2010: Eliminated the condition that the comparison of record against teams under consideration would be used only if both teams have played 10 or more games against such teams.

2011: Redefined the pool of teams under consideration as those at .500 or better in the RPI.

If two teams win the same number of comparisons, the team with the higher RPI is ranked higher, breaking the tie.

Vermont to host women’s worlds in 2012

The University of Vermont and the city of Burlington will host the 2012 IIHF World Women’s Championship, with Gutterson Fieldhouse being the primary venue.

Gutterson, home to the UVM men’s and women’s programs, will will host all U.S. and Canada games, as well as the playoff and medal rounds. Cairns Arena will serve as the secondary facility for the event.

Burlington was selected from a pool of finalists that also included Minneapolis, Rochester, N.Y., and Hartford, Conn.

The eight-nation tournament, which will tentatively run from April 7-14, 2012, includes 22 games and features the top female hockey players in the world.

“We are thrilled to be serving as the host site for the IIHF World Women’s Championship and look forward with enthusiasm and excitement to working with USA Hockey, the greater Burlington community and the state of Vermont in preparing for this very special and world-wide celebration of women’s hockey,” Robert Corran, associate vice president and director of athletics for UVM, said in a statement.

The United States has earned gold medals in three of the last four world championships (2005, 2008, 2009), while capturing silver in the remaining nine years (1990, 1992, 1994, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2007). The title game has featured the U.S. and Canada every year of the tournament dating back to its inception in 1990.

Flynn, Balisy, Grant named USCHO’s Three Stars for Jan. 19

THIRD STAR

Tommy Grant, Alaska-Anchorage: The senior first-line left winger posted two goals, five points and was plus-2 in the Seawolves’ wins over Colorado College — their first home sweep since October 2007. He gave Alaska-Anchorage a 2-0 lead with his ninth and 10th goals of the season on Friday. :: Tommy Grant’s player page

Tommy Grant of Alaska-Anchorage (Alaska-Anchorage Athletics)

SECOND STAR

Chase Balisy, Western Michigan: The freshman helped continue the Broncos’ resurgence with a three-goal, four-point weekend in a win and tie against Ohio State. A second-line center, Balisy was plus-3 after a two-goal, one-assist performance on Friday, then added another goal and was plus-1 a day later. :: Chase Balisy’s player page

Chase Balisy of Western Michigan (Western Michigan Athletics)

FIRST STAR

Brian Flynn, Maine: The junior winger posted his third game-winning goal of the season when he scored 48 seconds into overtime against Providence, capping a two-goal, one-assist night. He made it a five-point weekend two days later when he had a goal and an assist and was plus-3 in a victory over Boston College. :: Brian Flynn’s player page

Maine's Brian Flynn (Maine Athletics)

After each weekend’s games, make your nomination at www.uscho.com/threestars

Vermont power play: Let’s blow things up

Heading into last weekend’s series against Northeastern, Vermont’s struggles offensively could be linked to a number of things. The most notable, though, was the Cats power play. It hadn’t scored yet with the man advantage in 2011 and entered the series scoring at a 12 percent clip, ranked 53rd of 58 teams in the country.

Thus, head coach Kevin Sneddon took a drastic approach and literally blew up everything the team had done to date on the power play. Last week in preparation for the NU series, Sneddon held what he called open tryouts for a chance to play on the power play. What resulted was eye opening.

“We really blew it up. It was almost like tryouts,” said Sneddon. “We tried to see which guys could handle certain situations. It wasn’t until the end of the week that we put it all together and let it work as a five-man unit. It was trying to find a chemistry of five guys trying to work well together.”

That chemistry resulted in a rare mix of players playing on the Cats top power play unit. While it’s common to see a forward playing the point on many power play units, it’s not common to see a defenseman playing the wing. That was the case for the Catamounts, who placed blueliner Drew MacKenzie at the right wing. At the same time, freshman forward Matt White played on the point, providing a unique switch.

“We’re trying anything, you know. What do you have to lose at this point?” laughed Sneddon. “[The power play] wasn’t working at all and we showed the guys we wanted to try to fix it.”

The result on Friday night was a power play goal, the team’s first since December 18 against St. Lawrence. And the goal couldn’t have come at a better time. Vermont led, 2-0, before Northeastern got within a single goal scoring on the power play with 13:25 remaining. But the Cats got their own power play chance and cashed in when Sebastian Stalberg fired a shot through a Connor Brickley screen to put Vermont ahead, 3-1. That ended up as the final score as the Catamounts earned just their second Hockey East win of the season.

“[The goal came on] the set we had worked on all week, so it’s nice to see our efforts pay off,” said Sneddon. “That goal was an answer back. They make it 2-1 and instead of dropping the shoulders and worrying, they take a penalty and we answer to make it 3-1.”

RIT, Plattsburgh and Norwich all playing for a cause

Three of the top programs in D-III women’s hockey will be gearing up to play for a cause over the next two weekends.

Top-ranked RIT will host No. 4 Plattsburgh State for a pair of ECAC West games that are being dubbed “Black Out Heart Disease” weekend.

The Tigers will be wearing special-edition black jerseys that are currently up for bid on this nifty website that RIT has created. Seriously, you have to take a look at how the school set up this website for the jersey auction. It’s definitely the most impressive jersey auction I’ve ever seen. You can view the website here: http://www.rit.edu/studentaffairs/fingerlakeshealth/bidding.php

Yes, that’s Katie Stack’s jersey going for $500 at the moment and here’s a link to a great article from the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle on the senior forward as she nears the RIT career goals record: http://www.democratandchronicle.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2011101130319

“Anytime you can team up with a great organization like Finger Lakes Health and bring awareness to heart disease and the impact it has on so many families is a good thing'” said RIT Head Coach Scott McDonald. “This is a win-win situation for Finger Lakes Health, RIT and our community. This is going to a huge event between two talented teams, raising awareness for a very important cause.”

On Jan. 21, Geneva General Cardiologist Dr. Joe Gomez, and RIT President Bill Destler will drop the ceremonial first puck. There will be raffles and special giveaways during both contests. Friday’s game is a SAAC Tiger Den Event, with special black and orange rally towels to be handed out before each game. Following Saturday’s contest, the Tigers will hold a special autograph session at the RITz Sports Zone, where fans can obtain a 2010-11 team photo to be signed by members of the squad.

-Courtesy of RIT Sports Information-

Norwich will also be holding an awareness night this weekend as the Cadets host St. Michaels on Saturday in the “Cadets Skate For The Cure” Night 2011.

This marks the second straight season that Norwich is holding a cancer awareness night. The Cadets will don special-edition pink jerseys for Saturday’s game with all proceeds set to go to the SD Ireland Cancer Research Fund, which has raised over $1.8 million to date since its inception in 1999.

“Our league (Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference) has done a cancer awareness week in the past so we wanted to get on board and help bring awareness to the hockey world,” Norwich coach Mark Bolding said.

“This is the second year we’ve done a fight cancer night and it’s nice to have an in-state rival like St. Michael’s come in and join together to play hard for a good cause so that a game of hockey came help bring a little more awareness and money to cancer research.”

The Norwich athletic community was recently hit hard by cancer with the loss of a student athlete earlier this year.

