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Dec. 13 – Weekend Rewind

To say that parity has swept the D-III women’s hockey world by storm is an understatement. After the first semester, three teams are left undefeated and then there is a pack of 10 or so teams that have all had impressive victories to date and can be considered contenders to make the NCAA Tournament.

Just in the last weekend, Elmira and Plattsburgh split after Plattsburgh came in undefeated and Elmira was having an average year to date by the Soaring Eagles’ standards. Norwich lost to Trinity and then two days later avenged its loss from last year’s national championship by beating Amherst 5-2. Adrian split with .500 Concordia (Wisc.) and Cortland won its first game of the year against Utica after the Pioneers played two close games with Elmira last weekend.

Meanwhile, RIT and River Falls have asserted theirselves as the team’s to beat in their respective regions as they both carry undefeated records into the holiday break. RIT (13-0-0, 8-0-0 ECAC West) finished up its first semester schedule with a 7-1 win over Hamilton, while River Falls (10-0-0, 6-0-0 NCHA) affirmed its title as the team to beat in the West with a 4-2 win over Gustavus Adolpus.

Middlebury is also undefeated with a 6-0-0 record, but the Panthers have only played one team with a winning record so far in Bowdoin. They’ll get their first major tests right at the start of the second semester on Jan. 2 and 3 when they play Elmira and then either Amherst or Plattsburgh at the Cardinal-Panther Classic in Plattsburgh, N.Y.

Player of the Week – Sophie Leclerc, Norwich

Leclerc scored the game-tying goal to help spark Norwich’s run of four third-period unanswered goals to rally past Amherst 5-2 in a rematch of last year’s National Championship game. Leclerc also scored the fourth goal, which gave the Cadets some breathing room. The senior captain also scored the Cadets’ lone goal in Friday’s 2-1 loss at Trinity. She is tied for the nation scoring lead with 11 goals and 10 assists for 21 points along with RIT’s Katie Stack.

Goalie of the Week – Laura Sullivan, Elmira

Laura, a sophomore from Toronto, Ont. made 25 saves to help backstop Elmira to a 3-2 win over Plattsburgh on Saturday. She made 36 saves the next night to help the Soaring Eagles stay in contention in a 2-1 loss to Plattsburgh. Sullivan is 7-3-1 on the season with a 1.44 goals against average and a .937 save percentage.

Rookie of the Week – Henriette Ostergaard, St. Norbert

Henriette, a freshman from Herning, Denmark scored four goals and added an assist in a 10-1 win against Marian. She then followed up with a goal in the second game, a 8-0 win over the Sabres. Ostergaard has six goals and three assists on the season for nine points.

This week I’ll be handing out my mid-season awards in my column and then I’ll be taking a few weeks off for the holidays before returning in late December/early January for the Panther-Cardinal Classic Preview.

MCHA, MIAC, and NCHA Roundup: Dec. 13

UW-Superior’s Stauber collects 200th victory
UW-Superior Coach Dan Stauber notched his 200th coaching victory in a fashion that was emblematic of his 11 years at the helm.

After losing Friday’s contest to visiting St. Scholastica, No. 15 Wisconsin-Superior showed resiliency by bouncing back to win Saturday’s rematch 7-3. Such consistency has been the hallmark of Yellowjacket teams during Stauber’s tenure.

The No. 15 Yellowjackets (8-4-1, 6-2 NCHA) erupted for four goals in the third period to knock off the upset-minded Saints, who had won 3-1 the previous

Dan Stauber

night.

The milestone was on the players’ minds, the coach said.

“They were aware of it,” said Stauber, who dined out with his family to celebrate. “Like I told them, I’m a pretty humble guy … It sounds like a cliche, but coaches don’t win hockey games, players do.”

In 11 years at UW-Superior, Stauber has compiled a 200-67-42 record, which includes an NCAA National Championship in 2002. His teams have also won two NCHA regular-season titles and three playoff crowns.

Stauber assumed the UW-Superior head coaching role in 2000, succeeding Steve Nelson.

In Stauber’s first season, the Yellowjackets set school records for most wins in a season (30) and longest unbeaten streak (23 games). Stauber, who played four years at UW-Superior, served as an assistant under Nelson for two seasons and coached six years in high school circles, including at his alma mater, Duluth (Minn.) Denfeld. He was also an assistant at UW-Eau Claire for a season.

“At each milestone, you do remember the players who were on those teams,” Stauber said.

The veteran coach won’t likely forget the four-goal outburst in Saturday’s third period.

Talon Berlando scored twice – one a short-handed effort and the other a power-play tally- while Tom Budziakowski and Josh Kesler also netted goals during the span.

The Yellowjackets led 3-1 going into the final frame on goals by Tyler Klein, Colton Kennedy and Pat Dalbec. Goalie Drew Strandberg turned away 22 of 25 shots for his fifth win of the season.

Carter David, Alex Valenti and Tyler Miller scored for St. Scholastica, which was outshot 31-25.

The Yellowjackets also revived their dormant power play, going two-for-four in man-advantage situations. The team’s power play was an anemic 8-of-68 going into Saturday.

The team remains in second place behind No. 2 St. Norbert. To maintain that position, the team’s power play needs to run more efficiently, the coach said.

“Our penalty kill has been pretty good, but our power play has been brutal,” Stauber said. “When we look at the games we have lost lost, if we had just one power-play goal …. those losses could have been wins.”

Stauber credits the hard work of his youthful charges for the team’s Top-15 ranking. The squad had only two seniors, forward Matt Wiest and Berlando, in the lineup Saturday.

“It’s good leadership and our youth working extremely hard: That’s what I attribute to the early success,” Stauber said.

Snow and streaks fall
Two words could sum up the weekend in D-III Western region circles: flakes and breaks.

Heavy snow postponed Saturday’s Wisconsin-River Falls-Wisconsin-Stout contest at Dunn County Ice Arena in Menomonie, Wis. The game has been rescheduled for Jan. 10.

In terms of breaks, as in shattering things, Wisconsin-Stevens Point halted a seven-game losing skid with a 3-2 victory over No. 14 Wisconsin-Eau Claire Saturday while No. 8 Milwaukee School of Engineering’s nine-game undefeated run was shattered in a 2-1 loss to St. Thomas on Friday.

In Saturday’s rematch, MSOE (9-1) avoided a sweep when Ben Lauder’s goal 1:53 into overtime lifted the Raiders to a 5-4 win over the visiting Tommies (8-5). MSOE Michael Thompson’s goal tied the game at 7:39 of the third.

Connor Toomey stopped 19 of 24 shots to earn the win.

No. 6 Gustavus Adolphus solidified its ranking with a weekend sweep over host Finlandia, 3-2 and 4-1. Ryan Johnson, Zach May and Brad Wieck scored for the Gusties in Friday’s win.  On Saturday, Mitch Carlson, Sam Blaisdell, Gustav Bengtson and Brian White scored for Gustavus (9-3-1, 3-2-1).

No. 2 St. Norbert, No. 7 Adrian and No. 12 Hamline were idle.

Weekend wrap up 12/13

As we wind down towards the holiday break, games are getting scarce. There were just four league games played last weekend, with RIT picking up four points in a sweep of Mercyhurst, and Army and Connecticut getting wins in single game affairs.

RIT continued its dominance of Mercyhurst in Erie, expended its unbeaten streak to eight games with a pair of 4-2 wins. Both games were tied at two each going into the third period before the Tigers pulled away. Click on the links to see the box score fromFriday and Saturday.

