Home Blog Page 1196

This Week in the CHA: Oct. 18, 2007

Robert Morris endured a 12-hour travel day last Wednesday from Pittsburgh to Anchorage to win two straight games and the Nye Frontier Classic last weekend.

And the Colonials upset a nationally-ranked team along the way, too.

Yes, again.

RMU used three third-period power-play goals to topple then-No. 9 Boston University in its opening game last Friday.

“Christian Boucher (33 saves) played outstanding in goal for us tonight,” said RMU head coach Derek Schooley of his senior netminder. “Our seniors stepped up in the third period and provided great leadership for our team. I am very proud of the team, but we need to realize this is just one game.”

The Colonials fell behind early with two BU goals, but RMU would not go away quietly, getting three goals in the final 14 minutes of the game from senior Sean Berkstresser, freshman Scott Kobialko (his first career goal) and senior Tom Biondich.

Robert Morris was then crowned the Nye Frontier Classic champion Saturday evening after defeating Wayne State, 4-1.

The Colonials have started the 2007-2008 season 2-0, which marks the first time that has happened in the program’s history.

“I can’t say enough how proud I am of this team and the effort that they gave this entire weekend in Alaska,” said Schooley. “We played great defense all weekend and combined that with stellar goaltending. We received many timely goals from many different players.”

On Saturday, RMU picked up in the first period where it left off in the third period of Friday night’s contest by scoring the game’s first four goals, including two markers in the first session.

Senior Ryan Cruthers, freshman Nathan Longpre (first NCAA goal), junior Jason Towsley and senior David Boguslawski scored in the victory.

Wayne State’s Jon Grabarek broke up RMU’s shutout bid with a power-play goal at the 17:06 mark of the third period, when he beat sophomore goalie and Quinnipiac transfer Wes Russell.

Russell played the final 9:05 of the game. Boucher had stopped all 19 shots that he faced to that point.

Three Colonials were named to the All-Tournament Team: Boucher, Cruthers and Towsley.

Next up is No. 13 Wisconsin this weekend in Madison. Is another upset in the making?

“The Badgers are a nationally-recognized program with some high-end first-round talent,” said Schooley. “They play a very good defensive game and are well-coached. The Kohl Center is an excellent atmosphere to play in, so it should be a very challenging, fun weekend for our program.”

“(Robert Morris is) an interesting team,” Badgers head coach Mike Eaves said in the Capital Times of Madison. “They have 14 seniors and they’ll be a crusty, old bunch of college students who are probably as old as Ross Carlson was (25) when he graduated.

“It’ll be a challenge. They’ll be strong, they’ll be physical and they’ll want to make another statement this weekend. So I think it’s a benefit the fact that they beat BU because that’s going to get our attention for sure. If anybody was thinking who the heck Robert Morris is, they put themselves on the map last weekend.”

Schooley wishes more people would take a look at that map.

“I don’t know how many people in Pittsburgh understand what we have here,” Schooley noted in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. “It’s pretty special.”

Niagara Does Weekend Split

Son bested Dad in the father-son showdown at Merrimack last Friday night as the Warriors (and sophomore defenseman Dave Burkholder, Jr.) beat Niagara (and head coach Dave Burkholder), 4-2.

The Purple Eagles fell behind 3-1 after two periods, but came out on a mission in the third, outshooting the Warriors 11-5 in the final 20 minutes. Senior captain Matt Caruana scored in the middle period and Kyle Rogers in the third, but Merrimack added an empty-netter to seal the victory.

“Our third period was our best period of the night,” NU’s Burkholder said. “But we need to bring that for 60 minutes. Merrimack played unbelievable defense and their goalie played terrific.”

Following the game, Burkholder met near center ice with his son and the two shared a hug. The family affair took an interesting twist prior to the game, as Merrimack head coach Mark Dennehy’s wife gave birth to the family’s third daughter, Karolyn.

Saturday night, Niagara exhibited its blueprint for defeating Holy Cross: fall behind early and come storming back.

It worked last season in a 5-4 overtime thriller and it worked Saturday as the Purple Eagles beat the Crusaders, 6-2, to earn their first victory of the season. Niagara fell behind 2-0 in the first period and then scored six unanswered goals.

“In the first period, I felt that we played very well five-on-five, but we spent 13 minutes on the penalty kill,” Burkholder said. “We felt that once we got one, we would be all right. Then they came one shift after another.”

Sophomore Egor Mironov had his second three-point game of his career with a pair of goals and an assist and junior co-captain Vince Rocco added two third-period tallies to help freshman goaltender Adam Avramenko earn his first career victory.

Junior Ted Cook and sophomore Chris Moran also scored for NU and junior Les Reaney contributed three assists.

Cook’s goal, like 21 he scored last season, came on the power play.

Bemidji Arena Deal To Be Nixed?

Bemidji State president Jon Quistgaard has given the men’s hockey program two goals to reach by the end of the year — get into the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (even though an expansion moratorium has been put in place by the WCHA) and raise $2.5 million to ensure the financial viability of the BSU program.

Easier said than done, but that may all go by the wayside if Bemidji City Council has its way and delays construction of a new arena in the city.

City Councilor Jerry Downs last week said the city is working with Bemidji State to try to reach a lease agreement on the proposed events center. He would prefer to delay the project one year rather than continue forward without a specific proposal.

“You can’t put a square peg in a round hole,” he said in the Bemidji Pioneer. “We’re not going to force this project.”

If questions are still unanswered by Dec. 15, Downs suggested that the project be put on hold for a year.

In a year, there may be no BSU hockey, even though Quistgaard has noted that he has no intention of folding the program a la Wayne State.

Former BSU hockey coach and current CHA commissioner Bob Peters said that the team had already raised $100,000 as of two weeks ago. Peters said the majority of the remaining monies would be raised through the sale of suites in the new rink. He also said that he recently spoke with the WCHA and the conference is all in favor of BSU’s efforts.

“There is a great deal of support coming from the WCHA,” Peters said in the same Pioneer article. “They do not want to see a team from the great state of Minnesota go down.”

But an arena needs to be in place first, and if that is delayed a year …

Bemidji State Sweeps Away Army

The Beavers christened their 52nd year of hockey at the university with a two-game sweep of Army last weekend on home ice.

Friday, junior Travis Winter fired a shot through heavy traffic in front of the net with 3:12 to go in the third period to break a 1-1 deadlock and lift BSU to a 2-1 win.

Orlando Alamano recorded his first career shutout for Bemidji State last weekend (photo: BSU photo services).

Orlando Alamano recorded his first career shutout for Bemidji State last weekend (photo: BSU photo services).

The Beavers found themselves down 1-0 before most of the 1,382 in attendance had time to get in their seats. Owen Meyer put the first shot of the season over the left shoulder of Bemidji State senior goaltender Matt Climie just 32 seconds into the game.

Senior co-captain Jake Bluhm buried a one-timer from St. Cloud State transfer Matt Francis to tie the game later in the period.

Army looked to have taken a 2-1 lead midway through the third period on a shot off the stick of Luke Flicek. Climie was taken out on the play and the referee quickly waved off the goal. After a brief discussion between officials and explanations to both benches, the goal was disallowed due to an Army player being in the crease.

Freshman forward Matt Read earned his first collegiate point with an assist on Winter’s game-winner.

Junior goaltender Orlando Alamano turned away all 22 Army shots he faced for his first collegiate shutout as the Beavers completed the two-game sweep over the Black Knights Saturday with a 3-0 victory.

Bemidji State defenders also blocked 10 shots.

Freshman Jamie Ruff netted his first NCAA goal to give BSU a 1-0 lead early in the third period. Fellow rookie Ian Lowe was credited with an assist on the play for his first collegiate point as well.

Seniors Matt Pope and Blaine Jarvis each added empty-net goals during the final 25 seconds to secure the victory.

Alamano, now 4-2-0 in his career, posted his first win since a Jan. 6 victory versus Wayne State. It was also the first BSU shutout since Climie made 21 saves in a 1-0 win over Wayne State last Dec. 1.

Bemidji State’s sweep of Army extends the Beavers’ winning streak to four games as the team is now 4-0 versus the Black Knights all-time.

Wayne State Off To 0-2 Start — Again

Wayne State lost both of its games last weekend at the Nye Frontier Classic and in doing so started the season 0-2 for the third straight year.

Senior captain Mike Forgie and junior Derek Punches scored for the Warriors Friday, but three straight goals by Alaska-Anchorage in the second period proved to be the difference in the first-ever meeting between the two teams.

The Seawolves doubled Wayne State’s shot total, 26-13, while both sides went 1-for-4 on the power play.

Sophomore goalie Brett Bothwell stopped 21 shots for Wayne State.

With the loss to Robert Morris Saturday night, it marked just the third loss to RMU all-time and the first since Feb. 11, 2006.

“Last year, we went down there (WSU) and had a weekend we’d like to forget,” RMU senior forward Ryan Cruthers said prior to last weekend. “But then they came up here and beat us two straight. We need to turn that around.”

Mission: accomplished.

Freshman goaltender Kyle Funkenhauser, making his first collegiate start, totaled 18 saves and held Robert Morris to one power-play goal in eight chances.

Wayne State’s six-game road trip continues this weekend as the Warriors head to Ferris State.

UAH Blue-White Game Goes To Shootout

In an exciting come-from-behind contest, the Alabama-Huntsville White squad rallied from a 4-0 deficit to top the Blue team, 6-5 in a shootout, on Saturday afternoon.

