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Mercyhurst Women’s Assistant Critically Injured in Crash

Kristen Cameron, an assistant coach at Mercyhurst, was listed in critical condition Monday after she was hit by a car while riding her bicycle on Sunday, the Erie Times-News reported.

Kristen Cameron was an All-American at Bowdoin.

Kristen Cameron was an All-American at Bowdoin.

Cameron, 25, is in her second season on the Lakers’ coaching staff.

According to the newspaper, citing police, Cameron was hit in Summit Township, Pa., just before 7 p.m. Sunday. Allen Peters, 49, of Erie, Pa., was arrested at his home on Sunday and arraigned on Monday on 14 charges, including aggravated assault by vehicle while driving under the influence.

Cameron was a first-team All-American during her four seasons at Bowdoin, then spent the 2008-09 season as an assistant at Castleton State.

Commentary: Which Way Will Dominos Fall After Penn State’s Introduction?

Rumors abound about Penn State and Division I hockey. Then again, I think we’ve passed the rumor stage. Multiple sources both inside the process and in high ranking college hockey positions have confirmed it is happening and the official announcement will happen this week.

For many years I felt Penn State would never do this and if it does — and there is chatter in the hockey community that Indiana joins later on — you say that’s great for college hockey. A huge part of me wants to see Joe Battista and all of his hard work with the Penn State club program over the past couple of decades be rewarded.

Related link: Penn State Set to Field Varsity Program, Sources Say

If you are a Big Ten fan, you are thrilled. If you are Lake Superior State, Ferris State, Northern Michigan and the rest of the CCHA outside of the big three, you are keeping a close eye on this for many reasons. The most obvious is if Penn State comes in, it is doing so for the sole purpose of being a member of a six- or seven-team Big Ten Conference. That isn’t being said by anyone on the inside, but a blind man can see this one.

If that happens, the CCHA says goodbye to Michigan and also a fond farewell to Michigan State and Ohio State. Now in its 40th season and about to celebrate its 30th year of having its title game at Joe Louis Arena, this is a league well run by Tom Anastos, who enters his 13th year at the helm. The CCHA has set the bar pretty high in all that it does and should a Big Ten Conference be coming it will challenge this conference to get very creative in terms of its membership.

It will have no effect on the Michigan-Michigan State rivalry, but losing Ohio State hurts the rivalry with Miami. Michigan is a huge road draw in the CCHA as are the Spartans and the Buckeyes. With Notre Dame’s recent success (last season notwithstanding) as well as its brand name, and with the meteoric rise of Miami as a national power the CCHA might never be healthier as a conference as it is right now. Ohio State is coming back and Michigan State can always be counted on to be solid. The Spartans are the CCHA’s most recent national champion and have many alums as current NHL players.

You could make a case that the Big Ten member programs haven’t been the sole proprietors of success lately. Northern Michigan continues to be successful and winds up at the Joe for the CCHA championship weekend. Ferris State is always competitive and well coached by Bob Daniels. New coaches at Western Michigan and Bowling Green, coaches who have had recent success, bodes very well for this great conference. Miami is due for a national title and could be on track this season after back-to-back Frozen Four appearances.

Notre Dame is still a huge road draw, but who knows where the Irish plant their flag as a football program in the future and if it’s in the Big Ten (or 11, or 12, or 13 or 14) then possibly out go the Irish through no fault of the CCHA.

The WCHA is a little different with Denver, North Dakota and Colorado College as members because they are all big-time programs with national status. Losing the Gophers and Badgers isn’t great for the WCHA mostly because their conference tourney is in St. Paul, Minn. You would have to think that the CCHA and WCHA might be looking at some type of merger. On that note, would we see an all-Ivy League conference and see some of the more western-based ECAC members link up with the CCHA? It is all speculation of course, and based on nothing more than trying to think two steps ahead, but you’d have to think some cosmetic surgery will be needed to realign the face of college hockey.

American big business is about the big getting bigger and the small or obsolete getting taken over (ever think Blockbuster Video would go under 20 years ago?). Don’t for one second think that if Penn State comes in (despite Atlantic Hockey or the ECAC being a good match geographically) you will hear a giant bomb go off in college hockey as a Big Ten Conference gets into the discussion. Realistically, PSU would be great for the CCHA.

This is something floated in this space before but while the Big Ten is a conference with good rivalries, not every team is a rival of every other. This is a football-driven conference and to a lesser extent a basketball one, so school rivalries have developed based on geography (Michigan-Michigan State, Minnesota-Wisconsin, Wisconsin-Iowa, Ohio State-Michigan) and also competition.