On Friday, Army picked up its fifth win of the season with a 3-1 win over Bentley, but fell at Union on Saturday.

Sacred Heart’s woes continued, with a pair of blowout losses, first in AHA play to Connecticut and then to Clarkson.

Robert Morris had a successful trip to Alabama, sweeping former CHA rival UAH in a pair of close games, 4-3 and 2-1.

Niagara picked up another non-conference win for the HAA, defeating Colgate 4-3 in overtime, while AIC fell to Union 8-1.

How’d I do?

I had my best week of the season, going 8-1. Guest Analyst Ed Keller also had a good week, going 6-3. I’ve now won the last four matchups in a row and move to 5-4 on the season against my guests.

Hockey East week in review: December 10-12

All but one of the remaining games before the holidays took place this past weekend.  (The lone exception is Vermont at St. Lawrence on Saturday.)

The big winner was New Hampshire, which came from behind to topple Maine at Alfond Arena, 4-3 in overtime.  This has become a huge rivalry so bragging rights all by themselves loomed large but there was even more to this win.
 
The Wildcats needed an extra-attacker goal from Dalton Speelman with 18.3 seconds remaining in regulation to force overtime and then got the game-winner 1:26 in from Jeff Silengo.  So for UNH fans, it was an especially exhilarating win and for Maine fans, a dagger to the heart.

In the bigger picture, the win vaulted the Wildcats to the top of the Hockey East standings.  Technically, they’re tied with idle Boston College at 18 points, but with two games in hand UNH can consider itself on top.  Heading into the break in that position and with an 8-1-2 league record has to be particularly pleasing.

Maine got some of that bad taste out of its mouth on Sunday with a win over Massachusetts, 4-1, led by Brian Flynn’s hat trick.  The Black Bears now reside in fourth place with 14 points, four points out of first place and two points out of third but with two games in hand over BC and third-place BU.

Speaking of the Terriers, they travelled to Spell-Check University, also known as Rensselaer, and got sent back to Boston with their tails between their legs.  A 4-1 loss sends BU into the break with three losses in its last four games.  Since opening the season with a 6-0-1 mark, BU has gone 2-4-4.

In other nonconference games, Providence defeated Quinnipiac, 5-2, to boost its overall record over .500.   Massachusetts-Lowell lost twice at Princeton, falling to 2-14-2.  And Vermont got a much-needed win, its second of the year, defeating Dartmouth, 6-5.  Sebastian Stalberg and Matt Marshall each scored twice in that one.

So other than the afforementioned Vermont – St. Lawrence tilt this weekend, that’s it for games until after final exams and the holidays.

We’ll have more content here in the meantime so keep checking back, but just in case, here’s wishing a Happy Holidays to all of you and thanks for reading.

ECAC East/NESCAC Weekend Wrap-up – December 13, 2010

Oh where, oh where have the super teams gone?

We have just come to the semester break for the holidays and just take a look at the league standings and USCHO Poll – where are the juggernauts this year?

Sure, there are a lot of the usual names up top, like Oswego, St. Norbert and Norwich, but take a good look at the numbers in the loss column; there are very, very few clean slates this season, which speaks volumes about the level of competition across each and every conference.

In the interlocking schedule of the ECAC East and NESCAC, there are only three teams without a loss in league play to date:  Norwich (4-0-1), Amherst (3-0-1) and Williams (4-0-0) haven’t posted an “L” in  conference play yet and only Williams (7-0-1) goes into the break without a loss this season.  In fact, the way the Ephs are playing, they qualify as THE juggernaut this year.

Williams has dominated opponents this year outscoring the opposition by a 38-8 margin overall and 23-2 in conference play.  That’s right, a miniscule half a goal against average per game in league play.  On Sunday night, a Nichols team that has already scored 51 goals in their first 10 games was shutdown in Williamstown by a 3-1 score – a game decided by an empty-net goal. It showed the Ephs can play it uptempo, defensive or any other style that will drive opponents nuts.  With Ryan Purdy posting a .957 save percentage and 0.99 GAA, the rest of the team has to be supremely confident about the opportunity to win games without scoring a lot of goals.  That takes a lot of pressure off the offense, but Williams will still need to improve on it’s 12.5 percent power play conversion rate heading into the New Year.

Another team coming off a rare sweep of the home-and-home intrastate rivalry with Colby is the Bowdoin Polar Bears.  Bowdoin’s only loss is a 7-6 OT thriller at Skidmore, where the Polar Bears scored four unanswered goals in the third period, including an EAG with 50 seconds remaining to force overtime.  Skidmore got the game winner halfway through the extra stanza, but Bowdoin has demonstrated it can score goals and is led by senior defenseman Kyle Shearer-Hardy with 13 points in the first seven games.

In the ECAC East, Norwich sits alone atop the conference standings, having taken last week’s travel partner matchup from St. Michael’s.  Last year’s national tournament star Pierre-Olivier-Cotnoir had four goals and an assist while Scott Schroeder did him one point better with a goal and five assists in the 8-1 romp.  Over the weekend, Norwich played a nonconference game against a familiar league opponent in Castleton and found themselves on the short end of a 3-2 overtime loss.

Castleton my be one of the surprise teams this year.  Currently only 3-2-0 in league play, the Spartans are 6-2-0 overall and their significant improvement in special teams play may be a big reason for the early season success.

The Spartans power play unit was 3-for-3 against Norwich on Saturday night, scoring twice in the third period and once in overtime to upset the Cadets on their home ice.  In fact, team leader Stuart Stefan, with four power-play goals, had only one assist against Norwich, showing the Spartans’ depth upfront.  Moreover, the penalty killing group gave up nothing to the Cadets on five chances, showing the effort that the team has put into the special teams this season.  Through Saturday, Castleton was holding opponents to 11 percent on the penalty kill while scoring at 35 percent on the power play; that will help you win a lot of games.

So it sounds like there are some juggernauts in the making this season and maybe, just maybe, some of the teams have names we might not often associate with the top of the league standings on a regular basis.  A quick look at both conferences shows that there is a lot of balance and the teams that play with consistency and get on a solid run can move up quickly in the standings.

As we head into the break, the ECAC East has four teams with winning records, three with losing records and three at .500 for the season. Just two points, one win, separate the second place team from the eighth place team in the league.

On the NESCAC front, five teams have winning records heading into the break, four have losing records and one team is at .500.  Only four points separate fourth place from the bottom of the standings, and it would seem unlikely that teams like Middlebury, Trinity and Colby won’t play better in the second half.

So enjoy the holidays, hope that Santa delivers that missing ingredient your team needs most to have a great New Year and get ready for what will be one of the most interesting seasons in recent memory.  If the first half has shown anything, it’s that anything can and will happen in these conferences this year and anybody has a chance to win it all.

Speaking of winning it all, my prognostications finally got above .500 after this last weekend.  Having gone 6-3-0, I head into the break at 34-33-6 (.507) overall and hopefully on an upswing.  While the teams have started to show what they are about this year, I am not guaranteeing the second half is going to be any easier to predict, but I am sure it will be fun trying.

Happy Holidays to All!