The first three shots by junior forward Josh Murray of the Blue team found the back of the net. Junior forward Kevin Galerno made it a 4-0 lead minutes after Murray’s third goal.

The White squad finally got on the scoreboard when freshman Andrew Coburn scored. White junior forward Matt Sweazey then added a hat trick of his own.

Freshman forward Brady Cook then gave the White team their first lead of the afternoon at 12:34 of the second period.

Sophomore forward Cale Tanaka tied the game for the Blue team.

The shootout saw Morrison score the lone goal as the fourth man in the lineup for the White squad after both sophomore Blake MacNicol and freshman Cameron Talbot stood tall in net for the first part of the shootout.

“Defensively, I’m not real happy,” UAH head coach Danton Cole said in the Huntsville Times. “But once they settled down and remembered the system, they did all right. There were some good things, but this is going to be a process.”

Freshman goalie Wyatt Russell also saw action during the contest.

Colonials Get Local ’08-’09 Commitment

Robert Morris has reportedly received a verbal commitment from Pittsburgh-area native Furman South, a 19-year-old defenseman with the Baystate Breakers of the Eastern Junior Hockey League.

A Sewickley native, the 6-foot-2, 198-pound South has two goals and two assists with 20 penalty minutes in eight games this season.

USCHO Announces 2007-08 Women’s Game of the Week Broadcast Schedule

Beginning November 3, USCHO will present the fourth season of the Women’s Game of the Week, the only weekly national Internet broadcast for women’s hockey. Fans will be able to access the live and archived video feeds available through the USCHO women’s page.

The 2007-08 season will combine the past, present, and future of women’s hockey to provide unprecedented global coverage of the sport. The NCAA portion of the schedule will feature premier Division I and III regular-season matchups, and postseason coverage including the 2008 Frozen Four in Duluth, Minnesota. In addition, the Game of the Week is proud to introduce exclusive video coverage of past college standouts in the inaugural season of the CWHL as well as the new season of the WWHL. The schedule will conclude next April with coverage of the 2008 IIHF Women’s World Championships from Harbin, China in partnership with USA Hockey.

The Game of the Week is once again proud to offer a star-studded lineup of guest color analysts drawn from the ranks of the sport’s alumni. Former college greats who have appeared on the program include Patty Kazmaier Award winners Angela Ruggiero (Harvard ’04), A.J. Mleczko (Harvard ’99) and Ali Brewer (Brown ’00), as well as former Olympians Colleen Coyne (New Hampshire ’93), Natalie Darwitz (Minnesota ’07), Molly Engstrom (Wisconsin ’05), Sara DeCosta-Hayes (Providence ’00), Tricia Dunn-Luoma (New Hampshire ’96), Jamie Hagerman (Harvard ’03) and Carla MacLeod (Wisconsin ’05).

Game of the Week founder Brian Schulz will return for his fourth season of play-by-play. Schulz called men’s and women’s hockey games for Harvard University from 1999-2001, and also broadcast the 2001 and 2004 World Women’s Hockey Championships.

The broadcast schedule will begin Saturday, November 3 with live video coverage of Wisconsin Stevens-Point at Gustavus Adolphus. Specific CWHL and World Championship games to be announced at a later date.

2007-08 USCHO Game of the Week Broadcast Schedule

(all times EST)

Saturday, November 3, Wisc Stevens-Point at Gustavus Adolphus, 3:00PM
Saturday, November 17, Williams vs. Plattsburgh, 2:00PM
Saturday, November 17, Elmira at Middlebury, 5:00PM
Sunday, November 18, Middlebury Tournament Day 2, 2/5PM
Friday, November 23, St. Lawrence at Dartmouth, 7:00PM
Tuesday, November 27, Harvard at Dartmouth, 7:00PM
Saturday, December 1, Calgary at Minnesota (WWHL), 8:00PM
December 8-9, TBA (CWHL)
Saturday, December 15, Mercyhurst at Dartmouth, 2:00PM
December 29-30, TBA (CWHL)

January 5-6, TBA (CWHL)
Saturday, January 12, Boston College at Minnesota, 3:00PM
Sunday, January 20, Boston University at Providence, 1:00PM
January 26-27, TBA (CWHL)
February 2-3, TBA (CWHL)
Friday, February 8, Minnesota at Edmonton (WWHL), 10:15PM
Saturday, February 9, Ohio State at Minnesota, 8:00PM
Saturday, February 16, Amherst at Middlebury, 3:00PM
Saturday, February 23, Wisconsin at Minnesota, 4:00PM
Saturday, March 1, Boston College at Providence, 1:00PM

March 8-9, Conference Playoffs
March 14-16, NCAA Quarterfinals
March 20-22, 2008 Frozen Four

April 4-12, 2008 IIHF World Championships

*Schedule subject to change

Tuesday Morning Quarterback: Oct. 16

Welcome to Tuesday Morning Quarterback, USCHO.com’s freeform debate about the week that was in college hockey. Every Tuesday in this space, Jim Connelly, representing the East, and Scott Brown, representing the West, will discuss the issues of the day, trade barbs, make indefensible claims about their teams and leagues and generally rant about the things that make college hockey great.

Scott: Well, Jim, the new season is under way, and I know we’ll get to the games pretty quickly, but in the meantime let’s discuss the big bombshell of the last couple of weeks, which is Wayne State. The announcement that the Warriors are dropping men’s hockey is still reverberating — especially around the College Hockey America league offices. With that league now down to four teams after this season, is this the death knell for the CHA?

Peter Mannino compiled an 0.50 GAA and a .982 SV% as Denver swept Maine to open the season (photo: Melissa Wade).

Peter Mannino compiled an 0.50 GAA and a .982 SV% as Denver swept Maine to open the season (photo: Melissa Wade).

Jim: Certainly, Scott, this is a bombshell. Though nothing has officially been announced, I can’t see the NCAA — or the rest of the college hockey community — allowing the CHA to keep operating and receiving an NCAA tournament bid with just four teams. So, I think the most proper conversation now is where each of the four remaining teams belong. Assuming that all four programs remain — and as I say that I have no inside information that any of them would not — it would seem that a couple of teams could head to Atlantic Hockey.

Robert Morris, neighbors to Mercyhurst, and Niagara, a short ride from Canisius, seem like natural fits. Bemidji State is a geographic fit for the WCHA and Alabama-Huntsville really isn’t close to any of the current teams. If the WCHA or any other western league don’t want to open their doors to Bemidji and UAH, Atlantic Hockey might be interested in expanding to 14 teams. No matter how you slice it, though, the remaining CHA members will have to rely on the rest of the college hockey world for some help.

Scott: I agree on Niagara and Robert Morris, and both programs would be assets to Atlantic Hockey. When you mention Bemidji and UAH, though — aye, there’s the rub. The WCHA has not been willing to seriously consider Bemidji, due in part to arena issues, and I don’t think the league wants to go back to an odd number of teams.

That calls into play entertaining possibilities for playing Fantasy College Hockey Conference Realignment, where Michigan Tech goes to the CCHA, or Tech stays and the CCHA gives the WCHA Nebraska-Omaha to boot to make 12 WCHA teams, then takes Niagara itself. These scenarios are about as likely as me winning the Hobey Baker, but they’re fun to think about. The real irony is that the two teams in the biggest trouble — BSU and UAH — are traditional programs with a long history together in Division II. Losing either would be a crime, in my opinion.

Jim: I think your scenarios are certainly crazy, but you can’t rule out anything at this point. My thought is that the five remaining commissioners need to assemble at some point this season and make conscious decision on what’s best for the game. But you said it perfectly — losing any program is an absolute crime. And speaking of crimes in the CHA, how about Robert Morris stealing one from Boston University last weekend? What do you think happened there?

Scott: On the surface, this looks like a breathtaking upset, but this Robert Morris squad is one of the favorites in the CHA — which has had a number of wins over “Big Four” conference opponents in the past — and the Colonials are senior-laden, much like the 1999-2000 Niagara squad that beat New Hampshire in the first round of the NCAAs. Could RMU be this year’s surprise team on a national level? I’m not making any bets just yet, but it’s possible.

Of course, the fact is that BU outshot RMU 35-15, and the Colonials scored three goals on the power play in under four minutes, so maybe this falls into the “goalie stands on his head” variety of win (Christian Boucher, in this case) that won’t reflect the rest of the season. This can’t make Jack Parker feel better about his netminding, though, after losing John Curry to graduation. On the other hand, how ’bout them Gophers … and Pioneers … and Sioux … and Seawolves, for that matter? Quite a weekend for the WCHA.

Jim: It’s almost unimaginable how incredible a weekend that the WCHA had. Maybe that’s a hint of revenge for last year’s Frozen Four? The fact that the league earned wins wasn’t even the most impressive — it was the opponents they beat. Denver’s sweep over Maine was incredible, as was Minnesota over Michigan on Saturday. Add North Dakota over the defending national champions and Alaska-Anchorage earning a tie with BU, and my only word is “wow.” Oh and before you rub it in, yes, I recognize the major digger that Hockey East took on Friday night. When Merrimack is the only team in the league to earn a win, that’s a bad night.

Scott: I wasn’t going to say anything about that … okay, maybe I was. Regardless, though, we don’t know how much stock to put in early results like these. After one weekend, it looks like the WCHA is gunning hard to reclaim the NCAA title, but with lines not set, systems not fully developed, and starting goaltenders not even established in some cases, it’s tough to know how seriously to take wins and losses at this point. Luckily for the teams that lost over the weekend, this isn’t college football, where one bad loss can remove you from the national title picture a week into the season.