Mackenzie Pratt, a standout pitcher for the NU softball team passed away on Oct. 10 from complications related to cancer. The 21-year-old from Hyde Park, Vt. would have graduated this spring.

-Courtesy of Norwich Sports Information-

Plattsburgh will go from being the visiting team this weekend for an awareness event, to hosting its own next weekend when the Cardinals take on Oswego.

The Cardinals, like Norwich, will “Pink the Rink” and wear special-edition pink jerseys in an effort to raise awareness for breast cancer.

Plattsburgh is auctioning off the jerseys as well and there are still a few available for purchase on the Cardinals’ website. They also have a “buy it now” feature and you can own a one-of-a-kind jersey for $200. You can find the bidding page here: http://www.gocardinalsports.com/sports/2010/12/27/WHOCKEY_1227104351.aspx?path=whockey

The Plattsburgh State women’s hockey team will join forces with Off the Field Sports, Hampton Inn & Suites and Della Honda in an effort to “Pink the Rink” and raise awareness for breast cancer on Saturday, Jan. 29.

As a fundraising effort, admission to the event is $5.  Fans can also support the cause by participating in a 50/50 raffle or purchasing a limited edition “Pink the Rink” t-shirt, which will be on sale at the event. All proceeds from the event and the online jersey auction will go to the Fitzpatrick Cancer Center Treasure Chests Fund of CVPH.

-Courtesy of Plattsburgh Sports Information-

I find it remarkable that these types of events are starting to occur more and more often and my hat is off to all three programs for taking up the fight against heart disease and cancer.

Hopefully this is only the start and more programs pick up playing for a cause in the coming years.

Lastly, does anyone have $510 they’d lend me so I can be the new high bidder on Stack’s jersey? ;)

15 things = 13 things they said this week, plus two notes

As the second half of the season begins to simmer and the nature of the league’s real parity begins to emerge, I found the reactions to last weekend’s games especially interesting. My favorite quote isn’t from a player or coach, but from an impassioned sports writer at Western Michigan University’s student paper.
Here is some of the recent on-the-record CCHA chatter.

  • “We knew it was going to be a big game. We heard all week long from everyone that the students were going to pack the place and that gave us a lot to work for tonight.” WMU freshman forward Chase Balisy, this week’s CCHA Rookie of the Week, in the Kalamazoo Gazette after the Broncos took four points from the Buckeyes at home. Lawson Arena was turning students away because the demand for tickets was greater than the number available.
  • “There were times when we could’ve been better. Part of that is due to Ohio State. They’re as good a team as we’ve seen all year, in my opinion.” WMU head coach Jeff Blashill, also in the Gazette.
  • “The dressing room was a real happy one. We threw on our win song and everyone celebrated.” OSU sophomore defenseman Devon Krogh, blogging after the Buckeyes took the extra shootout point in Kalamazoo Saturday.
  • “Typical of OSU, they taunted WMU after the win and an old-fashioned hockey brawl broke out on center ice.” Jim Snyder, writer for WMU’s student newspaper, the Western Herald, with his take on the hand-shake line following Saturday’s 2-2 tie. OSU averages 13.4 PIMs per game, making the Buckeyes the 32nd-most penalized team in D-I hockey.
  • “I honestly don’t think that I had these guys prepared to play this team. I will take responsibility for it.” ND head coach Jeff Jackson, in the South Bend Tribune, after the Irish split at home with Alaska last weekend.
  • “We felt like we, from a performance standpoint, it was probably our best two back-to-back games of the season. Obviously, coming off the weekend we had at home against Western, we only managed to get one point at home in a tie on Friday night so we were…excited to get going.” UAF head coach Dallas Ferguson, to the CCHA Insider, after the split with Notre Dame.
  • “It’s easier to come from behind at home than it is on the road.” UM head coach Red Berenson, in the Michigan Daily, following the Wolverines’ sweep of Ferris State. The Wolverines trailed by two in their 3-2 win at home over FSU Friday, but led 4-0 at the end of the second in their 6-1 Saturday win.
  • “It’s too early to worry too much about the standings other than you need points every weekend.” FSU head coach Bob Daniels to USCHO arena reporter Bob Miller, after losing the first of two games to UM.
  • “It was great for the team’s confidence. We usually come out of the (holiday) break a little slow.” Miami senior forward Andy Miele, in the Hamilton (Ohio) Journal News after Friday’s 5-1 win over Bowling Green. The win snapped Miami’s three-game losing streak.
  • “I really felt like we played with a purpose in terms of our competition level and our intensity. There was a purpose in terms of our competition level and our intensity. It should show us individually and our team collectively that we can go nose to nose with whoever.” BGSU head coach Chris Bergeron, in the Bowling Green Sentinel-Tribune, after being swept by Miami.
  • “We got a couple good breaks tonight. They hit the post late in the second period and again in the third. But we finally scored and when we got the second goal, we relaxed, showed some confidence and took off.” MSU head coach Rick Comley, in the Lansing State Journal, after the Spartans beat the Lakers, 4-0, Friday night.
  • “The guys are doing everything we ask of them. They’re playing hard. We just need to find a way to score some more goals.” LSSU head coach Jim Roque, in the Soo Evening News, after LSSU took the extra shootout point following a 2-2 against MSU Saturday night.
  • “We have not shown we are ready to play with those guys at this point.” NMU head coach Walt Kyle, in the Marquette Mining Journal, on NMU’s 1-5-1 record against top-10 teams this season. The Wildcats had last weekend off.

Two things of note that come to mind:

  • Sometimes, good things do come to those who wait. Miami junior forward Patrick Tiesling netted his first career goal in his 81st college hockey game, his 18th with the RedHawks, in Friday’s 5-1 win over Bowling Green. Tiesling’s goal came at 6:13 in the third, assisted by freshman Bryon Paulazzo and sophomore Garrett Kennedy. Tiesling transferred to Miami after having played his first two seasons for Bowling Green. Kennedy’s assist was the first of his career and his second collegiate point.
  • No one is talking about why Michigan dismissed two players, freshman forward Jacob Fallon and senior defenseman Tristan Llewellyn. Llewellyn ends his collegiate career with three goals and 14 assists in 126 games. UM’s athletic department said that Fallon (1-2-3) may be given the opportunity to rejoin the team next season.

Can we get your digits?

Players of the Week

Player of the Week: Harry Zolnierczyk, Brown

Brown’s one-man wrecking crew potted two goals, added two assists and finished +3 in the home-and-home split with No. 1 Yale. The Antagonizer scored a short-handed equalizer on Saturday evening in a game Bruno ultimately lost, but he earned first-assists on each of Brown’s first two goals Sunday, then sealed the historic upset with a last-minute breakaway goal. The senior captain ranks third in the league in overall points per game, with 1.44.

Honorable mention: Greg Miller, Cornell (0-4-4, +1 vs. RPI and Union); Aaron Bogosian, St. Lawrence (3-2-5 in two at Michigan Tech); Kyle Flanagan, St. Lawrence (2-3-5)

Rookie of the Week: Greg Carey, St. Lawrence

Mr. Carey makes another appearance in this space, scoring two goals and adding four assists in a win and tie at Michigan Tech. He opened the weekend with two first assists in a 4-4 draw, but then really brought it home with two goals, two helpers and a +3 rating in SLU’s 6-0 blowout win on Saturday. Carey leads the league in overall points per game (1.14), and is tied with Union rookie Daniel Carr for the conference lead in overall goals with 14.