The weekend that was: Week 11

On the fly

Friday, December 10

American Int’l 1 at Union 8

The Dutchmen boasted as many multi-point scorers as they did goals in the blowout, with sophomore Jeremy Welsh leading the way with a hat trick. Senior Justin Pallos scored twice, and frosh Mat Bodie, sophomore Wayne Simpson and junior Kelly Zajac also chipped in with solo goals. Senior netminder Corey Milan stopped 14 of 15 in 45:29 for his first win of the season; rookie Troy Grosenick got clean-up duty with four saves in just under 15 minutes of relief.

Mass.-Lowell 2 at Princeton 5

The Tigers came back from 1-0 and 2-1 deficits, ultimately out-shooting UML 45-18 and scoring four straight to close out the win. Rookie left-winger Andrew Ammon made a big splash in only his sixth NCAA game, earning a natural hat trick in only 6:32 late in the third period with even-strength and game-winning, power-play, and shorthanded (albeit into an empty net) goals – his first three goals of his career. Classmate Jack Berger scored his first collegiate goal as well, and senior Matt Arhontas added to his team-leading goal total with his seventh in support of freshman Sean Bonar (16 saves).

Saturday, December 11

Quinnipiac 2 at Providence 5

The Friars scored first late in the opening frame, and QU never managed to pull even. Sophomore Ben Arnt and junior Yuri Bouharevich potted goals for the Bobcats, but four goals against freshman Eric Hartzell (19 saves) in 40 minutes spelled defeat in Providence. Senior Pat McGann stopped 10 of 11 in his first appearance of the season.

Boston University 1 at Rensselaer 4

The Engineers special teams ran BU ragged in Troy, opening with a shorty and scoring on three of 10 power plays to frustrate the Terriers. The seniors did the legwork for RPI, as classmates Chase Polacek, Joel Malchuk, Tyler Helfrich and Bryan Brutlag lit the lamp; junior Allen York made 28 saves for his eighth victory of the year. The teams combined for 99 minutes of penalties, 65 served by the visitors as tempers flared leading into the final horn.

Army 2 at Union 6

The Dutchmen improved on the best power-play percentage in the country, scoring all six goals on nine advantages. Freshman Daniel Carr notched a hat trick with one goal each period, junior Luke Cain added a pair, and Bodie scored once more in front of sophomore Keith Kinkaid (16 stops). Union out-shot the Black Knights 53-18 and remained unbeaten at home in eight games (7-0-1).

Niagara 4 at Colgate 3 (ot)

The Purple Eagles out-shot the Raiders 19-4 in the third period to force overtime, and the visitors’ only shot of extra hockey eluded junior Alex Evin (39 saves) to drop Colgate. Senior Francois Brisebois did his part for the home side, scoring twice and adding a helper on sophomore Thomas Larkin’s second-period strike, but it wasn’t quite enough as ‘Gate dropped its eighth of nine (1-8-0).

Mass.-Lowell 2 at Princeton 7

The Tigers jumped out to a 2-0 lead by the game’s seventh minute and never looked back, going 3/5 on the power play and rifling 41 shots on the beleaguered RiverHawks. Rookie Matt Farris, soph Rob Kleebaum and junior Derrick Pallis each scored twice for the Stripes and senior Tylor Fedun chipped in another; sophomore Mike Condon made 24 saves in Princeton’s third straight W. The Tigers pinned a dozen goals on UML on the weekend and scored 17 in their last three games.

Sunday, December 12

Vermont 6 at Dartmouth 5

The ostensibly superb junior goalie James Mello had an off-night to beat all off-nights, allowing three goals on three shots in 7:46 against Vermont before being replaced by classmate Jody O’Neill (18 saves on 21 shots). That could have set the tone for the game, but instead the story of the night was the tug-of-war that ensued for the lead. The Big Green actually held a 5-4 lead for 9:30 in the third period before the Catamounts took it right back, scoring twice in 2:34 to stun the hosts. Junior Nick Walsh and senior Adam Estoclet scored a pair apiece, and freshman Matt Lindblad found the net as well for his team-leading 13th point. The loss snapped a three-game winning streak for the Green, and also concluded a string of seven consecutive outings allowing two goals or fewer.

Clarkson 9 at Sacred Heart 2

The Golden Knights went 2/7 on the power play and senior Brandon DeFazio earned a hat trick in Clarkson’s fourth straight win and sixth victory in seven games (6-1-0). Frosh Will Frederick, sophomore Nik Pokulok, juniors Jake Morley and Nick Tremblay and seniors Scott Freeman and Bryan Rufenach each beat the ‘keeper too, all in support of junior goalie Paul Karpowich (27 saves). The Knights are 4/17 on the power play in their last four games, finally elevating their season’s percentage into double-digits (10.4 percent) after starting the year 3/50.

In retrospect…

Prediction precision: Me: 8-1-0 this week: Damn you, Vermont. 61-29-11 (.658) overall.
Tom Rodbell: 6-3-0.

Guest guessers: 38-31-6 (.547)

Head to head: Sullivan 5, Guests 2*

Who’s next? [email protected] for your shot.

Read all about my frustration at Time-Warner’s play-by-play guy! Only at SullivanHockey on Twitter.

