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This Week in D-III Women’s Hockey: December 10, 2009

Change of guard in the MIAC?

The Gustavus Adolphus Gusties have been the premier team in the MIAC ever since the NCAA started sponsoring a Division III women’s ice hockey championship for the 2001-2002 season. The Gusties have won every MIAC Tournament since 2004 and a majority of the regular season crowns as well.

However, this year the Gusties could be in danger of losing their stranglehold on the conference. The St. Thomas Tommies handed Gustavus Adolphus its first conference loss since 2007 this past weekend on their way to a three point weekend against the Gusties.

“They’ve had our number in playoff games the last five or six years,” said St. Thomas coach Tom Palkowski. “In the game of hockey one goal is a bounce here and a bounce there. We hadn’t been getting the bounces against them. We played a good solid weekend of hockey and were able to come away with three of four points.”

Palkowski said that is was especially bittersweet for his seven seniors that were a part of the last MIAC team to beat Gustavus Adolphus.

“This group knew they could compete obviously with results we’ve had in the last year tying River Falls and Gustavus Adolphus and beating Amherst,” Palkowski said. “They had the confidence they could win but you still have some self doubt until you actually do beat them. Traditionally we’ve actually played better against them in their barn then we do in our barn. I think when we tied it up in the second we got the confidence to take it the distance and then we scored with four minutes and held on from there.”

Currently, first place in the MIAC back to sixth place is separated by just three points making every conference game vital for every team involved. Each team has played four games and currently St. Thomas sits atop the standings with seven points. Upstart St. Catharine is 5-1 overall and 3-1 in the MIAC sitting in a second place tie with St. Olaf with six points. Gustavus Adolphus and St. Mary’s are tied with five points and Concordia-Moorhead sits sixth with four points. To say things are far from over is an understatement but St. Thomas certainly has the upper hand early.

“Beating Gustavus Adolphus is a huge win for the program,” Palkowski said. “But, I told the girls the win is only as big as what you do with it. If we go and falter down the stretch against some teams we should beat and they go on to win the conference, the win doesn’t really mean a lot. We need to take care of business the rest of the way in the conference and try and get that home ice for the playoffs and then go from there.”

Coming into the season, St. Thomas had to deal with the loss of all-everything forward Jackie Carroll. Carroll scored 136 points over her four-year career as a Tommie including being named MIAC Player of the Year last season.

“Losing Jackie Carroll was huge but it’s been a team effort all the way around to step up and fill her shoes,” Palkowski said. “Kara Ledel has stepped up and scored quite a few goals for us including both goals in Friday night’s win. Kara and her line mates have stepped it up a bit. But we’re also pretty solid in the net with Bradel and our six defensemen I think stack up with most in the country. It starts at the goal line and works its way out from there for us when we’re at our best.”

Kara Ledel’s five goals and three assists (5-3-8) lead a contingent of six players with five or more points on the young season. Kristine Beese (3-4-7), Taylor Shluter (3-2-5), Rachel Zilles (2-3-5), Amy Zimniewicz (1-4-5), and Meghan Parker (1-4-5).

Palkowski said he believes that the Tommies depth this season has been a huge asset compared to some of the teams they have played so far.

“When you can roll six defensemen and four lines every night it helps wear down teams,” Palkowski said. “We tend to typically play four lines more than most out here. I think even Gustavus only played three lines most of the weekend while we were able to play four and I think that does play some dividends in the end.”

The Tommies didn’t have much time to celebrate their three-point weekend as they had a quick turnaround with a Tuesday night game against Wis.-Superior. The Yellow jackets brought St. Thomas down a notch shutting out the Tommies on their home ice with a 3-0 win.

“I knew when I scheduled that game it was going to be a difficult task coming off the Gustavus weekend no matter if we won or lost,” Palkowski said. “The girls were obviously more focused on that series. Superior hadn’t played for two weeks and they were ready to go. To be honest they have had our number over the years as well for some reason and that continued on Tuesday. That was a nice measuring stick as well as Superior has a good team and they should be a mix in the (NCHA) down the stretch.”

Around The Country

Manhattanville turned some heads this past weekend when they stomped Norwich 7-0 in a crucial ECAC East early season test for both teams. The Valiants have been one of the more intriguing stories of the season so far by beating Elmira and Norwich already.

Manhattanville brought in a big recruiting class over the off-season despite not losing many players to graduation from last year’s team. So far 10 freshmen have been playing regularly for the Valiants led by Katie Little and Lynsey Schill. Little leads the nation with 14 goals and five assists for 19 points. Schill has recorded seven goals and nine assists for 16 points.

The Valiants will close out the first half of their season with a rubber match road game at Elmira on Saturday. The Soaring Eagles will desperately be looking for a win after getting swept by Plattsburgh and losing to Manhattanville already.

Plattsburgh continued its strong start to the season shutting out Neumann 6-0 and 7-0. The Cardinals have established themselves as the clear early favorite in the ECAC West with their sweep of Elmira and Neumann.

Along with the Manhattanville/Elmira showdown, R.I.T. will travel to Amherst for a big two game series between two Eastern powerhouses. Even though it’s only December these games will be crucial for both team’s NCAA resumes.

Weather Prompts Niagara-Robert Morris Postponement

Niagara has postponed its Friday night home game against Robert Morris because of snow and wind that have closed some major roads in the area.

The game has been rescheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 3 at 7 p.m. Tickets for Friday’s game can be exchanged for others for another men’s or women’s hockey or basketball game.

This Week in the WCHA: Dec. 10, 2009

As we hit what is basically the midpoint of the season (at least in terms of this column), the league picture is starting to get a little clearer. The point spread between first and last is separating oh-so-slightly (14 now; first-place Denver has 18 points while last-place Michigan Tech has four) each and every week.

That being said, the home-ice battle will undoubtedly be as close as ever as we currently have three teams tied for third (Duluth, St. Cloud State and Wisconsin) and seven points separate first through seventh (Minnesota State). If you want to take it even a step further, a whole whopping 10 points separate first from ninth (Alaska-Anchorage).

Enjoy the relaxing holidays; the second half is going to be another wild ride.

Red Baron WCHA Players of the Week

Red Baron WCHA Offensive Player of the Week: Rhett Rakhshani, DU.
Why: Scored four points (3 goals, 1 assist) to help his Pioneers take three points from rival CC and gain sole possession of first place in the league.
Also Nominated: Mike Testwuide, CC; Jason Gregoire, UND; Aaron Marvin, SCSU; Blake Geoffrion, UW.

Red Baron WCHA Defensive Player of the Week: Brendan Smith, UW.
Why: Scored seven points (2 goals, 5 assists), was plus-3 and helped his Badgers limit Michigan Tech to just two goals and 37 shots in UW’s series sweep.
Also Nominated: Gabe Guentzel, CC; Jesse Martin, DU; Brad Eidsness, UND; Mike Lee, SCSU.

Red Baron WCHA Rookie of the Week: Mike Lee, SCSU.
Why: Stopped 42 of 45 shots on goal and had three shutout periods to help his Huskies sweep Alaska-Anchorage.
Also Nominated: Joe Howe, CC; Josh Birkholz, UM; Derek Lee, UW.

Around the WCHA

DU: The Pioneers got a scare when defenseman Patrick Wiercioch left Saturday’s game against CC after reinjuring his knee. However, the re-injury was not serious and he will play Friday against the Bulldogs and report to Team Canada’s tryout camp on Saturday.

MTU: Sure, that combined 14-2 goal differential from the weekend’s games looks bad for the Huskies, but the team has also been nursing a ton of injuries, according to the Daily Mining Gazette. Tech was without defenseman Mike VanWagner for the series as well as forwards Jordan Baker, Milos Gordic, Bennett Royer and Eric Kattelus and had forwards Malcolm Gwilliam and Alex MacLeod playing through injury.

“We’re playing Wisconsin who has seven senior forwards, their D corps consists of three first round NHL picks, two second round NHL picks, and a draft eligible player who will probably go very high,” coach Jamie Russell told the Gazette after the series. “We’re competing with walk-ons against that.”

UM: According to the Star Tribune, Don Lucia held practices at 6:30 a.m. this week, stemming from his growing frustration on how his team is playing. After Friday’s game, he said his team needs to get mentally tougher and I’m presuming these practices are a good way to do just that.

USCHO’s own Tim Brule included a Lucia quote in his Friday game recap that well describes the coach’s frustration: “I told them my true feelings, but I am not sharing them with you. … We are capable of playing a lot better.”

UND: The Sioux lost another top-end player to (an undisclosed) injury this past weekend in Chris VandeVelde. The team is hopeful he’ll be able to play against Wisconsin this weekend, but isn’t entirely sure yet.

UW: The Badgers will be leaving three people behind when they travel to Grand Forks: goaltender Brett Bennett, who dislocated his shoulder in practice; forward Jordy Murray, who injured his shoulder two weeks ago against Michigan; and forward Sean Dolan, who injured his foot against Michigan Tech.

WCHA Midseason Report Cards

As this is the last column of the calendar year, it is my tradition to hand out grades to the member teams as I see them, based on several factors which include but are not limited to: preseason expectations, current record, current rankings, national statistics and personal observances.

No. 2 Denver
Overall Record: 10-4-2 (8-2-2 WCHA).
Top Scorer: Rhett Rakhshani (11-9–20).
Goaltending: Marc Cheverie (11 gp, 8-1-1, 1.77 GAA, .940 sv%).
Grade: A-minus. What, only an A-minus? The Pioneers were picked to be the top team in the league and so far, they’ve been playing up to those expectations. I’ve also seen them in action quite a bit and they’re often times very sloppy. However, that also says that if the team’s not playing up to its full potential right now and STILL dominating everyone? Watch out if they truly get their act together.

No. 3 North Dakota
Overall Record: 9-5-2 (6-5-1 WCHA).
Top Scorers: Danny Kristo (5-9–14), Evan Trupp (4-10–14).
Goaltending: Brad Eidsness (15 gp, 8-4-2, 1.97 GAA, .919 sv%).
Grade: B. Although the Sioux are sitting in sixth place (technically fourth) in the league, the Sioux have been playing well, injury to Chay Genoway notwithstanding. Add in a few ties or wins in the Sioux’s last few one-goal losses, and you’re looking at a different team. Another thing to keep in mind is that North Dakota has been a second-half team for the last few years. If that trend holds true, the Sioux could be very dangerous come March.

No. 6 Colorado College
Overall Record: 10-4-2 (7-3-2 WCHA).
Top Scorer: Bill Sweatt (8-11–19).
Goaltending: Joe Howe (14 gp, 9-3-2, 2.18 GAA, .928 sv%).
Grade: A-plus. This team has exceeded expectations. Period. They’re currently sitting at second place in the league when all the rest of us had them at seventh or eighth. Scott Owens is getting different people step up in the scoring, a fairly solid defensive corps and another freshman goaltender surprise in Joe Howe. It will be interesting to watch whether or not the Tigers can keep it up in the second half.

No. 11 Wisconsin
Overall Record: 10-5-1 (7-4-1 WCHA).
Top Scorer: Brendan Smith (7-17–24).
Goaltending: Brett Bennett (9 gp, 6-3-0, 2.12 GAA, .904 sv%); Scott Gudmandson (7 gp, 4-2-1, 1.57 GAA, .933 sv%).
Grade: B. The Badgers are playing about as well as everyone thought they would. That being said, the team has potential to be so much better. As the Badgers hit the meat of their schedule, which starts this weekend with North Dakota, we’ll get a better feel for what the Badgers truly can do and, if I may be so clichéd, if they’re going to be pretenders or contenders.

No. 12 Minnesota-Duluth
Overall Record: 10-5-1 (7-4-1 WCHA).
Top Scorer: Jack Connolly (10-13–23).
Goaltending: Brady Hjelle (10 gp, 7-2-1, 2.78 GAA, .911 sv%); Kenny Reiter (7 gp, 3-3-0, 2.52 GAA, .907 sv%).
Grade: B-plus. After we all saw how much the Bulldogs lost in the offseason, we all thought they were going to be a bottom half team. So far, Duluth has proved us all wrong, sitting pretty in a three-way tie for third place. The ‘Dogs have one of the highest-powered offenses in the conference (a stark change from two years ago) and are figuring out their goaltending situation quite nicely. The league is cruel, though, and UMD will have to fight hard to keep their spot.

No. 17 St. Cloud State
Overall Record: 8-6-2 (7-4-1 WCHA).
Top Scorer: Ryan Lasch (9-5–14).
Goaltending: Mike Lee (10 gp, 4-4-2, 2.38 GAA, .915 sv%); Dan Dunn (6 gp, 4-2-0, 2.32 GAA, .926 sv%).
Grade: C. Their league record is good, but there’s a reason the Huskies are so low in the national polls (difficulty of putting said poll together notwithstanding). This year’s edition of SCSU is, in many ways, similar to the last few years — a team struggling to find consistency. It looks as if the team is starting to find consistency in some ways (Mike Lee is emerging as the team’s No. 1 guy in nets), but we’re all waiting for them to take that next step.

Minnesota
Overall Record: 6-9-1 (4-7-1 WCHA).
Top Scorer: Tony Lucia (4-8–12).
Goaltending: Alex Kangas (12 gp, 5-6-0, 2.75 GAA, .911 sv%).
Grade: D. The Gophers are underachieving, plain and simple. Going into the season, we all thought the Gophers didn’t lose that much and we placed them fourth because, given the strength in the league, that’s the best spot we had. Instead, the Gophers have struggled to the point of frustrating Lucia beyond belief. The plus side? The Gophers have the tools to turn it around, but whether they have the mental capability to do so is the question.

Minnesota State
Overall Record: 7-8-1 (5-8-1 WCHA).
Top Scorer: Zach Harrison (5-9–14).
Goaltending: Austin Lee (11 gp, 6-5-0, 2.74 GAA, .906 sv%).
Grade: C. The Mavericks are about where we thought they’d be (lower half). Granted, they had a tough stretch of schedule that they struggled with mightily (UMD, UW, DU, CC), but they’ve seemingly started to turn things around. Whether that turnaround lasts is anyone’s guess, as their schedule contains much of the same in the second half.

Alaska-Anchorage
Overall Record: 6-12-0 (4-10-0 WCHA).
Top Scorer: Tommy Grant (4-10–14).
Goaltending: Jon Olthius (10 gp, 3-6-0, 3.55 GAA, .867 sv%); Bryce Christianson (9 gp, 3-6-0, 3.75 GAA, .867 sv%).
Grade: C-minus. I’ve seen the Seawolves play. I saw them claw and fight to earn a win and a split on the road at CC. I know what the team is capable of. However, as with the last couple years, UAA can’t get over the hump. While the team doesn’t have the superstars or big names as, say, Denver or North Dakota, it has the work ethic and enough skill to be much, much better.

Michigan Tech
Overall Record: 3-11-0 (2-10-0 WCHA).
Top Scorer: Brett Olson (7-8–15).
Goaltending: Kevin Genoe (11 gp, 2-7-0, 3.86 GAA, .896 sv%); Josh Robinson (7 gp, 1-4-0, 5.04 GAA, .856 sv%).
Grade: D. I know the Huskies had a lot of things working against them in the first half. They spent most of the first half on the road and went through a lot of injuries. And, as far as preseason expectations go, they’re technically meeting them by being last. However, in hockey (not to mention most things), you don’t want to just meet expectations — you want to exceed them. Right now, Michigan Tech isn’t doing that.

Future WCHA Team Watch

Bemidji State continued its roll, sweeping conference foe Niagara. The Beavers have only four games until we’re back here again — two at Minnesota State and two at Western Michigan.

Nebraska-Omaha, on the other hand, continues to slide. The Mavericks were swept by Ferris State, causing them to drop out of the polls. UNO has six games on the slate — two at Alaska, a home and home with Minnesota State and a date with the Denver Cup where they’ll face Denver and St. Lawrence.

#4 BSU: 13-2-1 overall, 1-1-0 vs. WCHA
UNO: 7-6-3 overall, 0-0-0 vs. WCHA

See You on the Flip Side

May your holiday season be calm, peaceful and as joyous as it can be this year.

Hockey-filled doesn’t hurt, either. Neither do party-filled, cookie-filled, present-filled and/or friend-filled.

This Week in ECAC Hockey: Dec. 10, 2009

I should probably keep this to myself, but I’ll just say it: Only six teams are playing this weekend (including Union’s exhibition against the kids), so my readership will likely be a bit lighter. I’ve been out of the country all week (for pleasure rather than business, I’ll admit), and between study period, finals, early winter breaks, and roaming charges in Canada, I just haven’t been able to wrangle any coaches for interviews this week.

So let’s get down to what we’ve got this week.

This Six is on Fire

I’m a sucker for topical puns.

Bull market

Yale is finally feeling its oats, organizing a spiffy little five-of-six affair. Apart from a deflating 1-0 loss up in Burlington, Vt., the Bulldogs have won five out of six overall and are 4-0-2 in league games since their ECAC-opening loss at RPI.

The Elis have also jumped to the top of the conference in offense, scoring 4.14 league goals a game and 4.33 overall. That’s in spite of a sub-par power play unit that is only producing on 14 percent of its ECAC opportunities (but is 13 points more effective out of conference).

Third-year Broc Little leads the team with 10 goals in 12 games, but 14 of his teammates have scored as well this year — 11 of them with multiple tallies. Freshman Andrew Miller has 13 points in his dozen outings, while classmates Antoine Laganiere and Josh Balch each have a half-dozen points as well. Even goalie Nick Maricic (more on him in a moment) has two assists, putting him 115th in the league in overall scoring.

Yale’s primary point of concern has got to be goaltending, as four different ‘tenders have eaten minutes in the Bulldog crease already. Senior Billy Blase — a 27-game starter only two years back — has played only 12 minutes of NCAA action this fall, while rookie Maricic has seen more time than classmate Jeff Malcolm or junior Ryan Rondeau, playing 309 minutes in five starts. The mega-rotation isn’t due to injuries or illness, but merely inconsistency on the individual level.

The Big O

In sports, it’s generally not so good to have too many zeros attached to your season, and Union has carried its share of undesirable goose-eggs over the years. But this year’s donut is a null of a different nature.

Mario Valery-Trabucco scored five goals with two helpers in the Dutchmen’s three-game weekend, leading the team to two wins and a draw as Union remained the last undefeated team in ECAC Hockey.