Honorable mention: Kevin Sullivan, Union (1-2-3, +2 at Cornell); Daniel Carr, Union (2-0-2, 2 PPG at Cornell)

Goalie of the Week: Mike Garman, Cornell

The Cornell junior made the most of a platoon-split weekend, stopping 23 of 24 Engineers shots on Friday in what ultimately ended up a runaway victory. He upped his save rate to .915 in 10 appearances this season, and shrank his goals-against mean to 2.46.

Honorable mention: Keith Kinkaid, Union (2 goals against, 40 saves at Colgate and Cornell); Matt Weninger, St. Lawrence (4 goals against, 61 saves; 2nd career/season shutout); Mike Clemente, Brown (6 goals against, 62 saves against Yale)

Players like numbers, too

Through most levels of youth hockey, in most parts of the world, players only get to choose sweater numbers between 1 and about 35, give or take. Most youth teams don’t make custom jerseys, so they only order as many numbers as they might have players on the roster.

Then you get to juniors or college, with equipment managers and name-plates and custom sizes, and the options open up. But athletes being athletes, most either don’t care what number they get, or are tied to the digits they wore throughout their youth. (Only 18 ECAC Hockey players don digits above 39; 13 of them play in the North Country, for some reason.) So when you see Bobby Farnham’s 46, Allan McPherson’s 93 or Chad Ziegler’s 59, you can’t help but wonder what the stories are behind them.

I did. So here are a few of them.

  • Brown junior Bobby Farnham takes the whole “legacy” thing to a whole new level: His #46 is the natural continuation of a family tradition. Father Bob, uncles Mark and Paul, and cousin Buddy all wore 46 for Bruno; Bobby (Jr.) broke free a little bit from the family business, however, as his family members all sported their 46’s on the gridiron.
  • Clarkson’s no slave to convention, with seven players sporting numbers in the 40’s or beyond. Here are a few of the explanations: Mike Garlasco (91) used to wear 19, but Louke Oakley already had it, so he reversed it. Bryan Rufenach (89) dons his birth year. Freshman Ben Sexton (74) actually chose it in honor of junior teammate and fellow Kanata, Ontario product Mark Borowiecki (55), who used to wear #74 in juniors. Borowiecki’s double-five is in honor of his father, a ’55 birth. Rookie David Pratt (44) was #4 all his life, but it was already taken (by senior Dan Reed), so – like Gretzky had to do with hero Gordie Howe’s #9 when he joined the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds – he doubled it. Goalie Paul Karpowich (33) honors one of the greatest ‘tenders in history, Patrick Roy. And for the capper, via Sport Information Director Gary Mikel, #37 Will Frederick “threw a dart at a board.”
  • Cornell is notable for having no notable numbers: coach Mike Schafer likes to keep things traditional, and apart from numbers 1, 13, and 25 (Ken Dryden wore 1, Joe Nieuwendyk, 25), players are assigned numbers more or less randomly, and within the conventional range. As for #13, Sports Information guru Kevin Zeise could only speculate:

    “Cornell’s not had a #13 on the men’s side since the 1965-66 season – I don’t know if superstition has deemed that number unlucky within the program, that the first year someone didn’t wear it we won a national title, or what.

    “I do know that [goalies] Mike Garman (35) and Andy Iles (33) are the first players in program history to wear their respective numbers, and rumor has it that when Shane Hynes played here [last year at Cornell: 2004-05], he wanted to wear #57 (Heinz/Hynes 57? – get it?), but as the story goes, that was denied.”

    Zeise also edified me on a very cool Big Red tradition: When a player is assigned his number, he is also responsible for researching the history of that number in the context of Cornell Hockey. Schafer thereby instills within his charges a sense of responsibility with each of their jerseys… a duty to honor the legacy of every Big Red to ever wear those digits before. That strikes me as a very inspiring concept.

    Unfortunately, no one had any insight on why one of the Devins (twins Mike and Joe) got #2, and the other 22. Oh well.

  • Union’s Kelly Zajac (19) wears the same number as NHL brother Travis.
  • Yale’s Chad Ziegler wears #59, in the memory of his late father, who was born in 1959. As I understand it, Ziegler’s father passed away just before the junior forward enrolled at Yale.
  • My top 20

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

    West is still best in Atlantic Hockey

    The western scheduling pod continues to dominate Atlantic Hockey. Teams from the west pod hold the top five places in the standings and six of the top eight. The west leads the east 33-16-10 in head-to-head play so far.

    This past weekend, the west took 17 of a possible 20 points, with only a win by Army over Air Force and a tie between Rochester Institute and Bentley giving the east pod something to cheer about.

    This weekend will again be all east-west series with all 12 teams in league action.

    USCHO.com AHA Player of the Week:

    Bryan Haczyk, Niagara – The senior wins the award for the second week in a row. Niagara scored six goals in its sweep of American International last weekend and Haczyk had four of them, two each night. Haczyk has recorded a point in 18 straight games and has eight goals in his last four games.

    Honorables:

    Ryan Zapolski, Mercyhurst – The Erie, PA native stopped 65 of 68 shots last weekend to help the Lakers to a sweep of Holy Cross.

    Eric Levine, Robert Morris – The sophomore goalie has put up gaudy numbers in his last five starts: 1.40 GAA and a .958 save percentage.  He allowed just three goals to help the Colonials to a sweep of Connecticut last weekend.

    Paul Weisgarber, Air Force – The junior forward had two goals and two assists last weekend against Army. He leads the Falcons with 10 goals on the season.

    Cody Omilusik, Army  - Omilusik had three goals including the game-winner to lead the Black Knights to a 5-4 win at Air Force on Saturday.

    Andrew Favot , RIT – The senior had a pair of goals in each game last weekend to help the Tigers take three points against Bentley.

    Nathan Longpre, Robert Morris – Longpre had a pair of goals and a pair of assists to help the Colonials to a sweep of Connecticut.

    Fashion sense

    Back in 2009, the Hockey News ranked the AHA jerseys and they, like I, found it to be a competitive battle. There are some absolute abominations out there (cough, Providence, cough) but top to bottom, Atlantic Hockey, IMHO has the best sweaters in college hockey.

    And they just got better:

    Air Force unveiled special jerseys for its series last week with Army, and they look amazing. Army’s classic look is very nice as well. Love the collegiate style with numbers in the front. Of course, as a radio announcer, the more numbers, the better. The bigger the numbers, the better.

    Nothing gold can stay

    With apologies to Robert Frost, a pet peeve of mine are teams that use “gold” as a school color, when it’s really “yellow.” Army and Notre Dame, for example, are gold. Canisius, Bentley, Quinnipiac, etc. are not gold. Let me illustrate.

    Gold:

    Not Gold:

    Gold:

    Not Gold:

    Gold:

    Not Gold:

    (Click on the last picture only if you want to go blind).