Jim: You’re very right that it’s better to lose early in the season than late. Plus, I think at least Boston College and Boston University can take some solace in the fact that they are working to break in somewhat fresh goaltenders. True, Karson Gillespie at BU has been around for a few years, but he’s always taken a back seat to Curry. Regardless, the opening weekend of college hockey surely gave us plenty to talk about around the country. I’m sure week two will do just the same.

North Dakota Firmly Atop USCHO.com/CSTV Poll

With a shutout of defending NCAA champion Michigan State Saturday, North Dakota cemented its hold on the top spot in Monday’s USCHO.com/CSTV Division I men’s poll.

The Fighting Sioux, who won 6-0 against the Spartans, earned 46 first-place votes to easily retain the No. 1 ranking they held in the preseason.

Following UND was Miami, which beat then-No. 20 Vermont twice and rose to No. 2, with Ice Breaker champion Minnesota at No. 3 after wins against Rensselaer and Michigan. Boston College, which lost to the Wolverines before rebounding to top the Engineers, came in fourth, and Denver skyrocketed eight places to fifth after sweeping Maine.

Michigan’s split at the Ice Breaker was good enough to send it up four places to No. 6, with Clarkson holding its ground in seventh with a loss to St. Lawrence and wins over Massachusetts and Providence in the two weeks since the preseason poll.

New Hampshire, which has yet to open its regular season, was No. 8, trailed by Michigan State and then idle Colorado College in 10th.

Notre Dame, which lost to Wisconsin before rebounding to beat Mercyhurst, was No. 11, with Lefty McFadden champion Ohio State — a winner over both of the same teams — moved up seven spots to 12th.

Wisconsin’s split in Ohio put the Badgers at No. 13, with idle Quinnipiac next. St. Lawrence, like Clarkson one of the few teams to have three games under its belt already, was No. 15 after beating Clarkson and Providence but losing to UMass.

The remaining five teams in the poll were St. Cloud State, which took three points from Canisius, and then Maine, Boston University — which fell nine places after losing to Robert Morris and tying Alaska-Anchorage at the Nye Frontier Classic — and finally idle Cornell and UMass.

Minnesota’s Stoa To Miss Season With Knee Injury

Minnesota junior left wing Ryan Stoa will miss the remainder of the 2007-08 season with an injury suffered in Saturday’s win over Michigan.

Stoa, who scored the team’s first goal of the season to spark Friday’s comeback from a three-goal deficit against Rensselaer, suffered a knee injury in the first period of Saturday’s victory that will require surgery. The Bloomington, Minn., native ranked seventh on the team with 12 goals and 12 assists for 24 points during 2006-07.

Minnesota's Ryan Stoa (l.) goes down to the ice Saturday alongside Michigan's Brian Lebler (photo: Melissa Wade).

Minnesota’s Ryan Stoa (l.) goes down to the ice Saturday alongside Michigan’s Brian Lebler (photo: Melissa Wade).

“I’m really disappointed for Ryan,” said Gopher head coach Don Lucia. “He worked extremely hard this offseason and had really taken a step in his development.”

Stoa played in all 41 games as a freshman and appeared in 41 of 44 games last season. Including his goal and assist last weekend, Stoa has 23 goals and 28 assists for 51 career points.

“We’re going to miss him as a leader and a person this upcoming season,” Lucia said. “I know Ryan will work extremely hard to get back on the ice and have a great year next season.”

Minnesota opened the season with a pair of victories, capturing the IceBreaker Invitational with wins over Rensselaer and Michigan by identical 4-3 scores. The Gophers open Western Collegiate Hockey Association play this weekend with a two-game series at Colorado College on Friday and Saturday.

2007-08 Providence Season Preview

When Tim Army first returned to his alma mater two seasons ago, the Friars turned out to be the biggest surprise in the league for the first half of the season before faltering in the stretch. Last season was a different story, as the Friars never really got all cylinders firing together on a regular basis. When the skaters played well, the goaltending sometimes was shaky. When the netminders held up their end, the skaters failed to light the lamp sufficiently. Fourteen of the team’s 23 losses were by two goals or less, including one-goal losses to BU, BC, UNH, and Vermont — the latter three all on the road.

All of which is to say that no one should look to Army to abandon his go-getter brand of offensive hockey.

“We’re excited about our team,” Army said. “For two years we’ve made some progress; I don’t think our record was necessarily reflective of the way we played last year. But I think we’ve solidified things over the last two years, and now we have our second recruiting class in, so we’ll have 16 freshmen and sophomores playing. We’ll be young.

“Obviously, the league is highly competitive, and you’re going to be challenged every night. But when you look at our team, we’ve improved in the areas of speed, overall skill, and hockey sense. We’ve gotten bigger, I think grittier, a little edgier. We want to play with discipline, but we want to play a little edgier. I think the group of freshmen coming in will further enhance those elements, and we’ll continue to play the type of game that we’ve tried to play — a puck-pursuit, puck-possession, attacking type of game.”

Several players will be critical factors in determining whether the Friars can get back in the black on the ledger of wins and losses. “Goaltending will be important; Tyler Sims and Ryan Simpson are two key guys. Key guys for us up front are Jon Rheault and Nick Mazzolini, and on the back end you look at Cody Wild, Mark Fayne, a freshman named Joey Lavin. Those are some key names, but we look to everyone to continue to improve and develop and contribute.”

Army also can think of some likely suspects in terms of breakout seasons as well. “I think Greg Collins and John Cavanaugh had good seasons last year [as freshmen], but I think that they’re capable of building on that. I think Chris Eppich was a freshman who struggled a bit last year but who has a high skill element. He’s another of the sophomores who might start to leap forward. Pierce Norton also has showed signs of developing; he’s another guy who could do real good things for us.”

ARMY

ARMY

But the substantial influx of freshmen-nine of them-might have the biggest long-term impact on the program. The biggest coup is the aforementioned Lavin, a recruit from the U.S. Under-18 Team. “Extremely mobile,” Army said of the freshman. “Six-two, very rangy, very intelligent player. We’re very active with our defensemen; I think you’ll see a great deal of offensive activity from Joey.”

Given the youth movement in the program, though, several other freshmen will be counted on to step in and play. “Paul Golden’s a walk-on freshman from Thayer Academy, but he’s got some talent. Paul’s one of those guys who will add depth and develop over time. The other guys: Eric Baier, six-foot two, another mobile defenseman who played for the New Hampshire Junior Monarchs, and then up front Kyle MacKinnon from Walnut, California, played for Langley up in the British Columbia Hockey League and put up big numbers. I think he’ll have an immediate impact.”

Army touted quite a few other newcomers for their size, speed, and skill as well. Many of the rookies will see substantial minutes. It remains to be seen whether the combination of Army’s offensive vision and his program’s ability to recruit will reap dividends quickly, but the longer term looks promising … and likely to lead to more entertaining hockey for all who watch the team play.

2007-08 Rensselaer Season Preview

Offense: Can Kirk MacDonald come back for another season, perhaps? Between Captain Kirk, Oren Eizenman and Jake Luthi, the ‘Tute bid a fearful farewell to last season’s top three scorers. With 77 points and 25 goals between them, the Engineers lost 28 percent of their offense on graduation day last spring.

RPI was ninth in league scoring last season with only 55 goals, and fell short of 2.5 goals a game overall as well. The graduating trio showcased magnificent playmaking skills, but they weren’t the team’s only assets in the offensive zone. Fortunately, six of the team’s top eight goal-scorers are back this fall, with juniors Seth Klerer and Angers-Goulet leading the pack with nine apiece last season. Each of the duo actually had more game-winners than the senior class combined: three.

Of an eyebrow-raising nine incoming freshmen, six are forwards, and surely a few of them will blossom in Appert’s second year behind the Houston Field House bench. Center Ben Contini out of the Ontario Provincial league is a 6-foot, 175-pound 18-year-old who put up 20-19–39 in 47 games last season.

Six-foot-four Kevin Beauregard is a 19-year-old from the Hartford Jr. Wolfpack of the Atlantic league, and with 45 points in 44 games last season, the potential for his 210-pound frame must have strength coach Jon Rowan drooling. At a more inconspicuous 5-foot-10, center and Eastern Junior product Scott Halpern ought to be a dependable player as well.

“We are very excited about the young men who are joining our team,” said Appert. “Collectively they bring size, speed, skill and an excellent work ethic. Just as important, they will be solid members of the community.”

Seth Klerer scored the winning goal against Denver last October (photo: Joe Petrowski / The Polytechnic).

Seth Klerer scored the winning goal against Denver last October (photo: Joe Petrowski / The Polytechnic).

Defense: Luthi and Ryan Swanson are the only defensemen not returning this season, so Appert should at the very least have a solid and reliable corps of rear-guards as he continues to refurbish the program. The Engineers watched ECACHL opponents light the lamp nearly four times a game last year; it’s highly doubtful that that will happen this time around.

Bryan Brutlag out of the Academy of the Holy Angels in Minnesota had a hand in a whopping 53 goals last season, with 49 helpers complementing a more understated four goals of his own. Oh, and that was in 28 games played, by the way.

“The area of concern defensively is much less than last year,” Appert told the Albany Times-Union. “[The incoming freshmen] are all very talented in their own ways. John Kennedy is more of a physical-style defenseman. He’s mean and he’s tough to play against. Jeff Foss is 6-foot-2 and he’s a great skater. Bryan is more of a power-play quarterback and also very competitive. We think all three can be impact players for us.”