Penn State is interesting because, unless I have heard this wrong from the alumni of a lot of these schools I am friendly with, Penn State isn’t exactly a blood rival with any of its conference rivals. Minnesota? Not really. Wisconsin? Somewhat. Michigan State? Thinking no but would listen to a counter argument there. Ohio State? Has to be; OSU has run Big Ten football for years. Michigan? To an extent due to the Wolverines’ pedigree (and as a friend and Bucky alum mentioned once, “we just hate Michigan in Madison”), but has either school really had a defining moment win vs the other or suffered a crushing defeat to the other? Did the Camp Randall Classic really add any fuel to the fire here? Do we need to have these conference “rivals” lumped together? You can make a strong case that the answer is no.

PSU is good for college hockey from this perspective: It’s a football-driven, marquee sports program coming into your world. They give you a well-known entity in an area that makes travel east or west an option. They can get to Boston to play the powers in the Hub. They can play Harvard and/or Cornell. They are big time and that is a factor. Penn State moves the meter and draws eyeballs. It also has money and will bring another state-of-the-art hockey facility into the fold. Along with Mercyhurst and Robert Morris, it gives Pennsylvania another college hockey option to battle against the presence of the Erie Otters.

Now, if you own a shopping mall and P.F. Chang’s comes in, you are thrilled. It’s a big chain that drives foot traffic to the mall. If you are a small Chinese restaurant in the area you might not be so excited. It is the same thing with college hockey as it relates to PSU coming in and the possibility of a Big Ten hockey conference. The flip side of this is that Penn State activates the shark that is the Big Ten and its ability to gobble up what is in its way. That’s capitalism, and that is what drives business in America, but this could have an adverse effect on some longtime college hockey programs.

If the CCHA teams like Lake State, Ferris State, Western Michigan, Bowling Green and Alaska lose big-time programs from their schedule like the Big Ten-affiliated schools in question, you have a problem. Are you driving an hour and a half to Big Rapids to watch Ferris State play Alaska-Anchorage like you would to play a rival like Michigan or Michigan State? That big tilt between St. Cloud State and Bowling Green getting you all warm and fuzzy? There could be room for these CCHA rivalries to continue on their schedules but it could be fewer and far between for these teams to meet.

Losing natural rivals and meter-moving teams is bad, but getting force fed unnatural rivals is worse. I still think losing the Capitals from the NHL’s old six-team Patrick Division has hurt their former division mates. The Caps were a rival to the Devils, Rangers, Isles, Flyers and Penguins, and today their rivalry with Pittsburgh (Crosby vs. Ovechkin) and Philly (right up the road) are probably more intense than their ones with divisional partners from Florida, Tampa, and Carolina (despite the latter two winning the Stanley Cup in the last decade). No one in Washington cares when the latter three show up, but when the old Patrick Division teams come in there is a buzz.

Maybe losing these teams won’t hurt the CCHA or WCHA. Maybe I see this all wrong. It wouldn’t be the first time. What I do know is Penn State coming in can be great for college hockey if it winds up in the CCHA. If it is the linchpin for the decay of the CCHA and the catalyst for the Big Ten hockey conference, its addition will fan some flames that could lead to future fires.

Both would be a shame.

Looking for No. 1: Watch These 5 Title-Less Teams in 2011 Hunt

In one sense, the last 17 NCAA tournaments have produced nothing new, really.

It has been 17 years since a new name entered the champions’ club, the relatively exclusive collection of schools that have Division I NCAA championship hardware in their trophy case.

In 1993, Maine became the 17th school to join that group, and ever since, the national champion has been one of those 17 teams.

So, which 18 do we get in the 2010-11 season? An 18th member of the champions’ club, or an 18th straight year without an addition?

Forty-one teams have a chance to break the streak, and as the new season approaches, here are five teams that the USCHO staff considers to be at the top of the list of possibilities.

Miami

Carter Camper is back after a 15-goal season for Miami (photo: Melissa Wade).

Carter Camper is back after a 15-goal season for Miami (photo: Melissa Wade).

Third time’s the charm? The RedHawks’ national title dreams died in spectacular fashion at the Frozen Four in the last two seasons — first, a last-minute lead lost to Boston University in the 2009 final, and then a humbling 7-1 loss to eventual champion Boston College in the 2010 semifinals.

Getting close hasn’t been the issue for Miami; finishing the job has been. In 2010-11, the RedHawks will turn to a talented cast of senior forwards that have gone through those tough times and a junior goaltending duo that, despite the forgettable finish to 2010, had two of the top three goals-against averages in the nation last season.

Forwards Andy Miele, Carter Camper and Pat Cannone combined for a near-evenly split 44 goals last season for a team that didn’t quite make the national top 10 in offense. Having the nation’s top defense was the difference, and it’s poised to return.

All six defensemen that played in the national semis last season (Will Weber, Joe Hartman, Cameron Schilling, Matt Tomassoni, Chris Wideman and Steven Spinell) are back this season. With goaltenders Connor Knapp and Cody Reichard behind them, the RedHawks seem to have a solid base for another run at the title.