The senior’s sizzling stick helped him double his goal production for the season, but more importantly it helped Union stun Capital District rival Rensselaer on Wednesday night.

Down by 3-1 and 4-3 margins at RPI’s Houston Field House, it was “V-T”‘s hat trick (accounting for Union’s first three goals) that laid the brickwork for Jason Walters’ game-tying extra-attacker goal with 51 seconds remaining … and then Mike Schreiber’s game-winner 32 seconds later.

It’s a shame that the mid-week game fell during RPI’s study period and Union’s early holiday break, as only a half-capacity crowd was on hand to witness the Dutch extend their unbeaten streak to nine games in such thrilling fashion.

Fittingly enough, this game somehow managed to top Nov. 28’s UC-RPI tilt, in which it was the Engineers who potted two late goals (including the equalizer with one second remaining) to send the non-conference game to overtime before Walters eventually won it for UC. That game was more exciting than the programs’ first non-con meeting of the year (yep, they played two non-league games), which featured three lead changes and another late game-tying goal by RPI. That led to the ‘Tute’s only win over Union in three tries so far this year.

There’s still one more chance to see how this rivalry could escalate any further, as the Albany-area neighbors clash again on Jan. 16 at Union’s Messa Rink.

Brown is good now. No, seriously.

The Brown Bears are good. Scary good.

Read that a few more times if you must.

Bruno, fresh off a 0-7-1 start in which they were out-scored 31-17 and shut out twice, is on a five-game winning streak — the second-longest in the nation, one behind Mercyhurst. The winning streak is the program’s longest since early 2004, when Yann Danis backstopped the Bears to five consecutive Ws and a six-game unbeaten streak.

The Providence Ivy scored 22 goals in those five games, allowing six (including four one-goal games). The run began with an 8-1 blasting of visiting Connecticut, followed by suffocations of Harvard (4-1), Princeton (3-1) and red-hot Quinnipiac (2-1) in firing-squad succession. As of this writing, American International was the Bears’ latest victim, falling 5-2 Tuesday night.

I’ll admit that last week, after winning two games, I figured it was a good time to strike while the iron was hot and feature Brown in the weekly column. Who knows when they’ll be a feel-good story again, I pondered … good to cover them while the coach is happy and there’s something positive to post.

Little did I know that not only would Bruno keep right on rolling, but they’d do it without smoke and mirrors; just good old-fashioned work. Since surrendering 43 shots in the victory at Harvard — a topic that was discussed by coach Brendan Whittet last week — the Bears have followed up with efforts of 37, 23 and 26 shots-against in the Princeton, QU and AIC games, respectively.

Brown’s power play needs some major attention, scoring barely once per nine advantages, but the penalty kill is solid: 86 percent successful on the whole, and 21 for 22 on the win streak. Goaltender Mike Clemente has upped his save percentage to .916 by saving over 96 percent of the shots he’s faced in these last five games, and sophomore Jack Maclellan has scored five goals (with four assists) in his last six outings.

Sometimes all it takes is for a spark of confidence to ignite a hard-working team, and I for one fully support yet another team that make my predictions look downright stupid.

What’s going on up there?

I touched on it in the “What They’re Saying About … ” section of last week’s column, but didn’t actually mention any specifics: Dartmouth, like Brown, appears to be rising from the dead.

That’s not to say that they were six feet under, but merely that some had decided to declare the teams lifeless a bit prematurely.

The Big Green take on Sacred Heart and Vermont in single-game weekends over the next two weeks, and didn’t play last weekend. Whether this proves to be a much-needed rest for the young squad or puts a damper on its surging momentum, we’ll have to see. What we do know is that the team has won three in a row after a 0-6-0 start, and did in one game what they had failed to do in any stretch of three previous contests combined: score six goals.

That outburst capped the trifecta run, as the Green hammered Harvard 6-2 in Cambridge nearly two weeks ago. Dartmouth allowed exactly two goals in each of its three triumphs, which also set a new bar for the season, since the team held only one previous opponent — Princeton — to that mark.

Sophomore goalie Jody O’Neill is saving nearly 19 of 20 shots on the streak, finally dragging his overall save rate above the .900 mark. His goals-against average is still 3.29, but at least he’s got it moving in the right direction.

A pair of juniors — Scott Fleming and Adam Estoclet — currently lead the team with 10 points apiece, but it’s Fleming doing the red-light work with seven of the team’s 24 goals.

Route 11 revisited

St. Lawrence took this edition of the Route 11 Rivalry, as the Saints claimed three of four points from the rival Golden Knights of Clarkson.

The points eased SLU out of the shortest of all losing streaks — two games — and put it back in the middle of the league standings, though Joe Marsh and the rest of the Appleton faithful can’t be too happy about settling for a home-ice tie on Friday night. Down 3-1 with under nine minutes to play, the Knights scored two of their three power play goals to wrestle a point from the jaws of defeat. Sophomore Corey Tamblyn’s extra-attacker, 6-on-4 marker with 30 seconds to play all but erased Clarkson’s embarrassing one-shot second period from memory, and sent SLU goalie Robby Moss home with a real shiner on his stat sheet: three goals on 17 shots.

Saturday’s tilt in front of nearly 3,400 at Cheel was one to remember, featuring three lead changes, three combined power play goals, and a comeback-capping goal with the man-advantage and 1:44 on the clock to seal the win for the Saints.

This time it was Clarkson goalie Paul Karpowich’s turn to feel the shame, surrendering four goals on 18 shots, while Alex Petizian denied an admittedly sub-par 21 of 24 on the other end of the North Country shootout.

The Knights are now 1-8-2 in their last 11 and 1-5-2 in their last eight ECAC Hockey contests. Defense has been a major concern, as ‘Tech has felt the red light’s burn 43 times in those 11 games, and has only held opponents under three goals thrice all year. The second big worry is, well, the second: Clarkson is scoring at the same pace as its foes in the first and third periods, but is getting blown out 29-11 in the middle frame this season.

Nine miles down the road (though it feels much, much farther in the snow, I can assure you), St. Lawrence has been winning more than it has been losing, but the team has failed to string together any significant streaks. The Saints are 3-1-1 in their last five ECAC games, and are 4-1-2 at home, but in order to be factored into the contender discussion will probably have to a) pick this year’s hot goalie from their current and underwhelming three-man rotation, b) figure out how to kill better than 70 percent of their penalties, c) get off to quicker starts and d) realize that while many players scoring is good, a few of them scoring more consistently is better.

With one more game on the docket for 2009, a win or tie at Vermont would equal SLU’s longest unbeaten string of the season — three games — just in time for a brand new year.

Red hitting all greens

The Big Red hid in Quinnipiac’s shadow during the Bobcats’ searing run, but now it’s possible to see Cornell’s hockey team for what it really is: consistent, and consistently good.

The Red have lost only twice all year, and those L’s came at the hands of QU and Yale. The team is on a four-game unbeaten streak, and for the record, Cornell hasn’t gone two games without a win yet this autumn: every loss or tie is followed by a win, no exceptions. For you NFL fans, think of recent Patriots teams — they never have two off games in a row.

Ben Scrivens is still Ben Scrivens, holding a save rate near 93 percent. He hasn’t allowed more than three goals in an outing, and has had only two games with a sub-90 save percentage.

Oh yeah, and Blake Gallagher is doing all right as well. The senior has 10 goals in 11 games, and has gone pointless only twice. He has already surpassed his career high for goals in a season, has accounted for a full quarter of the Big Red’s goals to date, and is doubling his nearest competition in the locker room — classmate Colin Greening, who has five.

Nick D’Agostino is leading a somewhat quiet freshman class with two goals and four assists, though fellow forwards John Esposito and Greg Miller have both seen ice time in all 11 games this year.

Slip-Sliding Away

This has been the autumn of their discontent for Harvard and Princeton. Two Ivies, disparate in culture, region, style and schedule, have nonetheless encountered the same fate as we approach the inter-annal divide.

“It’s been a rough fall,” summed Harvard’s Ted Donato. “We’re doing enough things to have some positives, but we’re not doing enough good things to push us over the top. I actually think we’ve improved quite a bit over the past month or so, but we haven’t seen the results in the wins and losses. We’ve had pretty good efforts, but not complete efforts.”

The Crimson have withered under the weight of four L’s in a row, and have now gone 10 games without a win. Defense and goaltending have been huge problems, with the Cantabs suffering over four goals against per game and finding their goaltending stable devoid of a .900-plus save guy. The defense seems to wilt as the game progresses as well, allowing 10, 14 and 21 goals in the first, second and third periods, respectively (though to be fair, four were empty-net goals).

The offense is only as good as the defense, but it’s not strictly one facet of Harvard’s game that is in tatters. More correctly, the Crimson suffer from widespread inconsistency: Donato pointed out that when a team is rolling along, it is frequently thanks to role players chipping in with big plays at opportunistic moments. The same thing, he said, happens in reverse to a struggling team — good players disappear at the wrong times, and weaker elements of your game are exposed night after night.

The team discovered a whole new weakness Wednesday night in a 3-2 loss to Boston College.

“We were missing quite a few guys,” the coach explained. “You could make a case that those were five or six guys that, if fully healthy … would be in the lineup. We had a little bit of food poisoning going on … so we had no [defenseman Ryan] Grimshaw, no [defenseman Ian] Tallett, no [forward and captain Doug] Rogers, no [forward Matt] McCollem, no [forward Marshall] Everson.”

Despite a strong effort in which the host Crimson out-shot the Eagles and pitched a solid game on special teams (1-for-3 on the power play, 3-for-3 killing penalties), a couple of soft goals against one-time Dryden Award-winner Kyle Richter put Harvard behind the 8-ball.

“As a staff, as a group, as a team, we’re frustrated, there’s no doubt,” Donato said.

Down south, Princeton is suffering through its own personality dilemma. A top contender on both the ECAC Hockey and the national stage, the Tigers are swooning to the tune of a five-game losing streak and a six-game winless slide.

Whereas Harvard could look at its tough five-game season-opening road swing as a setback to its development and record, Princeton was in an opposite situation: the Stripes started with six games at Hobey Baker Rink, and are two games removed from the end of a seven-game road trip … not including two Florida College Classic games on the other side of the holidays.

From the outside, it looks as though a blow-for-blow heavyweight bout at Colgate on Nov. 21 may have sent the Tigs into a spiral. Princeton blew three different leads in that game, and actually had to score last to force overtime … only to lose two minutes into the extra session despite a 47-27 advantage in shots.

Another Dryden Award winner, Zane Kalemba, may be experiencing his own crisis of confidence. The man with the .932 save percentage last year is all the way down to .891 this time around, and has already had four bad outings if you look at save rates. That’s not to say that he wasn’t hung out to dry in any of those games, but in hockey’s great scheme, a goalie below about 91 percent simply won’t cut it.

The one thing that Princeton is good at — and has, under coach Guy Gadowsky, always been good at — is a high-octane attack rooted in shots, shots, shots. The Tigers are popping over 37 pucks goalward each game, but unlike in years past, the goals just aren’t coming quite as frequently. Dan Bartlett leads the team with five, but with Mike Kramer and Cam MacIntyre is one of only three players on the team with more than two.

Readers’ Poll

Last week’s poll was a little more time-sensitive than my others have been, but the results still stand: Princeton was thought to have the most to prove last weekend, and in losing both games at Yale and Brown, is looking further and further removed from recent editions of the Garden State Goal-Machines. Quinnipiac may have lost both as well — who would’ve thunk it? — but it had a little wiggle room, given the quality (and quantity) of its previous victories.

This week’s question: Which team has impressed you most in the first half? Cornell, for quietly Cornell-ing just about everybody it’s played? QU, for obvious reasons … or Union, for that second-column zed? What about Yale, which — despite a hot-and-cold start — is nonetheless 4-1-2 in league and 7-3-2 overall? Have at it!

This Week in the CHA: Dec. 10, 2009

It’s hard to lead off this column with anything other than Bemidji State, but when the crumbling conference that is the CHA boasts the No. 4 team in the country, there’s a reason why the Beavers deserve top billing.

It also doesn’t hurt that BSU leads the country with 13 wins.

They got Nos. 12 and 13 last weekend at home against Niagara, topping the Purple Eagles by a combined score of 11-4.

BSU won 8-2 Friday night and then held on for a 3-2 win Saturday night.

“We are very fortunate to have such a strong team defense and I can’t say enough about our goaltending,” Bemidji State coach Tom Serratore told the Bemidji Pioneer.

Jamie MacQueen scored the game winner for Bemidji State against Niagara last Saturday (photo: BSU Photo Services).

Jamie MacQueen scored the game winner for Bemidji State against Niagara last Saturday (photo: BSU Photo Services).

In game one, Ian Lowe scored twice and Matt Read, Ryan Cramer, Tyler Lehrke, Ben Kinne, Shea Walters and Darcy Findlay added singles to back Dan Bakala’s 27 saves in goal.

Aaron McLeod was also a remarkable 15-2 on faceoffs for the Beavers.

Chris Moran had a goal and an assist for NU. Ryan Olidis scored the other and Adam Avramenko stopped 31 shots in a losing effort.

“Bemidji is a good team with the lead, especially at home when they can smell blood,” Niagara coach Dave Burkholder said. “Consecutive even-strength goals in the second period put us in a bad spot.”

Saturday night, BSU took a 2-0 lead on goals by captain Chris McKelvie and Kinne.

Giancarlo Iurorio scored early in the third period for the Purple Eagles to make it a one-goal game, until Jamie MacQueen got what proved to be the game-winner with 3:45 to play.

Olidis scored in the final minute with goaltender Chris Noonan on the bench, but BSU held on.

“We were very fortunate to win tonight,” Serratore said to the Pioneer. “I thought Niagara played very well. They were tough on us defensively and forechecked hard. We had a hard time sustaining any back to back shifts and couldn’t get into a flow offensively.

“The bottom line is I don’t know if it was our prettiest game, but the guys found a way to win. We got the first goal and played with a lead the whole way — that certainly makes things easier.”

McLeod was again stellar on draws, winning eight of 10. Read went 16-for-21 to boot.

Burkholder said it just wasn’t meant to be.

“We played another good road game, but we couldn’t get the result we wanted,” he said. “We competed all night, outhit and outshot them, but came up one goal short on the scoreboard.”

Bakala made 29 saves in becoming the first goalie in the country to 10 wins (10-1-1), while Noonan stopped 19 shots.

And the voters took note, too, as the Beavers moved up another notch in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll to the No. 4 slot.

Anyone else think they’ll do just fine in the WCHA? BSU will get a chance to see a future conference opponent as Minnesota State comes to Bemidji this weekend.

Chargers Take 3 Points From RMU

Alabama-Huntsville took three big CHA points on the road at Robert Morris last weekend with a tie and a win against the Colonials.

Friday night, UAH scored two quick goals in the first period, only to have RMU come back and get the tie with a goal in the third off the stick of Scott Kobialko.

Davide Nicoletti and Andrew Coburn scored for Alabama-Huntsville, while Nathan Longpre tallied late in the first for Robert Morris.

Brooks Ostergard kicked out 21 shots for the Colonials and Cameron Talbot stopped 46 for UAH.

In Saturday’s game, RMU scored the first and last goals (Zach Hervato, with his first career goal, and Furman South), but the Chargers scored four in the middle and came away with a 4-2 win.

Cody Campbell scored a pair to go along with singles from Sebastian Geoffrion (first NCAA goal) and Tom Train.

Talbot made 39 saves for the win, while Ostergard finished with 13 at the other end.

Niagara Picks Up USHL Commitment

Sioux City Musketeers forward Ryan Rashid has committed to play at Niagara following his United States Hockey League career.

Ryan Rashid has given Niagara a verbal commitment (photo: USHL Images).

Ryan Rashid has given Niagara a verbal commitment (photo: USHL Images).

The 19-year-old native of Farmington Hills, Mich., has posted a 4-3–7 line playing in all 20 games for the Musketeers this season. Rashid is playing in his first USHL season and registered his first point, an assist, in just his second game back on Oct. 9.

Rashid is the second USHL player to commit to the Purple Eagles this season, with Waterloo Black Hawks forward Patrick Divjak being the other.

Niagara has five former USHL players on the roster: Avramenko (Green Bay Gamblers), Dan Baco (Lincoln Stars), Bryan Haczyk (Green Bay), Robert Martini (Indiana Ice) and Moran (Omaha Lancers). NU assistant coach Tim Madsen spent two seasons as a player in the USHL (2002-04) split between Waterloo and the Tri-City Storm.

On A Personal Note …

With this being my final column until 2010, I just wanted to take this opportunity to wish all of our USCHO readers a happy holiday season and a reminder to drive safe. If you’re already late, slow down — you won’t get there any faster if you end up off-roading into a ditch.

And to my loving and supporting family that still can’t beat me at Wii Bowling, maybe the holidays will bring you some luck so you can finally beat me. Then again, maybe not. Oh well, I love you guys anyway!

In any event, be safe, keep warm, and see you back here in 2010. Hopefully, we get a white Christmas in suburban Flint. That’s what I’m hoping for. The wind we can do without, but the snow, bring it on, baby!

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Dec. 10, 2009

Streaking

There’s very little mediocrity at this juncture of the Atlantic Hockey season. Seven of the league’s 10 teams are on some kind of streak, good or bad.

Let’s keep things positive for now and talk about the four teams that have won at least four games in a row. RIT and Air Force have the No. 1 and No. 2 unbeaten streaks in Division I. The Tigers are 9-0-1 in their last 10 games, while the Falcons are 6-0-3 in their last nine contests.

Mercyhurst is on a six-game winning streak, and Army has won four in a row.

It’s no surprise that goaltending has been key for all four teams during their spate of success.

“It all starts there,” said Mercyhurst coach Rick Gotkin. “We build from the net out and you can’t be successful without strong goaltending. And Ryan Zapolski has been the man for us.”

Zapolski has been named goaltender of the week in the AHA for two consecutive weeks. Last weekend, he allowed one goal on 50 shots to lead the Lakers to a sweep of Connecticut.

“He’s playing some of the best hockey of his career,” said Gotkin.

RIT’s Jared DeMichiel has been spectacular for the Tigers during their streak, posting a 1.34 GAA and a .951 save percentage over his last nine starts. The senior split time with the departed Louis Menard last season, but has taken over the starter’s role this season, playing in 14 of the Tigers’ 15 games so far.