Weekend work-up: Dec. 13, 2010

Thank you Nanooks and Bulldogs. Thank you. While I realize that neither of you is entirely pleased with last weekend’s split, you did win on the nights that I picked for each of you to win. Two other series split with each team winning on nights opposite of my picks for their wins. You’d think they’d have a little consideration for this lowly CCHA reporter, but no.
But no.
Three of the four full weekend series in the CCHA split Dec. 10-12 – which is no surprise, given how the first half of this season progressed. In addition to the Alaska-Ferris State series, the Lakers and Broncos split in Kalamazoo and the Wildcats and Fighting Irish split in South Bend. The Buckeyes swept Bowling Green, marking OSU’s first regular-season sweep of a CCHA opponent since they swept, well, Bowling Green Jan. 8-9, 2010.
And then the Wolverines blanked the Spartans, 5-0. You may have heard something about that game.
The shuffle at the top of the standings
Miami had the weekend off, so that gave Michigan and Notre Dame a chance to gain some ground and they did.
Notre Dame is the new top team in the conference with 29 points, followed by second-place Michigan (28) and third-place Miami (27). The Fighting Irish could have distanced themselves a bit with a sweep in South Bend, but Northern Michigan had other thoughts. Saturday, the Wildcats led 3-0 going into the third, but the Irish scored twice – and, not surprisingly, David Gerths and T.J. Tynan did the scoring – to bring the final score to 3-2.
In that contest, NMU sophomore Brian Nugent doubled his goal output from a year ago by netting his second goal of the season in the second period, and that held up to be the game-winner. Wildcat goaltender freshman Jared Coreau had a herculean effort in net, stopping 51 pucks for his third win of the season.
ND bounced back Sunday to win 5-2, scoring three unanswered goals in the second half of the third period to win the game.
The Wolverines beat the Spartans and soundly, winning 5-0 in The Big Chill in the Big House. There were a couple of notable things about that contest. First, senior UM goaltender Shawn Hunwick was not slated to start. He replaced senior Bryan Hogan, who suffered a significant groin pull in pre-game warm-ups. Even though the two have been splitting time in net this season and Hogan has had the better numbers, it’s impossible not to think about how Hunwick propelled the Wolverines through the late going of 2009-10 after the same injury sidelined Hogan.
Another important thing to note: MSU is now scoreless for the last 136 minutes, 38 seconds of play. The last Spartan to score a goal was captain Torey Krug, at 9:22 in the third period of MSU’s 3-2 win over FSU Dec. 3.
UM freshman defenseman Jon Merrill had the first two goals of the Big Chill game, giving him the game-winner of course. The Wolverine power play, which has been struggling mightily this season, netted three goals.
So the Irish end the first half of CCHA play with the top spot in the league and the Wolverines end on a very high note and with a game in hand on both Notre Dame and Miami.
In the middle
The same three teams that were tied for fourth place last week are tied for fourth again this week, because each split points evenly for the weekend.
Northern Michigan, Alaska and Ferris State came into the weekend with 20 points each; now each has 23. NMU took those three points from ND, an important way to keep pace with the Nanooks and Bulldogs, who split with each other. These teams are just three points behind Miami. NMU has played 13 games, UAF 14 and FSU 15.
In FSU’s 4-2 win Friday, Andy Taranto scored for UAF at 13:33 in the first, but the Bulldogs kept the Nanooks off the scoreboard again until Jarret Granberg scored his third power-play goal of the season at 18:04 in the third to make it a 3-2 game. Junior Jordie Johnston’s (say that three times fast) empty-net goal at 19:39 made it a 4-2 game for FSU. It was Johnston’s second goal of the season, and he’s now one away from equaling his career-high of three from two seasons ago.
As it turns out Taranto was the first and last to score a goal in that series, as he found the net at 3:37 in OT Saturday – on a five-on-three power play – to lift the Nanooks over the Bulldogs for a 4-3 win. If it weren’t for Nik Yaremchuk’s goal to tie it for UAF in the late third period, there would have been no overtime.
Fourth place isn’t the only bottleneck in the CCHA. With their two-game sweep and six points, the Buckeyes lifted themselves into a three-way tie for seventh with Western Michigan and Lake Superior, who split a series with each other. Each team has 17 points; the Buckeyes and Broncos each have two games in hand on the Lakers.
OSU beat Bowling Green, 4-3, in overtime Friday. After trailing 2-0 early in the third OSU netted three unanswered goals. James McIntosh knotted the score for BG at 17:16 in the third, but Danny Dries had the game-winner at 3:54 in OT. The Buckeyes jumped out to a two-goal lead after two in the 4-2 win Saturday.
LSSU and WMU split a pair of decisive victories in Lawson Arena, with the Lakers winning 5-2 Friday and the Broncos 4-1 Saturday. Three goals in the second half of the second period – by Ben Power, Nick McParland and Dan Radke – cemented the game for LSSU Friday. Nick Pisellini started in net for WMU but was replaced by Jerry Kuhn at the start of the third.
The Broncos scored all four of their goals in the third period in Saturday’s win, the first two coming 21 seconds apart, and all four by four different WMU players. Kuhn had the win.
Last and perhaps likely to stay there
I still can’t get over that the Spartans are in 10th place. They’ve played like a next-to-last-place team only a couple of times this season. Saturday in Michigan Stadium was one of them, giving up three power-play goals. While it’s clear that the offense is struggling, the Spartan blue line needs some quiet, seasonal contemplation between now and the Great Lakes Invitational Tournament.
With 10 points, MSU is two points ahead of last-place Bowling Green and the Spartans have two games in hand on both the Falcons the Lakers directly ahead of them.
The Falcons – well, let’s just say that Chris Bergeron is doing what he can. The sweep at the hands of Ohio Start was the fourth time this season that BG hasn’t earned points in a two-game set against a CCHA opponent. Bergeron and his staff inherited a program that needs rebuilding from the bottom up. I know they’re up to the task, but it makes for some pretty painful hockey this season. There are valiant players at BG who will reap few immediate rewards this year. A few years from now, though, they may be able to look back on this 2010-11 season and know that whatever success came to Bowling Green after this year did so in part because of their efforts in a tough season of hockey.
How did I do?
December has been painful. I went 4-5-0 for the weekend, in large part for having called two series splits the wrong way.
And my condolences
I am saddened by the passing of UAH athletic director, Jim Harris, who died of a heart attack Dec. 11. He was 63.
I had the pleasure of talking with him through the process of UAH’s application to the CCHA. The outcome wasn’t what Harris desired or even expected; I was very lucky, however, to have been able to spend a little time on the phone with him. He was a nice man, and one whose enthusiasm for Chargers hockey was unsurpassed.
My deepest sympathies to Harris’s family and friends, and everyone in Huntsville who is touched by his death.

Weekend of Dec. 9-12

Despite being an all-league weekend, it was still kind of odd – a Thursday/Friday series, games being postponed due to snow … crazy.

Speaking of that snow … if any of you in Minnesota want to ship that out here to Colorado, it would be much appreciated. Thanks.

– Michigan Tech may be scrappy, but they’ve got to generate more offense if they want to improve in the standings. The Huskies were outshot 84-38 this weekend, with the worst of it coming on Thursday, when UNO won the shots battle 53-19.

– While it’s nice to the Mavericks stop their little slide, it’s not nice to see the Huskies continue theirs.

– Sometimes, in a post-game interview, one coach will say something that will spawn a reactionary question to the other coach. For example: Coach A says it was a dead-even game (something you may not agree with). Therefore, you ask Coach B if he agrees with Coach A. Sometimes you get good responses; sometimes you don’t. USCHO arena reporter Matthew Semisch used this tactic on Saturday and I kind of like the responses.
“I thought our guys deserved two points tonight,” Tech coach Jamie Russell told Semisch. “That’s not to take anything from UNO, because I thought they played great in both games, but with the courage and determination that our guys played with, the adversity we’ve faced with all our injuries and players playing hurt, they sucked it up … our guys battled their butts off, especially tonight.”
Then, he presumably asks Dean Blais if he agrees with Russell’s assessment, despite the fact that UNO won 3-1.
“I felt bad (for us) after last week and Jamie’s sitting with one win in the league, so I know how he feels. It’s tough, but we had to take care of business here and look out for our team first, but there is sympathy (for MTU). Not pity, because they could’ve won that game tonight and I don’t think they deserved (to win) like Jamie did, but that’s his thoughts. He’s proud of his guys and he should be.”

– The other league Mavericks were unable to keep their momentum from sweeping Minnesota going, getting swept by the rejuvenated Fighting Sioux.

– It wasn’t for lack of trying, though, as MSU got out to an early lead each night; the team just couldn’t hold it. Fellow columnist Tyler Buckentine called it a weekend of missed opportunities for MSU.

– Looking at the flip side of the coin, it was a great weekend of tenacity for the Fighting Sioux.
“It was a pretty gutsy weekend,” coach Dave Hakstol told Tyler. “We had our ups and downs. Our level of competition was good enough to win in the second and third periods.”

– St. Cloud continues to stumble, as they were swept by CC.

– That being said, CC coach Scott Owens still had high praise for the Huskies after Friday’s 3-0 shut-out.
“This was a good road win,” he told the Colorado Springs Gazette‘s Joe Paisley. “Aren’t they the best 11th-place team you’ve ever seen?”

– It’s no secret that both SCSU goaltenders are struggling, and CC took advantage of it Saturday, scoring two goals 25 seconds apart on Dan Dunn.
“The first 10  minutes we were playing hard, honest hockey,” SCSU coach Bob Motzko told Paisley. “Then all of a sudden they hit a two-run homer and we never got back into the game.”

– Paisley also posted an interesting snow-related tidbit on his blog regarding the officials for the weekend. All four of the officials for the game were Twin Cities-based and all four drove back Friday night, despite the weather forecasts. So, on Saturday, when it came time to travel for the game, the normally 90 minute drive to St. Cloud took the men in stripes five and half hours instead. I think I would have just gotten a hotel.