Vermont

If you hold the belief that, just as the WCHA had its run of national championships, this is Hockey East’s era, then the Catamounts might just be the next team to step into the spotlight. They don’t have the historical cachet of Boston College and Boston University, but they’re not too far removed from the 2008-09 team that was leading halfway through the third period of a national semifinal game.

Goaltender Rob Madore was a freshman that season; now he’s a junior with two NCAA tournament experiences under his belt. Pair him with a defensive corps that returns five regulars and you have 464 collegiate games back to put Vermont on track.

The big question mark for the Catamounts is the offense, which has a duo of nine-goal scorers — seniors Jack Downing and Wahsontilo Stacey — leading the returners. The top three scorers from last year, when Vermont was in the bottom half nationally in offense, graduated, leaving a significant hole in a group that already was less than proficient.

But if Vermont overcomes that obstacle — second-round NHL draft pick Connor Brickley could help in that regard by stepping in as a scorer right away — there’s a winning mentality building in Burlington that is ready to push upward.

Yale

Broc Little was tops in the country last season in goals per game at 0.79 (photo: Melissa Wade).

Broc Little was tops in the country last season in goals per game at 0.79 (photo: Melissa Wade).

If there’s a way to sum up why the Bulldogs have a chance at big things, it goes back to last season’s NCAA regional semifinal against North Dakota. They were energetic and opportunistic, and it didn’t appear to matter to them that they were the underdog.

If there’s a reason to be skeptical, it goes back to what happened the next day. Yale saw a Frozen Four berth evaporate when its offense, productive as it was, couldn’t keep up with defensive shortcomings in a wild, 9-7 loss to Boston College. Up front, the Bulldogs had no match in college hockey last season; in goal, they were sub-par, using four goaltenders through the season with none able to solidify himself as the starter.

If Jeff Malcolm, Nick Maricic or Ryan Rondeau can give the Bulldogs a stable base in goal, they could make the step from being just one of the top 10 teams to being one of the college hockey elites behind 27-goal scorer Broc Little and 45-point scorer Brian O’Neill.

The Bulldogs list 20 letterwinners returning from a team that extended the program’s NCAA experience to two straight seasons. It’s not a big streak, but coach Keith Allain has put Yale on a rapid incline in his first four seasons that makes a Frozen Four trip the next item on the agenda.

New Hampshire

When their season ended with a stunning 6-2 loss to RIT in last season’s regional finals, it was easy to forget how far the Wildcats got after how poorly their season started. After 10 games, they had just two wins and were allowing more than four goals per game. Before March was over, UNH had become Hockey East regular season champions and made the poor start a distant memory.

Still, New Hampshire can be one of those head-scratching programs in that it has been successful at the national level, but just never quite successful enough to win it all. The Wildcats played for the 2003 title in Buffalo but were turned away by Minnesota. They own the second-longest active streak of NCAA tournament appearances with nine, behind only Michigan’s 20, but they haven’t been back to the Frozen Four since that 2003 trip.

New Hampshire will be playing in front of an inexperienced goaltender this season after the graduation of Brian Foster, so there’s a natural concern about that area of the game. That puts extra pressure on this year’s defensemen, five of whom were regulars at the end of last season.

Senior Paul Thompson scored 19 times last season and matched departed Hobey Baker Award finalist Bobby Butler with four game-winners, so the cupboard is anything but bare up front. Mike Sislo was a 14-goal scorer a year ago and Phil DeSimone added 10. The Wildcats may be known by some more for what they haven’t done in the postseason than for what they have, but it takes only one big moment to change that.

Minnesota-Duluth

Mike Connolly has been a big contributor in his first two seasons at Minnesota-Duluth, including the overtime winner against Princeton in the 2009 NCAA tournament (photo: Jason Waldowski).

Mike Connolly has been a big contributor in his first two seasons at Minnesota-Duluth, including the overtime winner against Princeton in the 2009 NCAA tournament (photo: Jason Waldowski).

One could be forgiven for forgetting the Bulldogs on a list of programs that haven’t won a national title. They have their own how-close-can-we-get moment, that coming in 1984 when they took a two-goal lead with just over eight minutes left in the final against Bowling Green. The Falcons tied it with under two minutes left, then won in the first minute of the fourth overtime.

Minnesota-Duluth is the only school among the five here that didn’t make the cut for the NCAA tournament last season, and it was thanks to a wildly inconsistent performance over the course of the season. It wasn’t because of a lack of talent, and a more mature Bulldogs team this season could have the goods to make a long postseason run.

They lost forward Rob Bordson to an early departure and two other forwards to graduation, but the trio of Jack Connolly, Mike Connolly and Justin Fontaine has the potential to be quite potent.

As it seems to go with the Bulldogs, the kind of success we’re talking about here probably will come down to goaltending. Two years ago, Alex Stalock was the postseason star that UMD rode to within one win of the Frozen Four. When the Bulldogs made the Frozen Four in 2004, Isaac Reichmuth was shining down the stretch. Kenny Reiter got plenty of valuable experience last year to carry into his junior season, one in which a lot is being expected of the Bulldogs.