“Our strong defensive play starts with Jared,” said RIT coach Wayne Wilson. “He is on top of his game right now, and with that, the whole team has bought into playing stronger defensively.”

At Army, Jay Clark is averaging 1.5 goals allowed a game over his last four games, and has an overall GAA of 2.77. Last weekend, Clark stopped 76 of 79 shots to lead the Black Knights to a 2-1 and 4-2 sweep of Sacred Heart.

And last but not least, Air Force’s Andrew Volkening hasn’t allowed more than three goals in a game since Oct. 23. The reining AHA goaltender of the year has a 2.53 GAA and a .911 save percentage.

Volkening’s Falcons will host Mercyhurst in the only conference games this weekend. Mercyhurst trails Air Force and RIT by two points in the standings. The Tigers have a single non-conference game this weekend, so either Air Force or Mercyhurst will find itself in sole possession of first place heading into the holiday break.

It’s been a fast reversal for Mercyhurst, which four weeks ago was swept by RIT at home and was near the bottom of the AHA standings. I asked Gotkin if he was surprised to be playing for the conference lead so soon after.

“Anything is possible,” he said. “This league is tough from top to bottom. I said before the season started that this was going to be the tightest year ever in terms of the standings. So the difference from top to bottom can change in a hurry.

“I thought those two games against RIT [2-1 and 3-2 losses] were two of the best games we played all year. An average fan can sometimes think you play well when you win and you play bad when you lose. But it’s not always that way. We played our best games of the season to that point and it didn’t go our way. We got better from that weekend.”

“We are getting the bounces now, and are playing really calm and composed in the tight games,” said Wilson of his Tigers. “We haven’t deviated from the game plan in those situations, and have been able to come out with some big wins. We need to continue to play well, because every game is tough from here on out.”

“This Friday is our biggest game of the year,” said Gotkin. “Not just because it’s Air Force. It’s because it’s our next game.”

Weekly Awards

Player of the Week for Dec. 7, 2009:
Jacques Lamoureux — Air Force

The senior had three goals and three assists last weekend with help the Falcons to a sweep of AIC. His four points on Friday tied his career high. Lamoureux leads the Falcons with 10 goals and 11 assists.

Goalie of the Week for Dec. 7, 2009:
Ryan Zapolski — Mercyhurst

Zapolski wins the award for the second week in a row. This time he stopped 50 of 51 shots in a 5-0, 3-1 sweep of Connecticut.

Rookie of the Week for Dec. 7, 2009:
Joe Campanelli — Bentley

Campanelli had a four-point weekend on one goal and three assists as Bentley split a series at Canisius.

The Other Kind of Streak

Unfortunately, there are three teams in the league that have streaks they’re trying to break.

AIC has lost seven in a row, getting swept in succession by Canisius, Mercyhurst and Air Force and then dropping a game at Brown on Tuesday. The Yellow Jackets have one more game before the holidays and it’s another toughie, at No. 7 Quinnipiac on Saturday.

Connecticut is winless in its last eight games (0-7-1) and has put away the skates until after Christmas. The Huskies will host Bentley, UMass and Union in their annual holiday tournament on Dec. 29 and 30. The Bentley-UConn first-round game is a league game.

Sacred Heart hasn’t won in its last seven games (0-6-1) and travels to Dartmouth on Sunday for its final contest of 2009.

Defense = Offense

RIT’s defense is having a pretty good season, allowing just 2.3 goals per game, ninth best in the nation. But it’s on offense that the Tigers’ blue line corps is really shining. RIT defensemen are putting the puck in the net at amazing pace, accounting for 52 percent of the Tigers’ goals so far this season. Senior defenseman Al Mazur leads the team in goals with six, while classmate Dan Ringwald is tied for second with five. Freshman Chris Tanev also has five goals from the blue line, while sophomores Chris Haltgin (three) and freshman Chris Saracono (two) have also lit the lamp more than once.

Quote of the Week

Air Force coach Frank Serratore made these postgame comments to the Colorado Springs Gazette after his team defeated AIC on Friday:

“I can’t think of a game I’ve coached at Air Force that we played this poorly and won. We won the game for two reasons: We had Andrew Volkening and we had Jacques Lamoureux. I wouldn’t give you a plug nickel for any of the other 17. We stole that game.”

Happy Holidays

This is my last column of 2009. There’s a few AHA teams in action before we meet again:

• Canisius hosts Robert Morris on Dec. 15 and Colgate on Dec. 20
• Bentley and Connecticut will be at the UConn Classic on Dec. 29 and 30
• RIT will be at Minnesota State Jan. 1 and 2
• Air Force travels to Sacred Heart for a conference series on Jan. 2 and 3
• Holy Cross will be at the Ledyard Bank Classic on Jan. 2 and 3
• Mercyhurst will be at the Catamount Cup on Jan. 2 and 3
• Army will host Union on Jan. 2

Check out a game if you can, and we’ll see you in 2010.

This Week in the CCHA: Dec. 10, 2009

Baby, It’s Cold Outside

For the months of October and November and for the first few weeks of December this year, Flint resembled Columbus in climate. As much as I wanted to leave Ohio for Michigan — nothing personal, Buckeye State — I knew one week into November 2008 that I had been spoiled by 19 years of milder and shorter central Ohio winters and that the weather hardiness on which I had prided myself as a native upstate New Yorker was nothing but a self-deluded ploy.

One week into November 2008 and I was crying, “Uncle!” By mid-February of this year, I was simply crying.

It’s not that the return of winter is completely unwelcome. There’s a big holiday approaching — the one with the tree, the late-night gift-wrapping in a desperate attempt to send out the packages to arrive in time for Christmas Day, the eggnog spiked just enough to help make palatable yet another retelling of stories from my dad’s years working quality control for General Electric in Syracuse — and the frigid weather and drifting snow help to feed the seasonal illusions.

The sudden onslaught of winter, however, coupled with the piles of end-of-the-semester grading (I’m surprised that my eyes can’t, in fact, bleed) has made me grumpy — or grumpier, as people who are forced to interact with me personally would say.

I’m not usually a Christmas curmudgeon. I’m fairly chipper this time of year. I break out the music, from the A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector to the soundtrack of A Charlie Brown Christmas, and I bake those cookies, address those cards, wrap those gifts — all after a full day of bleeding eyes — and I do so without rancor.

Usually.

As I am hitting a midseason slump about a month shy of its usual arrival, I thought now would be a good time to grab some cocoa and search the CCHA for things that have made me smile so far this season. I encourage you to reach for your beverage of choice and smile along.

The Michigan Wolverines Have Yet to Experience the Shootout

I’m not saying that the Wolverines have never experienced a shootout per se, but the Wolverines have taken care of business — one way or another — in regulation since their 5-4 overtime loss to Notre Dame in the 2008 Frozen Four.

That means that the Michigan has yet to experience CCHA regular-season points determined by a shootout; the Wolverines were 29-12-0 last season and are 8-8-0 this year.

Of course, Michigan plays a home-and-home series against Notre Dame this weekend, and given how much I love the shootout and on which of Santa’s lists my name rests this year, that streak will probably be broken Friday, when the Wolverines play the Irish in Yost Ice Arena … and I’m in attendance.

The Last-Place Michigan Wolverines

Before all you Maize-and-Blue fans get your hate on and e-mail in, I take no pleasure in watching Michigan languish near the bottom of the standings. I admire Red Berenson and what he’s accomplished in Ann Arbor, and a weak Wolverine team is bad for the league.

However, it was interesting to see Michigan anchoring the CCHA standings — briefly — after the Wolverines’ loss to Ohio State last Friday, Dec. 4. It’s even more amusing because I don’t think that UM is out of the running for a much loftier spot at the end of the season, as Berenson seems to possess some magic and regular-season wins are worth three points now.

Ferris State Fans

Some of the best, brightest moments I’ve had during the past few weeks have come by way of Ferris State fans, and I’m sure that my reaction was the opposite of what was intended.

Whenever a team that doesn’t often threaten the top spot in the league emerges as a very strong competitor, that team’s fans emerge from hibernation, eager to vent their seasons-long spleen at the most convenient target.

That target, of course, is me.

Over the course of the last few weeks, I’ve received at least half a dozen e-mail messages from Bulldog fans — that’s actually quite a few, relatively speaking — berating me for not doing enough to beat the Ferris State drum. These e-mails usually begin with, “I’m a big fan of Ferris State,” and end with either “Thank you” or “What’s wrong with you, anyway?”

One of my favorites came this week and although the tone was vaguely polite — there was no cursing, no questioning of my lineage, no suggestions for cosmetic surgery — the implication was clear: I’m useless because I haven’t declared the 11-3-2 Bulldogs supreme leaders of the universe, or at least the CCHA.

Another favorite came to nearly everyone on the USCHO e-mail list, as far as I can tell, and was close to being a press release touting FSU’s first half. It reminded all of us that Ferris State is in Big Rapids and encouraged me (and others) to “catch a game of the Bulldogs.” I wondered if it were written by a player’s dad.

It’s true that the Bulldogs are having a great year. Blair Riley (13-5–18), Taylor Nelson (.942 SV%, 1.59 GAA) and Pat Nagle (.933 SV%, 1.84 GAA) are having career seasons. FSU took four points — by way of two shootout “wins” — from Miami in Oxford. They’re in the top 10 in my USCHO.com Poll ballot.

There are two more things about the Bulldogs that make me smile. First is that they’re leading the nation in penalty minutes, averaging 22 per game. This bolsters my theory that some teams need to play with passion to win, like the RedHawks did last weekend in two home shutout wins over Notre Dame last weekend, two games in which Miami amassed 83 penalty minutes.

The other thing about Ferris State that makes me smile, though, has nothing to do with how they’re playing. No, I’m just happy that FSU heads to Madison in three weeks for the Badger Showdown, and I’m hoping that history repeats.

The Penalty Killing Non Sequitur

The top three penalty-killing teams in the country are Michigan, Ferris State and Notre Dame. One of these things is not like the other.

The Bulldogs and the Bemidji State Beavers have the best defensive teams in the country, allowing 1.75 goals per game on average. FSU’s goaltending tandem is impressive, and the Bulldog defensive corps of sophomores and juniors — Chad Billins, Zach Redmond, Michael Trebish, Scott Wietecha and Brett Wysopal — is the best under-the-radar unit in the country.

Notre Dame is allowing 1.94 goals per game on average and is a team known for superior defense. That freshman Mike Johnson (.932 SV%, 1.79 GAA) and junior Brad Phillips (.919 SV%, 2.53 GAA) provide solid backstopping helps to explain the Irish penalty-kill dominance.

But Michigan? Bryan Hogan’s .902 save percentage is, frankly, below average in a league that includes all of the aforementioned goaltenders plus half a dozen other CCHA netminders with better numbers. And the Wolverines have the 12th-best scoring defense in the country, allowing 2.38 goals per game. Yet, UM’s penalty kill is tops in the nation (91.7 percent), and the Wolverines haven’t allowed an opponent power-play goal in five contests.

Red Berenson Is 70

Coaching hockey is not like coaching other sports, where one is not required to skate on a surface that can break a hip.

Red Berenson celebrated his 70th birthday Dec. 8, and he can probably still take you.

Fuzzy Shutout Math

Last weekend, there were three shutout wins in the CCHA, including Taylor Nelson’s blanking of Nebraska-Omaha and the back-to-back shutouts by Miami’s Cody Reichard and Connor Knapp against Notre Dame.

(And who starts the guy who didn’t deliver the shutout the night after the shutout? The coach who knows the other guy can also deliver a shutout. Wow.)

This got me thinking about shutout hockey in the CCHA. So far this season, league goaltenders have posted 17 shutouts, including the gripping 0-0 tie Lake State recorded against Union Nov. 27.

Last year, CCHA goaltenders recorded a total of 45 shutout games. That’s impressive … until you take Alaska’s Chad Johnson and Notre Dame’s Jordan Pearce out of the mix. Between them, Johnson (six) and Pearce (eight) had 14 shutouts for the season. Subtract that from the total number, and we’re down to 31 — less than half of the recorded shutouts so far this season for the CCHA.

So … with my fuzzy math, the mere mortal CCHA goaltenders this season are on a pretty good pace to eclipse the mere mortals of a season ago.

Not CCHA Hockey, but Funny Anyway

I covered my first College Hockey Showcase this season, an experience that yielded unexpected laughs.

After Wisconsin’s 7-3 win over Michigan State, Derek Stepan — who had a goal and four assists — explained his offensive outburst this way:

“Coach has been working with me the last couple of weeks and discussing what part of my game has been missing. He kind of pounded last weekend that I wasn’t playing with an edge, I wasn’t getting hits. I wasn’t getting my five hits a game.

“I’m not a guy that’s going to go out and blow somebody up, but if I get my five hits a game, I tend to play with a little more edge. I found that tonight, and with that came the points, which is good. It was a good feeling tonight.”

So, Bowling Green, Notre Dame, Western Michigan, Ohio State — get your five hits a game. Don’t blow someone up, but get your hits, by all means.

The post-game quote was provided by Benjamin Worgull, USCHO’s arena reporter in Madison. I met Benjamin for the first time that night, and the meeting spawned the Last Ten Seconds theory of hockey. If you run into him in Madison, ask him about possible shanking and it will all make sense.

My Really, Really, Really, Really Bad Timing and Sense of, Well, Everything

Based on Ohio State’s weak Friday-night performances this season, I picked it to split with Michigan last weekend by losing Friday, winning Saturday. Guess what happened instead.

Based on MSU’s re-emergence as a team to be reckoned with and UM’s less-than-impressive start to the season, I predicted the Spartans would sweep the Showcase and the Wolverines would not. Guess what happened.

Based on Louie Caporusso’s three goals in four games after being placed on a new line, I suggested that the UM junior may be on the verge of finding his scoring touch again. He didn’t score last weekend.

In the preseason, I predicted that Notre Dame would top the league, UM would come in second, MSU would finish eighth, Ferris State ninth. My prediction record this season is 53-41-17 — and that’s inflated because I had my first good weekend in a month last week.

It’s a Party in the … Locker Room.

This amuses me more than it should. Perhaps it’s because it illustrates the real youth of college hockey players. Maybe it’s because it’s another non sequitur.

I have heard the Miley Cyrus song “Party in the U.S.A.” blasting from more than one CCHA locker room post-game this season. No, the song wasn’t used as punishment after a loss. I’ve heard this after wins.

Seriously.

I’ve also heard similar reports from other leagues. So I’m nodding my head. Like, yeah.

It Will Be a Party in … Detroit

I do love my adopted state of Michigan and I am still in love with Flint — seriously — but now that I’ve lived in the area that amounts to the epicenter of the fall of Western civilization as we know it, I find it extraordinarily amusing that every single Division I men’s college hockey team is playing its collective heart out for a trip to Detroit, Mich., in April.

Detroit. In April.

That just tickles me.

They Play Hockey in Flint

They do play college hockey in Flint, ACHA club hockey. The University of Michigan-Flint campus has a team, as does Kettering University. UM-Flint is toying with the idea of adding D-III sports to its campus, including football and men’s ice hockey.

What amuses me even more, however, is that former Spartan and NHL journeyman Bryan Smolinski is playing — willingly — for the Flint Generals of the IHL. Smolinski, who played 17 seasons in the NHL, wanted a professional gig close to East Lansing.

The Generals have 13 former NCAA players on their roster, including seven from the CCHA including Smolinski: Chris Bogas (MSU 1995-99), Brandon Gentile (MSU 2005-09), Tyler Howells (MSU 2003-07), Steve Silver (WMU 2006-09), Tony Tuzzolino (MSU 1994-97) and Nathan Ward (LSSU 2003-06).

The number of Spartans is no surprise once you know that Jason Muzzatti (MSU 1987-91) is the Generals coach and director of hockey operations.

The Cure for the Bah Humbugs

The list of things that hasn’t made me smile this season is far longer but not nearly as entertaining. We all know that I don’t like the shootout, that I’m not happy that the WCHA poached UNO but people groused that the CCHA was in the wrong for trying to preserve its own league, that people throw the word “parity” around as though it means “equally good” and that so many people fail at geography — as in not knowing that Huntsville, Ala., is closer to Oxford, Ohio, than is Marquette, Mich.

I’m not overly fond of the Great Lakes Invitational tournament — and I am beginning to loathe Joe Louis Arena’s press box and press parking — I dislike that there’s no college hockey tournament in played in Chicago proper, that the city of Columbus couldn’t support a midseason tourney, I’m tiring of the outdoor hockey gimmick and I’m far more bitter than I should be about the Buffalo Bills.

It’s cold, my head hurts from reading essays that include variations of the phrase “there for me” — as in, “My mother was always there for me,” or, “I knew my girlfriend would always be there for me” — and I haven’t baked a single cookie.

That having been said, I’m grateful to you, my readers, for checking in with me weekly and keeping me honest, and I wish you a very happy Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Solstice and Festivus.

Try the following cure for the bah humbugs, my mother’s cut-out cookies. My mom, Dolly Weston, is 75 years old and still baking. I’ll try to get her kolache recipe, but she can be stingy about such things.

Dolly’s Cut-Out Cookies.

3 cups flour
2 cups sugar
2 tbs. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
half tsp. nutmeg
1 cup butter
2 eggs
4 tsp. milk (1 tbs. plus 1 tsp.)
1 tsp vanilla

Method

• Combine dry ingredients and set aside.
• Cream butter and sugar. Add vanilla. Add eggs, one at a time. Add milk.
• Mix dry and moist ingredients together until smooth.
• Divide into workable amounts and wrap in wax paper. Refrigerate several hours or overnight.
• Preheat oven to 375.
• Roll a small amount of dough into one-eighth to one-quarter inch thick. Keep the remaining dough refrigerated.
• Cut into festive shapes. Mom always prefers bells and other rounded shapes, as they are less likely to get too crisp around the edges. Place on ungreased baking sheets.
• Brush with beaten egg whites and decorate with colored sugar before baking.
• Bake five to 10 minutes and watch carefully — these can burn quickly.

You’ll need to make sure your rolling pin is cold and that the work surface is floured — I cut the flour with powdered sugar so that I’m not adding too much flour to the dough. Work quickly, because the dough warms quickly.

I think these are perfect with coffee and I never ice them, but readers over the years have recommended other beverages accompany them and I know of at least one NHL player who has made and frosted these with his own mother.

See you next year.