Goaltending: Mathias Lange played in eight more games than Jordan Alford last season, but allowed goals at a higher rate, and saved shots at a lower one. It’s going to be a battle for playing time all year long between these two; Alford fired the first volley, backstopping a 4-0 home win over Bentley on Tuesday, October 9.

Outlook: Last year, Rensselaer showed flashes of not only coherence and competence, but true competitive grit and victorious ability. While Appert and the team obviously strive to improve on last season’s inconsistencies, reliable scoring appears destined to remain an issue. Will any among the bevy of freshmen compensate for what was lost in last season’s seniors? Can a goalie — or goalies — rise to the occasion and steal the few games that can swing the course of a season?

These are questions that are too crucial to be left undetermined, or to be dismissed with fluffy, sugary optimism.

2007-08 Northeastern Season Preview

After an excruciating 3-24-7 record in his first season at Northeastern, coach Greg Cronin saw his squad improve to 13-18-5, performing especially well during the second half.

“You try and point toward the positives from a year ago,” Cronin said. “We were able to march through the second half of the year with a 9-6-1 record. … The fact that we were able to have some success without Mike Morris [who was injured for much of last season], who may have been one of the most talented players in the league, has kind of reinforced the believability of our team.

“From December onwards we were able to have some good chunks of time where we were successful as a team, and we did that without Morris and the other guy who was very effective who was Dave Strathman, who was dismissed from the team in January. That was very good for our players.”

Yet Cronin still could see the clouds just as clearly as the silver lining. “The absence of Morris and Strathman underscored a problem we had offensively, which was power-play production, an area that we’re going to have to get better at statistically,” Cronin said. “Our penalty killing was in the top three-four in the country most of the year, though we got destroyed by BC in the playoffs, which shocked me. I really feel that if our power play had been more successful last year, we would’ve had much more success as a team.”

So are the Huskies going to be able to make further strides during this campaign? One make-or-break factor will indeed be special teams, especially the power play. Cronin cites special teams, goaltending, and team chemistry (“a cultural thing”) as the keys to success. “We’re making progress on the cultural piece, and we’ve clearly got a goaltender [in Brad Thiessen] who’s very good. I think that as we continue to recruit talented players that can think the game and make plays, we can get better.”

But the Huskies aren’t going to wait around for recruits to make the difference; the onus is on their talented crop of sophomores and juniors to raise the bar this season. “If you look at our team, we’ve got a bunch of guys who were at 14 to 21 or 22 points last year,” Cronin said. “You’ve got your Chad Costello, Kyle Kramer, Ryan Ginand, Jimmy Russo, Joe Vitale, and Dennis McCauley. There’s that bloc of players who all have been through at least one year in this program, and they understand what’s expected of them.

“Our challenge with that particular group is that they’ve got to ratchet up their ability to be productive offensive players while maintaining that tough-to-play-against identity. They have to do it. If we’re going to move up the ladder in Hockey East, those players are going to have to set their sights on higher point totals.”

That said, Northeastern does have some newcomers who bear watching this season. “We’ve got a good freshman class,” Cronin said. “We had Chad and Strathman and Thiessen last year; I think that if Strathman had not been expelled from the team, he would’ve been one of those guys who would’ve been a popular pick for the all-rookie team.

Brad Thiessen makes a stop on Jon Pelle during last year's Beanpot (photo: Melissa Wade)>” /></p>
<div class=Brad Thiessen makes a stop on Jon Pelle during last year’s Beanpot (photo: Melissa Wade)>

“This class is different: We don’t have a guy like Chad, who led the USHL in scoring. We have good, solid recruits in Tyler McNeely, Wade MacLeod, and Steven Silva who kind of highlight the forward group. And then you’ve got the addition of some really intriguing defenseman in [Daniel] Nycholat and [Drew] Muench, two western Canadian kids who probably should’ve gone back and played another years of juniors.”

Cronin characterized the triumvirate of forwards as clever players who are able to make plays. This should help the power play.

Both Nycholat and Muench are unusually young for college players these days, both barely 18. “So we basically mortgaged our future on the development of those players because we think that they’re going to be special at some point in their careers.”

Perhaps the most difficult player to replace from last year’s team is d-man Steve Birnstill. “We need to generate more offense from the blue line,” acknowledged Cronin. “No one’s going to step in and replace Steve Birnstill right away from the blue line. A guy like Mike Hewkin who played roller hockey up until he was 17 years old has got a little Birnstill in him. He can move the puck real well; he can move real well laterally, but he’s kind of a neophyte to hockey.

“We view him as a project that may develop into a unique player, kind of like Kyle Kraemer did last year. Kraemer went from anonymity the first half of the year to one of our best players the second half of the year. That’s a very similar learning curve to Hewkin, coming from that roller hockey background.”

So there is room for optimism on Huntington Avenue, but Cronin has his skates planted firmly on the ice. “People are getting excited about Northeastern because we had some success last year; there were some really stunning victories at Michigan, at Maine, against BC, against BU, but I’m guarded because I’m in the trenches here working through it. We only have one senior. We’re still in that phase where we’re asking our freshmen to play significant roles.”

2007-08 Massachusetts Season Preview

Massachusetts enjoyed a breakthrough season last year, earning its first NCAA tournament bid and then making the most of it with a first-round win over Clarkson, 1-0. Along the way, the Minutemen secured playoff home ice, swept Maine in the Hockey East quarterfinals and fell to New Hampshire only after taking the game to double-overtime.

The challenge, however, will be to maintain that level of success following the departure of several key players, most notably goaltender Jon Quick, a second-team All-Hockey East selection, and leading scorer Chris Capraro.

“The biggest thing with this program is to sustain a level of play that people look at and say is pretty high,” UMass coach Don “Toot” Cahoon says. “Three or four years ago, we had a nice little run with Tommy Pöck and Nick Kuiper, but we knew that there wasn’t the foundation in place. We had some really good high-end players, we got good goaltending from Gabe Winer and over a short period of time we could make some things happen, but over the long period of time we knew there were still holes.

“We’re hoping now that we’ve filled some of those holes and that we’ve elevated the whole level of play within the program. It’s a tough thing to do in this league because every other coach is trying to do the same thing, and they’re all working like the dickens to make sure they have good players and have a good culture. So it’s a real challenge but hopefully a fun challenge.”

Cahoon isn’t about to project whether his team, holes filled and all, can duplicate last season’s success.

“It’s not practical to think about where we’re going to shake out,” he says. “That’s a big mistake. I like the foundation of the team, the makeup of the team, but it’s what we do day-to-day [that matters].

“If we try to take last season and say we want to be able to [repeat] what we did, that’s swallowing a whole season into one statement. We’re much better off just dealing with the day-to-day process. At the end of the year, we might be able to say, ‘Hey, this is what we’ve become,’ and it might measure up pretty well with last year and it might not. We certainly are working to make sure that [it does measure up].”

The biggest question mark, of course, is how well the Minutemen can replace their biggest difference-maker, Jon Quick, in goal. Sophomore Dan Meyers only factored in three decisions last year. He’ll battle with freshmen Paul Dainton and Matt Gedman for the job.

“Danny Myers has got the leg up initially just because he has the benefit of being around, seeing it, feeling it and understanding it,” Cahoon says. “Quite frankly, in limited time he did a very good job under very difficult circumstances. Based on that minimal experience, he’s going to be given every opportunity to show what he can do.

“The two young kids will work to try to augment his playing time and make this a position by committee initially with the ultimate goal of one guy really stepping up and doing it.

Cory Quirk scored 31 points last season as UMass reached the NCAA tournament (photo: Karen Winger).

Cory Quirk scored 31 points last season as UMass reached the NCAA tournament (photo: Karen Winger).

“So the question marks are unanswered, but I don’t think we have a negative feeling about it.”

There aren’t any such question marks on the blue line where all seven defensemen return. Captain Mike Kostka and assistant David Leaderer are the leaders, but Justin Braun also made quite an impression last year, earning a berth on the league All-Rookie team. Although Quick got most of the notoriety, this group had a lot to do with the team’s number four defensive ranking in league games.

“We’re in a much better place defensively as a team than we were going into last year,” Cahoon says. “I’ve got six defensemen with a lot of game experience coming back. I’m hoping that is going to help us be a little bit more stingy and allow us to break the puck out of the zone a little bit more effectively than we initially did last year.

“I like our depth, I like our experience and I like the personality makeup of that group.”

Up front, there are holes to fill left behind by Capraro, Mark Matheson, Kevin Jarman and Matt Anderson, four of the top seven scorers. Returning are: Cory Quirk (31 points), P.J. Fenton (25), Will Ortiz (21), Chris Davis (19) and Alex Berry (13).

“What we do have is pretty good team speed,” Cahoon says. “We just have to learn to be positionally sound because when you have speed you can start running around and it can become helter-skelter.

“If we’re a solid team positionally and if we move our feet pretty well, that can help us be a better defensive team as well as a team that gets on the puck. We’re hoping that we can build a style of play that allows us to have that tight defensive make-up but yet can transition into a team that can create some offense as well.

“We’ve got a good influx of freshmen and also a foundation of players who have been there that should allow us to at least be competitive up front and be challenging.”

2007-08 Dartmouth Season Preview

Offense: Simply put, the Big Green parted ways with five of its seven leading scorers from 2006-07. There’s no way to sugar-coat it, no way to minimize the effect that will have on Dartmouth’s capacity to put pucks in the net in 2007-08.