White House Visit Monday for Boston College

National champion Boston College will visit the White House along with other collegiate champions on Monday.

Eagles players and staff members will visit Walter Reed Army Medical Center as part of the daylong visit. They also will participate in an alumni reception near the Capitol.

At the White House, President Barack Obama will congratulate the student-athletes on their accomplishments in the classroom as well as in competition, according to a news relase.

Boston College also visited the White House after its 2001 and 2008 national titles.

DeGregorio Tabbed as CHA Commissioner

Robert M. DeGregorio Jr., already the commissioner for Atlantic Hockey, will add the same duties for the CHA women’s league.

Atlantic Hockey commissioner Robert M. DeGregorio is adding the CHA women's league to his resume (photo: Ed Trefzger).

Atlantic Hockey commissioner Robert M. DeGregorio is adding the CHA women’s league to his resume (photo: Ed Trefzger).

“We want to place the management of our league in the hands of an experienced leader,” Niagara athletic director Ed McLaughlin said in a statement. “Commissioner DeGregorio is known throughout the hockey community and he has the management experience to lead and grow our league into the future.”

The CHA is one of four leagues in Division I women’s hockey.

“I am very excited about this new opportunity,” DeGregorio said. “The CHA is very competitive and it will be an honor to be associated with this very successful group of institutions.”

Also, David Rourke was named CHA director of media relations and Eugene Binda was named supervisor of officials.

St. Cloud State Hires Johnson as Assistant

St. Cloud State has named longtime USHL coach and former North Dakota player Steve Johnson as an assistant coach.

Johnson replaces Eric Rud, who left the Huskies to become the head coach with Green Bay of the USHL.

He coached Fargo in the USHL last season but is best known for a decade-long run with Lincoln.

“Steve has been one of the most successful coaches in the history of the USHL and he is one of the great players in the history of the WCHA,” St. Cloud State coach Bob Motzko said in a statement. “His experiences as a player and a coach will be a huge asset for our program.”

Johnson played at North Dakota from 1984 to 1988, helping the Fighting Sioux win the 1987 national championship.

“I am very excited to be coming to St. Cloud State and getting back into the WCHA,” Johnson said. “I’ve gotten to know Coach Motzko and Coach [Mike] Gibbons very well over the years, and I am looking forward to becoming a part of the program at St. Cloud State.”

Mercyhurst Tabs Rosso As Assistant Coach

Former Nebraska-Omaha player John Rosso has been named an assistant coach at Mercyhurst.

Rosso was an assistant coach with Sioux Falls of the USHL for the last two seasons. He also has been an assistant in the NAHL and the Western Hockey League.

“We’re really excited to welcome John Rosso to the Laker family,” Mercyhurst coach Rick Gotkin said in a statement. “With his coaching and recruiting background, we know he will make an immediate impact on our players and the program, and continue to attract the kind of student-athletes that we like to recruit here at Mercyhurst.”

Rosso replaces Brian Burke, who left the Lakers to become the head coach of the Victory Honda junior program in Michigan.

Rosso played defense for Nebraska-Omaha from 1997 to 2001.

Parker, York Named Lester Patrick Trophy Recipients

College hockey coaching institutions Jack Parker of Boston University and Jerry York of Boston College are among the recipients of the Lester Patrick Trophy for outstanding service to American hockey.

York and Parker rank first and second, respectively, in college wins among active coaches. They trail only Ron Mason on the all-time coaching wins list.

The other Lester Patrick Trophy recipients for 2010 are former Boston Bruins player Cam Neely and AHL president David Andrews.

They will be honored at a ceremony in Boston in late October.

Early Departures 2010

NCAA players who have signed professional contracts in the 2010 offseason with eligibility remaining:

Player              Pos  School             Year  Pro Team                      2009-10 stats
Jordan Schroeder    F    Minnesota          So.   Vancouver                     9-19-28 in 37 GP
Casey Wellman       F    Massachusetts      So.   Minnesota                     23-22-45 in 36 GP
Matt Irwin          D    Massachusetts      So.   Worcester (AHL)               7-17-24 in 36 GP
Jake Newton         D    Northeastern       Fr.   Anaheim                       9-13-22 in 34 GP
Hunter Bishop       F    Ohio State         Jr.   Montreal                      15-12-27 in 33 GP
Zac Dalpe           F    Ohio State         So.   Carolina                      21-24-35 in 39 GP
Nick Bonino         F    Boston University  Jr.   Anaheim                       11-27-38 in 33 GP
Lee Baldwin         D    Alaska-Anchorage   Fr.   New York Rangers              1-9-10 in 32 GP
Jeff Petry          D    Michigan State     Jr.   Edmonton                      4-25-29 in 38 GP
Ian Cole            D    Notre Dame         Jr.   St. Louis                     3-16-19 in 30 GP
Marc Cheverie       G    Denver             Jr.   Florida                       24-6-3, 2.08, .932
Rob Bordson         F    Minnesota-Duluth   Jr.   Anaheim                       12-28-40 in 40 GP
James Marcou        F    Massachusetts      Jr.   San Jose                      11-40-51 in 36 GP
Cameron Talbot      G    Alabama-Huntsville Jr.   New York Rangers              12-18-3, 2.60, .925
Mark Olver          F    Northern Michigan  Jr.   Colorado                      19-30-49 in 40 GP
Joe Colborne        F    Denver             So.   Boston                        22-19-41 in 39 GP
Patrick Wiercioch   D    Denver             So.   Ottawa                        6-21-27 in 39 GP
Brandon Bollig      F    St. Lawrence       So.   Rockford (AHL)                7-18-25 in 42 GP
Colby Cohen         D    Boston University  Jr.   Colorado                      14-16-30 in 36 GP
Kevin Shattenkirk   D    Boston University  Jr.   Colorado                      7-22-29 in 38 GP
Bryce Christianson  G    Alaska-Anchorage   Jr.   Stockton (ECHL)               3-8-0, 4.37, .848
Teddy Ruth          D    Notre Dame         Jr.   Columbus                      0-5-5 in 22 GP
Eric Selleck        F    Oswego             So.   Florida                       21-33-54 in 28 GP
Gody Goloubef       D    Wisconsin          Jr.   Columbus                      3-11-14 in 42 GP
Matt Bartkowski     D    Ohio State         So.   Boston                        6-12-18 in 39 GP
Andrew Rowe         F    Michigan State     Jr.   Philadelphia                  17-11-28 in 38 GP
Brendan Smith       D    Wisconsin          Jr.   Detroit                       15-37-52 in 42 GP
Chris Tanev         F    RIT                Fr.   Vancouver                     10-18-28 in 41 GP
Tommy Wingels       F    Miami              Jr.   San Jose                      17-25-42 in 44 GP
Derek Stepan        F    Wisconsin          So.   New York Rangers              12-42-54 in 41 GP
Corey Tropp         F    Michigan State     Jr.   Buffalo                       20-22-42 in 37 GP
Ryan McDonagh       D    Wisconsin          Jr.   New York Rangers              4-14-18 in 43 GP
Riley Nash          F    Cornell            Jr.   Carolina                      12-23-35 in 30 GP
Dave Kostuch        F    Canisius           So.   MKS Cracovia Krakow (Poland)  15-12-27 in 35 GP
Nick Leddy          D    Minnesota          Fr.   Chicago                       3-8-11 in 30 GP
Louis Leblanc       F    Harvard            Fr.   Montreal                      11-12-23 in 31 GP
Kyle Palmieri       F    Notre Dame         Fr.   Anaheim                       9-8-17 in 33 GP
Reid Edmondson      F    Robert Morris      Fr.   Laredo (CHL)                  0-0-0 in 5 GP
Jerry D'Amigo       F    Rensselaer         Fr.   Toronto                       10-24-34 in 35 GP
Brandon Pirri       F    Rensselaer         Fr.   Chicago                       11-32-43 in 39 GP

Daigneau Named Assistant Coach at Canisius

Former Harvard goaltender John Daigneau has joined the Canisius staff as an assistant coach.

Daigneau will work with Canisius’ goaltenders and in recruiting, video operations, academics and community outreach.

“We are extremely excited to have John join our staff,” Canisius coach Dave Smith said in a statement. “He comes very highly recommended from his coaches at Harvard and the people he has worked with in the past. John has been with numerous championship teams and our Griffin hockey program will look to draw on those positive experiences.”

Daigneau played in 43 games at Harvard from 2002 to 2006, a stretch in which the Crimson won two ECAC Hockey titles and appeared in the NCAA tournament all four years.

In his senior season, he was named the most outstanding player at the ECAC Hockey tournament and also was named the team’s most valuable player.

Pirri Signs With Chicago, Leaves Rensselaer After One Season

Rensselaer has seen a second player this offseason sign a pro contract after just one season in school.

Brandon Pirri’s contract with the Chicago Blackhawks was finalized Tuesday.

“It is a terrific opportunity as I continue to work toward my ultimate goal, which is to play in the NHL,” Pirri said in a statement. “Signing with the Blackhawks at this time would not have been possible without my experiences at RPI. I learned a great deal from the coaching staff, my teammates and all the others who work with the Engineers. It is a first-class program and I wish them nothing but success.”

Related link: Early departures in 2010 offseason

Pirri was Chicago’s second-round draft pick, No. 59 overall, in 2009.

He joins Jerry D’Amigo as Engineers players who have signed pro contracts this summer with eligibility remaining. D’Amigo signed with Toronto on Aug. 11.

Pirri played all 39 games in his freshman season, scoring 11 goals and recording an ECAC Hockey-high 32 assists.