This Week in the ECAC East-NESCAC: Dec. 10, 2009

With most teams playing around 24 games this season, for many they are at the one third mark of the season. Or, as coach Jim Ward from Connecticut College, describes it: “It’s the end of the first period.”

The Camels break up their season into three periods of eight games each which seems apropos for the sport. In looking at the first period across the leagues there are some teams that hope their roll continues on through the break and into the proverbial second and third periods.

Likewise, there are teams that are headed to the locker room after the first period looking to regroup and come out more focused on producing solid results and changing momentum for the balance of the season following the semester break.

No doubt everyone is still optimistic about their team’s chances to succeed and play well through the remainder of the season; for now, however, it is time to benchmark the start of the season and make adjustments and improvements based on the sample of the first six to nine games that everyone has played to date.

Camels Looking to Get Over the Hump

The season began with great promise for the Conn. College Camels who returned a solid group of performers from the previous seasons. Each year, Jim Ward’s club has exceeded the performance of the prior season and this campaign appeared to be no different starting in November. With one game remaining this weekend against travel partner Tufts, the Camels are off to a 1-6 start that has their coach concerned but not in any way panicked.

“We see a lot of good things out there,” said Ward. “It really is not about the level of commitment or effort on the ice. We really haven’t played a full 60 minute game so far this season. The closest to that was probably our game against St. Anselm which coincidentally is our only win right now. This group has been here before so I am confident that we will figure it out and play better and create more scoring opportunities.”

The Camels have definitely had problems scoring so far this season having netted only 15 goals through their first seven games. Nearly half of the goals have come from senior forward Trevor Bradley (three goals, two assists, five points) and sophomore Julien Boutet (4-0-4) so there is a need for some of the other talented forwards to contribute on the scoresheet.

“We don’t need a bunch of goals,” said Ward. “Just a half dozen or so right now would make a big difference and probably would have swung a few games in our favor. If we can get more opportunities to score I am confident we will get our fair share of pucks to go in the net — more chances and few good bounces our way would surely help.”

One big beneficiary of a more potent offense would be senior goalie Greg Parker. Parker so far this season has played in six of the first seven games posting a 3.01 goals against average and .916 save percentage. In a league where goaltending is at a premium level for many teams, Parker has continued his strong play this season and will need to continue while the offense finds itself.

“Greg has been very good,” said Ward. “That’s why I say it’s not a lot of goals we need to turn this around. He is very solid and gives us a chance to win every night so we need to go find a few more goals and we will be fine.”
The semester break arrives following the game against a high-flying Tufts team on Saturday afternoon. The Jumbos have a hot goalie of their own in Scott Barchard who has been spectacular in the early going — not something a struggling offense wants to see.

“We have one more chance to finish the first ‘period’ or part of the season on a positive note,” said Ward. “Regardless of the outcome, we are focused on being better when we come back from the break and play Oswego to kickoff the new year.

“These guys have all been through this before and we have gotten through the rough patches and improved to play our best hockey when you want to be through the back-half of the season. I am sure they will all be staying in shape over the break and looking in the mirror as to how to get it done so we can meet our own expectations for the season.”

The pieces are all there for the Camels so it’s just a matter of putting them together and having them all aligned for 60 minutes — Saturday against Tufts will be a good barometer of how far this team needs to go to start strong in the second part of the season.

Ephs Getting A’s to Start the Season

For Williams College, the beginning of the 2009-10 campaign has gone extremely well. The Ephs are a perfect 4-0-0 in the conference and 5-0-1 overall with two games remaining before exams.

“It’s a good start,” said head coach Bill Kangas. “The kids are playing well together and we are getting solid performances from everyone including the younger players who have fit in very well so far.”

While averaging almost four goals per game offensively, Williams has received outstanding play from netminders Ryan Purdy and senior Marc Pulde. Both goaltenders have miniscule goals against averages to start the season, along with save percentages .950 or higher.

“We like both of our goalies,” said Kangas. “Today you really need two good ones to be successful as it becomes very difficult to expect one guy to carry the burden for all 24 or so games. Even when we had some All-American goalies here it was a challenge so it is nice to have two guys that are playing well and push each other to be successful.”

Ironically, the area where the Ephs are most inexperienced is at defense where playing time is largely shared by freshmen and sophomores. Junior Brian Malchoff (2-3-5) is the veteran presence on the blueline and he is supported by sophomore Justin Troiani (1-4-5) who was the leading scorer among defensemen last season as a freshman.

“The defense is coming together,” said Kangas. “This team has done a nice job of bringing the younger players up to speed and getting them comfortable with the program on and off the ice. Right now we are just focused on continuing to improve our game and get better balanced upfront. Last season I felt like we had a couple of lines that were very productive but right now I would say we have three lines that are producing and a fourth line ready to add to that overall balance offensively.”

Williams senior forward Alex Smigelski has led the Ephs to a fast start in the NESCAC conference (photo: courtesy of Williams College).

Williams senior forward Alex Smigelski has led the Ephs to a fast start in the NESCAC conference (photo: courtesy of Williams College).

Leading the Ephs is senior Alex Smigelski (5-4-9) who has returned this season from a shoulder injury that limited his playing to just 17 games last season. He looks like he can be that goal-per-game player that every coach wants in the lineup. There is also the element of family bragging rights in the standings and point total categories as Alex’s brother Michael is a freshman forward for Colby who has gotten off to quick start like his older brother posting four points in his first six games.

The Ephs finish the first semester with an exhibition game against the USA U-18 team on Saturday and a non-conference game with Salve Regina on Sunday.

“We are really looking forward to finishing the first half on a strong note,” said Kangas. “We know the U-18 team is a very talented bunch this year so it should be a lot of fun to give our kids the chance to play a game against strong competition where we get the opportunity to work on some things and see how we measure up overall.

“There is a long way to go so getting off to a good start is nice but we have a lot of hockey to play and I hope we are playing better in January and February that we are even now.”

There aren’t many teams without a loss on their record so far this season and certainly Williams would like to finish the first half on a high-note by keeping their record that way. Look for the Ephs to be a strong contender at the top of the NESCAC standings and validate their ranking in the polls.

Not much left this weekend but some interesting travel partner matchups that may provide some tiebreaker stats for playoff position down the road. They all count so coaches are trying to keep the focus on the ice in advance of exams for most schools next week. Still a few good games to take in before the holidays so enjoy some hockey “cheering” before the New Year and maybe Santa will bring exactly what your team needs for a great second-half.

Almost done — drop the puck!

This Week in D-I Women’s Hockey: December 10, 2009

Up in Orono, you use your snow tires for most of the hockey season because traction is always such a problem. Or at least it has been over the years for the UMaine women’s team.

The Black Bears have been hard pressed to make the WHEA playoffs throughout their previous seven years in the league, and have finished in the league basement the past two seasons.

However, there are signs that a thaw in their fortunes may be at hand.

With this weekend’s non-conference games at Union to play before the Christmas break, the Black Bears have fashioned for themselves a nifty little six-game unbeaten streak. It includes twin wins over Vermont, and – impressively – a 1-0 blanking of No. 9 Northeastern. Added to a trio of ties, the Black Bears playing playing with some added jump in their skates these days.

“Our effort in general (lately) has been outstanding. We’re starting to figure out the identity of our team,” said third-year coach Dan Lichterman. “What we’re going to be and how we’re going to play. We’re battling and trying to get into those playoffs.”

They’re able to start think big by keeping the tasks small.

“We’re learning that we’re simple,” Lichterman said. “We’re not an overly skilled team. We want to keep things simple and get pucks deep. We forecheck hard. And that’s what we need to keep doing.”

The hardest of the forecheckers is senior captain Amy Stech, who hails from the Iron Range but chose to study among the pines instead. A recruited walk-on four years ago, Stech has become the embodiment of the Black Bear vibe: always on the puck. Always responsible. Always upbeat.

“I was on the fourth line with no wingers,” she said. “I just kept on working hard and it definitely paid off. You learn a lot watching, as I found out my freshman year. I was fortunate to put on the Maine jersey every game.”

Lichterman was only too happy to hand her one when he took over for Guy Perron.

“Amy’s a kid who goes 100 miles an hour all the time,” he said. “Even at times when she should slow down. She’s really a lead by example kid. She won’t say anything to the group that she’s not willing to do herself.”

Not really much of a scorer – she’s currently ninth on the Maine points ladder with four (2G, 2A) – Stech was nonetheless sent over the boards as the lone Black Bear among the Hockey East All-Stars in their Qwest Tour battle with the U.S. Nationals.

“It was such an honor to represent Maine,” Stech said. “I was completely taken aback when (Lichterman) told me I was selected. It gave me a reality check. It was unbelievable. I’ll never forget it.”

Stech has seen the Black Bears encounter more than enough rough sledding in her first three years. Now, however, she’s looking forward to wrapping up her stay in Orono on a sharp upswing, one with no sharp slide into the cellar.

“I think this year is a huge turning point for us,” she said. “We’re getting some consistency down. We have this attitude (now) that we’re not going out to (try) not to lose. The old Maine used to do that. We go out there to win. We call ourselves the ‘new Maine’.

“It’s fun to keep on playing and not give up.”

As for the continuing Qwest Tour, the Nationals will make their last East Coast appearance on January 3, when they’ll take on an ECAC All-Star team at Quinnipiac’s TD Bank Sports Center.

The ECAC roster has just been announced, and is laden with experience. A total of 16 upperclassmen (including 11 seniors) will be on hand, Including three of the league’s top four overall point-getters (Dominique Thibault and Britney Selina from Clarkson and Katie Stewart from Colgate).

Among the trio of netminders will be the league’s reigning Goalie of the Year, Colgate sophomore Kimberly Sass. Jeff Kampersal of Princeton will serve as head coach, assisted by John Burke (RPI) and Hilary Witt (Yale). Tickets are available at the arena box office, or by calling (203)582-3905.

Mercyhurst has continued its season-long stranglehold on the top spot in the USCHO.com poll, thanks in no small part to the big-time goal-getting of sophomore Bailey Bram. Bram leads the nation in sniping with 14 goals, five of them holding up as game-winners.

Meanwhile, Minnesota freshman goalie Noora Raty continued her spectacular play, by giving up just one goal in two games at No. 9 Harvard. Unfortunately for Raty, she received literally no goal support, as the Gophers were blanked both times by Harvard’s Christina Kessler.

This Week in the NCHA/MCHA: Dec. 10, 2009

As these are our last columns of 2009, it’s time to take a look at the USCHO.com Division III men’s poll for the final time this calendar year. This week’s edition wasn’t overly surprising, though there was certainly some movement amongst NCHA and MCHA teams.

After going 2-2 in its last four games, St. Norbert is no longer the top team in the nation — nor the top ranked team in the NCHA or MCHA. The Green Knights are now fifth in the country while Adrian held onto fourth and is now ranked higher than anyone from the NCHA.

A split with the aforementioned Green Knights didn’t hurt St. Scholastica as the Saints remained in seventh. Despite being idle last weekend, River Falls moves up a spot to ninth and Superior rounds out the ranked teams, down five spots to No. 12 following a weekend split in Stevens Point.

That’s it for the NCHA/MCHA collectively as for a change not one team from either league is on the outside looking in.

What Have We All Learned Here?

The season is nearly half over for many teams in the NCHA and MCHA and as always there have been some surprises. Some teams have overachieved and some have possibly not yet performed to expectations, but the season has no doubt offered its share of twist and turns thus far. Dozens of story lines have developed that will no doubt be worth following during the second half of the season, so to close out the year here is a recap of some that are worthy of further discussion.

St. Norbert Back On Top

Fresh off their first national title in school history, the Green Knights were heavy preseason favorites to win the NCHA a year ago. When all was said and done, however, their 8-5-1 fourth place finish in the conference and 19-8-1 overall record were not enough to land the Green Knights a spot in the NCAA tournament for a chance to defend their title.

It was not a bad season by most standards, but a disappointing one nonetheless for St. Norbert. Some roster turnover over the summer left the Green Knights with more question marks than originally anticipated, but they have responded in highly impressive fashion.

At 7-1-0 in the NCHA the Green Knights sit atop the conference at the turn. They are six points clear of St. Scholastica, so despite being idle this weekend they will lead the league as the league hits its holiday break. A 4-3 overtime loss to St. Scholastica last Friday is the only blemish on St. Norbert’s league ledger, while their only other loss came to Eastern foe Salem State in the Western Thanksgiving Showcase.

The Green Knights are one of only two teams in the NCHA with a positive goal differential in NCHA play as they currently stand at plus-21. St. Scholastica is the other but the Saints have only scored twice more than their opponents.

After struggling with goaltending a year ago, junior netminder B.J. O’Brien claimed the starting job early this season and has performed admirably in posting a 10-1-1 record with a 1.62 goals against average and .922 save percentage.

St. Norbert is scoring just over four goals a game which, while not dominant, is actually an uptick from their nightly output over the previous two seasons.

The Green Knights rise back to the league might surprise some, while others might have been expecting it. Either way, once again they have proven that just when some start thinking they may have lost their edge, it’s foolhardy to not always consider them a legitimate NCHA contender.

Adrian Perfect, Tests To Come

While St. Norbert may be a bit of a surprise atop the NCHA, Adrian’s reign over the MCHA has come as no surprise at all. The Bulldogs are a flawless 10-0 overall and 8-0 in the conference and have outscored league opponents by an overwhelming 73-17 margin. Their league win streak now stands at 35 games and the closest a MCHA opponent has come to the Bulldogs this year is three goals.

Led by junior forward Mike Dahlinger’s 25 points, Adrian already has three players who have scored over 20 points on the season while seven others have posted more than 10.

Things won’t get easier for the Bulldogs come January, however. In fact, they’re about to get much harder. They kick off the new year with a road series at Hamline before traveling to Oswego to take on the currently top ranked Lakers the following week.

Should they manage to get by those challenges, current MCHA second place Lawrence awaits the following week and the Milwaukee School of Engineering looms the week after. That’s a straight month of challenging games and the Bulldogs’ success — or lack thereof — in January may give us our best gauge ever of how good Adrian actually is … or isn’t.

Finlandia Coaching Change

In a rare and highly unexpected bit of in-season news, it was announced by Finlandia on Nov. 23 that head coach Joe Burcar was released from his position with the university. The release cited only “institutional policy violations” as the reason for his dismissal.

Burcar was in his eighth season as head coach of the Lions and was 74-81-1 during his tenure. Included in that span was a 19-8-0 mark and MCHA Harris Cup playoff title in the 2006-07 campaign.

Finlandia athletic director Chris Salani has taken over head coaching duties on an interim basis for the remainder of the year and a national search to replace Burcar is expected to be held at the conclusion the season.

The Lions currently stand at 2-6 this season and are losers of four straight following a pair of setbacks at Northland a week ago.

Northland Sweeps

Speaking of Northland, the Lumberjacks did indeed sweep Finlandia last weekend. It was their first weekend sweep since downing Crookston on back-to-back nights in 2008, and their first sweep of a Division III opponent since sweeping MSOE in January, 2001.

The pair of wins gives the Lumberjacks more than they had all of a year ago, and despite being 2-8 this season, that’s not the only reason for a bit of optimism is their camp.

They tallied all of 31 goals a season ago but have already posted 27 this season, and are actually averaging over three goals per game over their past seven contests. The Lumberjacks were shut out 11 times last season but have yet to be this year.

Resurgent River Falls

With a roster full of first year players last season the Falcons struggled more than many anticipated. When all was said and done, a loss at St. Scholastica in the opening round of the NCHA playoffs wrapped up a disappointing 10-15-2 season that included a 4-9-1 sixth place finish in the NCHA.

Things haven’t been nearly as disappointing for the Falcons so far this season, as an opening weekend sweep at Superior in late October set the tone and the Falcons currently stand at 7-3-1, are tied for third in the NCHA and are the ninth ranked team in the country.

The Falcons have a chance to enter the break as high as second in the NCHA pending the results of this weekend’s series with rival Stout, and their rebound from a year ago is clear evidence that, like St. Norbert, when a successful program happens to have a down and out year it’s more than wise to keep an eye on them the next.

Youth Is Served, Somewhat

Numerous teams in the NCHA and MCHA are featuring rosters littered with underclassmen and the results have varied.

Despite both featuring large recruiting classes they are extremely high on, Eau Claire and Stevens Point have had a rough go of things so far, though both look to maybe have turned a corner lately.

The Blugolds suffered a nonconference losses to Marian and Lawrence to open the season and started 0-2-2 in the NCHA. After a weeknight loss at Hamline two weeks ago, however, they rebounded with a three point weekend at Stout and now sit a mere three points back of second place in the NCHA.

Things looked even bleaker for the Pointers as they got off to a 0-7 start in NCHA play, and it included a pair of losses that could best be described as heart crushing. After giving up a lead with 12 seconds to go in an eventual overtime loss at Stout, they also allowed two power-play goals in the final three minutes to let last Saturday’s context with Superior to slip through their hands. They did rebound to score a 2-1 win over the Yellowjackets on Saturday to finally get some league points, however.

If either team wants to make a move, this weekend is their chance, as in yet another convenient effort by conference schedule makers, the two square off in a two game set in Stevens Point this weekend.

Aforementioned Superior also has a roster littered with inexperienced players, but due to some offensive firepower provided by a group of upperclassmen, they have fared much better than Eau Claire and Stevens Point.

Despite the opening weekend sweep at the hands of River Falls, the Yellowjackets stand at 7-3-1 overall and are No. 12 in the nation.

Goaltending was a major concern for the ‘Jackets heading into the season, but it appears freshman Garret Tinkham may have landed the number one spot. Tinkham is 4-2-0 with a 2.83 GAA and .895 save pct. on the year.

Heading over to the MCHA, MSOE has had 12 freshman see ice time already this season and the results have been somewhat mixed.

The Raiders are 5-3 overall, but lost both contests with league rival Marian and has yet to play Lawrence or Adrian, the latter of which it will face a daunting four times in the second half of the season. The Raiders travel to St. Thomas this weekend with a prime opportunity to make another statement, or two, on behalf of the MCHA. They are coming off a split with Lake Forest in which a 3-2 Friday loss was followed up by a dominating 9-1 victory.

Lake Forest Settles In

The Foresters are also rife with inexperience, but deserve special note as they of course have the individual storyline of it being their first season in the MCHA.

Like most of the other young teams in the two leagues, it’s been a bit of up-and-down thus far. An astounding 18 freshman, including three goalies, have seen action for the Foresters already this season; they are 3-7 on the year.