    Getting My Vote

    My USCHO.com Men’s D-I Poll ballot this week:
    1. Yale
    2. North Dakota
    3. Boston College
    4. UNH
    5. Duluth
    6. Denver
    7. Michigan
    8. Notre Dame
    9. Wisconsin
    10. Miami
    11. Maine
    12. Union
    13. RPI
    14. UNO
    15. Merrimack
    16. Boston University
    17. Alaska
    18. W. Michigan
    19. Ferris State
    20. Dartmouth

    Pictures courtesy of Mike Kaplan/Den Mar Services (Air Force) and the respective schools.

    The WCHA’s return to league play

    With each Nebraska-Omaha loss, that hot start seems more and more distant. UNO was 9-2-1 at Thanksgiving but has gone 3-6-1 since the start of December starting when it was swept at Bemidji State.

    UNO’s slide came full circle when it picked up only a point in a home series against the Beavers this weekend. UNO has endured a scoring drought over this 10-game stretch, averaging just 2.3 goals per game. The only time UNO scored more than three goals was against last-place Michigan Tech (a 5-2 win on Dec. .

    UNO had one of the top offenses in the country before December but have fallen to 18th in scoring offense with 3.32 goals per game. Line mates Matt Ambroz (six goals, five assists) and Joey Martin (two goals, seven assists) have done their part offensively in the past 10 games.

    Injuries hampered UNO over this stretch, most notably is Terry Broadhurst’s thumb injury that has kept him out since Dec. 18. Broadhurst is UNO’s fourth-highest scorer with 19 points.

    The Omaha World-Herald’s Chad Purcell said in his story Sunday that Broadhurst “probably won’t return for the North Dakota series.” Purcell tweeted Tuesday “depending how practice goes” Tuesday and Wednesday, Broadhurst could be back this weekend.

    UNO began the season on the outskirts of the polls but rose to No. 4 in November. It’s not like the schedule before the slide was easy. UNO swept No. 13 Minnesota and beat No. 4 Michigan, both on the road. UNO split with No. 8 UND at home.

    The last 10 games have been the easiest part of UNO’s schedule based on the quality of opponents. No. 20 Colorado College was the only ranked opponent on the schedule since UND.

    UNO’s second-half schedule might be as tough as the first half, which will make it even harder for UNO to receive an at-large berth to a regional. UNO is on the bubble, tied for 14th in the PairWise right now.

    After a trip to Grand Forks, N.D. to face the No. 2 Sioux this weekend, UNO has three straight home series. UNO heads to Alaska-Anchorage in late February and Anchorage hasn’t been the easiest place for WCHA teams to play this season. The regular season concludes with a home series against Denver and a trip to Minnesota-Duluth.

    Thoughts on the UND/Minnesota scrum
    It’s beginning to seem like there has to be some kind of payback due after every single big check thrown at any level of hockey these days.
    Brad Malone’s massive check on Minnesota defenseman Kevin Wehrs was clean. Unnecessary, but not dirty. I’m not for retaliation after every big hit but I think the Minnesota players did the right thing to get behind Wehrs, Friday at UND.

    The Gophers have become a doormat when it comes down to grit and many questioned whether Minnesota could stand up to UND’s physical play. The Sioux still dominated the physical aspect of Friday’s game like it does most games, but the Gophers, at least, showed emotion in the scrum that followed the second period.

    And at game’s end, the Gophers had the edge on the scoreboard where it counts.

    If UND had beaten Minnesota, Friday night, the Sioux would be the top team in the USCHO.com Polls. No. 1 Yale lost 3-2 to Brown and No. 3 Boston College fell 4-1 to Maine, Sunday. With Yale, UND and BC losing this weekend, nothing changed in the top three.

    It’s arguable UND is the best team in the country anyway. The Sioux have the depth to deal with injuries like no other team. UND has played through injuries and illness all season and kept a 10-game unbeaten streak going with Derek Forbort and Brock Nelson at World Juniors.

    The WCHA is a much “tougher” league compared to the ECAC, which Yale plays in and the Sioux has played a much more challenging nonconference schedule.

    Maine and Notre Dame alone make for a more difficult nonconference slate than Yale’s nonconference platter of Colorado College, Air Force and a list of East Coast mid-majors.

    The biggest challenge Yale faces from now until the playoffs is when the Bulldogs go to No. 12 Union and No. 14 Rensselear Jan. 28-29. Otherwise, Yale might be at the top for a long time to come.

    DU/MSU could’ve went either way
    Every time Denver plays Minnesota State, Pioneers coach George Gwozdecky always seems to be very impressed by MSU. DU escaped Mankato with three points this weekend, needing third-period comebacks on both nights to earn points.

    “[MSU] is a terrific team and they deserve to be one of the hottest teams in the country,” Gwozdecky said after Friday’s game. “I’m sure we’ll see them when the postseason begins as well.”

    Justin Jokinen’s goal with 1:47 left was seemingly the game winner but Kyle Ostrow tied the game 31 seconds later at 1:16 and the game ended in a 4-4 tie. The following night, MSU took a 3-1 lead into the third period but everyone knew it would need another goal to get the win.

    Despite odd-man rushes and point-blank shots MSU couldn’t get the fourth goal. The Pioneers scored two goals near the midpoint of the third period and won the game on a Dustin Jackson overtime goal.

    The Pioneers were 1:16 and half a period away from being swept in Mankato. Instead, DU gained three points, jumped two spots to No. 4 in the USCHO.com Poll and kept pace with UND and UMD to remain in second place in the WCHA.

    DU also put a dent in MSU’s hot stretch going back to their last meeting in November. MSU quietly became one of the nation’s hottest teams with six nonconference wins and a home sweep of Minnesota.

    Freshman Chase Grant of MSU scored twice with two assists and DU’s top freshman Jason Zucker scored two goals with an assist this weekend but the WCHA Rookie of the Week went to Alaska-Anchorage’s Rob Gunderson.

    The freshman allowed two CC goals all weekend although he needed to make just 38 saves.

    Jaden Schwartz’s return to the Tigers lineup can’t come soon enough. CC did alright without him while he was at World Juniors but the Tigers could score a lot more goals with him back. He’s not expected to return until February, hopefully in time for the Denver series Feb. 4-5. It’s likely he’ll miss the weekend before when CC hosts UND.

    Yale still No. 1 in men’s poll

    Five different schools garnered first place votes, but Yale earned the most (38) and remains the top-ranked team in the weekly USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

    No. 2 North Dakota received nine first place votes, while No. 3 Boston College, No. 4 Denver and No. 6 Michigan all earned one apiece.

    No. 5 Minnesota-Duluth did not receive a first place nod, but holds steady this week in the top five.

    After Michigan, New Hampshire drops three places to No. 7, Notre Dame retains the No. 8 position, as does No. 9 Wisconsin, and Maine is up three to No. 10.

    Miami moves up one to No. 11, Union is up two to No. 12, Merrimack continues their rise by moving up two spots to No. 13, Rensselaer falls four to No. 14 and Boston University is up one to No. 15.

    Nebraska-Omaha drops again, this time five spots to No. 16, Western Michigan is up one to No. 17, Dartmouth enters the poll this week at No. 18, Alaska jumps a notch to No. 19 and Princeton is back in the rankings at No. 20.