David Jones, the leading scorer with 44 points in 33 games, is playing for the Lake Erie Monsters in the AHL. T.J. Galiardi — 31 points, second on the team last year — is plying his trade with the WHL’s Calgary Hitmen. Kevin Swallow transferred to Maine. Nick Johnson and J.T. Wyman combined for 27 goals and 27 assists as the third- and fifth-place producers, respectively, but the fact remains that among the departed were 55 goals the last time the group skated together.

“Our losses through graduation and other reasons left us a little down,” said coach Bob Gaudet. “This group of newcomers is very important to the success of our program. It’s hard to single out specific players who will be keys to our success but between the freshmen and the players returning we should be able to make up for the ones we lost.”

Sophomore Rob Pritchard flew under the radar on last year’s talent-laden squad, but buried 10 goals nonetheless and improved on his freshman campaign by eight points. Five new forwards don the Green this fall, and 19-year-old Waterloo veteran Kyle Reeds might be the best of the bunch when all the votes come in. Reeds won’t tip the scale, but he may tip the ice for Dartmouth after putting up 23 goals and 22 assists in the USHL last year.

Andrew Owsiak and Scott Fleming posted gaudy numbers last season as well, but against somewhat softer competition.

GAUDET

GAUDET

Defense: Three defensemen accepted their sheepskins and bid Hanover adieu, making room for some new blood on the blue line.

“We lost three players that saw a lot of ice time for us,” Gaudet said. “But with returners like Peter Boldt and John Gibson I feel confident.”

Only two returning d-men logged time in 24 games or more last season, those being Will Boardman and Josh Gibson. This opens the door for the likes of Kevin McCarthy, Harry Taylor or Chris Johnson to prove their worth, with a mere 32 games’ experience between them. Among the incoming freshmen is Jonathon Wolter, who scored 28 points in 33 games for the Jr. Bruins in the underappreciated Eastern Junior league. Joe Stejskal of Grand Rapids was a highly sought-after stud, and Evan Stephens could be an offensive yin to fellow USHL alumnus Danny Markowitz’s stay-at-home yang.

Goaltending: Mike Devine, Mike Devine, Mike Devine. He’s the Big Green Workhorse and rightly so. Of Dartmouth’s 33 games last year, Devine started — and finished — 32 of them. His sophomore year, he played 30 games between the pipes. He put up matching .915 save percentages each of those years, and held opponents to about two and a half goals a game as well. He’s not going anywhere without a fight.

Backing him up, just in case, is freshman Joe Grossman. More on him when necessary.

Outlook: Dartmouth has a tremendous collective void to fill up front, and does not possess the proven defenders to back it up should the goals be slow in coming. Devine will likely be tested like never before as Gaudet tries to mold his team in a hurry, and God help the Green if they should suffer the plagues of injuries that hamstrung them last season. Fortunately for Dartmouth fans, Devine is worth his weight in stopped pucks, and Gaudet’s no rookie behind the pine.

2007-08 Quinnipiac Season Preview

Offense: When you can score nearly three and a half goals a game in league and overall, you’ve got yourself a pretty good chance of winning any given night. The media agrees.

“It’s an honor to be ranked in the top 20 in both polls and we are very excited for the 2007-08 season,” said veteran coach Rand Pecknold, who signed an extension with QU over the summer.

The Bobcats were the highest-scoring team in the ECACHL last season, tied with Clarkson, and come back with just about every merciless sniper they dressed last time out. All five double-digit goal-scorers (Brandon Wong, Ben Nelson, David Marshall, Jamie Bates and Bryan Leitch) are back, and Reid Cashman is the only 20-point scorer who was lost in the move between March and October. However, Cashman is an awfully difficult asset to replace, considering how much he contributed to the team all over the ice.

“After a week of practice, it’s clear how much our power play misses Reid Cashman,” said Pecknold.

Running the man-advantage, Cashman’s power play scored 56 times, accounting for an even 40 percent of the total offense.

Sophomores Jean-Marc Beaudoin, Eric Lampe and Greg Holt could easily join the others with 10 or more goals this season, after notching eight, eight and six in their first years, respectively.

Let’s face it, this is not the lineup you want to be facing if you’re missing a defender or two.

Defense: Who needs defense when you have this kind of firepower up front?

After losing Reid Cashman but not too much more, Rand Pecknold's Bobcats are poised for a big season (photo: Quinnipiac sports information).

After losing Reid Cashman but not too much more, Rand Pecknold’s Bobcats are poised for a big season (photo: Quinnipiac sports information).

The ‘Cats were tied for sixth in team defense last year, allowing 63 goals. Four returning defensemen played 27 games or more last year, and two additional sophs — Josh Duncan and Sami Liimatainen — combined for 35 appearances. The Bobcats look deep at the blue line, welcoming four additional defensemen to an already saturated roster, but it’s quality that Pecknold is striving for … not quantity.

“We need to do a better job of playing team defense,” said the coach, emphasizing backchecking and a strong transition game.

The defense will have to hold the line a bit more firmly this season, because the offense just won’t be sneaking up on people they way it did last year.

Goaltending: Bud Fisher has been the go-to goalie since he stepped on campus, and there’s no indication that that’s going to change this winter. Late-round 2005 draft pick Pat McGann joins the fraternity after playing in the USHL last year, but the starting job is Fisher’s to lose. What can you say; 73 games in his first two seasons suggest a pretty strong confidence at the top in Fisher’s game.

That said, Pecknold hopes to spell Fisher a bit more frequently this year, as Massachusetts-Lowell transfer (and former Hockey East Rookie of the Year) Peter Vetri is eligible to suit up for the blue and gold this winter.

Outlook: A team as offensively loaded as the Bobcats has to be wary of defensive complacency: just because you can score seven goals in a game doesn’t mean you always will when you have to.

Fisher and the defense are serviceable, but this might be the year that they will be called upon to be superb rather than merely acceptable.

2007-08 Massachusetts-Lowell Season Preview

Last year, Massachusetts-Lowell endured a 20-game winless streak that lasted almost three months — from Nov. 10 through Feb. 2 — before putting on a fierce, albeit unsuccessful, 5-2-1 drive for a playoff berth. In the offseason, the UMass Board of Trustees considered terminating the hockey program until a new lease agreement with the city was negotiated. UML coach Blaise MacDonald then incurred a suspension after an arrest for driving under the influence.

Talk about a tough year.

Unfortunately, not all the potholes have been filled and smoothed over. The patience of River Hawk fans will likely be tested yet again.

“We’re very young,” MacDonald says. “We’ve only got one senior and he only played 10 games last year. We have three juniors, and the rest of the team is freshmen and sophomores. I’m sure we’ll get better as the season goes on. January and February will be our best months.”

The strength of the team will be on the blue line despite the graduation of Cleve Kinley and J.R. Bria and the potential loss of Steve Capraro to sports hernia surgery (out a minimum of 12 weeks). Four freshmen — Capraro, Jeremy Dehner, Nick Schaus and Barry Goers — impressed mightily last season and although Capraro is a major question mark the other three should be even better with a year under their belts.

“Dehner, in my opinion, was one of the top freshmen defensemen in the league, if not in the country,” MacDonald says. “Barry was right behind him but suffered a shoulder injury that sidetracked him for six weeks. Nick is a tough, gritty, hard-nosed competitor that can really elevate our team’s intensity.”

That mobile group provided a new dimension not seen in recent Lowell defensive corps.

“We’re trying to get away from wrapping it around the boards and giving your bad luck to somebody else,” MacDonald says. “These guys are able to make plays under pressure. Great puck poise, great stick skills, and they make a lot of tape-to-tape passes coming out of our own zone.

“Typically in this game, the team that comes out of their own zone the cleanest is going to win whether it’s from defensive zone transition or through breakout opportunities. They’ve given us that capability as well through the neutral zone and the guts of the ice. They really allow us to have a very coordinated attack.”

Between the pipes, Nevin Hamilton and Carter Hutton both had their moments as freshmen and will be challenged to take the next step. Transfer Jon Dryjowicz-Burek, who put up great numbers (1.73 GAA, .941 Sv%) at D-III Massachusetts-Dartmouth, will be in the mix as well after sitting out the required year.

Blaise MacDonald and the River Hawks are looking to put a difficult year behind them (photo: Melissa Wade).

Blaise MacDonald and the River Hawks are looking to put a difficult year behind them (photo: Melissa Wade).

“It’ll be very competitive,” MacDonald says. “Carter Hutton started off really well last year, but had an injury to sidetrack him. He’s used the summer to his advantage. He’s in really great shape. He looks terrific, not so much the saves that he’s making but just his presence in the net. He looks so confident.

“Nevin Hamilton was a Hockey East Rookie of the Month in February and played great while we were playing well down the stretch. And John [Dryjowicz-Burek] has unquestionable work ethic and skills and ability.

“Those three guys are going to cause some very competitive outings everyday at practice, and we’ll have some tough choices to make. Those who play well are going to get more playing time. If we can’t find somebody playing well, we’ll continue to rotate guys until we find that person.”

Up front, Jason Tejchma and Jeremy Hall, two of last year’s top three scorers, must be replaced from a unit that finished next-to-last in the league in scoring (2.09 goals per game). Even so, five of the six returning forwards who hit double-digit points were freshmen last season and the other was a sophomore so they’re at the stage where another year of development could take their games to the next level.