Their opening weekend sweep of Finlandia looks less impressive now than it did at the time considering the Lions slow start, though five of the Foresters losses have come to strong teams in St. Norbert, Adrian and St. Olaf.
Last weekend’s results against MSOE are also indicative of the inconsistencies young teams are likely to face.

Overall, it’s probably too early to make a judgment on Lake Forest, but head coach Tony Fritz suggested prior to the season that a .500 finish was a reasonable goal for this year’s club, and despite the 3-7 mark, a look at their schedule in the second half indicates the Foresters might reach that goal.

Saturday Night Fever

Ah yes, the return of the two game series in the NCHA. As expected, the series have done their part to rekindle some old rivalries while amping up the intensity of numerous NCHA weekends.

One way this is manifesting itself, likely to the chagrin of some coaches, is in the accumulation of a healthy dose of penalty minutes.

Superior rolled up 71 minutes in the sin bin in a 7-4 loss to River Falls earlier in the season, included in which were three majors, three 10 minute misconducts and one game disqualification.

Turns out that pales to what went down in River Falls a few weeks ago as St. Norbert and River Falls both notched four game disqualifications for fighting in a game the Green Knights ultimately won. Interestingly, the first two happened in the second period while the final six all occurred during the same third period entanglement.

Finally, four more DQs were handed out, two to each team, at the end of last Saturday’s Superior-Stevens Point tilt as a donnybrook ensued at the final whistle of the Pointers 2-1 win.

As I witnessed the latter two of those incidents in person, it’s worth pointing out that they both involved fisticuffs of the helmet and gloves off variety. Simply put, none of them were cheap disqualifications. Note, these aren’t getting pointed out for the sake of condoning fighting, but rather to point out that the return of back-to-back games against the same teams in a league that is now as competitive as the NCHA might very well have something to do with the increased intensities.

After all, all three of these incidents took place on a Saturday.

Just Getting Warmed Up

Plenty of interesting things have happened in the MCHA and NCHA thus far, but the biggest developments are surely to come in the second half of the season as the date of the first ever MCHA team in the NCAA tournament is drawing nearer. And things should only heat up in the NCHA as jockeying for playoff position begins. Stay tuned.

Tasty Travels

This week brings is to Fitger’s Brewhouse in Duluth, Minnesota. Located at 600 E. Superior St. on the shore of Lake Superior, the Brewhouse is one of four restaurants located within Fitger’s Hotel. The hotel itself is on the national register of historic places and the on-site brewery is a remodeled rendition of the 1885 original.

Upon entering, I was somewhat surprised to see a wait for a table at 1:30 p.m. on a Saturday, but as I was dining alone I was fortunate enough to grab a seat at the bar. Nothing about the interior looked atypical but its original beer list most certainly did. As I had never seen the sort of thing before, I started off with a pint of their Juniper Porter, a lighter porter brewed with juniper berries. I was not disappointed.

For my meal I tried the artichoke chicken sandwich and, as I claim to be “in training” for a pond hockey tournament, I skipped on the fries and had chips and salsa with my sandwich (note: that didn’t stop me from getting a beer, of course).

The sandwich was straightforward. Grilled chicken breast served with mixed greens on a ciabatta bun and covered with an artichoke cheese dip. It was good but nothing special, though the homemade salsa that was heavy on the chipotle was a pleasant surprise. If anything the chicken may have been a little dry, but overall it was nothing to complain about. I did notice some other entrees being served — the nachos in particular — that looked excellent.

I’d call the food average to slightly above for a brew house, but let’s not forget Fitger’s Juniper Porter. Without question the star of the show and it’s brewed with water from Lake Superior, which on principle alone is a great bonus. The place had 8-10 original brews on tap and I enjoyed the first Juniper Porter so much that I had a second instead of trying another offering — and also happened to snag a 64 oz. Growler of it to tap into later that evening.

The staff was quite cordial and the two employees behind the bar gave me an education in why 64 oz. was the most I could take with me due to Minnesota law. I wish they sold six or 12 packs of it on-site because if they had, I would have bought some.

Good marks for the service, average marks for the food, and full blown top marks for the beverages. Average all that and it looks to me like Fitger’s Brewhouse in Duluth, Minnesota is worthy: 3.0 pucks.

This Week in MIAC: Dec. 10, 2009

Conference Roundup

After all the unexpected results of the first two weeks of conference play, this past weekend seemed to finally answer some nagging questions.

At the same time though, it did nothing to put any gaps between teams in the standings. Six teams are within four points of first place, meaning a great weekend for one squad could see them vault up the standings, while a bad weekend for another could see them come crashing down.

Bethel’s split with Concordia (MN) pushed the Royals out of first place, but just barely, as they now sit in second place. Meanwhile, the Cobbers came out of the weekend in fourth place, only two points behind Bethel.

The results of the other three series may not have been particular surprising, but the manner that they occurred was definitely unexpected.

After returning most of last year’s forwards, it was somewhat assumed that Augsburg’s offense would come back as fast paced and action packed as last year. So while it may not have been surprising that the Auggies defeated St. John’s Friday and Saturday, the 3-1 and 3-2 scores may have raised a few eyebrows.

Regardless of how they occurred, the two wins vaulted the Auggies from last place into fifth, which would be good for a playoff spot if the season ended today.

Coming into the weekend, Gustavus Adolphus and St. Thomas were tied for second place in the league. With St. Thomas’s defensive orientation and Gustavus’ ability to generate fast paced attacks, this looked to be an interesting matchup between teams that might be evenly suited for one another.

Instead, the Gusties ran over the Tommies, coming out with a 4-0 shutout and 7-1 rout. When all was said and done, Gustavus was sitting alone in first place and the Tommies had dropped into a tie for fifth.

I picked this last matchup as my series of the week, as it pitted two good teams, both fighting to move up the standings. For some extra spice, they also have a history against each other.

Last season, St. Olaf won the regular season title, finishing a comfortable seven points ahead of second place. However, in their first playoff game, they were unceremoniously knocked out of the playoffs by Hamline in a 5-1 game. St. Olaf got some amount of revenge by beating the Pipers in their first game of the season, which is still Hamline’s only loss so far this year.

So coming into this weekend, I was expecting to see a big effort from St. Olaf, who came into this weekend tied for fifth place. The Oles had been in every game they played until the end, losing to Gustavus by one goal, and tying their three other games. Going into the third period on Friday, the Oles held a 2-0 lead, and it looked like they might win their first conference game of the year.

However, two power-play goals in the final period evened the score and neither team could score in overtime. Just like that, the Oles recorded their fourth tie of the season and remained winless in league play.

On the heels of such a close game, Saturday was definitely shocking.

St. Olaf was never able to generate much offense, and the Pipers swarmed in the Oles zone all night, sustaining pressure, generating power plays, and finally cashing in on their chances. When the final horn sounded, Hamline had won 6-1. St. Olaf still has only two conference losses, yet after this weekend they see themselves sitting in seventh place, while Hamline moved up to third place despite having played two less games than the teams ahead of them.

When asked about what changes the team had made compared to their 3-1 loss earlier in the season, Piper coach Scott Bell talked about the importance of being healthy.

“Even though it was early in the season, we had some guys banged up, or not 100%,” Bell said. “Right now we’ve got almost everyone healthy, and we’re really able to play the way we’ve wanted to play.”

The Pipers have received steady defense, consistent goaltending, and an ability to generate goals from virtually any line they throw out there. Eight different players have scored at least three goals for Hamline, meaning that even if you shut down one line, you still have two more to worry about.

Sophomore goaltender Beau Christian has flourished so far this season, posting an amazing 1.53 goals against average along with a stellar .941 save percentage. The defense in front of him has been great as well, with freshman Taylor Vichorek using his size to clear the crease, and junior Chris Berenguer performing as one of the best two-way defensemen in the league.

While there won’t be another conference game until Jan. 15, the first half of the season has given us a lot of unexpected results, promising starts, disappointing efforts, great stories, and above all, some great hockey from the top of the standings all the way to the bottom. If the rest of the season is anything like this, it’s going to be one wild ride all the way to the end.

One Minute Left in the Period. One Minute . . .

If you boil a season down to a single game, we’d be coming into the first intermission right now. After a break, we’d be right back to the action as the NCHA and MIAC face off again, followed by six weeks of conference games to finish up the second period, er, I mean the regular season. The third and final period would of course be the conference and NCAA playoffs.

It seems like it was only a few days ago that players were getting in game shape, coaches were still figuring out which players to line up together, and the fans were getting ready for the season to start.

Now, just a few short weeks later, we’ve reached the midway point of the season. While there are a handful of games this coming weekend and the first weekend in January, most of the league is off for the next month until the MIAC-NCHA crossover resumes Jan. 8 and 9.

What better time than now to take a quick look at each team’s first half? And since the holiday season is just around the corner, what would be better than giving each team a gift that they could use in the second half?

St. Mary’s Cardinals

There’s a saying that nothing worth doing is ever easy. When head coach Bill Moore returned to St. Mary’s after 20 years, he had a goal to bring the team back to the winning ways it used to enjoy.

It may take some painful rebuilding years, but Moore does have a vision in place, and a plan for reaching it. While currently sitting tied for eighth place, that doesn’t necessarily mean that the team hasn’t improved. With parity so prevalent in the league, improving as a team does not necessarily mean a rise in overall conference finish.

Taking the first four games of the season, if stretched out to a full 16 game league schedule, the Cardinals will score 36 goals while giving up 60. Compared to a 46-93 ratio last season, that is a marked defensive improvement. With another season to recruit the type of players needed to fit their system, teams looking for an easy win over the Cardinals may be in for a rude surprise.

My gift for St. Mary’s: a set of binoculars. While the road to success may seem long and hard, the prize at the end is worth the effort, and it’s a good idea to keep that coveted goal in sight.

St. John’s Johnnies

Last year’s team finished two points out of a playoff spot and lost several key players to graduation. Coming into this season it was unclear if they’d be able to replace all they lost and keep up with the improvements other teams made.

So far this season it’s been a frustrating time for the Johnnies. They currently sit tied for eighth place with only two points in six games. While that may seem bleak, they’ve played well in most games, losing five games by two goals or less. A few bounces here or there and a timely goal or two might have been enough to win a few of those games and turn their 4-7-1 record into a winning one.

The biggest area for improvement for St. John’s is on offense. They are currently allowing less than three goals per game, which is respectable by any league’s standards. Unfortunately, they’re scoring just under two goals a game in league, and under 2.50 overall. If they can find a way to get more offensive pressure without sacrificing defense, this is a team that can steal a tie or win in a game with virtually any opponent.

My gift for the Johnnies: some firecrackers. With some more explosiveness on offense, this team has the potential to make a run in the second half and make the playoffs. And once there, in a one game elimination, any team with this kind of defense can cause nightmares for opposing teams.

St. Olaf Oles

After winning the MIAC regular season title last season, expectations were high coming into this season. Like the Johnnies, the Oles have to be frustrated with how their first half has gone. Despite going 5-1-0 in nonconference play, the Oles have yet to record a win in a league game, posting a record of 0-2-4. While four points is good enough for seventh place (only one point behind the final playoff spot), this cannot be where the Oles imagined they’d be at the end of the first semester.

There have been drop-offs on both offense and defense so far. Last season in league games they averaged 4.13 goals per game while giving up 2.44. So far this season their offensive-to-defensive split is a far inferior 2.33-3.33. Those changes are clearly the difference between a dominant regular season and one that could end in the team missing the playoffs.

Something that might explain the offensive drop is the Oles special teams play so far. Last year they converted on the power play at an impressive rate of 20.7%. So far this season they’re converting only 12.1% of their chances. Whatever the reason, just a handful more goals could have the Oles sitting near the top of the standings instead of near the bottom.

My gift to St. Olaf: a pogo stick. Whether it’s cracking down on defense to protect late leads, getting that extra goal to stomp out late comebacks, or something else, the Oles need to find a way to get over the hump of doing enough not to lose, but not quite enough to win. Hopefully this gift gives them that extra little bounce that they need.

St. Thomas Tommies

The year started off for the Tommies like so many other years: with quite a few more wins than losses. St. Thomas went 4-1-2 in their first seven games, and things were looking good. However, they have now lost their last four games, scoring only three goals over that stretch.

On the defensive front, St. Thomas is right where they were last season.

They’re giving up exactly three goals per game on average, which is definitely respectable. However, their offense has gone way down from last season, from 4.13 goals per game to 1.50. Whether it’s losing scorers to graduation, the league getting defensively better as a whole, or just a midseason slump, the Tommies need to find a way to put the puck in the net more often.

Currently St. Thomas is 69th (out of 72 teams) in the nation on the power play, scoring on a measly 7.1% of their chances. The worst part? That works out to the Tommies scoring four power play goals on the season, while at the same time they’ve given up five shorthanded goals. That means while the Tommies are on the power play, it’s been more likely that their opponents will score than they will. That simply can’t happen if a team is going to succeed.

We’ll have to see what kind of changes the Tommies make before resuming league play next semester. Fortunately for them, they’re one of the few MIAC teams to play this coming week, as they host MSOE for two nonconference games. This is the perfect opportunity for them to try some new things out and see if they can get their offense clicking.

My gift for St. Thomas: A Tommy Gun. While I certainly am hoping they don’t literally mow down their opponents, the Tommies need to do something to increase their firepower. Their defense has been a strong point of the team for years, but they seem to always manage to not sacrifice on offense at the same time. To get back to their winning ways, they’re going to need to be able to show some offensive punch more often. Hopefully this will help.

Augsburg Auggies

When Augsburg defeated Bethel and Gustavus Adolphus in two nonconference games to start the season, it looked like it was going to be a good year for them. After all, they returned virtually all of their forwards from last season’s team that led the MIAC in scoring. But after that opening weekend Augsburg lost three straight, getting shutout in each game.

The Auggies went 0-16 on the power play over that period, including no goals in six tries in a 1-0 loss to UW River Falls. Since that stretch, though, Augsburg has scored at least three goals in every game they’ve played, and gone 8-27 on the power play, good for a 29.6% conversion rate. If they’d kept up that rate all season, that would be good for seventh in the nation.

While they haven’t won any of their last few games in a rout, the Auggies have now quietly won four in a row, and are unbeaten in their last five games.

They still have plenty of tough games in the second half of the season though, as they have yet to face Gustavus, St. Olaf, Hamline, or second place Bethel.

After that dismal three game stretch, the Auggies have to be happy with their last few weeks, even if the offense may not be clicking at the same level it was last season. While their scoring may be down, their defense has improved greatly, going from giving up 4.00 goals in league games last year to only 2.25 this season.

My gift to the Auggies: the Energizer Bunny. It usually doesn’t matter too much how you win, as long as you actually win. Whether it’s by five goals or just one, whether you got outshot or not, whether someone claims they outplayed you or not, none of that really matters as long as at the end of the game: you’re on top. Right now Augsburg has a good streak going, and hopefully they can keep it going … and going … and going.

Concordia (MN) Cobbers

Last season the Cobbers finished dead last in the league, scoring a league worst 35 goals while giving up 65. After six games this season Concordia is in fourth place, having reversed that all-important ratio to 16 goals for, only 13 against.

Despite being one of the youngest teams in the league, the Cobbers have played well for second year coach Chris Howe. His team has lost only two of their 13 games by more than two goals, meaning they’ve had a chance to win in virtually every game they’ve played. When facing the highest scoring team in the nation (the Adrian Bulldogs average 8.2 goals per game), while Concordia did end up losing, it was only by a score of 3-1.

After only three conference weekends, Concordia has more points (six) than they did all of last season (four). They have taken two points each weekend, splitting with Bethel and St. Mary’s, and tying St. Olaf twice. One of the Cobbers biggest strengths this season has been their penalty kill, stopping 89.7% of their opponents’ chances, while scoring two shorthanded goals.

With the majority of this team being underclassmen, there is a lot of potential for them to improve over the rest of the season, but also a chance for erratic play. If Howe can keep his team focused and playing hard, the Cobbers have a great chance to make the playoffs this season. The home stretch won’t be easy though, as they play their last six conference games on the road.

My gift for the Cobbers: blinders. It’s said that those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it, but sometimes it’s better to let go of what’s behind you and instead focus on where you’re going. And right now the Cobbers have a great chance to make a run into the playoffs if they finish the season strong. This team does not resemble the Concordia teams of the past few years, and it’s important not to hold their past against them. Instead: give them the respect they are due.

Hamline Pipers

They may be in third place, but it’s not for lack of results. The Pipers are the only team undefeated in MIAC play, currently sporting a 3-0-1 record. Hamline also has the best overall record of any team in the MIAC, sitting at 6-1-2 going into the break.

They’re relying on shutdown defense and a steady offense in conference games so far, allowing 1.50 goals per game while scoring an even four per contest. Their power play has been clipping along at a 24.5% rate, good for 15th in the country.

Not to be outdone, their biggest asset defensively is their penalty kill. The Pipers have allowed only three goals on 52 chances, good for a 94.2% kill rate, which is easily the best in the nation.

Hamline will have possibly their biggest test of the season Jan. 1 and 2 when they host Adrian for a pair of games. The Bulldogs have lost only four games in their two and a half years of existence, putting up an eye popping record of 63-4-1. However, they have never faced any of the top Western teams over that time, instead facing mainly Eastern teams in their nonconference games.

That’s not to say they’ve never played a tough game. Last year, Adrian split a two game series with the eventual national champion Neumann Knights, defeating them 10-1 in the second game. They’ve also played the US U-18 team three times, and have yet to lose, which is not something many teams can say.

All this makes for a very intriguing series between the Pipers and Bulldogs. It’s going to be one heck of a way to kick off the second half of the season.

My present for the Pipers: a camera lens. While things are going well, it’s important to stay focused. The season is only half over and Hamline has plenty of games left, including 12 conference games. A good season can turn around very quickly if you stop working hard, so it’s important to stay focused on each and every game.

Bethel Royals

No one was really quite sure what to expect from Bethel this season. Last year their playoff hopes came down to the final weekend and final game of the season. In the end they finished one point short of their playoff goal, and Augsburg took the final playoff spot.

That team lost a lot of their scoring threats to graduation, although they did return several players on the defensive end. The team probably knew coming into the season that they would have to be able to score from all over instead of relying on a top line to carry them in games.