– The Seawolves’ streak of splits came to an end, as they were able to only manage one point in their weekend series with Denver.

– Interesting to note is that Adam Murray got the start on Friday over Sam Brittain. Part of the decision may have been motivated by the fact that Murray is an Anchorage native.

– Unfortunately for Tom Serratore, who I spoke with last week, his team’s fortunes turned just as quickly, as the Beavers were swept by Wisconsin this weekend.

– The surprise of the weekend was Minnesota, who took three points from Minnesota-Duluth … something I don’t think any of us saw coming.

– For the Gophers, it was good to see Kent Patterson step up and have a good weekend, as he was called the difference-maker in Friday’s game, particularly in the third period.
“Patterson was big for them in the third period; made some huge saves,” UMD coach Scott Sandelin told USCHO’s Brian Halverson. “Give him credit you can’t control that. You can control effort and I thought our guys went out and played a lot harder [in the third period] and gave ourselves a chance.”
“I thought we had a good first period and a good third period but [Patterson] was the difference.”

PairWise, RPI and KRACH: Sorting things out

Yale’s No. 1 ranking in last Monday’s USCHO.com Division I poll certainly generated a lot of  controversy, at least judging by the comments left here on USCHO.

So while it’s probably a bit early to start making brackets for Bridgeport, Manchester, St. Louis and Green Bay, it’s not too early to take a look at the components that make up each ranking system. Perhaps voters will begin taking the computer rankings — at least the “official” PairWise and RPI — into account in making their decisions.

One thing that does bear out the opinions of the poll voters: Yale sits atop both the PairWise and RPI (and the entertainment-only, non-official KRACH.) But the opinions of those who feel Yale hasn’t faced a tough schedule — particularly supporters of Minnesota-Duluth or North Dakota at No. 1 — are also borne out by Yale’s middle-of-the-pack schedule strength.

In any case, with USCHO’s 2010-11 edition of all three computer rankings having been live for the past several days, we thought we’d point readers to the new, improved versions for this year. The biggest addition is the ability to sort columns: clicking on the column headers will allow you to see RPI, PWR or KRACH sorted by various parameters. It should make for some interesting discussions — especially strength of schedule.

Watch for bracketology discussions here on this blog through the latter half of the 2010-11 campaign, and later in the season, columns from our resident bracketologist, Jayson Moy.

By the way, USCHO also publishes a PairWise, RPI and KRACH for women’s D-I hockey, which is now live for 2010-11. For D-III men and women, a PairWise Comparison — showing the raw data used to select teams — and KRACH are published and are also now live. Links to all are found either in our main menu or in the side menus within the rankings section of the site.

UAH athletics director Harris passes away; Bell named interim director

Jim Harris, the athletics director at Alabama-Huntsville since 1995, suffered a heart attack and passed away Saturday night.

Harris was 63.

“Jim Harris was the consummate athletic director in that he always put the welfare of the student athlete first,” said UAH president Dr. David Williams. “Jim created a lot of success for our students not only in their athletic pursuits, but for their success in the classroom as well. He has had a long list of accomplishments and built an excellent program for our university. Jim transformed the quality of our facilities tremendously in the time he served as the university’s athletic director.”

Under Harris’ administration, UAH won two Division II national championships and 12 GSC titles. The Chargers also won College Hockey America titles in 2007 and 2010 and played in the NCAA tournament each of those years, taking No. 1 Notre Dame to double overtime back in 2007.

Harris is survived by his wife, April, who serves as director of alumni relations at UAH, and a son, J.R.

On Monday, Alabama-Huntsville named Antoine Bell interim athletics director. Bell joined the UAH athletics staff in 1998 as sports information director and was later promoted to associate director of athletics for media relations.

No NCAA event has ever packed in as many people as the Big Chill

Some notes from the Big Chill at the Big House:

It’s in the books

The record-breaking crowd of 113,411 inside Michigan Stadium on Saturday did more than set a world record for attendance at a hockey game. It was the largest crowd for an event inside Michigan Stadium, surpassing the attendance of the Sept. 4, 2010, Michigan-Connecticut football game here.

It was also the biggest crowd for any NCAA event, ever.

It was fun, too

It’s hard to put a 5-0 loss into perspective so soon after the end of the game, but Spartans players Torey Krug and Trevor Nill both knew enough to appreciate the game while they were playing it, in spite of the outcome.

World record breaking attendence for a hockey game. (Michael Simari)
The crowd of 113,411 set a Guinness World Record (photo: Michael Simari).

“Obviously, it was a great experience and nobody could have told us what it was going to be like before it happened,” said Krug, the sophomore MSU captain. “Michigan put on a great show. Ten years from now, what I’m still going to remember is that it was the most fun I’ve ever had on an ice rink. You look at these 23-year-old men and they’re like little kids back on the ice, so it was a lot of fun.”

“It was a great experience,” said Nill. “They did a great job setting up the ice. The ice was excellent. I was excited to come out and see 113,000 fans sitting in the crowd. It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, and it’s something I’ll remember.”

Nill said that the start of the game was “surreal.” “It was hard to fathom that there were that many people there.”

Michigan captain and senior Carl Hagelin, who scored twice in the game, said that the announcement of the attendance was a unique moment.

“I think we all got goose bumps,” he said. “The whole crowd was going crazy. You saw Coach clapping his hands. Everyone on the team, we felt great being a part of history. That’s something we’ve got to take with us. We just loved being out there today.”

He added that since Wolverines coach Red Berenson doesn’t emote often on the bench, seeing his coach clap his hands “was a good thing.” The environment was loud, Hagelin said: “It was overwhelming.”

Senior goaltender Shawn Hunwick, who found out 30 minutes before the game that he’d be starting for the Wolverines, had a different perspective on playing in front of the largest crowd in hockey history.

“I really just wanted to make that first save,” Hunwick said. “The crowd? I looked around a bit during TV timeouts, to really soak it up. We’re playing where some of my favorite football players, you know, played. When the play’s going on, you’re looking at the puck. You’re not worrying about the crowd.”

Lost in the crowd …

… might be the fact that it has been 136 minutes, 38 seconds since the Spartans scored. Krug was the last Spartans player to score a goal, at 9:22 of the third period of MSU’s 3-2 win over Ferris State on Dec. 3, 2010, and it was the winner.

It was the third time in the last six games that MSU was been shut out by opponents, and it was not the way the Spartans wanted their first half to end — averaging 2.33 goals per game, tying them with Bemidji State and Bentley as the 47th-best offense in the nation.

Each team had eight shots on goal in the first period, but Spartans coach Rick Comley said that his team came out slow due to factors for which the Spartans couldn’t have prepared.

“I’ve never been in a situation as a hockey coach where the wind impacted the game,” Comley said, “and it was tough skating into the wind. Red and their players said that during the week, that wind was a factor. They played very well and they were the better team tonight, but that was one of the human elements that was out there that was part of it.”

Gallery: Big Chill at the Big House

Photographer Michael Simari captured these images Saturday at Michigan Stadium, where Michigan beat Michigan State 5-0 in the Big Chill at the Big House.