    Women’s poll has Wisconsin still on top

    Wisconsin is still the top-ranked team in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Women’s Poll.

    The Badgers received 12 first place votes with No. 2 Cornell getting the other three.

    Boston University stayed in the No. 3 spot, while Mercyhurst jumped up one notch to No. 4.

    Minnesota, up two to No. 5, finished out the top five.

    Last week’s fourth-ranked team, Minnesota-Duluth, falls to No. 6 this week and Boston College is down one to No. 7.

    North Dakota (No. 8) and Providence (No. 9) remain the same as a week ago and Quinnipiac, unranked last week, enter’s the poll this week at No. 10.

    Tuesday Morning Quarterback: Bad week for the top 5

    Todd: Well, Jim, I guess it wasn’t a good weekend to be ranked in the top five. Every one of those teams from last week’s poll lost once last weekend, including No. 1 Yale, which fell to Brown on a last-minute goal on Sunday. Because of the other results — North Dakota, Boston College, New Hampshire and Minnesota-Duluth all falling once — and because Yale still sits atop the RPI, the Bulldogs are still in the first spot on my poll ballot this week. How about you?

    Jim: Yeah, it certainly was ugly for the top teams in the poll. But as you mentioned, when all of the top five fall it’s difficult to drop the No. 1 team, in this case Yale. They’re still my No. 1.

    But this goes back to something we mentioned recently that despite what many perceive as an easy schedule in the ECAC, Yale does not have a cakewalk into the postseason. Brown has played extremely well of late, including routing Boston University, 6-1, and then, of course, Sunday’s upset of the Bulldogs. The Bears are still a game below .500, but I have to think they are trending upwards in many people’s eyes, no?

    Todd: When I saw that Yale lost on Sunday, I wasn’t overly surprised when I saw it was Brown that did it. But I also am not surprised when I see the Bears losing to Minnesota State or Dartmouth. They’re a team that’s tough to get a handle on, and I suppose a lot of that has to do with a fairly tough schedule they’ve played (sixth-toughest in the country, according to the RPI).

    I think the thing that should concern Brown the most right now is that it’s in the bottom four of the ECAC Hockey standings. It’s going to be a close race for the top four spots and a first-round playoff bye (Brown is only four points out of fourth), so the Bears can’t afford to give away too many points.

    As for Yale, I’ll be interested to see how the Bulldogs respond this weekend against Clarkson and St. Lawrence. The last time they lost, they rattled off 10 straight wins in response.

    Jim: Brown has indeed played a very difficult schedule. There have been so many bright spots to the season but, strangely, plenty of dark ones as well. I think that’s the sign of a team that is still trying to find its identity. This isn’t exactly a program with a recent history of winning. Last year’s playoffs were a good steppingstone and wins like Sunday’s upset of Yale are great as well. But this team needs to find consistency. I still wouldn’t want to face them in the playoffs.

    As for Yale, I’m sure the Bulldogs will rebound. It’s more and more difficult to put together extended winning streaks in college hockey. There’s simply too much parity, don’t you agree?

    Todd: Absolutely. I wouldn’t put it past the Bulldogs to run together another big streak, but think how difficult that would be. Even if they get through this weekend unscathed, they have to do the Union-Rensselaer double on the road the week after. Let’s put it this way: If Yale puts together a four-game winning streak right now, we’re looking at something pretty special.

    I was just looking through the standings, and I’m glad no one is so far ahead of the pack that a league title is a foregone conclusion at this point. Last year, we knew Miami was going to run away with the CCHA crown by now, but even Yale, at 9-1 in the ECAC, isn’t a lock. I’m guessing we’re going to have some leagues going down to the final day to determine a champion this year, don’t you think?

    Jim: Well, a lot of that goes back to how we began this conversation. Even the top teams aren’t free from potential pitfalls. That certainly makes for great races come late February and early March.

    In Hockey East you have what is likely a four-to-five horse race with Boston College and New Hampshire leading the way. Rochester Institute of Technology has a big lead in Atlantic Hockey (five points right now), But Niagara has two games in hand and can make up those points quickly.

    The CCHA might not have a major pack of contenders, but the race between Notre Dame, Michigan and Miami could come down to the wire. Union is probably in the best possible position to give Yale a run for its money, and next weekend’s head-to-head matchup will be possibly the biggest game in Union hockey history.

    And last but not least is the league you see the most — the WCHA — where eight points separate seven teams and there are four points between the top four. What are your thoughts on that race? Safe to say there still is no clear favorite in the WCHA?

    Todd: I go down the list in the WCHA and I see a bunch of teams that can end up on top. North Dakota has been playing well, even despite its home split with Minnesota last weekend. Denver keeps getting points despite a few missteps. We’ve seen that Minnesota-Duluth can be an elite team, and I’m thinking they’ll find their early-season form again.

    And Nebraska-Omaha has a huge series at North Dakota this weekend where it could make itself one of the prime contenders. Think Dean Blais will have his team fired up to play in Grand Forks?

    Jim: Talk about a series to watch. The man who took North Dakota to the top returns with a Nebraska-Omaha team that is very similar to the Sioux teams of the mid-1990s. When you add the fact that these two clubs are part of the WCHA logjam, can’t get much better. So besides that series, what else will you be watching for this weekend?

    Todd: It’s getting to be make-or-break time for Alaska, which plays a pair at Michigan this weekend. The Nanooks have won only once in their last four games. This is the week where they stay in the Lower 48 between two road series, so you’ve got to think there’s plenty of time to ponder what needs to be done the rest of the way. What’s on the marquee out East?

    Jim: Well, the famous Beantown rivalry between Boston College and Boston University wraps up the regular-season series this Friday night at Agganis Arena. BC easily routed the Terriers in a two-game set back in early December but the Eagles are coming off a 4-1 loss at Maine on Sunday. In the ECAC, Dartmouth will head to Union on Friday and RPI on Saturday for a series that may reveal just how legit this Big Green team is. Plenty of good hockey as we head down the stretch. Until next week …