So far they’ve gotten exactly that, with several players showing up on the scoresheet and making plays when they need them. With everyone playing hard right to the end, their work has earned them second place in the standings after the first half. The Royals swept St. John’s to open conference play and have since split with Concordia and Gustavus Adolphus.

While Bethel’s nonconference record of 0-5-0 does not look pretty, those games are often treated as ways to get players extra ice time, especially those who haven’t seen much time in conference games. Against the University of Wisconsin-River Falls, both backup goalies saw time, each seeing about 30 minutes in net.

Using nonconference games as tune-ups for league games may seem a little strange to some fans, but it’s the best way to try new things out without risking it in a pivotal conference matchup. It shows that the Royals are clearly focused on their MIAC games, and that is not a bad thing.

My gift to Bethel: a brick. When you’re on a team with 20 or so other players, not everyone’s job is necessarily going to be flashy or stand out that much. But every person has a role and plays a part in the team winning. If everyone keeps focusing on playing as a team, and doing their part, what may seem like a small thankless job will eventually lead to something much bigger. After all, even the Great Wall of China started with just a single brick.

Gustavus Adolphus

Gustavus easily leads the MIAC in offense, and is not that far behind on defense either. Through six games, the Gusties average 4.50 goals per game while giving up only 2.50. Led by senior David Martinson’s 12 goals, Gustavus has started this season strong.

After losing in last season’s national championship game, some thought that Gustavus would fade away after graduating senior goaltender Matthew Lopes. Instead, they’ve started this season stronger than the last, currently sitting at 6-3-1 compared to 8-7-0 a year ago.

If you haven’t ever seen Gustavus play and want an example of the kind of speed and skill they bring to the ice every night, look no further: only two teams in the nation have four shorthanded goals (Oswego and Wentworth); the only team with more than four is Gustavus, and they have six.

Once the puck hits the ice, this team does not stop skating hard until the horn sounds. They skate hard in the corners to dig out pucks, they skate hard chasing after loose pucks, and they skate hard when they win the puck and turn it into a 2-on-1 break in what seems like the blink of an eye.

Anyone thinking this team would fade away clearly had not seen them play, and was not giving them the respect their offensive skill, hard work, and defense have earned.

My gift to the Gusties: a picture of their 2008-2009 MIAC championship trophy. No one handed anything to Gustavus last year; they went out and earned it. If they keep playing hard like they did the first half of this season, they have a great shot to earn it again. So I’m giving them this reminder of something that no one can give, something that has to be earned.

Just like the beginning of this season flew by, these next few weeks will go by quickly as well. Soon enough it’ll be time to drop the puck once again and see what more surprises are in store for the MIAC this season. Whether you’re celebrating Christmas, Hanukkah, Festivus, or any other holiday, I hope you have a happy and safe time with your friends and family.

This Week in SUNYAC: Dec. 10, 2009

A Rare Feat

Scoring a hat trick is an accomplishment to be proud of. Scoring a natural hat trick (three consecutive goals without anyone on either team scoring during that time span, and some would say it has to happen in the same period) is an even greater achievement, though it does rely on a bit of luck — all the other players have to avoid scoring during that span.

Scoring a hat trick with all shorthanded goals puts you in a very elite club. Doing so with a natural hat trick puts you in a group small enough to fit in my MINI Cooper.

Oswego's Neil Musselwhite (photo: Jim Feeney).

Oswego’s Neil Musselwhite (photo: Jim Feeney).

Senior assistant captain Neil Musselwhite of Oswego wowed the college hockey world by scoring three shorthanded goals in a span of 2:59.

The first two goals came on the same power play within 11 seconds at the end of the second period, one low stick side and the other off a deflection. The third goal came early in the third period as Oswego pounded Brockport, 10-1. Musselwhite also scored an even-strength goal in the first period for a total of four tallies on the night.

“Pretty impressive effort,” Oswego coach Ed Gosek said. “He was a dominant player. It wasn’t like they were flukes. They were hard working, winning 1-on-1 battles, and then taking off. If he isn’t one of the fastest players in college hockey, Division I or Division III, he’s got to be up there. What makes it more remarkable is the timeframe. And actually, he had a chance to get a fourth, and he shot it wide.”

Musselwhite now has eight goals and seven assists for the year for a career total of 29-26-55 in 91 games. However, it’s not just his performance on the ice that helps to contribute to Oswego’s success.

“It’s a credit to him,” Gosek said. “He’s a type of guy that accepted his role, took pride in it. He’s the kind of guy you want all your players to be. Good in the classroom, in the community, works his tail off in the weight room. He’s the strongest player pound for pound. Never takes a practice off.”

How many college players have performed this shorthanded achievement is not easy to find. The NCAA Division I record book lists the record for shorthanded goals in a game as three, so that list is readily available. There are seven D-I players to have done so, including one just a few weeks ago. But even then, the number is a bit nebulous.

NCAA records prior to 1995 relied on information submitting to the NCAA by the schools themselves. And the 2010 record book doesn’t include a shorthanded hat trick performed last year. How many others are missing?

Two of them did it with a natural hat trick — Zach Harrison of Minnesota State last year (scoring one goal a period with the last on a rink length empty netter) and C.J. Young of Harvard in 1988 (the only player to score his three goals all on one penalty, a minor penalty, which spanned over the second intermission, within 49 seconds).

The record in Division III is four shorthanded goals by David Garofalo of New England College vs. the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (MCLA) in 1988, which means there is no easy to find out if anyone else scored a shorthanded hat trick. Then, there is the question did anyone do so back from the Division II ranks, as I could not find any sort of records for those years?

Thus, what we know for sure is at least nine players have scored a shorthanded hat trick in men’s college ice hockey. Only three of them have done so with a natural hat trick. No matter what the true list is, Musselwhite’s is indeed a rare feat.

Midseason Review

The SUNYAC conference schedule is now half over. The first semester may have been short, but there was plenty of excitement and surprises to fill a season’s worth.

The two top teams in the league, Oswego and Plattsburgh, have performed so well, a week ago their success placed both of them in a tie for the nation’s No. 1 ranking.

“It’s a pleasant surprise,” Gosek said. “If you told me with 12 rookies and two transfers we’ll be 8-0 in the league, I’ll be happy to believe that. We have a long way to go. We keep talking long term. We’re happy right now, but we think we can continue to improve, get better, compete every night.”

One of the biggest question marks heading into this season for nearly every team in the league was netminding, and Oswego certainly fell into that category.

“Our biggest question mark going into the season was our goaltending,” Gosek said. “I think Kyle [Gunn-Taylor] and Paul [Beckwith] both have proven they’re very capable goalies for our team, so we’re pleased with that.”

Beckwith (2.50 goals against average, .906 save percentage in conference) started out as the number one netminder, but an injury gave Gunn-Taylor (1.34, .939) a chance to see 75% of the conference starts. They have combined for a league leading low 13 goals allowed in eight games.

The goaltending, added to a league high of 51 goals scored, combined with a Lakers win at Plattsburgh has given Oswego a three point advantage over the Cardinals.

Despite sitting in second place, Plattsburgh has been just as impressive. More so when you consider they had the biggest question mark in net, having to replace someone as solid as Bryan Hince. Bob Emery stated on WIRY’s ‘Behind the Bench’ that he is very happy with both his freshmen goalies who split evenly the conference action, Josh Leis (2.12, .946) and Ryan Williams (1.25, .946). All told, Plattsburgh has 13 freshmen.

“I thought our defense has played well,” Plattsburgh coach Bob Emery said on ‘Behind the Bench’. “I thought our forwards have played well. We need to improve on our power play and that will improve our scoring output.”

Just like in the standings, they are also second to Oswego in many conference categories: offense, defense, and net special teams.

The Cardinals are going to need some help in playing catch up to Oswego.

“They played some tough road trips early, so their schedule is easier in the league than it was in the first semester,” Bob Emery said. “The only road trip they have left in the league is Brockport, Geneseo, [and Morrisville].”

Fredonia started out slow, losing the first two SUNYAC games, and got stronger, winning five of their last six, averaging five goals a game in those victories which has them in third place at the midway point. Pat Street (3.93, .879) has seen most of the action in net as James Muscatello paces the team in scoring (6-5-11 in conference play).

“Musco is 20 pounds lighter than he was a year ago,” Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith said. “He’s stronger than he was a year ago. He’s reaping the benefits of a lot of his hard work. He’s a great leader. He sets the bar and that brings everyone else up.”

Potsdam has also gotten stronger as the semester has gone on. In fact, the Bears may be the sleeper team in the second half.

“They’re a big, strong, tough team,” Utica coach Gary Heenan said after facing Potsdam in a weekend series. “I think they have a really nice team. Their first line is tremendous. I think that goalie that played tonight played really, really solid. Everything hit him in the chest which is a credit to him.”

That goalie Heenan is referring to is freshman Andy Groulx. He has played just two games, both nonconference (Skidmore and Utica), and has performed splendidly. However, Trevor O’Neill, who had a so-so freshman year, has also been outstanding in his second year, getting stronger with each start. So good in fact, he has not lost the starting job to the up-and-coming Groulx.

“I think we got a great situation in our net,” Potsdam coach Chris Bernard said. “Both guys are playing great. There are two guys behind them that are quality goalies that people haven’t seen yet. Trevor is our guy. It’s nice to know that we have some guys who continue to push for opportunities.”

Starting from fourth place down, it’s a tight fit. Potsdam is one point ahead of Brockport, Cortland, and Geneseo. And those three teams are two points ahead of Buffalo State and Morrisville.

Brockport and Geneseo are not doing as well as some thought, and Cortland is doing a bit better than many figured.

Geneseo is last in conference scoring with only 18 goals, but they are third in goals allowed at 27.

“It’s frustrating because I think we’re playing well,” Geneseo coach Chris Schultz said. “When your offense is anemic, you have to make sure you’re playing great defense. We’re playing pretty darn good defense. We’re blocking a lot of shots, doing a lot of good things. There just has to be a focus on placing pucks on the net, getting our power play to at least getting some chances.”

The key to keeping the puck out of the net has been Adrian Rubeniuk, third in save percentage (.922) and fourth in GAA (2.38).

“I think we’re in good shape [in net],” Schultz said. “Rubeniuk for a while there was top five in the country in save percentage, making the big save when we need it. And [Cory] Gershon before he got hurt, he was playing extremely well, too. If you give us the goaltending that we’re getting now and the offense that we had last year, there is a good chance that we only have three losses on the year. That’s the way the game is. You’ve got to put the pieces together. Every single piece.”

That what every team will be trying to do for the second semester. If the first semester is any indication, we’re in for some huge battles for the top dog, home playoff spots, and playoff berths.

SUNYAC Short Shots

Nick Petriello scored a pair of goals to lead Buffalo State over Morrisville, 6-4 … Joey Christiano scored the first and last goals for Cortland as the Red Dragons scored four unanswered markers en route to a 5-3 win over Geneseo … Potsdam tied Plattsburgh by scoring three third period goals after falling behind, 3-0 … Eric Selleck scored the game winner midway through the third as Oswego beat Geneseo, 4-2 … Fredonia jumped out to a 4-0 lead thanks to two goals by Marc Deeley as the Blue Devils beat Morrisville, 5-2 … Brockport beat Cortland, 2-1, on goals by Tom Galiani and James Cody … Oswego fell behind Utica 2-0, took a 3-2 lead, fell behind 4-3, before scoring two third period goals to win 5-4.

Game of the Week

With the holiday break coming and this column going on hiatus until the first week of the new year, there are a lot of weeks to look ahead.

Two SUNYAC schools will be hosting strong tournaments and another will be competing in a tough tournament.

The Cardinal Classic has been a long time tradition as Plattsburgh takes on Castleton New Year’s Day and then plays either Trinity or Skidmore.

The Oswego Pathfinder Classic may not have been around as long, but it has been gaining a strong reputation. The organizers always try to get a team from a different conference, including a western foe. This year, Oswego faces Connecticut College while Elmira takes on the Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE) in the first round on the day after New Year’s. I’m sure most fans would love to see an Oswego-Elmira final for what would be a third meeting this year between these schools.

Potsdam competes in the Times Argus Invitational at Norwich, facing New England College on New Year’s and then either the host or Curry. This will be an excellent measure of Potsdam’s improvement this season. Morrisville also competes in a tournament, the Saint Michael’s Holiday Tournament. In a predetermined scheduling format, the Mustangs first face the host school, and then coach Brain Grady’s alma mater, Hamilton.

As for individual contests, two stand out. One is Manhattanville at Geneseo this coming Sunday. Both teams have struggled lately. Manhattanville has lost four of their last five with Geneseo dropping four of their last six. Something has to give this weekend.

Finally, there is the Plattsburgh at Norwich game to wind up the schedule during the break. Not knowing how the tournament matchups will turn out, this is the game of the week break. These two longtime powerhouses settled nothing in the Primelink final, tying 1-1, also at Norwich. They get another shot, and fans will be eagerly waiting.

On The Periphery

As I was attempting to research the players who have scored a shorthanded hat trick, I was tremendously disappointed in the lack of proper record keeping by the NCAA for hockey. Part of the reason is the NCAA did not formally keep track of hockey records and statistics themselves until relatively recent. Therefore, they had to rely on whatever the schools and conferences did, and in many cases, some of these schools and conferences don’t even exist anymore. Thus, some of those records, and their histories, are probably lost forever.

As always, some sports received much better treatment, such as football and basketball. But even in these sports, the NCAA did not officially keep track of numbers from the very beginning. They just don’t have as big of a potential gap as hockey does.

Then, there are the women’s sports where the NCAA doesn’t even acknowledge those schools when they played as a member of the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW). It’s as if those teams never existed.

Potsdam had one of the top women’s hockey programs in the country back in the early 80s, regularly playing NCAA Division I schools and beating them quite often. Yet, according to the NCAA record books, Potsdam’s team did not exist back then because they were a member of the AIAW. Sadder, most people, even diehard college hockey fans, are totally unaware that one of the greatest woman players in college history, Kathy Lawler, played at Potsdam, and holds scoring records that are unmatched by today’s players — records that the NCAA does not acknowledge.

Finally, there are the individual schools and conferences, whose record keeping is widely disparate. At times, it comes down to individuals whose love for the game commits them to gather records and statistics on a particular topic. One such person did just that, compiling a thorough database of SUNYAC records and statistics. More on that effort next month.

It’s a shame a piece of the sport will never be recovered or acknowledged by the NCAA. But, a lot can be restored and accepted. We owe it to the history of the sport to do just that, regardless of what the NCAA has been able to do or limited us to see.

This Week in Hockey East: Dec. 10, 2009

Letters To Santa

For the final column before the holidays, we’ve once again intercepted mail from Hockey East arenas to the North Pole and are sharing them with you.

On New Hampshire stationery:

Hey, Santa, Dick Umile here.

Things are looking pretty good here in Durham.

First place in Hockey East with a 7-2-2 record. We’re 5-0-1 in our last six games, all of them in the league. In fact, we came within 11 seconds of being way out in front with an 8-1-2 league record. That tying goal in regulation and overtime loss at UMass really hurt at the time and still stings a bit, but the way the boys are playing now has me thinking of March and maybe even April instead of the past.

Santa, did you hear that word? April? As in April in Detroit? That’s what I’d like under my Christmas tree.

And if you didn’t mind, I’d sure like it if come NCAA time you arranged it so that Wisconsin was in another bracket. They really took it to us and I’d really rather not see their coach, Mike Eaves, again until the Coaches’ Meetings after the season in Florida.

That’s it.

Well … maybe not. There is one other thing you could do for me. Remember that newspaper writer who wrote last year that I should get fired? Right before we came so close to the Frozen Four?

I try to be a nice guy — you know that — but that writer really got to me. So if you leave some coal in the guy’s stocking I wouldn’t be at all disappointed. Oh, and if the reindeer left some droppings on his roof, well that would be just … just … heh, heh, heh … it would be just perfect.

On Boston College stationery:

Well hello, Santa, this is Jerry York.

I’m pretty happy with my club right now. We haven’t lost in almost a month. We’re 5-0-1 in our last five, 7-1-1 in our last eight, and all but two of those wins came in Hockey East play.

We’re scoring at a good clip — tops in Hockey East — and playing well defensively too. We’ve got a power play that’s clicking at 22.8 percent and the league’s best penalty kill.

You’d think I have it all and have nothing to ask for. Except, of course, another championship banner to hang at Kelley Rink.

But there is something. Could you please help John Muse return to his play of two years ago? That’s my No. 1 worry. Last year he wasn’t quite himself because his hip was bothering him.

So he had the offseason surgery and could be rounding into form if our recent game against BU says anything. He stopped 30 of 31 shots. A little more of that will go a long way. Our freshman, Parker Milner, is looking pretty good, but I think Muse can be a difference-maker again for us down the stretch so give him a good dose of health for me, would you?

Oh, and one other thing. If you could get Dave Hendrickson a brain for Christmas, he sure could use it. A nice kid and well-meaning, but dumb as rocks. He picked us to finish eighth this year, can you believe it?

Eighth!

So a little boost to the guy’s IQ would do him a world of good cause it sure seems like he’s taking stupid pills.

Hey, that’s it, Santa. Help yourself to some milk and cookies, and go Eagles!

On Maine stationery:

Santa, this is Tim Whitehead.

For a while there, I thought you were dumping another load of coal on me this year. A slow start after two rough years and I could hear the grumbling.

He’s no Shawn Walsh. He’s no Shawn Walsh.

Yeah, well, who is? Hey, I knew I was going to hear that even after all those Frozen Four appearances. It comes with the territory, like it or not.

So I was going to ask for some earplugs but guess what?

I don’t need them. We’ve just won four straight and after opening the season with some of the most brutal defense in the college hockey, we’ve allowed only a single goal in each of those games.

We’re in third place now and it’s like old times again with us up at the top along with UNH and BC. Only BU is missing from what they used to call the Big Four. It’s nice just to hear that phrase again.

The Big Four.

Yeah.

But it isn’t easy keeping all that going. The competition just gets tougher and tougher.

So here’s what I’d like. While my assistants and I are scouting the rinks for next year’s freshmen, could you keep an eye out for another family like the Kariyas? I know I asked you for that last year, but I’m going to keep asking until that next group of stars arrives.

On UMass-Lowell stationery:

Blaise MacDonald here.

Three and three, Big Guy. Three and three.

Here’s what I’m talking about. We got to No. 3 in the country — three in the country! — and then we lost three in a row.