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Video from the Big Chill at the Big House

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Some video from during and after the Big Chill at the Big House on Saturday:
Michigan goaltender Shawn Hunwick, part 1:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGH-GhtvR3E
Hunwick, part 2:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LI9X-TybDI
Michigan coach Red Berenson, part 1:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DgQEMi717Q
Berenson, part 2:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-tsxILuPG-Y
Michigan’s Carl Hagelin, part 1:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zpY_DyVLcIY
Michigan State coach Rick Comley:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vOKtPu-074
The crowd near the end of the game:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXgXH_rzRp0
Announcement of a Guinness World Record:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Kb91tilJU0
Michigan State exits:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npNVur8Gfcs
Michigan exits:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUXo9tHQbRo

An Ivy-Covered Post

I am, of course, well aware that I haven’t had much to say lately about the Hobey Baker race. I find that there isn’t much to say in October and November. Now, however, it’s December, and your humble Hobey pundit has deemed it time to jump back in, so I’ll share a few thoughts while I flip back and forth between the Big Chill at the Big House on the Big Ten Network and BU and RPI on the NHL Network.

Among the players distinguishing themselves most in the race for the Hobey, there aren’t too many surprises: Carter Camper has taken his scoring to another level with Miami, and averaging nearly two points per game, he has to be considered one of the front-runners for the Hobey, especially with the RedHawks riding high in the CCHA standings. BC’s Cam Atkinson is the national leader in goals with 16, and will also likely be in the mix for the award as the season goes along. I do have some reservations about how Atkinson will be received by Hobey voters, given the fact that Pat Eaves, Tony Voce, Brian Gionta, Nathan Gerbe, Chris Collins, etc. have not won the award, but we’ll get into that more later.

For now, the subject commanding my attention is ECAC Hockey, and more specifically, the Ivy League.

With Yale currently standing atop the national polls, there has been a certain amount of hand-wringing as concerns ECAC Hockey and the Bulldogs’ opponents. It had a familiar sound, as I’ve been hearing similar things about the conference for years whenever Cornell is enjoying a high spot in the polls.

Of course, commenting on polls and who’s overrated or underrated is generally not my department, and it is worth asking how Yale would perform against a WCHA or Hockey East schedule. That said, however, Yale also features four of the top ten scorers in the country – that’d be Broc Little, Andrew Miller, Denny Kearney and Brian O’Neill – and it’s highly likely that at least one member of that quartet will be a finalist for the Hobey when all is said and done. When that happens, I can’t help but wonder if we’ll hear the players’ accomplishments downplayed because of their conference the way their team’s performance has so far.

It is worth noting that ECAC Hockey hasn’t produced a Hobey winner since Lane MacDonald in 1989, and the conference’s last two contributions to the Hobey Hat Trick were a pair of Cornell goaltenders, David LeNeveu in 2003 and David McKee in 2005. To find a skater from the conference who made the top three, you’d have to go back to another Yale forward, Chris Higgins in 2002.

Personally, I don’t see any of these Bulldogs changing that this year.

Normally, I’m one of the first to stick up for players and teams in ECAC Hockey when their legitimacy is challenged, and I maintain that Yale has the talent to beat any team in the country, and will be in the mix for a spot in the Frozen Four this spring. However, there are too many things working against the Bulldogs’ high-scoring forwards to make a serious run at the Hobey.

For starters, there’s the Bulldogs’ schedule. I’m not going to run down ECAC Hockey, but adding two non-conference games against conference opponents (the Ivy Shootout) isn’t going to impress anyone. I do understand the merits of opening the season against opponents who are also playing their first games, but at the same time, it’d be helpful to the conference’s profile to see a high-end team like Yale play against top teams from other conferences as much as is feasible. Unfortunately, that hasn’t happened. With the two Ivy shootout games, three games with Atlantic Hockey opponents Air Force, Holy Cross and Sacred Heart, and a date with struggling Vermont, Yale’s stiffest non-conference test was a Colorado College team that didn’t even bother to play its No. 1 goaltender (although only Minnesota has scored more against the Tigers this year than Yale did). That is going to be an issue when the committee gets to talking.

Then, there’s the issue that I’ve touched on before: Yale’s balance. If there were a Yale player with the numbers of, say, Peter Sejna in his Hobey Year, the schedule issues wouldn’t stop that player from making it to the Hobey Hat Trick. As it is, though, Yale has four big-time scorers, which makes it hard to single any one of them out as a Hobey candidate. Miami, as we’ve discussed had that “problem” last year – of course, most coaches would love to have that kind of “problem” – and the result was Cody Reichard being the team’s Hobey finalist. I don’t think that’d happen with Yale, since the level of the scoring is higher, but I think the same issue comes back into play when the time comes to narrow the Hobey finalists to the Hobey Hat trick.

Anyone who thinks that Yale isn’t going to be a force to be reckoned with in March is kidding himself (especially if they get consistent goaltending), but I don’t see Yale making a real impact in the Hobey race. At least one of the four big scorers will get a finalist nod (at this point, I’m thinking Little), but unless someone’s numbers surge as the season goes along, I think that’s as far as it gets.

Of course, any Bulldogs who do get to that point probably won’t be the only ECAC Hockey representatives. 2010 Hobey finalist Chase Polacek of RPI is still among the nation’s top 20 scorers – and as I write this, is having a very nice game against Boston University – and as a Hobey finalist who returned for his senior year, will likely be commended for his commitment. However, there is also a pair of players from other Ivy League schools who could give Little some company.

For starters, there’s Jack Maclellan of Brown, who is currently second in the nation in points per game, with 20 points (9g, 11a) in 11 games. That includes three assists in the tie with New Hampshire and a goal in the tie with Boston University, with only Cornell having been able to keep Maclellan off the score sheet. Maclellan is definitely a surprise, currently scoring nearly twice as much per game as he did as a sophomore, but with Brown still rebuilding under Brendan Whittet, there’s probably a limit to how much consideration he’ll get. Still, Maclellan will face two more major conference foes, with games against BU and either Notre Dame or Minnesota State at the Shillelagh Tournament to start 2011.

At the other end of the ice, there’s Dartmouth goaltender James Mello, who is second in the nation in goals-against average and tops in save percentage. It’ll be interesting to see if he can keep it up, since he didn’t play in Dartmouth’s 7-3 loss to Yale (that was Jody O’Neill in net for the Big Green that night), or the 4-1 loss to Rensselaer. If Dartmouth and Mello are still looking good in late January (after they’ve played Yale, UNH and RPI), Dartmouth could be on its way to having only its second Hobey finalist ever (David Jones was first in 2007). Those games (along with a possible date with Boston College at the Ledyard National Bank Tournament) will be a prime indicator as to whether Mello is a contender or a pretender.

Back again soon with more Hobey analysis.

Snow causes postponements at Minnesota, Minnesota State

A major snowstorm moving through Minnesota has postponed three games scheduled for Saturday.

Minnesota has postponed Saturday’s men’s game against Minnesota-Duluth and women’s game against Ohio State because of a snowstorm in the Twin Cities.

Both games have been rescheduled for Sunday, the school announced. The men’s game will begin at 4 p.m. CST, while the women’s game will start at noon with free admission.

Tickets for Saturday’s Minnesota men’s game will be honored Sunday.

Minnesota State’s home game against North Dakota also has been rescheduled for 4 p.m. Sunday.

Gallery: Syracuse at Princeton

Photographer Shelley M. Szwast captured these images Friday at Hobey Baker Rink, where Princeton defeated Syracuse 4-2:

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MCHA, MIAC and NCHA picks Dec. 10-11

Forgive me, Wisconsin-Eau Claire Blugolds for having doubted you.