“Kory Falite, a freshman, scored ten goals last year including some big ones,” MacDonald says. “I think he’s going to make a big step. Chris Auger was a highly regarded freshman coming in last year who only scored two goals and he had a lot of quality minutes. I look for his production to go way, way up. Another freshman, Frank Stegnar, has got a big body and an NHL shot. I think he can really step up and be a big point producer for us as well.”

Unfortunately, three incoming freshman forwards who were expected to be significant contributors won’t take the ice. Two chose to go major junior late in August while Matt Ferreira, the top recruit, was diagnosed with a brain tumor a month ago. Fortunately, the tumor was benign and surgery was successful. The hope is that he’ll live a normal life and play again. That, however, won’t be this year.

“We’re looking at a collective effort offensively,” MacDonald says. “A lot of our offense is probably going to come from our back line. But we’re thin. We’ll have to hope for the best injury-wise.”

2007-08 Boston University Season Preview

It was a pretty typical year for Boston University in many ways last season. The Terriers picked up their usual Beanpot, earned home ice in Hockey East, and made the NCAA tournament. The failure to do any more than that was a disappointment given that it was the swan song for goaltender John Curry, and the fact that the ultimate NCAA champion ousted them in the first round of the NCAAs was a tough pill to swallow.

This year it’s the usual question for the Terriers: they should be a very solid team, but will they have what it takes to win a league championship and/or reach the Frozen Four? They have won just one Hockey East championship in the last 10 years, and a Frozen Four has eluded them since 1997. It would be sweet for veteran coach Jack Parker to get back there again before he retires, presumably in the next few years.

This year’s model looks as promising as ever. “I think we’re going to have a good club,” Parker said. “I think we’ve improved areas that we needed drastically to improve like our power-play situation and our overall team offense. It remains to be seen whether the added goals will help us in terms of more wins because a) it’s a very, very tough league, and b) we won’t have John Curry in the net.

“But we think we’re going to get solid goaltending from [Karson] Gillespie and [Brett] Bennett, a senior and a sophomore, who are both talented kids and were heavily recruited but neither has had much experience. That’s the question mark.”

Peter MacArthur and Chris Higgins headline the returning forwards while Matt Gilroy is the offensive standout from the defensive corps, but Parker noted that we could see a great leap forward from a few other upperclassmen.

“I think Jason Lawrence will be a guy to make a big jump from last year to this year. He had an off season last year [with a 5-13-18 scoring total]; we expect him to be a 12 to 15-goal scorer, and I think he will do that for us,” Parker said. “I also believe that Brandon Yip will have a huge jump because he didn’t play that much last year. He only played 18 games and probably half of those he was at 60 percent, so he will be a guy to add a lot to our lineup.”

Brandon Yip returns after playing just half of last season, with 11 points (photo: Jamil Siddiqui).

Brandon Yip returns after playing just half of last season, with 11 points (photo: Jamil Siddiqui).

Four freshmen also could be highly visible in a hurry. “Up front the two guys who will impact us the most will be Colin Wilson, centerman from the Ann Arbor Under-18 Team, second-leading scorer on that team last year and the leading scorer in the World Championships, a very, very talented kid. We think he’s going to be able to step right into one of our top lines and be a power-play guy for us. And the same holds true for our other guy, Nick Bonino, another center-iceman who can play left wing, another very, very talented player, probably more offensive-minded than any other freshmen we have coming in, real good stick skills.”

But if you go by the 2007 NHL Draft, the two biggest prizes among the recruits are a pair of blueliners who went 14th and 45th overall respectively, both to the Colorado Avalanche. “On defense we have two defensemen, Kevin Shattenkirk and Colby Cohen — both guys that we’ll rely upon to give us a different look on the power play, both offensive defensemen,” Parker said. “We think that they’ll be able to step in on the points on the power play for us-play together, who knows? The big question is how they’ll adapt to a more physical and intense environment on the defensive end.”

Leadership also was brought into question during occasional funks last season, so new captain Brian McGuirk will be an important factor for the Terriers as well. Perhaps starting the season with a very long trip to Alaska will be a good team-building opportunity; that’s why the team is going. After a dearth of offense for significant stretches last season, the Agganis Arena faithful will be eager for more consistent production, especially on the power play. Neither goalie has the upper hand for now, but one should emerge after a lengthy look-see with a platoon in the early going.

2007-08 Clarkson Season Preview

Offense: Clarkson tied Quinnipiac for the most goals scored in the league last year with 74. Seven of that team’s top eight scorers are back for another year in the green and gold. So, things are looking good for the Knights.

With the acid of the first-round NCAA loss to Massachusetts still on their tongues, the Knights have both a chip on their shoulder and a target on their chest. The ECACHL tournament champs fell flat on the national stage, and are dying to make up for that failure this time around.

“A lot of the seniors are returning this year to see if we can’t get to the next level,” said Roll, concluding his initial recruit rotation with Clarkson. “Without a doubt, last year’s successes motivated the guys for this year. The guys are not content with how last year ended.”

Shawn Weller was the sole defector, leaving the program early to sign with the Ottawa Senators, taking with him last year’s team-best 19 goals and 40 points.

“He is not replaceable,” Roll said, praising both Weller’s hockey abilities and character. “Selfishly, sure, I’d like him back, but I think it was the right move for him.”

Second-best was a mere one goal and one point short of Weller’s achievements, though, and Nick Dodge is well complemented by his other forwards. Chris D’Alvise and Steve Zalewski each notched 16 goals last season. David Cayer scored 11 in his junior year, and Matt Beca potted 10.

Now a junior, Shea Guthrie was a menace by making sure that every teammate without the puck was still a major scoring threat, and proving it with 23 assists. Nineteen different players lit the lamp for the Golden Knights last season, and 13 of them still have their nameplates up in the Cheel Arena locker room.

Clarkson welcomes a large nine-man class to campus this fall, including wingers Scott Freeman and Brandon DeFazio out of the Ontario Provincial league. Each stands 5-foot-11, each was born in 1988, but Freeman outperformed DeFazio a bit with 97 points in 43 games and a Divisional MVP award on his mantle. DeFazio is more of a toughie with 135 penalty minutes last season, and 6’2″ league-mate Michael Kosziwka will battle for playing time with the other youngsters after posting 28 goals and 62 points in the OPJHL last year.

Nick Dodge (r.) is Clarkson's top returning scorer (photo: Lowell K. Chow).

Nick Dodge (r.) is Clarkson’s top returning scorer (photo: Lowell K. Chow).

Defense: Four defenders return with 33-plus games played last season, and a fifth — Jeremiah Crowe — played 22. With Leggio behind them, the Clarkson D held opponents to only 53 goals in league play, two goals fewer than St. Lawrence and Cornell. With 2.38 goals against overall, the non-con matches threw the Knights a bit, but nothing too disastrous.

Dan Reed, Tom Pizzo and Brian Rufenach, reads the list of incoming defenders, and each from different leagues. Six-footer Rufenach showed an affinity for the scoresheet in the OPJHL, scoring 11 goals in 31 games with Lindsay, while Pizzo held the fort behind an explosive New Hampshire Jr. Monarchs’ offense. Reed, at 6-foot-1, 195, played at Salisbury Prep last season.

Goaltending: Leggio won the Dryden last year, and with good reason. A 2.16 goals-against average almost seemed too high for his .930 save percentage; behind a veteran core of rear-guards, he shouldn’t experience much of a dropoff this year either.

“He looks in midseason form … he’s very focused,” Roll said.

Kyle McNulty graduated, and stepping in to fill his backup role are Alex Wyse and Tim Potter, who both played in Canada last year. If they have any significant role in Clarkson’s upcoming season, things probably aren’t going very well.

Outlook: Clarkson ended the season in rare form: a loss. One in a handful of inconsistent and disappointing efforts, Clarkson is the team to beat in the ECACHL, and likewise a team in a beating frame of mind overall. The Golden Knights are out to prove that both they and the league are no pushovers, and all any of us can do is sit back and enjoy the ride. Knights fan or not, you can’t help but admire this team.

2007-2008 Maine Season Preview

Last year was certainly “A Tale of Two Seasons” for the Maine Black Bears. They failed to secure playoff home ice for the first time since 1997-98 and then got swept in the first round by Massachusetts. Initially, many wondered if an NCAA berth would be forthcoming. The PairWise numbers, however, didn’t lie and the Black Bears’ season lived on. All the way, as it turned out, to the Frozen Four. Again.

This year’s Preseason Coaches’ Poll projects the Black Bears to finish fourth but with a significant gap between them and the other three usual suspects: Boston College, New Hampshire and Boston University. In fact, they finished closer to co-fifth-place projections UMass and Vermont and almost as close to seventh-place pick Northeastern as compared to third-place BU.

“That’s fine,” Maine coach Tim Whitehead says. “We have so many unknowns, this year in particular, it would be very tough to pick where we are going to finish. Anywhere in the mix would have made sense.”

The biggest unknowns are up front where holes abound after the loss of the top three scorers, five of the top six, and six of the top eight. Only Billy Ryan (13-20-33) and Keenan Hopson (7-15-22) and Wes Clark (8-5-13) return from the double-digit points club. Last year’s juggernaut power play, tops in the nation and a big reason behind the team’s “second season” success, won’t be reprised.

“We don’t have a lot of scoring coming back and we don’t have any elite scorers coming in,” Whitehead says. “That will definitely be a challenge for us. We have seven freshman forwards coming in. They’ll see the ice quite a bit more than freshmen typically do.”