We went from one of the top offensive teams in the league to one that scored four goals in three games.

So a little bit of consistency would be nice. We’ve become Hockey East’s top defensive club so that’s great but we’re only middle of the pack in both special teams areas. So a little boost there would be appreciated.

But overall I like my team. I like our crowds. And I like this program’s chances to do something big this year.

Which reminds me …

You don’t have to bring us anything now. Wait until March sometime. When we really need that little extra something. Like … oh, say like last year in the Hockey East championship game when a win would have given us our first title and a trip to the NCAA tournament. And there was that goal that got waved off …

Yeah, that one.

You want to make up for that one? See me in March.

On Massachusetts stationery:

Santa, this is Toot Cahoon.

You got our hopes up again. Four wins to start the season. Seven out of eight. Nine out of 11.

Then three straight losses.

I’ve heard a few too many times about our fast starts and our less stellar finishes.

You know, this is a pretty good club. Second-best offense in the league. The top power play. A pretty good defense.

I wouldn’t be out of line to ask for home ice in the playoffs and then a trip to the Garden and then how about a Hockey East championship we can call our own.

How about it?

On Vermont stationery:

Santa, this is Kevin Sneddon.

Last year’s trip to the Frozen Four was just what this program needed. It was a great experience and we came so close. Seven minutes away from the championship game and we held the lead …

Ah well, there’s nothing you can do about that game unless you’ve got a time machine stashed away up there on the North Pole.

So let’s talk about this season. We just haven’t been able to put it all together so far. Our power play has been killing us just about the whole year. I mean, 12.1 percent? Last in the league? And our PK hasn’t been much better.

It seems like when we get the offense, we don’t get the defense and goaltending. Or when we get the other, we don’t put the puck in the net.

We’re not bad. We aren’t pushing panic buttons.

But we could be a lot better.

So if you’re dropping off gifts, those of the special teams variety would be especially welcome. But other than that, any little thing will do. A little more of this and a little more of that may be all we need.

On Northeastern stationery:

Greg Cronin here.

I gotta tell you, Big Guy, I really don’t believe in you. I’m only writing this stupid letter because Hendrickson, that nitwit Hockey East writer for USCHO, asked me to.

I remember last year, I told you that if we had another good-first-half and bad-last-half season, I’d consider it a mound of coal in my stocking and whack you over the head with it. You got the message. We had a heckuva year.

Close but no cigar in so many ways. The Hockey East semifinal game. The NCAA tournament game.

But a heckuva year.

So since it worked, I’m going at it again (even though I don’t believe in you). See, I don’t really want to whack you over the head with a stocking full of coal. I really don’t. But I will.

That is, unless we get more scoring. We’re last in the league in team offense. A week ago, we got two long 5-on-3s against Merrimack in the third period and couldn’t score once.

So we need some more scoring. And a stocking full of coal would give you a really bad headache.

Got the picture?

On Merrimack stationery:

Mark Dennehy here.

You know, Santa, I’ve got to admit it. I thought you were just one big pantload while we were finishing in last place my first four years here, especially the season when we went 3-27-4 and scored a whopping 28 goals in 27 Hockey East games.

Yeah, ho-ho-ho. I was laughing all the way.

But we’ve really turned the corner here so I’m feeling a lot more in the holiday spirit. We’re second in the league in scoring, first on the power play, and second on the penalty kill.

It used to be that teams didn’t like to come to our barn because … well, it isn’t exactly a palace. But you know, now teams really don’t like to come into our barn and you know why?

Because we kick their butts.

We’re 7-1-0 at home. Check out these scores: 5-2 over Vermont, 5-3 over BC, 6-3 over BU and 3-1 over Northeastern.

Hey, if we played and won the two games we hold in hand over most everyone else, we’d be sitting in fourth place.

Fourth place!

Home ice.

Did you catch that? We’re not talking about sneaking into eighth place so we can be someone’s sacrificial lamb. We’re talking about kicking butt, taking names, and maybe even getting home ice.

Home ice at the J. Thom Lawler Arena. That has a nicer ring to it than any of your stupid sleigh bells, if you ask me.

So what am I asking for?

A little better defense, but basically more of the same, baby, more of the same. Oh, and if next year’s recruiting class could include another Stephane Da Costa, that would be really sweet.

On Providence stationery:

Santa, Tim Army.

You been paying attention, oh Jolly Round One?

Last year, we missed the Hockey East playoffs for the first time. Ever. So I had a pretty lousy offseason. Every drive off the tee was a snap hook into the woods. Every burger on the grill got burnt. Every horn honked on Route 95 sounded like a goal siren going off in our end.

So it was quite a relief when we got off to a great start this year: 4-1 after five, 5-2 after seven and 6-3 after nine.

Unfortunately, most of those wins were against nonconference teams. And now we’ve lost three straight.

We do hold games in hand against every team in the league, three in hand over most of them. So we hold our destiny in our hands. But we need to win those games because right now we’re ninth in winning percentage.

And you know what that means. If the season ended today, we’d miss the playoffs again. So maybe you understand why I’m not in the best of moods.

Here’s what I want. A playoff berth, for starters. We are not going to miss the playoffs two years in a row. And then I’d like an upset so we get to the Garden. And finally, how about a young Ron Wilson and Chris Terreri as recruits for next year?

On Boston University stationery:

Santa, Jack Parker here.

If you had anything to do with those miraculous two goals against Miami last year, thank you, thank you, thank you. You don’t owe me anything. You delivered eight months early.

If not, then I’ve got two words for you.

Bah humbug.

Hint, hint. They Make Great Gifts

For those booklovers on your shopping list, don’t forget The Trouble With Heroes, an anthology of original stories looking at the other side of mythical and historical heroes. It includes my own snarky contribution, “Beloved.”

You’ll find it the Science Fiction/Fantasy section (perhaps under new releases) under the editor’s name, Denise Little, or order it through Amazon.

There’s also Scott Weighart’s book, Burn the Boats: A Seven-Championship Season for Boston University Hockey.

You can’t go wrong with either one.

And Finally, Not That It Has Anything To Do With Anything, But…

• I was in a public place when the Patriots went down to defeat last Sunday. It was a stunning loss but even more stunning was the reaction. “Tom Brady, you [stink]!” “Bill Belichick, a genius? My [butt]!” What an incredibly spoiled bunch we’ve become.

• Based on the way the Pats defense has been playing, the go-for-it call on fourth-and-2 now seems like the only rational one to make.

• Yeah, the defense would be better with Richard Seymour but it hardly looks like our boys would have been heading to the Super Bowl with or without him. It remains highway robbery that we traded one year of Seymour for many years of a future star.

• Marco Scutaro should improve the Red Sox a ton next year at shortstop even though I am leery of one-year wonders. I’m not sure I’d have given up a first-round pick for him even if we’re getting one back for Billy Wagner. My guess, though, is that he’ll instead cost a No. 2 after we sign Adrian Beltre, whose home-away splits suggest that he could be a Fenway monster.

• If you like science fiction, check out Diving Into the Wreck by Kristine Kathyrn Rusch.

• If you’re a fiction writer who’s interested in improving your work, check out Odyssey and these Oregon workshops.

• No matter who you are, thanks for reading this year. Have a safe, healthy and happy holidays, one and all.


Thanks to Diana Giunta.

The goalie experiment (and Men of the Month)

Well, I gave it a try.

Sunday afternoon, with my beloved New York Jets having already conducted their business for the week, I sat down on the couch with a clipboard and three pens to watch ESPNU’s broadcast of New Hampshire and Vermont from Gutterson Field House.

After my blog post last week about how we look at goalies’ stats, I decided to use the game to test out a system of breaking down the numbers. For each goaltender who played in the game, I recorded their saves and goals allowed based on the score of the game at the time.

Now, I didn’t do a perfect job on this. I noticed at the first intermission that my shot totals didn’t match ESPNU’s, probably because I thought one or two more shots were broken up in front. That said, this is just an experiement, and I’ll ask that you bear with me.

By my count, UNH goaltender Brian Foster saved four of five shots he faced with the score tied (including two of three power-play shots), all five shots he faced when the Wildcats were down one goal (including two shorthanded shots), all five shots he faced when the Wildcats led by one, and 11 of 12 shots he faced when the Wildcats led by two or more goals (including two of three power-play shots).

UVM’s Mike Spillane, meanwhile, saved three of four shots he faced with a tie score, three of four while the Catamounts trailed by one, three of four while the Catamounts led by one (including two power-play saves), and allowed a goal on the only shot he faced when the Catamounts trailed by two goals. He was replaced by Rob Madore, who stopped 11 of the 12 shots he faced (including six power-play saves), all of which came with Vermont down by two or more goals.

What can you take from that?

Well, over one game, you can’t really take too much from the numbers, but if I were to zero in on anything, I would take the fact that Foster stopped 14 of the 15 shots he faced while the teams were within one goal of one another, while Spillane stopped nine of 12. That’s a pretty big difference (and I think I may have shorted Foster a couple of saves). Actually, if I were going to create a “designer stat” (think OPS in baseball), I’d look at save percentage when the goal differential when the teams are within a goal of one another.

I don’t think I’d need the next goaltender to win the Hobey to match Ryan Miller’s .950 save percentage, but I think I’d want to see a .950 save percentage with a goal differential of 1 or 0. Just something to think about going forward.

Next, November is in the books, which means we have a new crop of Player of the Month winners to look at.

In Hockey East, it’s Bobby Butler of New Hampshire, who averaged 1.86 points per game as the Wildcats went 3-2-2. Butler really didn’t jump out at me when I watched him on Sunday, but the numbers don’t lie. As a goal-scorer and a senior, he certainly has the right profile. It’s just a question of how his pace keeps up as the season goes along.

In the CCHA, it’s Blair Riley of Ferris State who had 10 points (8g, 2a) while the Bulldogs went 4-0-2. I like Riley as a darkhorse for a finalist spot, especially if FSU can make a run in the CCHA and grab an NCAA tournament berth. I don’t think he’s a likely candidate to win the award, but again, he’s a goal-scorer (13g in 16 games), he’s a senior, and he’s helping the Bulldogs battle with the big boys of the CCHA (note those two goals he had against Miami). Again, if he and the Bulldogs hang around, keep an eye on Riley.

Atlantic Hockey’s Player of the Month is Canisius’ Cory Conacher, who had 13 points in 9 games as the Golden Griffins went 5-3-1. Conacher may be the most interesting player here, since he now has the No. 3 scoring average in the nation, and more goals than either of the players ahead of him (UMass’ James Marcou and Wisconsin’s Brendan Smith…more on him in a second). He’s coming off of a 35-point season, but his 12 goals tie his career high. The thing that could make it tough for Conacher is team success. Right now, the Griffs are fourth in Atlantic Hockey, and well behind RIT and Air Force. I think the conference semifinals might be a must for the Griffins if Conacher is to get noticed, especially with other potential Hobey finalists out there like Bemidji State’s Matt Read in the CHA and Air Force’s Jacques Lamoureux competing against Conacher in Atlantic Hockey.  Could there be more than one finalist out of the smaller conferences? Maybe.

Now, last I checked, ECAC Hockey, the WCHA and the CHA don’t name players of the month, but I think it’s pretty obvious in the case of ECAC Hockey (Blake Gallagher or Colin Greening, take your pick). In the WCHA, I think Brendan Smith of Wisconsin has thrown himself into the Hobey conversation with authority. Anytime a defenseman is No. 2 in the country is scoring, you have to pay attention, and that is the case with Mr, Smith. His point-per-game average in November has put him in position, and he followed that up with a huge seven-point series against Michigan Tech last weekend. Overall, Smith has 15 points in his last seven games, which means I will have my eye on him this weekend when the Badgers take on North Dakota (thank you, NHL Network).

In the CHA, Matt Read continues to make it clear he’s in a class by himself. Not to say there aren’t other great players in the conference, but Read is the leading reason the Beavers are No. 4 in the country.

As we get deeper into the season, the Hobey picture is starting to take shape, and with guys like Smith, Gallgher, Greening, and Read in the mix – to say nothing of James Marcou, Brandon Wong, Eric Lampe, Jack Connolly, Marc Cheverie and we could go on and one – that shape is definitely an interesting one. Stay tuned.

This Week in the ECAC West: Dec. 10, 2009

Back in the Groove?

Hobart stumbled through the last two weeks of last month, starting on Nov. 14 when they gave up four one goal leads against Neumann. The bottom fell out the next weekend when Hobart dropped a pair of games against Elmira and the slide continued a week later out of conference with a loss at Cortland.

“You want to get so much done that sometimes you focus on what you want to get done and not how you want to get it done,” said Hobart head coach Mark Taylor. “That’s where we were for a couple of weeks. Then we were focusing on what we weren’t getting done and not why we weren’t getting it done. We were looking in all the wrong places.”

With a pair of league wins this past weekend, it appears that Hobart has stopped the slide and is starting to move upwards again. The Statesmen started to turn the corner last Friday. After Hobart played a good first period, Utica scored a trio of power-play goals in the second period to take a 4-2 lead into the third period. It seemed like the slide would continue, but Hobart ripped in four goals over a 9:15 span of the final frame to secure a 6-4 victory.

“Utica was a good start,” said Taylor. “They got a couple of goals on the power play. The puck was on the right guy’s stick for them. Nick Broadwater didn’t see many shots, certainly in the first period, and that played into it. He had to regroup and did a great job of collecting himself and coming back out in the third period and shutting the door.”

After giving up four goals on 12 shots in the first two periods, freshman goaltender Nick Broadwater shut Utica out in the last stanza to help Hobart win the game.

Saturday night, Hobart started to play like the Statesmen of previous years, jumping out to an early lead on three power-play goals on the way to beating Manhattanville, 4-2.

“We started to play like the old Hobart hockey team, to get back to our groove a little bit,” said Taylor. “We’re starting to get a little bit of a sync back. We are real happy with the guys on how they have collected themselves and stopped focusing on all the pressures and expectations. We have been trying to take a step every single year. These steps get tougher to take. There is always that weight of ‘we want to be the class that does, not the class that doesn’t do it.'”

At the top of the scoring charts for the Statesmen is freshman Chris Cannizzaro, who has tallied seven goals and added nine assists so far this season.

“He’s got a good stick,” said Taylor. “He’s doing a great job, that’s why you bring them in. Sometimes points are coming hard for other guys and that can challenge them.”

With big road wins under their belts, the Statesmen are now looking to climb back up the hill. Midway through the league schedule, Hobart is in third place with a 3-3-1 record and trails second place Manhattanville by three points.

“We’ve faced some good adversity,” said Taylor. “I hope it will make us a heck of a lot better at the end of the year. We’re starting to come together and play for each other. I’ve never questioned the quality of this group. They have done so much for me for so many years. We all got focusing on the wrong stuff.”

Powered to First

Elmira stumbled out of the gate at the start of the season, splitting a pair of home-and-home series against Oswego and Morrisville. A big reason for the Soaring Eagles struggles during the first three games of the season was a powerless power play. Elmira failed to score on its first 16 man advantages of the year.

Since then, the Soaring Eagles power play has been dominant, spurring the team to eight straight wins. Elmira has scored 21 goals on its last 58 opportunities and is now clicking along at a 28.4 percent success rate overall, and a robust 36.6% in league play.

“[Assistant coach] Dean Jackson has done a terrific job with that,” said Elmira head coach Aaron Saul. “We split up the duties a little bit. He has been doing the power play pretty much since the beginning of the year. Credit to the players too as they are focused when we get a power play opportunity. It has been very good for us and is obviously making a difference in the streak that we are on.”

Elmira is the last undefeated team in conference play and is in a dominant position two points ahead of second place Manhattanville and has a game in hand. The Soaring Eagles passed a big test last Friday against the Valiants to take sole possession of first place when they defeated Manhattanville, 5-4.

After getting out to a 2-0 first period lead, Elmira withstood a firestorm in the second as Manhattanville poured 20 shots on goaltender Casey Tuttle.

“We took a lot of penalties in the second period and they got a lot of shots on net,” said Saul. “They had a 5-on-3 early in the third period. We were able to kill that off and it was a momentum swing for us.”

Rusty Masters led Elmira in scoring against the Valiants with a pair of goals, and also leads the team in goals for the season with 10.

“In my opinion, if he keeps going Rusty could maybe get consideration for All-American at the end of the day,” said Saul. “He has been our most consistent player offensively and defensively. He is doing a great job of leading our extremely young team.”

Another strength so far this season for Elmira has been a quick start to games. The Soaring Eagles have outscored opponents 16-3 in the first period through 11 games.

“We have gotten off to very good starts,” said Saul. “With the last four games being on the road, as a coach you always anticipate the first period. Usually with the long bus rides, it is the other way around, but we have come out firing on all pistons and it has seemed to work for us.”

Despite its success so far, Elmira isn’t letting up heading into the holiday break. The Soaring Eagles continue to practice this week despite not having another game until New Year’s weekend when they will play in Oswego’s Pathfinder Classic tournament.

“We definitely finished this first half of the season strong, being undefeated in our league,” said Saul. “In the ECAC West, that is a big feat. We are not going to sit on our laurels. There are definitely some things that we can get better at.”

Game of the Week

Hobart faces one last challenge before the holidays, and it will be a doozey of a test whether the Statesmen are back in sync or not. On Saturday, Hobart travels up Route 14 to take on top ranked Oswego.

The Lakers are on a 10 game winning streak, tied for the longest in Division III. On the other hand, Hobart seems to have found its groove recently and is looking to end the first half of the season on a roll.

“I like the resolve that we have had,” said Taylor. “We took a couple slips down the ladder and I wasn’t so sure if we had hit bottom or just fell backwards. But we are pulling ourselves back up. We have a great test against Oswego, the best team in the country right now. We’re going to try our best to try and get it done.”

Season’s Greetings

I would like to extend my best wishes to all USCHO readers during this holiday season. I’ll be taking a break to enjoy the merriment, but fear not: the regular ECAC West column will return on Jan. 7 as teams sprint toward the playoffs in the second half of the season.

Tuesday Morning Quarterback: Dec. 8, 2009

Todd: As the final weekend with a full schedule of 2009 approaches, it’s probably about time to look at the conference standings. The first thing that jumps out at me is that Bemidji State has opened up a 12-point lead in the CHA. The Beavers are 8-0, while Robert Morris is 1-4-2, Niagara is 1-3-1 and Alabama-Huntsville is 1-4-1. Not a whole lot of doubt about who’s going to get the top seed in the final CHA tournament, and unless the Beavers collapse in the second half, they’ll be in line for an NCAA tournament spot no matter how they fare in the postseason. What stands out to you, Jim, as you look at the standings around the country?