“I want to congratulate Brandon on signing a great contract with the Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks,” Rensselaer coach Seth Appert said. “He established himself as an elite offensive threat in his freshman year while making huge strides in his overall game and strength development through the help of his teammates. We wish Brandon the best and he will always have a home with the RPI Hockey Family.”

Former Wayne State Player Frakie Dies

Former Wayne State forward Brandi Frakie has passed away. She was 22.

Brandi Frakie played for Wayne State from 2006 to 2009 (photo: Wayne State Athletics).

Brandi Frakie played for Wayne State from 2006 to 2009 (photo: Wayne State Athletics).

Frakie, who played for the Warriors from 2006 to 2009, died Wednesday, according to an obituary in the Star Tribune of Minneapolis.

She had 22 points (11 goals, 11 assists) in 67 games for Wayne State, with most of her points coming in her freshman season.

Frakie was a CHA all-rookie team selection in 2006-07, when she had nine goals and 15 points.

She missed the final 13 games of her sophomore season and the first 18 games of her junior season with an injury.

When she was 10, she survived being struck by lightning in Medina, Minn., an event that she described in a 2006 USCHO.com feature story.

Huntsville Rounds Out Staff by Hiring Morgan

Alabama-Huntsville has hired Gavin Morgan as an assistant coach, rounding out incoming head coach Chris Luongo’s staff.

Morgan, a former Denver forward, played 11 years in the pros before turning to coaching with the Chargers.

“As a player, Gavin has achieved success through hard work and determination,” Luongo said in a statement. “His relentless work ethic and his experience playing at the highest levels of college and pro hockey, including the NHL, make him a valuable asset for teaching our young players the finer points of how to be a successful student-athlete. He will work primarily with our forwards but will also be involved with our special teams.”

Mike Warde also was hired as an assistant coach this month.

Morgan played at Denver from 1996 to 1999, helping the Pioneers to the 1999 WCHA playoff championship.

He played six games in the NHL for Dallas in 2003, and also played in the Montreal, St. Louis, Chicago and Phoenix minor league systems.

Commentary: In Eventful Summer, Nothing More Important than Mandi

We are still a ways away from the opening puck drop, but it has been an eventful summer. Some news, notes, and opinions to get us thinking college pucks.

No college hockey story is more important than Mandi Schwartz. This blurb from the USCHO staff was posted recently.

Aug. 15 — Tests have indicated that Yale’s Mandi Schwartz is no longer in remission in her battle with acute myeloid leukemia, a development that has postponed her stem cell transplant.

Schwartz needs to be in remission to have the transplant, so she will undergo more chemotherapy.

Her doctors at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Care Center in Seattle have developed what’s being called a breakthrough procedure in the stem cell transplant that is being planned for when Schwartz is again in remission.

Woody Hayes coined the phrase “You win with people,” and every coach will tell you that you coach people first, players second. The fact that the hockey world has rallied around Schwartz is a tremendous sign that we still look at these student-athletes, especially hockey players, as people first. Hockey has done a great job taking care of its own. Hopefully, we can all continue on this path and do what we can to get Mandi back on the road to recovery.

Tarnished Dome?

Notre Dame has made headlines, and for the first time in years it’s football that looks good and hockey that has taken its lumps.

In a recent interview I was a part of on “The Pipeline Show” in Edmonton, Alberta, the questions about Notre Dame were about whether its reputation is tarnished with the off-ice issues it has had?”

To say it hasn’t would be putting your head in the sand. To believe that the Irish will feel long-term effects from this is the anti-college hockey faction cranking up the propaganda machine.

Yes, Kyle Palmieri left after his freshman year. Yes, Jarred Tinordi backed out of his commitment. Yes, there have been some issues with underage drinking and players getting arrested (something new to the American sports scene). They are not the only school to have this issue, and yes, it happens in major junior also.

However, it is still Notre Dame, a program a year away from christening a fantastic new building. It is still Notre Dame, which was just ranked higher academically than any other non-Ivy League school with a hockey program and seventh overall in that category in a US News and World Report survey. It is still Notre Dame, whose staff is as good as any in the NCAA in developing two-way players.

Everyone gets a black eye at some point; just ask Michigan football. The problems Notre Dame is having fall outside the direct responsibility of the hockey program and somewhat on the student-athletes themselves. Poor judgment is more the problem here than anything “official,” like willingly allowing players to practice outside of allotted time for it as detailed by the NCAA.

This whole thing should be a blip on the map for Notre Dame if handled correctly. I bet it recovers well.

So Long

Underclassmen Derek Stepan, Jerry D’Amigo, Jordan Schroeder and Kyle Palmieri all chose to depart early for the pro ranks.