I mistakenly attributed your back-to-back wins over No. 7 Adrian and No. 9 SUNY Geneseo to tryptophan-laced turkey and inertia-inducing giblets on your opponents’ Thanksgiving dinner plates.

I picked Wisconsin-Stout to prevail. But you showed me, didn’t you? By sweeping Stout last weekend, you cast further doubt on the Irish Seer’s Cleo-like clairvoyance.

My misgivings left last week’s record at  3-3 while causing my overall 9-14 puck prognostication mark to plummet dangerously close to Krusty the Klown territory.

For those who don’t partake in watching TV animated shows, let me explain: In a classic episode, “The Simpsons” star clown was revealed to have a serious gambling problem, underscored by his penchant for laying serious coin on the Harlem Globetrotters’ favorite foil, the Washington Generals.

Confronted by his financial advisor with this stinging reality, the seltzer-spewing punter looked to the heavens and cried, “But they were due. …”

Me thinks I’m due for some fortuitous forecasting this week .

Dec. 10-11

Friday and Saturday

St. Thomas at Milwaukee School of Engineering: The undefeated No. 8 Raiders (8-0, 6-0 MCHA) arguably face one of their toughest tests in this nonconference match-up with the MIAC Tommies (7-4, 4-2). St. Thomas is fresh off a 2-1 overtime victory against No. 6 Gustavus Adolphus Dec. 4, which was indicative of the young team’s remarkable buoyancy this season. The Tommies nabbed the victory after losing Friday’s game to the Gusties, 5-3. MSOE’s firepower with leading scorer Jordan Keizer (13 goals and 4 assists) and home-ice advantage should extend the Raiders’ winning streak to 10.

MSOE, 5-2 and 3-1

Wisconsin-Stevens Point  at Wisconsin-Eau Claire: These teams are on opposite trajectories with the No. 14 Blugolds (7-4, 3-3) enjoying an impressive four-game winning run — all against Top-15 squads — while the Pointers (4-7, 2-6) are mired in a six-game losing funk. While UW-Eau Claire has momentum and home-ice advantage, UW-Eau Claire has enough talent — namely Nick Graves (2.37 GAA and .910 save-pct.) in goal — and moxie to sneak out with a split.

UW-Eau Claire, 4-1; UW-Stevens Point, 2-1

St. Scholastica at Wisconsin-Superior: Despite having few individual scoring phenoms, the No. 15 Yellowjackets (7-3-1, 5-1) sprung into the NCHA’s upper tier by grinding out wins with a balanced attack as 22 players have at least a point. Meanwhile, the Saints’ wildly inconsistent campaign was highlighted by last weekend’s upset victory over No. 2 St. Norbert at home. Any carryover isn’t likely to mask the Saints’ serious special team deficiencies. St. Scholastica (5-6, 1-5) ranks last among NCHA teams on the penalty kill (16-of-22 for 72 percent) and second to last on the power play (3-of-16 for 11 percent).

UW Superior, 5-2 and 4-1

Paula's picks: Dec. 10

Clearly, I am not someone you can take to the bank, so to speak.
My picks last week: 2-5-3
Overall this season: 54-27-15
And I thought Thanksgiving week was bad. I did call MSU-FSU, ND-Miami and OSU-UM to split. Unfortunately, only the Buckeyes and Wolverines won and lost on the predicted nights. Ouch.
I’m now calculating my picks percentage based on a formula passed along by a friend who’s been calculating such percentages longer than I’ve been writing about college hockey. Accordingly, my percentage of success last week was a low .350. I doubt my math that leads to a .780 overall percentage for the season.
Surprisingly, there is a nearly full schedule this weekend. Miami is idle. The Spartans and Wolverines will pick up another single game Jan. 29.
LSSU at WMU. The Lakers took four points from Bowling Green last weekend with two ties and shootout wins. The Broncos took two points from Northern, losing Friday and winning a shootout Saturday. WMU is 4-2-1 against LSSU in the past two seasons, and the Broncos took five points from the Lakers last year. LSSU goaltender Kevin Kapalka has the league-leading save percentage (.948). The teams are tied for seventh in the CCHA, each with 14 points, but the Broncos have two games in hand on the Lakers. These are Lake’s last games until Jan. 14. Friday-Saturday. Games begin at 7:35 p.m. WMU 3-1, LSSU 3-2.
NMU at ND. Last week, the Wildcats earned four points against the Broncos with a win and single-point tie, while the Fighting Irish earned three points in a split in Oxford against Miami – coming from behind in genuine gritty fashion Friday night to do so. The teams are .500 in the Joyce Center (10-10-4), but the Irish hold a 6-4-0 advantage in the last 10 meetings. ND’s Riley Sheahan (0-6–6) will be missing, as he’s been invited to Canada’s Junior Selection Camp in Toronto. Saturday 7:05 p.m.; Sunday 4:05 p.m. ND 4-2, NMU 3-2.
OSU at BGSU. This seems really silly to me. These teams are 120 miles apart. The league probably has a good explanation for why these games aren’t home-and-home, but it still seems silly. Last weekend, the Buckeyes came from behind against Michigan to win in OT Friday before dropping Saturday’s game, and the Falcons earned two points with two ties against LSSU. OSU has taken the last four matches from BGSU by outscoring the Falcons 23-13. This match pits two new head coaches, so the hockey between these teams is bound to be better than it has been recently – and here’s hoping that this rivalry intensifies in ways of old in the coming seasons. The Falcons have played three consecutive OT games and have been 0-1-2-0 in that stretch. Friday-Saturday. Games begin at 7:05 p.m. BGSU 3-2, OSU 3-2.
UAF at FSU. The Nanooks are well rested after a bye week. When last they played, they took four points from the Buckeyes, two with a shootout win Nov. 26 and three the following night. The Bulldogs split a home-and-home series with the Spartans, losing at home and winning in OT in Munn. The last time UAF lost to FSU was Jan. 2, 2004, a streak of 15 games. Last season, the Nanooks swept the Bulldogs in October in Fairbanks. Friday-Saturday. Games begin at 7:05 p.m. FSU 3-1, UAF 3-1.
MSU at UM. The Spartans split with the Bulldogs last weekend, winning on the road and losing in OT at home. The Wolverines split with the Buckeyes on the road, losing in OT before winning outright. Last season, MSU went 3-1-0 against UM in the regular season, but the Wolverines swept the Spartans in the second round of the CCHA playoffs, ending MSU’s season. If you want more notes on this match – and I have plenty of them – see this week’s 15 things blog. You should also check out what Dave Starman said this week, too. Have you heard? This game’s being played outdoors! The Wolverines may have the added advantage of having played Wisconsin in the Camp Randall Classic Feb. 6 of this year. Of course, neither team has ever played in front of 100,000 people. No one has. Saturday 3:05 p.m. in Michigan Stadium. UM 3-2.
Join me for live blogging from the Big Chill at the Big House Saturday beginning at 2:30 p.m.

ECAC Hockey picks: Week 11

Well well well, we finally found somebody with the cajones to step into the ring with The Prognosticator. Welcome Tom Rodbell, a life-long ECAC fan from the Nutmeg State. Don’t try to push your Bobcats or Bulldogs fervor on him, though – he’s from a family of Engineers fans, who considers Brian Pothier his favorite collegiate player of all time. So without further ado, let’s see how the picks fall.