Jim: I think the Hockey East standings are quite notable in that New Hampshire, while not even part of the USCHO.com poll until this week (and, at that, ranked No. 19 after wins against Massachusetts-Lowell and Vermont last weekend) sits in first place with a two-point lead over No. 10 Boston College and a five-point lead over No. 9 Lowell. I guess the fact that UNH is winless out of conference has a lot to do with that. You can also look at the fact that defending national champion Boston University sits 10 points behind UNH. As Jack Parker alluded to over the weekend, it will be difficult, if not impossible, to make up a gap that big (though I think it’s time that BU likely begins worrying about things like home ice or even making the playoffs and not about a regular-season title).

Todd: The picture in the WCHA is cloudy as usual. Three points separate the first five teams, and North Dakota is in sixth, five points behind leader Denver. One of the teams in a three-way tie for third intrigues me this week, and that’s Wisconsin. No one in the WCHA has scored more goals, and only North Dakota has allowed fewer. Seeing the Badgers do well defensively is no surprise, but this team can score in bunches, as evidenced by its 14-goal weekend against Michigan Tech. When they won the national championship in 2006, the Badgers’ scoring margin was plus-1.53. So far this season, it’s plus-2.12 (second in the nation to Bemidji State’s plus-2.25). If they can get some points out of a trip to North Dakota this weekend, this will a team to watch in the second half.

Jim: I think the one thing that is interesting about the WCHA’s standing is that already it seems that the haves are separating themselves from the have-nots. The top six teams are all above .500 overall and are all nationally ranked. The bottom four teams are below .500 and missing from rankings. The same can’t be said for the CCHA, where Michigan is in 10th place and exactly .500, or, say, Hockey East, where Providence is in the cellar but boasts a 7-7-1 overall record. Is it safe to say, then, that the WCHA’s standings are very much indicative of where the strength in that league resides?

Todd: Things seem to be trending that way, at least. But I don’t think that’s a real dark line drawn between sixth and seventh. Minnesota State is one game below .500, and I think Minnesota could be a better team than they’ve shown so far but, like you mentioned with BU before, it’s getting to the point where the Gophers have to readjust the regular season goals. You mentioned the CCHA, so I wanted to throw this out there: I can’t get used to the three-points-per-game system being used there this season, even though it’s probably the right way to do it if you’re going to use the shootout. Thoughts?

Jim: I’m a major proponent of the shootout in the NHL. There, everyone is on a level playing field as all 30 teams are using the shootout. Everyone’s standings look the same. Every team is rewarded the same for wins, losses, overtime/shootout losses and shootout wins. The fact that the CCHA is the only team that uses it just feels strange to me. I was working in Hockey East when they used this for a couple of seasons in the mid ’90s. It was a fun gimmick, but when you consider it has zero impact outside of the league standings, it feels very insular to me. Additionally, I don’t like the three-point scoring system. Teams that used to earn ties would get 50 percent of the available points. Now a tie is worth only 33 percent if you can’t score on breakaways. It’s possible that I simply like the NHL’s scoring system better and that’s why I’m partial to that league’s shootout. At least you’re not penalized for having a deficiency in one specific aspect of the game (penalty shots), particularly given the fact that a penalty shot is almost never seen outside of the shootout.

Todd: Unless, of course, you’re Colorado College, which has seen three penalty shots already this season, including one on which Mike Testwuide scored in the final minute last Saturday to tie Denver. But back to the CCHA’s format. I can understand why there are concerns that, in the way things were last season, some games were worth more than others. If a game ended in regulation or overtime, two points were dished out. If it went to a shootout, that game produced three points, which skews the system somewhat. I think you’re right in calling it a gimmick, but not all gimmicks are bad. I think it needed to be tried, and I’m glad the CCHA is giving it some time to see how it works out. What’s on the docket for the weekend?

Jim: Well, I’ll literally have my eye on BC and Harvard Wednesday night as I’ll be covering that game. I’ll be interested in seeing how Harvard, a team that I believe has massively underachieved thus far, does against a red-hot BC team. I think this weekend’s most compelling games are in the WCHA where Wisconsin faces North Dakota and Denver locks horns with a Minnesota-Duluth squad I think is capable of being a top-tier team this season. How about you?

Todd: Throw in the third WCHA series between ranked opponents — Colorado College at St. Cloud State. And in the CCHA, Michigan and Notre Dame play a home-and-home series Friday and Sunday that could tell whether the Wolverines are capable of making up some of the ground they’ve lost in the standings.

Jim: Oh, good call on the Michigan-Notre Dame series. This really is a litmus test for both teams. Notre Dame is coming off two losses against Miami, while Michigan … well, we know that the bottom of the CCHA standings isn’t a place that Red Berenson likes to reside. I hate counting teams out at the holiday break, but if Michigan is on the wrong end of a sweep this weekend, it could spell doomsday for them. Until next week …

Laker Love: Oswego Top Team in D-III

The Oswego Lakers are the top team in Division III college hockey.

A week after splitting the vote with SUNYAC nemesis Plattsburgh, Oswego wrested control of the nation’s No. 1 ranking after hammering Brockport, 10-1, and doubling up Geneseo, 4-2. They received 12 of 20 first place votes.

The Cardinals, meanwhile, skated to a 3-3 tie with Potsdam and fell to second, 20 points — and seven top tallies — behind the Lakers.

Undefeated Norwich, fresh off back-to-back blankings of Amherst and Hamilton, rose two spots despite garnering one less first place vote than last week. In just three polls, they have gone from unranked to third in the country — a remarkable ascendance for the 5-0-1 Cadets.

Speaking of unblemished, the Adrian Bulldogs completed another ho-hum weekend: outscoring their opponent — Concordia (WI) — 19-2 to improve to 10-0 on the year. Though remaining in fourth, they received only two top tallies, one fewer than last week.

After splitting with seventh ranked St. Scholastica on home ice, St. Norbert dropped two spots to fifth. Sandwiched between the Saints and the Green Knights, the Soaring Eagles from Elmira are still No. 6 nationally.

Middlebury College remained in eighth after tying with Southern Maine and shutting out the Nor’easters from the University of New England, 5-0. The University of Wisconsin-River Falls moved up one spot to ninth after besting Bethel and St. Mary’s by a combined score of 12-2.

The Bowdoin Polar Bears — rivals with the Nor’easters for best D-III mascot — continued their winning ways by blanking Skidmore, 1-0, and blasting Castleton, 7-1. Tenth in the country, they are now 5-0 on the season.

Continuing the trend of non-traditional national powers rising up the rankings, the Curry Colonels — 7-0-1 in the nascent campaign — ascend one spot to No. 11.

Ninth in last week’s poll, the UW-Superior Yellowjackets split with in-state rival Stevens Point, landing at No. 12.

The MIAC’s Hamline Pipers acquitted themselves well last weekend in taking three points in a home-and-home series with conference foe St. Olaf. They rose two spots to No. 13.

Rounding out the top 15 were newcomers Williams and Salem State, a combined 10-1-2 on the season.

A mirror image of Norwich’s ascendancy has been Manhattanville’s precipitous fall from grace. Two weeks ago, the Valiants were ranked fourth in the country. But after losses to Elmira and Hobart, they didn’t even receive any votes from the pollsters.

Amherst also fell out of the top 15 teams.

Calm Cheverie Leads Favored Denver

Coming into the season, the Denver Pioneers were favored to win the WCHA title in most media and coaches’ polls. Part of the reason for that was goaltender Marc Cheverie, who in his first season as a starter posted a .921 save percentage and 2.3418 goals against average while starting all 40 games.

With the role of favorite thrust upon them, some goaltenders might have wilted, but Cheverie posted four shutouts in his first 10 games and is currently ranked fifth among goaltenders nationally with a .940 save percentage and 1.7680 goals against.

“Four shutouts in the first 10 games is pretty huge,” Pioneers captain Rhett Rakhshani laughed when asked about Cheverie’s performance. “I think he’s a very consistent goalie and has been rewarded for his hard work. I think just his maturity is the one thing he’s grown in, both in the locker room and around the rink. He knows that he’s been there, that he has the experience and a whole season of starting under his belt, and you can see that.”

For the Pioneers, then, perhaps the scariest moment of the season occurred on Oct. 30 in a game against Minnesota State. In the third period, after a collision with Justin Jokinen, Cheverie was taken off the ice on a stretcher, bleeding from a deep cut to his left calf. The injury ultimately required around 30 stitches to close, and kept Cheverie out of the lineup for three weeks.

“Any time your starting goalie goes down, you get a little nervous,” said Pioneers assistant captain Tyler Ruegsegger. “After finding out what happened to him, we were happy he was all right. We just wanted him to get back as healthy as possible.”

“About 30-ish, give or take five,” said Cheverie, when asked about the stitches. “I didn’t really know how serious it was until I got to the hospital. The doctors were a little worried, but once they found out there were no ligaments or nerves damaged, I was a little more relaxed, because I knew it wouldn’t be as long. It was a scary experience, but I’m glad it’s over.”

Cheverie’s goal after the injury was to make it back in time for the North Dakota series on Nov. 20-21.

“I did a lot of rehab,” explained Cheverie. “The flexibility was gone. My calf and my knee, I couldn’t move it. That was the hardest thing, getting back to being able to move it.”

“[Assistant coach] Derek Lalonde spent time with him in the video room watching tape, and the majority of the time Marc spent in the training room rehabbing with Aaron Leu, our trainer,” said Pioneers coach George Gwozdecky. “I think Derek spent, on that Tuesday prior to North Dakota, Marc was officially released to go to full practice, and Derek did some light drills with Marc on the ice in the crease. It wasn’t until Thursday that Marc was released to go full.”

Cheverie earned a shutout in his first game back, and kept the Sioux to two goals in the second game, helping Denver earn a critical sweep.

Coming into December, with a crucial series with archrival Colorado College looming, Cheverie’s performance again would be critical to the team’s success. Denver hadn’t beaten CC since 2007, but in the first game of a home-and-home series on the road, Cheverie earned the game’s first star, stopping 26 shots. In the second game, with several defensive breakdowns, Cheverie kept the Pioneers in it at times, but it wasn’t enough to prevent the Tigers from earning a tie.

Cheverie came to Denver from Cole Harbor, Nova Scotia. Prior to playing for the Pioneers, he played for Nanaimo in the British Columbia Hockey League. He was drafted in the seventh round by Florida in 2006.

According to Gwozdecky, the Pioneers started looking at Cheverie early.

“It probably would have been when [Glenn] Fisher was a junior [2005-2006],” he said. “We were looking Fisher’s sophomore year, and seriously started looking during Fisher’s junior year, so that’s probably when we identified Chevy.”

“I visited Cornell and North Dakota before DU,” said Cheverie. “I looked at Michigan State and CC a little bit as well. I chose DU because overall, the city and school, what it had to offer, has a great balance of academics and hockey. It’s not just a hockey place or an academic place. Just the guys here, I felt like some other places I felt you could tell you were in the United States and here I couldn’t tell. The guys were so laid back and I wanted someplace that felt like home.”

During his first season, Cheverie spent most of his time on the bench, backing up senior Peter Mannino. Cheverie played five games that year, winning his first collegiate start against Bemidji State.

Denver goalie Marc Cheverie posted four shutouts in his first 10 games this season.

Denver goalie Marc Cheverie posted four shutouts in his first 10 games this season.

“It was really good to be around him and see his practice habits, and obviously becoming good friends was a good overall experience for sure,” Cheverie said of Mannino.

One thing his teammates have noticed about Cheverie’s play this season is his calm demeanor, which the team seems to feed off of.

“I always tell people I think his leadership on this team is huge, and that drips down,” said Rakhshani. “Every single game he plays, he’s ready to go, and I think everyone else on our team feeds off that preparation.”

“There’s a lot less uncertainty,” said Cheverie, when asked about his play this season. “If you look at this time last year, now that I’ve proved myself, I know I can play at this level and succeed and excel, and once you know that, there’s no real reason to panic. If you’re focused and relaxed, chances are you’ll have a good game.”

Cheverie’s play is one reason for the Pioneers’ success this season. Denver is ranked No. 2 in the USCHO.com poll and is first in the WCHA.

“Last year was a year where he played a year on a regular basis, and I think the confidence he gained from that, the understanding and know how of what it takes to play at this level, together with what he’s done with his strength and conditioning in the off-season, based upon how he played, I think those are the reasons he’s continued to improve and develop like he has,” said Gwozdecky.

Now a veteran, Cheverie finds himself in the mentoring position that Mannino had with him a few years ago, as he helps freshman Adam Murray adjust to the speed of college hockey, something that hasn’t gone unnoticed by his teammates.

“In practices or when the goalies go out to work on things, he’s always there, helping them out and encouraging them,” said Ruegsegger. “I think as the starting goalie, that’s your job. I know Mannino did it with Cheverie and I think he’s passing the torch along.”

For Denver, which has a young defensive core, having Cheverie is a huge boon, and helps the team play better.

“I think you don’t want to look at it that way, that if the puck gets behind us then ‘Chevs’ will save it, but I think you still have to be very defensive and I think our team has learned that if we’re not being very good on defense, then Chevy will save us out from time to time,” said Rakhshani.

Echoed Gwozdecky, “I think it helps them relax and helps the whole team feel more comfortable. They don’t have to be mistake-free. Marc is there and is going to correct many mistakes they make in front of him. I think whether it’s the young ‘D’ corps or those old veteran guys, it’s the same feeling of the confidence you have knowing that you’ve got a guy back there who can make you look pretty good at times.”

For Cheverie and the rest of the Pioneers, however, the goal is getting back to the NCAA tournament and doing better than they have the past two years, where they flamed out in the first round. Cheverie acknowledges that there is some pressure from being the front-runner, but isn’t worried about it right now.

“We might be No. 2 or No. 3, but it doesn’t matter until those PairWise Rankings come out. I don’t even pay attention to them. I’m looking forward to getting back there, but we have a long season ahead of us.”

Hockey East Leader New Hampshire Returns to Top 20

Hockey East’s first-place team is back in the top 20.

New Hampshire, which extended its unbeaten streak to six games last weekend with victories over No. 8 Massachusetts-Lowell and at No. 19 Vermont, entered the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll on Monday at No. 19.

Related link: USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll: Dec. 7, 2009

The Wildcats started the season at No. 16, but they were 2-6-2 after 10 games. Since that point, however, UNH is 5-0-1 and pushed above .500 last weekend.

New Hampshire is 7-2-2 in Hockey East play but 0-4-1 outside it.

The top three was unchanged from last week, with Miami, Denver and North Dakota holding those spots.

Bemidji State moved up a spot to No. 4, its highest ranking in the USCHO.com poll.

Boston College and Wisconsin each moved up five spots, to Nos. 10 and 11, respectively. Massachusetts had the biggest fall of the week, six places to No. 15 after losses to Boston College and Massachusetts-Lowell.

An eight-game unbeaten streak helped Union earn the 20th spot in the rankings. The Dutchmen are in the top 20 for the first time since Dec. 4, 2000.

Vermont and Nebraska-Omaha dropped out of the poll.

This week’s schedule includes the six ranked WCHA teams pairing off. No. 12 Minnesota-Duluth hosts No. 2 Denver; No. 3 North Dakota hosts No. 11 Wisconsin; and No. 6 Colorado College hosts No. 17 St. Cloud State.

What I Think: Week 9

Another collection of random (and not-so-random) thoughts after the ninth week of the season:

* Just when I start to question Miami’s fitness as the No. 1 team in the country, the RedHawks shut out Notre Dame for the weekend.

Thanks for clearing that up.

* Something Michigan Tech coach Jamie Russell said in the wake Saturday of yet another loss marked by too many penalties and too many power-play goals against stood out to me.

He said the Huskies aren’t a bad team 5-on-5, and I’m inclined to believe him. They’re not great, mind you, but they’re not as bad as that 3-11 record makes them look.

But when you add 19.8 penalty minutes per game (third in the nation) and a penalty kill that’s at 62.2 percent (by far the worst in the nation), and yes, the Huskies’ record is representative of what they put on the ice.

Throw some key injuries in there to really push the depth, and it’s not a pretty picture.

* So the Quinnipiac offensive bubble has burst. All season, the Bobcats had been able to post at least three goals per game.

Until Saturday, when Brown held them to one goal in a 2-1 victory that dropped Quinnipiac to 12-3.

Brown has an average defense in terms of goals against, so who knew it would be the one to put the clamps on the Quinnipiac offense?

* Colorado College was on its way to a sweep at the hands of rival Denver and losing its grip on the Gold Pan until Mike Testwuide restored a little bit of hope for the Tigers in the annual competition in a highly unusual manner.

Down 4-3, CC was awarded a penalty shot in the final minute when Matt Donovan was called for intentionally pushing the net off the pegs. Testwuide, already with two goals to his name in the game, beat Marc Cheverie to — after overtime — earn CC a point.

Here’s another rarity: There has been a penalty shot in three of CC’s 16 games this season.

* In case you haven’t noticed, part 1: Boston College is unbeaten in its last five games and is 8-3-2 on the season.

The Eagles didn’t have a great start to the season, but they’ve lost only once in their last nine games. I don’t think it’ll ever be a surprise to see BC in the top 10 mix, but the designation again seems fitting now.

* In case you haven’t noticed, part 2: New Hampshire has pulled above .500 at 7-6-3. Not bad for a team that was 2-6-2 not too long ago.

* Ferris State has added a ranked team to the list of teams it has swept out of Ewigleben Ice Arena this season. Two victories over Nebraska-Omaha made the Bulldogs 10-0 at home.

Say what you will, but it’s getting harder to make the case against them being a top team this season.

* Here’s how I voted in the USCHO.com poll this week:

1. Miami

2. Denver

3. Bemidji State

4. North Dakota

5. Boston College

6. Colorado College

7. Quinnipiac

8. Massachusetts-Lowell

9. Cornell

10. Ferris State

11. Yale

12. Michigan State

13. Massachusetts

14. Minnesota-Duluth

15. Alaska

16. Wisconsin

17. St. Cloud State

18. New Hampshire

19. Vermont

20. Notre Dame

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