All four were members of the gold medal-winning American team at the 2010 World Junior Championship in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, last January. All four had very good showings in the WJC and Stepan at times looked like a man among boys. D’Amigo showed hockey sense beyond his years, and Schroeder demonstrated his elite-level offensive skills. Palmieri was a buzz saw throughout the tourney and has good size, which he likes to combine with a gritty attitude to be effective.

Whether they should have come back to school for further development at the NCAA level is up for debate in many circles, but it would be a surprise if any of these four talented U.S.-born-and-developed players doesn’t get a good sniff at the NHL in the very near future.

Welcome Back

One school that did get its key underclassmen back is Boston College. The Eagles were awesome last season, and they could be as good if not better this year.

It is hard not to keep your eye on the Eagles, but with their team speed you might have to watch very quickly to see them play.

Putting Faulk on the Radar

Keep your eye on Minnesota-Duluth defenseman Justin Faulk. The kid just keeps growing on me as a player since I watched him a bit in camp for the World Junior team in Grand Forks, N.D., last December.

He’s a little under the radar as compared to some of the higher-profile defenseman from the U-18s who were picked in the draft, but if this kid doesn’t become (at the very least) an elite NCAA defenseman I’d be shocked.

Early Challenges for UNH

Looking at some early schedules, I really like New Hampshire in October. The Wildcats start at Miami, which is a back to back Frozen Four team, then come home and play Michigan, which just made its way to the NCAA tourney for a 20th consecutive time.

Michigan is a good skating team that always moves the puck well, so in the big rink in Durham the Wolverines should be a good challenge for UNH.

The Wildcats play at Northeastern, at Cornell and at Boston College (to start November). If any team will know what it can do after a month of hockey, it’s UNH. You have to respect a program that challenges itself early in the season. Those games aren’t easy. Keep an eye on UNH; at the very least it will be battle-tested early with a great schedule.

Backing Bergeron

If there is anyone who thinks Chris Bergeron won’t do well as a head coach, speak up now.

I think he’ll do very well. He has the passion, energy, and smarts for the job. Bowling Green is a program that needed a shot in the arm and Bergeron should provide that.

The Falcons might not win a ton of games right away but they should be a hard team to play against. He is also an excellent recruiter, so BG shouldn’t be the third choice among Ohio-based schools for very long.

On that note, add new Ohio State coach Mark Osiecki and his brilliance recruiting in Minnesota, and you have a battle brewing in Ohio on the recruiting front.

Watch These Trios

A couple of trios to watch for this season. The first is the three senior centers at Miami — Carter Camper, Andy Miele and Pat Cannone. This could be the deepest threesome of centers on one team since Ohio State had R.J. Umberger, Ryan Kessler and Dave Steckel.

A second trio is Louie Caporusso, Carl Hagelin and Matt Rust at Michigan. Those three are as good an offensive force as any in the nation, and if all have their “A” game all season Michigan becomes a very dangerous team, home or road.

Off the Air

On a TV note, I’m still sad to see the Frank Mazzocco-Doug Woog team broken up in Minnesota. We all get replaced eventually, but these guys have been great colleagues and good friends. They will be missed.

Also on a TV note, best wishes to Eric Haugen, who left NHL Network U.S. to take a position at NESN in Boston. Eric was a huge force behind NHL Network’s coverage of the World Junior Championship last season and has an imprint on this season’s planning. His brains and creativity were all over that production and were the reason it was so successful. He is a friend of college and amateur hockey in the United States, and wherever he is amateur hockey will be in good hands from a TV perspective.

Eye on UNO

Keep an eye on Nebraska-Omaha in its first season in the WCHA.

Dean Blais got the most out of an under-talented roster last year and did a masterful job on the physical, emotional, tactical and mental side of things winning the gold medal at the WJC.

This is year two at the helm in Omaha, and the team is taking on his personality. The players believe in him and so do I. Watch the Mavs and you’ll see a program on the rise.

Congrats

Lastly, congratulations to Brett Henning on his new position in pro scouting with the Vancouver Canucks. Henning, a recruit of Dave Poulin at Notre Dame, suffered a career-ending neck injury during his career in South Bend.

A Long Island-born-and-bred player, he was as smart a player as any. If that hockey sense translates into his scouting, the Canucks have a great hire.

I coached Brett on the Islanders pee wee team that played in the annual International Pee Wee Tourney in Quebec City (I’m thinking it was 1993). In a game at Le Colisee, one of the Nordiques assistant coaches was standing near the end of our bench and after a whistle asks me “is that Henning Lorne’s kid?” I said yes. The coach says “It’s amazing, the kid has his father’s hockey sense and he’s only 12.”

His father is Lorne Henning, one of the smartest players of his NHL era. It was he who set up Bob Nystrom’s OT goal to win the 1980 Stanley Cup for the Islanders (Henning to John Tonelli to Nystrom).

Robert Morris, RIT Get Winter Classic Tuneup Spot

Robert Morris and RIT will play an Atlantic Hockey game at the new Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh as part of the lead-up to the 2011 Winter Classic.