Of the seven, Tanner House, Robby Dee and Andrew Sweetland stand the best chance of making an immediate impact.

“It will have to be a group effort,” Whitehead says. “I don’t know if there is a Teddy Purcell in this freshman class. We’ll just have to wait and see. Certainly there are a lot of good hockey players in there.

“It’s a very typical Maine class of recruits. You may be sitting there [now] saying, ‘Who’s that guy? Where’s he from?’ But at the end of the year hopefully you’re saying, ‘Who’s that guy? Where’s he from?’ We’ll see. It’s going to take time.”

Two of the three freshman blueliners, Josh Van Dyk and Mike Banwell, are also likely to be in the lineup each night as well, even though every defenseman but Mike Lundin returns.

Billy Ryan brings his 33 points back to Orono for 2007-08 (photo: Melissa Wade).

Billy Ryan brings his 33 points back to Orono for 2007-08 (photo: Melissa Wade).

“I think it’s going to be a good D corps,” Whitehead says. “Losing Mike was a tough blow because he logged so much ice time. He was a real warrior for us out there.

“But I like the guys coming in and I like the guys coming back.”

Goaltender Ben Bishop made important strides last year, as evidenced by his save percentage soaring from .907 to .923. His groin injury down the stretch hurt the Black Bears badly.

“I’m really excited for Ben,” Whitehead says. “If you look at his development at Maine, it’s been very consistent. He came in as a real project and that freshman year he was kind of thrown into it after Jimmy Howard turned pro. He did a lot to help us get to the Frozen Four that year, but we had a very strong team that year, probably our most talented team in a long time.

“Last year, I thought he improved again. He showed some elite play at times, which he had not done in his freshman year.

“Now the next step for him is to be elite on a consistent basis like a Cory Schneider at BC or Jimmy Howard for us years ago. I think that’s a very natural step for him.

“He trains hard. He’s very tough mentally and a very good athlete.”

Arguably, the team will play a lot more low-scoring games this year so Bishop and the blueliners will backbone the young team.

“We better be squeaky clean on defense if we’re going to beat some elite teams,” Whitehead says. “But I think we can surprise some people.”

2007-08 Boston College Season Preview

Had Boston College goaltender Cory Schneider returned for his senior year, the Eagles would have been the near-prohibitive favorite to win Hockey East and potentially the team to beat nationally. Even with Schneider’s departure for the pros, they are the league co-favorites with New Hampshire based on a stellar group of forwards and solid, veteran blueliners.

“We have to see how everything goes as far as chemistry, as far as injury and as far as all the intangibles,” BC coach Jerry York says, “[but] on paper, this is a team that certainly holds their own with the ones I’ve coached over last few years.”

That’s saying a lot since the Eagles have made the NCAA tournament the last five seasons, the Frozen Four the last three, and the national championship game the last two.

“We have some really top-end offensive players and we’re very solid defensively,” York says. “I think [freshman goaltender] Johnny [Muse] is going to give us enough strength in goal.”

Up front there’s considerable firepower. Juniors Nathan Gerbe, Benn Ferriero and Brock Bradford all return having scored at least 45 points last season.

“[They] highlight an outstanding junior class for us,” York says. “They’ve had a lot of the big game atmosphere over the last few years. I also think that the senior Danny Bertram is ready for a breakout year. He’ll be a real leader.”

Not to mention sophomore Ben Smith, who took off after assuming a larger role when Brian Boyle moved to defense, scoring ten points over the final eight games.

Not counting Boyle’s late-season switch to the blue line, BC returns all seven of its defensemen from last year. Senior captain Mike Brennan leads a veteran group of fellow-senior Brian O’Hanley, juniors Brett Motherwell, Anthony Aiello, Tim Filangieri and Tim Kunes, as well as sophomore Carl Sneep.

Nate Gerbe is Boston College's top returning scorer (photo: Melissa Wade).

Nate Gerbe is Boston College’s top returning scorer (photo: Melissa Wade).

“We’re very solid defensively,” York says. “Our captain Mike Brennan is just rock solid on defense and has the chance to become one of the really significant captains at BC.”

As if that weren’t enough depth, the group will be augmented by freshman Nick Petrecki, an NHL first-round pick. File that one under: The Rich Get Richer.

“I would think that Nick will evolve into a pretty good player during his freshman year,” York says. “He brings a lot of size and strength. He’s got a chance to become a very good player for us.”

The focus, however, will be on freshman goaltender John Muse. He’s no last-minute band-aid brought in to replace Schneider. BC recruited Muse hard with the understanding that he’d play a year of juniors if Schneider returned (so as to not burn a year of eligibility), but come right away if Schneider turned pro.

“He’s our key recruit out of that class,” York says. “I think he’s going to be a significant player for us. He’s got a good frame of mind. He’s ready for it. He’s excited about it.

“He reminds me a little bit of Scott Clemmensen when he came in as a freshman. Matti Kaltiainen played a lot as a freshman. So it’s not unusual that a freshman can step in and play well. We think Johnny can do that.”

An opening three-game gauntlet of Michigan, Minnesota (if it defeats Rensselaer) and North Dakota beckons. Baptism by fire for Muse; a stern reality check for the veterans.

“It’s good for the team,” York says. “We’ve got to get prepared for Hockey East and the challenges it has.”

2007-08 Brown Season Preview

Offense: Fortunately for the Brown Bears, Brian McNary was the only top-four scorer lost from last season, as the six-goal, 18-assist junior elected to focus entirely on academics in his final year in school. Senior Jeff Prough led the squad with 33 points last year, while Sean Hurley was one of the league’s best offensive defensemen with 10 goals and 24 points in 32 games. Surprisingly, the oft-maligned Bears were seventh in the league in goals scored with 65, and tallied an even three per game overall (96 goals, 32 games).

“You’ve got to be well-rounded,” said Roger Grillo of his charges, “and you’ve got to put up some numbers [to win today]. You can’t win every game 1-0. Our power plays and penalty kills have gotta be better than they were last year.”

Bruno restocked the stables with four more forwards out of five new recruits, including six-footer Jesse Fratkin out of Prince George of the BCHL. The 20-year-old winger notched 26 goals and 74 points last season and 54 points the previous outing … in 60 and 53 games played, respectively. Coming on board with him is Harry Zolnierczyk from Alberni Valley of the same league. Zolnierczyk (ZOHL-nerr-CHIK) cashed out with 20-18–38 in 47 games, with a nifty 85 penalty minutes to boot.

That said, the BC has a well-deserved reputation as a league that buys goal lights in bulk, if you know what I mean: Fratkin’s prodigious production only merited top-25 status last year; the league’s top scorer (Victoria’s Tyler Bozak, bound for the University of Denver) racked up 128 points in 59 games. Yeah.

Winger Tyler Fernandez out of the Eastern Junior Hockey League scored 14 goals to pair with his 14 assists in 37 games last year, and mucked it up with the best of ’em as well, serving 89 minutes of shame, as Denis Lemieux might say. His stats are a probably a bit more representative of his capabilities than the BCHL kids’ are.

Defense: At ninth in the ECAC with 69 goals against, it just doesn’t seem fair that Grillo’s guys finished 11th in the standings. Overall, the D allowed one fewer goal than the team scored, and the Bears didn’t lose a single blueliner this offseason.

GRILLO

GRILLO

“It’s a group that struggled a bit last year,” Grillo said. “We couldn’t get on the other side of some close games.”

Incoming is bruising 20-year-old Sean Connauton, who found enough time to pot eight goals and 20 assists last year between 222 staggering minutes of penalties with Fort Saskatchewan of the Alberta Junior league. (That’s a 59-minute improvement … if you elect to look at it that way … on the previous season’s 163 minutes, in 57 games apiece.) Connauton cuts an imposing figure, as you might imagine, at 6-foot-2, 200, making him the fourth-tallest player on the ice for Brown. When he’s on the ice, that is.

Hurley, sophomore Jeremy Russell, junior Matt Palmer, and seniors Paul Baier and David Robertson each played at least 29 games on the Bruno blue line last season, signifying some solid experience entering this campaign.

Goaltending: Fabu-frosh Dan Rosen gives way to what he hopes is a super-soph-worthy season. After taking the reins early last season, Rosen went on a significant tear, saving 90 percent or better in each of his first 10 appearances. Whether he got burned out or the odds caught up with him, Rosen allowed four-plus goals in seven of his final dozen outings.

The starting job is his to lose; how far he can go toward recapturing last winter’s magic is as much up to his improved defense as it is to Rosen himself.

Outlook: The ’07-08 Brown Bears are an experienced and dangerous bunch … but who isn’t dangerous in the ECACHL these days? And there’s the rub: Bruno, like anyone else, could be a dark-horse candidate in this league, winning brutal, defensive, low-scoring and opportunistic contests. But on paper — which is all we have to work with so far — the Bears don’t quite stack up with the Clarksons, Colgates and Quinnipiacs of ECAC Hockey.

2007-08 Vermont Season Preview

Although Vermont’s move from sixth place (10-11-6) in its first season in Hockey East to a tie for fifth (12-10-5) last year might seem like only the most modest of improvements, there’s reason to view the step forward as more significant than first meets the eye. In the Catamounts’ inaugural campaign, they struggled against “the big boys” — Boston College, Boston University, Maine and New Hampshire — posting a collective 1-6-5 record before being swept by BC in the playoffs. Last season, however, that record rose to 5-7-0 with series wins over BC and BU. In the playoffs, they then went tooth-and-nail with BU before losing in overtime of the rubber game.