    ECAC East/NESCAC Wrap-up – January 18, 2011

    Continentals on the Move
    For some, the upset of #1 ranked Oswego by Hamilton at the Lakers holiday tournament may have been a bit of luck or the NESCAC school taking advantage of a back-up goaltender. However the Continentals have made the second half a showcase for knocking off ranked teams. Last weekend coach Norm Bazin’s team tied Middlebury and then knocked off another top five team in beating Williams. The second half was off to a good start in league play and it only got better this weekend.
    After tying travel partner Amherst 4-4 last Tuesday, Hamilton swept league rivals Tufts and Conn College this past weekend in convincing fashion. Since league play began a couple of weeks ago, Hamilton has taken 8 of a possible 10 points and is contending for a home-ice berth as they move up in the standings.
    Leading the way for Hamilton has been the team’s leading scorer, sophomore Joe Houk. In fourteen games played this season, Houk has 11 goals and 7 assists and is just one point off his season total from his freshman season. Even more impressive is that nine of his goals have come playing 5-on-5 hockey which is important since the power play has stumbled a bit this season.
    On the back end, Scott Heffernan has very quietly put together a good season in his senior year. The senior is 8-3-0 with a .924 save percentage and a 2.25 goals against average. The shutout at Conn College was his first of the year and the team has played solid team defense in front of him yielding just 34 goals in 14 games played.
    Another bright spot for the Continentals has been the play of freshman Michael DiMare. The diminutive forward, just 5’7″ and 150 pounds as listed on the roster, has played much bigger for Bazin’s squad. He leads the freshman class with 7 goals and 5 assists including 3 power play goals for Hamilton – about 25% of the team’s total.
    This weekend finds Hamilton back at home to face ECAC East rivals Skidmore and Castleton. The Spartans are currently ranked eighth in the nation according to this week’s USCHO poll so look out for the giant slayers again as Hamilton seems to like the challenge of playing the nation’s best teams on their way to challenging in this year’s NESCAC conference standings.
    Purple Knights Surprising the ECAC East
    St. Michael’s has had the misfortune of being one of the few remaining D-II schools playing in a D-III conference. While only the games against their fellow Northeast-10 schools count for post-season, Coach Davidson’s team is a cool 4-4-1 in the league and 6-6-1 overall having defeated D-II rival St. Anselm and tying New England College this past weekend to take 3 of a possible 4 points.
    Junior forward Reave MacKinnon leads the team in scoring and this past weekend led the team with a goal and four assists for five points in the win and tie. The Purple Knights can score but if they really want to show off to the rest of the league they are going to need to tighten up the defensive zone a little bit and they will be in every game. The prior weekend, St. Mike’s defeated Colby by a 5-2 score before dropping a close one to a hilly touted and ranked Bowdoin squad by a score of 6-5.
    This weekend finds the Purple Knights on the road again in Connecticut to take on Trinity and Wesleyan – two teams like themselves that are trying to make a move in the second half.
    Cardinals Win, Cardinals Win!!!
    Since 1973, that’s right 1973, Wesleyan has never defeated Middlebury in a hockey game – 0 for 35. Well now it’s a one game winning streak as Wesleyan defeated Middlebury on the road this past weekend led by sophomore John Guay’s two goals including the game winner in OT.
    After building leads of 2-0 and 3-2, the Cardinals were not undone by the Panther’s rallying back to tie the game in the third period and sending it to a five minute overtime session. Just 31 seconds into the extra session Guay won it and the 0 for 35 streak was snapped.
    The Cardinals have been playing them tight recently as four of their last five games have gone into overtime including Friday night’s 3-2 loss at Williams. just a little more offense and Wesleyan has the style to play well when playoff time rolls around.

    UNH-Quinnipiac women’s game postponed

    The New Hampshire-Quinnipiac women’s game scheduled for tonight at Quinnipiac has been postponed due to inclement weather.

    The game has been re-scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 8  at 7 p.m. at the TD Bank Sports Center in Hamden, Conn.

    Weekend Rewind Jan. 17

    Fit To Be Tied (or split)

    It’s amazing to me how many of the top teams tied actual games over the past weekend or tied a season series.

    Norwich ended up garnering a season series split with Plattsburgh with a 3-1 win over the Cardinals on Wednesday at the Ronald B. Stafford Ice Arena. The Cadets then ended up tying Salve Regina 1-1 on Saturday, despite outshooting the Seahawks 42-11.

    In a rare East/West crossover game, Gustavus Adolphus and Trinity tied 0-0 and then the Bantams beat St. Thomas 4-2 the next night. Trinity fared much better on its Minnesota trip than fellow NESCAC foe Amherst did two seasons ago when the Lord Jeffs lost both matchups.

    Lake Forest and Wis. Superior tied, as well as Adrian and Wis. Stevens Point. But, the biggest tie out in the West came Saturday when St. Norbert put the first chink in Wis. River Falls’ armor by tying the Falcons 1-1 and putting the first blemish on their record.

    In the NESCAC, conference heavyweights and archrivals Amherst and Middlebury split their pair of games. Middlebury blanked Amherst 3-0 on Friday night before the Lord Jeffs returned the favor with a 2-1 win on Saturday.

    Oswego and Neumann split their season series as the Lakers continue to make strides towards a breakout season. Saturday’s win at Neumann was the Lakers first win ever against the Ice Knights after dropping the previous nine meetings.

    My point in all of this is that once again we have even more proof of how much the Division III women’s game is growing. Five years ago, you didn’t have this many teams that could beat or tie each other on any given night.

    Outside of RIT, who has shown absolutely no let up so far, there is parity across the country in every league. The Tigers will get a stern test this weekend though when they host No. 4 Plattsburgh for a pair of ECAC West games that could for all intent and purposes lock up ECAC West hosting rights for RIT.

    If RIT gets through this weekend unscathed, they’ll hold a stranglehold on the ECAC West top spot and all roads will run through the Frank Ritter Memorial Arena for not only the conference championship, but probably the Frozen Four as well.

    Player of the Week – Steph Moon, Plattsburgh

    Steph, a senior forward from Pittsburgh, Pa. was a part of five of the six goals that the Cardinals scored against Buffalo State this past weekend. Moon recorded five assists and is tied for the national lead with 20 assists.

    Rookie of the Week – Allie Tanzer, Wis. Stevens Point

    Allie, a freshman forward from Chippewa Falls, Wis. tallied her first career hat trick to lead Wis. Stevens Point to a 4-1 win over Adrian on Sunday after the two teams tied 1-1 on Saturday. Tanzer has 13 goals and seven assists on the season for 20 points.

    Goalie of the Week – Kaley Gibson, St. Norbert

    Kaley, a freshman from Glendale, Ariz. Stopped 44 shots to backstop SNC to a 1-1 tie against Wis. River Falls and put the first blemish in the Falcons’ record in 14 games. Gibson made 39 saves in Friday’s 3-1 loss to River Falls. She is 4-4-1 on the season with a 1.79 goals against average and a .947 save percentage.

    The weekend that was: Week 15

    On the fly

    Friday, January 14

    Rensselaer 1 at Cornell 5

    Senior Joe Devin’s sixth goal of the year with 6:05 to play in the second period opened the Big Red floodgates, as Cornell scored four straight to break a 1-1 draw and secure the Red their first three-game winning streak of the year. Classmate Tyler Roeszler scored twice, fellow senior Mike Devin potted a goal, as did freshman Rodger Craig. Junior Mike Garman (21 saves) out-dueled RPI junior Allen York (22 stops), who was replaced with sophomore Bryce Merriam (one save) after Cornell’s fifth goal. Senior Tyler Helfrich managed the ‘Tute’s only score – on the power play early in the second period – as RPI surrendered a season-high number of goals (tied, with its 6-5 win over UConn in late November).

    Union 2 at Colgate 1

    Sophomore Wayne Simpson and rookie Josh Jooris put Union ahead by two, and the Dutchmen held on late to earn their first win in Hamilton since 1998. Soph Keith Kinkaid made 24 saves for lucky win No. 13, while frosh Eric Mihalik fell to 0-5-0 despite 22 stops on 24 shots. Raiders rookie Jack McNamara scored in the game’s 49th minute, but his side couldn’t find the equalizer in a program record-tying eighth consecutive loss.