The Colonials and the Tigers will play at 3 p.m. Eastern on Dec. 30, the first game in a doubleheader that also features an AHL game between Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and Hershey.

The Pittsburgh Penguins are hosting the NHL’s Winter Classic at Heinz Field on Jan. 1.

“We are very excited that the Penguins have asked us to participate in this special hockey event,” Robert Morris coach Derek Schooley said in a statement. “We feel this is going to be a great event for our student-athletes as well as our university. We are privileged to be able to be part of such a wonderful event.”

Said RIT coach Wayne Wilson: “This is a great opportunity and I am very proud that our program is able be a part of the Winter Classic. We play a very good team in Robert Morris in a brand new, state-of-the-art arena, which will be a great experience for us.”

Robert Morris is also scheduled to play at the new home of the Penguins on Oct. 17 in the RMU Hockey Showcase.

Consol Energy Center will host the 2013 Frozen Four.

St. Cloud State Assistant Rud Heads to USHL

Assistant coach Eric Rud is leaving St. Cloud State to become the head coach and general manager of the USHL’s Green Bay Gamblers.

Rud spent the last five years at St. Cloud State following one season at Colorado College, his alma mater.

He was an assistant coach with the USHL’s Cedar Rapids Roughriders from 2002 to 2004.

“I’m excited to be the head coach for an outstanding organization like the Green Bay Gamblers,” Rud said in a statement. “The USHL is a great league and I am proud to be a part of it. Green Bay is a great family town and that was a big part of it for me.”

Said St. Cloud State coach Bob Motzko: “We hate to lose Eric because he has done an outstanding job for us over the past five seasons. He has become a great friend and was one of our team’s top assets. This is a well deserved job opportunity for Eric and a chance to run his own program in a great league. We certainly wish him the best at Green Bay.”

Alabama-Huntsville Adds Warde as Assistant Coach

Alabama-Huntsville has named former Iona and Army assistant coach Mike Warde as an assistant under new head coach Chris Luongo.

Warde returns to coaching after several years in the health care sales industry.

“I am very excited to have Mike Warde join our hockey team,” Luongo said in a statement. “He brings a wealth of college hockey experience that will complement the strengths of our staff.”

Warde will be the Chargers’ recruiting coordinator and work with special teams, Luongo said.

CCHA Will Continue Shootouts, Three-Point System

CCHA members have voted to continue using both the shootout to complete tie games for league standings purposes and the three-point-per-game system that goes with it.

The CCHA Council made those decisions this week at a meeting in Dearborn, Mich.

The league became the first in men’s college hockey to adopt the shootout when it was allowed under NCAA rules in 2008.

A year later, it tweaked its standings to award a consistent three points per game — three for a regulation or overtime win, two for a shootout win, one for a shootout loss and none for a regulation or overtime loss.

In the first year of the shootout, games that ended in regulation or overtime were worth a total of two points; games that ended in a shootout saw a total of three points awarded.

Last season, 25 CCHA games went to a shootout. Alaska played in a league-high eight.

Also at its meeting, the CCHA adopted standardized media timeouts for all league games and non-conference games hosted by CCHA teams. Timeouts will be taken at the first whistle with under 14 minutes, 10 minutes and six minutes remaining in each period.

Media timeouts can’t be taken after an icing call, a call for shooting the puck out of play, a goal or during a power-play situation.

Robert Morris Women Add Bittle to Staff

Robert Morris has hired former Colonials men’s player Logan Bittle as an assistant coach with the school’s women’s team.

After four years at Robert Morris from 2004 to 2008, Bittle played professionally in the ECHL and EPHL.

“I am very excited to have Logan joining our program,” Robert Morris coach Nate Handrahan said in a statement. “I believe he will bring a lot of assets to the table in helping our players develop as well as assisting in recruiting elite players around the world.”

Bittle has the first game-winning goal in Colonials’ men’s history, scored against Canisius on Oct. 22, 2004. He graduated from Robert Morr

is in the spring of 2008 with a degree in sport management.

“I am excited to have the opportunity to start my coaching career at RMU and am looking forward to working with Nate and Scott [Spencer] to continue to improve on the success that the women’s team has already had,” Bittle said.

Providence’s Army Coaches U.S. to Second at Ivan Hlinka Tournament

The U.S. Under-18 Select Team coached by Providence coach Tim Army finished second at the Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament, falling 1-0 to Canada on Saturday in the championship game in Piestany, Slovakia.

“Our guys gave it everything they had today,” Army said in a statement. “We couldn’t have asked for anything more from these players, who really came together in a short period of time and played well against tough international competition all week.”

Army, who is starting his sixth season at Providence, previously was an assistant coach for the U.S. national team in 1994 and 1996 and for the U.S. World Cup team in 2004.

Canada’s Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scored the game’s only goal less than two minutes into the first period.

Stephen Michalek stopped 23 shots for the Americans.

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