“We were the new team in Hockey East feeling our way the first year,” UVM coach Kevin Sneddon says. “We had a decent year last year. We made more strides to close that gap with the top teams. We had more success with the top four.

“Now our attitude is, ‘Hey, we’ve arrived, we belong here.’ That’s the attitude we have to take. It’s our championship to go after just like anybody else.”

If a championship is in the offing, goaltender Joe Fallon will almost certainly be the difference-maker. One of the top returning netminders in the league, Fallon had Sneddon holding his breath until the first day of classes over the possibility of Fallon turning pro. The senior, however, is back, and Sneddon expects sophomore Mike Spillane to push him.

“Mike Spillane has done a tremendous job of really closing the gap with Joe, so I think we have a great one-two punch, probably the best tandem in college hockey,” Sneddon says. “You’re always in good shape when you have that position solidified.

“We’ll have to go with whoever is playing the best and not just plug in Joe no matter what. Mike is hungry, and his hunger is going to drive Joe to be more hungry. Joe’s got the aspiration of playing in the National Hockey League, so he’s going to have the motivation not only [of playing well] for his team but also because he’s got a future goal in sight. But he’s going to have a young guy pushing him the whole year, which is great for everybody.”

The blueliners in front of Fallon and Spillane will include several new faces and have much less experience. Four of the top six defensemen graduated, most notably Kenny Macaulay and Ryan Gunderson.

“Those two guys are big losses on the blue line,” Sneddon says. “Kenny Macaulay was a tremendous captain for us and logged a ton of minutes. Ryan Gunderson was a recruited walk-on forward that we converted to defense and was tremendous for us for four years.”

Freshmen Kyle Medvec, Kevan Miller, Josh Burrows and Dan Lawson will need to hit the ground running.

Joe Fallon will tend the Catamount nets once again this season (photo: Melissa Wade).

Joe Fallon will tend the Catamount nets once again this season (photo: Melissa Wade).

“The goal is to move those guys along as quickly as possible and get them confidence,” Sneddon says. “Their talent level is tremendous and we’re really excited about them. They’re probably the best four defensemen that we’ve brought in since I’ve been here, so we’re excited about their potential. It will just take some time and patience to get those guys going.”

The forwards will miss top scorer Torrey Mitchell, who turned pro, but otherwise return all the primary threats led by juniors Dean Strong, Peter Lenes and Corey Carlson. Brayden Irwin, Colin Vock and Viktor Stålberg all broke into double-digit points as freshmen and with added experience should progress further. Incoming freshman Wahsontiio Stacey arrives with high expectations.

“Our forwards are as dynamic as I think we’ve ever had since I’ve been here,” Sneddon says. “We’ve done a great job recruiting and finding some great players that play our style.

“Losing Torrey obviously is a challenge and an obstacle, but I guess we look at it as an opportunity for somebody else to step in and fill that void. Last year, it was easy to look down the bench and see where number nine was and think, ‘Okay, he’ll get it done.’ Sometimes a player like that might overshadow some other guys. He was a great player and we would have loved to have him back, but when a player of his skill level leaves, it brings more opportunities for other guys to really shine.

“He was the only player that we lost from our top three lines on the playoff roster. So we’re excited to have a lot of great players back that are bigger and better.”

2007-08 Colgate Season Preview

Offense: True, true, the Raiders practically couldn’t win a game in which they didn’t pitch a shutout last season, going 7-21-3 when allowing more than a single goal. That record fell to a disastrous 0-16-1 when the team surrendered three or more. With figures like that, Colgate didn’t stand a chance against top competition, going 2-7-2 against the top four teams in the league and 1-6-1 versus NCAA-qualifying teams.

That wasn’t the fault of the defense; it was instead emblematic of a sputtering offense that accumulated only 53 goals, the fewest in the league. The 2.41 league goals per game was only moderately worse than the overall count of 100 goals in 40 games, or 2.5 per contest.

This year should be better. Fulton was the only departing member among the team’s top 11 scorers, and while the charts were top-heavy last season, the extra year of seasoning will even things out a bit.

Tyler Burton scored 40 points last season, matching his sophomore total exactly, which had been a six-point improvement over his freshman season. Therefore, it seems safe to presume that last season’s prodigious production was not an anomaly. Classmate Jesse Winchester likewise stayed the course, tallying 37 points after a 36-point sophomore campaign. Junior Nick St. Pierre is a brilliant offensive defenseman, and his production on the scoresheet should compare similarly or favorably to last year’s seven goals and 16 assists.

Tom Riley and David McIntyre performed admirably in their first full seasons as regulars, and hope to benefit from the talents of the incoming class: Governor Dummer’s Brian Day, specifically, who played for the 2004 U.S. Under-17 Team, and was drafted 171 overall in the 2006 NHL Draft.

Defense: After so many losses in such close games, it’s a testament to Don Vaughan’s staff and the character of his players that the Raiders still showed up to shut down Rensselaer in the first round of the playoffs.

Jesse Winchester has been a consistent producer for Colgate (photo: Melissa Wade).

Jesse Winchester has been a consistent producer for Colgate (photo: Melissa Wade).

The defense lost only two seniors this spring in Mike Campaner and Alex Greig, and return four players who earned ice time in 35 games or more last season. St. Pierre and senior Matt Torti were the only two blueliners to lace up for all 40 games, and the duo is night-and-day in style: St. Pierre is the rush-running, quick-stepping offensive opportunist, while Torti didn’t register a single point all season … he just went to work, game in and game out, rocking opponents with his 6’5″, 210-pound frame.

The tandem will once again by example, and expect to command an experienced corps that played 200 combined games between six returning skaters. Of note, Kevin McNamara out of Belmont Hill played on the 2004 U-17 team with Day.

Goaltending: Mark Dekanich played 36 games for the second year in a row in 2006-07, and is one of the elite established goaltenders returning to ECAC Hockey play this fall. His 2.33 goals-against and .923 save rate should have earned him a much better record than the 15-17-4 with which his offense saddled him in the end.

“He’s a pretty focused kid,” coach Vaughan told CSTV. “He’s very driven and pretty intense. He’s tough mentally, which bodes well for any elite goaltender, and he’s a tremendous athlete.”

Outlook: The defense is solid, and only getting better. The offense … well, it can’t really get much less consistent than it was last season. Like Union, there may have been some strange mojo in play all year long for the Raiders, but mostly it was a simple lack of firepower.

Colgate looks like a solid pick for home ice come March, and if the goals can complement the defense as well as it deserves to be complemented, the Raiders may well be a dark horse in the race for the league title.

2007-08 Princeton Season Preview

Offense: The Tigers tied for fourth in league scoring last season with 69 goals, just over three a game, and hit that 3.00 mark right on the nose in 34 games overall. The forward lines will be missing last season’s second-, third- and fourth-leading scorers, who combined for 29 goals and 78 points in 100 combined games. The team retains the returning second-, third- and fourth-leading goal-scorers though, in Lee Jubinville (11), Mark Magnowski (10), and Cam MacIntyre (nine).

Depth of experience also a strong point for this edition of the Tigers, as nine returning forwards scored multiple goals last year, and eight not only saw time on the power-play, but ended one with a goal as well.

“I feel good — we made great strides last year,” said Gadowsky. “We lost nine seniors; we lost a lot of leadership,” but the returners and the incoming class are solid, he said.

Three new scorers enter the fold under Gadowsky this fall, as the coach experiences his first full class rotation at Princeton. Kevin Lohry, Matt Arhontas and Mike Kramer each settle into new digs in ‘Jersey after playing last winter in the USHL.

Kramer produced consistently for three years in the league, and served with the US Under-18 team three years back, but Arhontas demonstrated strong improvement in each of his three seasons in the U’. Lohry isn’t to be forgotten either, tallying 43 points in his only season of USHL service.

Defense: The team allowed just shy of three goals per game in league in 2006-07, and surrendered a nice round 100 goals in its 34 total games. Four seniors are gone from the Princeton blue line, with three having played at least 32 of the team’s games.

GADOWSKY

GADOWSKY

Mike Moore and Jody Pederson are the only returning defenders who saw significant ice time last year, while freshmen Kevin Crane and Brad Schroeder combined for 27 game appearances. Gadowsky invited three defensemen to join Princeton’s Class of 2011, including Fort Saskatchewan teammates Taylor Fedun and Cam Ritchie. Both around 6-foot, 185, they also have the ability to turn the puck up-ice and to make good first-passes out of the zone; neither was a stranger to the scoresheet in the AJHL.

Goaltending: Zane Kalemba played 21 games for the Tigers, most on the team, and held a 2.89 overall GAA despite a sub-900 save rate. He played well most of the time, but will likely be overshadowed by the truly remarkable goaltenders in the league.

Alan Reynolds, 19, comes on board as the third goalie, fighting for time with Thomas Sychterz. Divisional Rookie of the Year last season in the Ontario Provincial league, Reynolds might be the one who takes over should Kalemba begin to struggle … but Gadowsky insisted that no one was the de facto number-one goalie yet.

Outlook: The defense will require a bit more patience and Kalemba will probably need to come out strong to prevent the Tigers from slipping into an early hole.

As a team, however, the Stripes look well-led by a small but accomplished senior class, and Gadowsky has effectively developed the younger players in such a way that they can capably take control every now and again. Youth can be unpredictable, but hey, so can this whole league.

Latest Stories from around USCHO