    St. Lawrence 4 at Michigan Tech 4 (ot)

    Once senior Aaron Bogosian tied the game at one apiece, the Saints appeared to have the game in hand with 2-1 and 4-2 leads. Unfortunately, two Huskies goals late in the second period deadlocked the game for good as SLU’s winless skid hit three games (0-2-1). Sophomore Kyle Flanagan scored twice (once on the power play and once short-handed), and senior Jared Keller accounted for the other goal in support of rookie Matt Weninger (39 saves, including four in overtime).

    Saturday, January 15

    Brown 2 at Yale 5

    The top-ranked Bulldogs blanked the potent Brown power play (0/4) while scoring twice in eight of their own advantages to tame the Bears. The game was a 2-2 thriller into the third period, until two goals 4:04 apart – by sophomore Andrew Miller and junior Brian O’Neill – busted the game open. Soph Josh Balch added the insurance empty-netter, while senior Broc Little and Clinton Bourbonais scored early for the Blue. Bruno rookie Michael Juola opened the game with his first collegiate goal, while senior Harry Zolnierczyk’s 10th of the year drew the game even at two just before the game’s midway point. Yale senior Ryan Rondeau became the nation’s last undefeated goaltender (14-0-0) with 22 saves, while Brown junior Mike Clemente was peppered with 39 shots (of which he saved 35).

    St. Lawrence 6 at Michigan Tech 0

    The Saints fought through two early penalty kills to take a 2-0 lead after the first period, and never looked back en route to a blowout road win. Bogosian and frosh Greg Carey each scored a pair, and were joined by juniors Peter Child and Jacob Drewiske in the goal department. Weninger stopped all 22 shots on goal for his second shutout, as SLU matched its season high for goals and set a new standard for margin of victory.

    Dartmouth 5 vs. New Hampshire 4 (Verizon Wireless Arena; Manchester, N.H.)

    An early 1-0 lead was the only edge UNH held all night, but that’s not to say that the win came easy for the Big Green. Dartmouth held 2-1, 3-2 and 4-3 leads before junior Doug Jones’ third goal of the year with 1:11 to play finally went unanswered. Senior Scott Fleming converted on Dartmouth’s only power play of the night late in the first period to draw the game even, 1-1, and seniors Rob Smith and Joe Stejskal and sophomore Dustin Walsh accounted for the Green’s other goals. Junior James Mello made 34 saves for his eighth win of the year and Dartmouth’s third straight; the RiverStone Cup resides in Hanover once more for the first time since 2008.

    Harvard 2 at Boston University 5

    The Crimson’s 0/4 power play also allowed a back-breaking shorthanded goal in the game’s 34th minute, as Harvard fell for the 11th time in 12 games (1-11-0). Sophomore Marshall Everson and junior Ryan Grimshaw did what they could for the road team, but it wasn’t enough for senior Kyle Richter (32 saves) and the Crimson.

    Rensselaer 2 at Colgate 1 (ot)

    The Raiders lost in true gut-punch fashion, as RPI senior Chase Polacek beat Mihalik (18 saves) on an overtime penalty shot to boost the Engineers and crush Colgate. The result of junior defenseman Kevin McNamara’s desperation hook, Polacek’s goal ensured two points for RPI despite matching its total for fewest goals in a weekend (three, matched by the season-opening weekend at Colorado College) all year. Senior Joel Malchuk opened the scoring with the Engineers’ other goal and York stopped 29 of 30; senior Francois Brisebois earned the Raiders’ lone goal as Colgate set a new program low with its program-record ninth loss in a row and 16th loss in 17 games (1-16-0).

    Union 5 at Cornell 1

    The Dutchmen peppered Cornell rookie Andy Iles (35 saves) and Garman (one save) with 42 shots, while holding the Big Red to only 17 SOG of its own in extending their season-long win streak to four games. Joe Devin scored the game’s first goal only 76 seconds into the action, but it proved to be the only sniff Cornell would get against Kinkaid (16 saves) and Union. Simpson scored again for the visitors, as did rookie Daniel Carr (twice), classmate Kevin Sullivan, and senior Brock Matheson (his first of the year). Union scored twice on four power-play opportunities as well, and beat Cornell at Lynah Rink for the first time in three years.

    Sunday, January 16

    Yale 2 at Brown 3

    Zolnierczyk scored on a breakaway with only 46 seconds left in regulation to lift Bruno to its first-ever win over a No. 1 team. Yale took 1-0 and 2-1 leads as play progressed, but frosh Garnet Hathaway’s third goal of the year tied the game in the 54th minute before Zolnerczyk brought it home for the nearly 1,500 in attendance at Meehan Arena. O’Neill and senior Denny Kearney each scored on the power play for Yale, and Rondeau’s reign as the nation’s only unbeaten goalie was shockingly brief despite 22 saves. Jack Maclellan scored Brown’s first goal 27 seconds into the second period to tie the game, 1-1, and Clemente stopped 27 of 29 in Brown’s stunning first home win of the year (1-3-2).

    Quinnipiac 7 at Canisius 3

    Quinnipiac jumped on the Griffins with four goals in the first period, and six Bobcats went on to score in the rout. Freshman Cory Hibbeler scored his first collegiate goal, classmates Connor and Kellen Jones each lit the lamp as well, as did sophomores Jeremy Langlois, Zach Davies, and junior Scott Zurevinski in QU’s fourth win in six games (4-1-1). Soph Eric Hartzell saved 16 of 18 before being replaced by senior Pat McGann (one save). The ‘Cats’ seven goals set a new season high for the team, as did the four-goal margin of victory.

    Monday, January 17

    Quinnipiac 2 at Canisius 2 (ot)

    Despite out-shooting the Griffins 44-21, the Bobcats needed sophomore Zach Currie’s 57th-minute score to knot the game and earn the road draw. Currie’s goal was his first of the season, and followed Langlois’ 11th of the year in support of Hartzell (19 saves). Despite the lopsided tie, QU improved to 4-1-2 since the holiday break and 7-4-1 in non-conference play.

    In retrospect…

    Prediction precision: Me: 9-1-2 this week, 91-45-15 (.652) overall.

    Benjamin Davis: 8-2-2

    Peter Jasinski: 7-3-2

    We still have the Harvard at Northeastern game to go on Wednesday, and Mr. Davis and I picked opposing sides. Will I finally defeat my nemesis, or will he crush my outstanding week with a last-second equalizer?

    Or does anyone else even care?

    Guest guessers: 69-45-12 (.595)

    Head to head: Sullivan 6, Guests 4*. (I have six now, because I beat Mr. Jasinski. Wee!)

    Keep up with me on Twitter, if you like. Rumor has it USCHO will be finding a place to list all of its beloved staffers’ Twitter feeds on the site, so I’ve got that going for me.