Prediction precision

Last week

7-5-1 (.577)

Season record

53-28-11 (.636)
Guest guessers: 32-28-6 (.530)

Keep the challenges coming; who’s next? [email protected] for the chance to submit your own picks.

This week

All times Eastern

Friday, December 10
Mass.-Lowell at Princeton – 7:00

The Riverhawks are 2-12-2, last place in Hockey East, and giving up nearly twice as many goals (62) as they are scoring (34). Alabama-Huntsville is the only team in the nation with a winning percentage as bad as UML’s (and it’s the same, .188). The Tigers are 6-5-0 and tied (despite playing three more games) with Yale atop our league. My heavens, I think I’m developing a prediction! 5-2 Tigers.

TR: Massachusetts- Lowell @ Princeton- I am not a big believer in the Tigers fast E.C.A.C start. Unfortunately this game will not do much to refute that. Mass- Lowell has lost seven straight and this weekend is not going to be the one to turn it around. Princeton wins 4 – 1.

American Int’l at Union – 7:00

This will be AIC’s first non-conference game of the year, and they’re 4-8-0 overall. Without delving a single statistic further, I think Union has a decided edge. 4-1 Dutch.

TR: This will be a big test for American International. Their first out of conference game comes against a Union team with something to prove. The Dutchmen are coming off of a whitewashing at Yale and as much as I would love to see an upset here, I don’t believe American International has the muscle to pull it off. Union wins 4 -2.

Saturday, December 11

Boston University at Rensselaer – 3:30

Two teams with a lot to prove: BU squeaked out a comeback home win over low-ish (if not lowly) Northeastern on Wednesday, while RPI is still trying to establish the consistency that carried them so well last year. This is one of those cases where I believe the national stereotype of the ECAC might work for the Engineers, giving them some element of surprise on the shorthanded Terriers. 4-3 RPI in a close one.

TR: I am hesitant to predict the outcome of this game. As you know I bleed cherry red and white, and I would love to see an upset here. R.P.I had the upper hand last year against the Terriers, but B.U. is coming off of a weekend in which they were smacked by B.C. by a combined score of 14 – 7. I would imagine they are going to have extra motivation in this one. That being said… I am still going to go with the Engineers in a 4 – 3 win.

Mass.-Lowell at Princeton – 7:00

It was Einstein who purportedly said, “insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results”. Who am I to argue with Einstein? As Tom is about to say (being the brilliant Seer that I am), the second verse will be the same as the first: 4-2 Tigers.

TR: I see no reason why this game would be any different than the first. Tigers eviscerate 5 – 1.

Army at Union – 7:00

Colgate beat Army. Twice. And I think we can all agree who we’d reasonably expect to win a game between Colgate and Union right now. 5-1 Dutchmen.

TR: The Black Knights have not shown me that they have the ability to go into a ranked teams house and come out with a win, even though I would love to see nothing more. The Dutchmen sweep the weekend and win in convincing fashion 6 – 1.

Quinnipiac at Providence – 7:00

QU and PC have very similar offensive and defensive averages, and in the broad scheme of things I imagine them as very similar teams this year. I’m going to give PC the edge right now, almost entirely based on the home-ice advantage, as the Friars are 3-1-3 at The Coffin while the Bobcats are sub-.500 on the road. I could’ve easily swung the other way, but hey, I gotta make a call. 2-1 Friars.

TR: This will be an extremely hard fought game that will come down to the wire. In the end, I believe this will be the weekend that will turn the Cats season around. Bobcats take this one down 4 – 3.

Niagara at Colgate – 7:05

I picked the Raiders over the Purps last time out, and look what happened. Fool me once, shame on you… 4-3 Niagara.

TR: This game is another tough one to predict. The Red Raiders have been going through a difficult season to date, while the Purple Eagles have been nothing short of erratic in their play. I will say Colgate takes revenge for their loss two weeks ago to this same Niagara team. Colgate wins 3 – 2.

Sunday, December 12

Vermont at Dartmouth – 4:00

Vermont is not the Frozen Four team they were in 2008-09, and Dartmouth is not the unpredictable headcase it was last year. The edge is decidedly Dartmouth’s, 5-2.

TR: The Big Green are winners of three straight and I see no reason why that streak is in jeopardy. Vermont’s struggles continue in this one as Dartmouth wins 4 – 2.

Clarkson at Sacred Heart – 4:05

Clarkson is surfing the heat wave right now, and Sacred Heart is just a little spritz in the face. The Knights should be able to wipe SHU away with little trouble. 5-2 ‘Tech.

TR: I believe that the Golden Knights are the most underrated team in the E.C.A.C after a tough season last year. The Pioneers on the other hand are just plain bad and have not fared well against the E.C.A.C with no wins in four chances. Clarkson steamrolls Sacred Heart 6 – 0.

I also promise not to tweet 80 times a period when I’m watching a game. There’s updates, and then there’s overkill, am I right? Catch me at SullivanHockey on Twitter.

Atlantic Hockey Picks 12/10

Last Week: 6-3-2

On the Season: 45-33-8 (.560)

This Week’s Picks:

There’s only four league games on tap with the schedule winding down towards the holiday break.

Friday, December 10 and Saturday, December 11:

Rochester Institute of Technology at Mercyhurst – The Tigers are 5-0-1 in thier last six games in Erie, but I think that will come on an end on Saturday. RIT 3. Mercyhurst 2; Mercyhurst 4, RIT 1.

Robert Morris at Alabama-Huntsville – The former CHA rivals square off in a non-conference series. I like the Colonials to sweep. Robert Morris 5, UAH 3; Robert Morris 3, UAH 2.

Friday December 10:

Bentley at Army – I think the Black Knights prevail on home ice. Army 3, Bentley 2.

American International at Union – I think the 13th ranked Dutchmen will overcome an improved AIC squad. Union 4, AIC 2.

Connecticut at Sacred Heart – I think the Pioneers will find their groove on home ice against their Nutmeg State rivals. Sacred Heart 4, UConn 3.

Saturday, December 11:

Niagara at Colgate – I think this one will go down to the wire, with the Purple Eagles pulling it out late. Niagara 4, Colgate 3.

Army at Union – Union gets a home sweep over the AHA. Union 4, Army 2.

Guest Analyst

This week’s guest analyst is Ed Keller, an Army fan. He’s forgoing the Black Knights this weekend though, for a trip to Ann Arbor and the Big Chill game. Here’s his picks:

“In the weekend’s two game series, RIT travels to Mercyhurst. With AIC’s sweep of the Lakers still fresh in their minds, Mercyhurst kicks their game up a notch to sweep RIT, 5-1 on Friday and a closer 3-2 game on Saturday. Robert Morris returns to Huntsville to face former conference rival, Alabama Huntsville, and splits the series. UAH 4-3 on Friday and the Colonials rebound 3-2 on Saturday. Army, off a strong showing in a loss against Colgate uses their home ice advantage to defeat Bentley on Friday night, 3-1. Union and their #13 ranking is too much for the Black Knights on Saturday, 3-2 Union. In a battle of cross-state rivals UConn picks up a road victory over Sacred Heart by the score of 4-2. The much improved AIC Yellow Jackets play #13 Union tough, but fall 4-2. Clarkston handles Sacred Heart on Sunday 6-2.

Friday it’s off to the Big Chill in Ann Arbor … Go State Go!”

Check back Monday to see how Ed and I did.

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