    SUNYAC Wrapup: Jan. 17

    Morrisville Splits with ECAC West Foe
    The team nobody wants to play, Morrisville, split with Neumann, with the loss coming in overtime.
    The first night, Morrisville cruised to a 4-1 victory. After letting up a goal 3:23 into the game, the Mustangs wound up outshooting Neumann, 42-27, scoring two goals in the second (Derek Matheson and Jonathan Cristini) and two in the third (Brent Quinn and Geoff Matzel).
    Colin Breen started in net, making 12 saves, before being replaced by Caylin Relkoff who made 14 saves.
    The next day, Neumann came back fighting hard. After taking a 1-0 lead, Bobby Cass tied it on a power play just before the first period ended. Neumann again took the lead, and again Cass tied it on a power play. Rob Sgarbossa gave Morrisville a 2-1 lead, with Cass getting an assist, but Neumann tied it just before the second period ended.
    A scoreless third period meant overtime, where Neumann got the game winner with 32 seconds left on the power play. Relkoff made 35 saves.
    Fredonia, Buffalo State Sweep
    The two Western New York schools had no problems against their weaker competition.
    Buffalo State beat Johnson and Wales in the first game, 5-1, thanks to four third period goals. Trevor McKinney got one in the first while Johnson and Wales tied it up in the second. Then McKinney again, followed by Nick Petriello, Justin Knee, and Eric Bajc put the game away. Kevin Carr made 20 saves.
    The second game, Carr got the shutout with 29 saves in a 7-0 romp. Drew Klin scored twice with the other goals registered by Knee, Jim Durham, Petriello, Mike Zannella, and Kyle Granville.
    Fredonia also scored seven goals in their first game against Franklin Pierce, winning 7-2, and outshooting the Ravens, 56-19. Franklin Pierce did take 1-0 and 2-1 leads before Fredonia put the game away thanks to two goals within 44 seconds and a short-handed score by Chris LaBella. Jordan Oye (2-2-4), Bryan Ross (2-1-3), and Alex Morton (0-3-3) led the way.
    The Blue Devils won the second game, 6-2, in a much closer shot advantage of 30-29. Bryan Ross got four assists along with a goal and Morton got two goals and two assists. Fredonia broke a 2-1 game open early in the second, scoring at the 12 (Oye) and 32 (Chris de Bruyn) second marks.
    Tough Loss for Geneseo
    Things were looking good for the Ice Knights, as they led Elmira, 3-1, after the first period. Elmira scored first and then Stefan Decosse, Jake Yard, and Jimmy Powers, the latter two on the power play, turned the game around. The Ice Knights outshot Elmira in the first, 21-7.
    However, Geneseo couldn’t hold on, letting one up in the second and two in the third for the 4-3 loss, despite outshooting Elmira, 38-29. Adrian Rubeniuk lost for the first time this year in goal.
    This loss may be a significant blow to Geneseo’s chances of landing a Pool C slot in the NCAA tournament.
    Other Highlights
    – Geneseo stomped Western New England, 9-1. Michael Forgione was the only multiple goal scorer with two.
    – Potsdam shutout Southern New Hampshire, 6-0, as Kevin McFarland only needed 14 saves. The Bears unleashed 57 shots as Fraser Smith scored twice.
    – Plattsburgh got their game against Williams off to a quick start with Ryan Corry scoring 19 seconds in. Ryan Craig made it 2-0 before the Ephs scored. Dan Sliasis notched one in the second, Dylan Clarke scored in the third, and Ryan Farnan got an empty netter. Josh Leis made 24 saves.
    SUNYAC Players of the Week (selected by the conference)
    Player of the Week: Bobby Cass, Morrisville (F, Sr., Burlington, Ontario) was involved in each scoring play for the Mustangs in the 4-3 overtime loss to Neumann College. Cass tallied two power-play goals to even the score each time against the Knights. He assisted on the other Morrisville score in the second period to give the Mustangs their only lead of the game.
    Rookie and Goaltender of the Week: Kevin Carr, Buffalo State (Unionville, Ontario) led Buffalo State to a 2-1 week. He stopped 69 of 72 shots faced in the three-game stretch, playing 182 minutes between the pipes. Carr posted 20 saves in the 2-1 overtime loss to Hobart and then followed up with 20 and 29 saves, respectively in back-to-back games against Johnson and Wales. He earned his second career shutout in the second game against the Wildcats.
    Last week’s selections
    Player of the Week: Ian Finnerty, Brockport (F, Jr., Ardmore, Penn.) notched three goals and six assists in a 2-1 week for Brockport. In a 9-6 win against Western New England Friday, Finnerty figured in six of the Golden Eagles’ nine goals, tallying two goals and four assists. It was the first time a Brockport player had six points in a game since 2000. In Saturday’s action, he contributed two more assists. Earlier in the week, he scored a goal against Hobart. The nine-point week brought his season point total to 20.
    Co-Rookie of the Week: Joe Reagan, Brockport (G, Yonkers, N.Y.) stopped 20 shots and did not allow a goal in 32 minutes against Hobart Tuesday. He then went 2-0 against Western New England over the weekend. In the two games against the Golden Bears, Reagan made a combined 43 saves. For the week, he finished with a .926 save percentage and 2.13 goals-against average.
    Co-Rookie of the Week: Rich Manley, Geneseo (F, Buffalo, N.Y.) doubled his season point total to 16 after an eight-point weekend in two Geneseo wins against Franklin Pierce. In Friday’s 8-2 win, he tallied a goal and three assists. In Saturday’s 5-1 win, Manley figured in four of Geneseo’s five goals, netting two goals and two assists. He was also credited with the game-winning goal.
    Goaltender of the Week: Josh Leis, Plattsburgh (So., Kitchener, Ontario) helped lead Plattsburgh to a 1-0-1 week against strong competition, including a win against No. 7 Norwich on Tuesday. Leis made 27 saves as the Cardinals defeated the defending national champion Cadets, 7-4. In a 2-2 tie Saturday against Elmira, Leis stopped 25 shots, including a combined 16 in the third period and overtime. Leis is 9-1-1 on the season.

    Weekend wrap-up 1/17

    It was East vs. West last weekend with five two-game series played, each pitting a team from the East scheduling pod against the West. The West came out on top, sweeping three series and taking three points in another.

    Only the Army at Air Force series resulted in a split, with the Falcons taking a commanding 5-1 win on Friday and Army getting off to a fast start on Saturday and withstanding two Air Force comebacks for a 5-4 win.

    Bentley was the only other East pod team to get a point, as the Falcons opened a 3-1 lead over Rochester Institute of Technology and then settled for a 3-3 tie on Saturday. The Tigers won 4-1 the night before.

    Niagara cut into RIT’s lead in the AHA standings by sweeping American International 3-2 and 3-1.  Bryan Hacyk (4) and Paul Zanette (2) accounted for all of the Purple Eagles’ goals.

    Robert Morris kept pace with a 3-1, 4-2 sweep of Connecticut. Nathan Longpre had a goal and an assist in each game.

    Mercyhurst took all four points from Holy Cross, with both games going down to the wire. The Lakers won 3-1 on Friday with an empty net goal, and needed a comeback and overtime to get a 3-2 win on Saturday.

    In non-conference play that included a rare Monday afternoon game (hence the lateness of this blog entry) Canisius dropped a 7-3 contest to Quinnipiac on Sunday and then tied the Bobcats 2-2 on Monday thanks to a 42-save performance from Golden Grifffins goaltender Tony Capobianco.

    How’d I do?

    My guest analyst Nate Lull and I both had good weekends, which yours truly coming out on top 9-1-2 to Nate’s 7-3-2. I improved to 70-41-13 on the season and am now 7-4 so far picking against my guests.

    Want to challenge me? Drop me a line.

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