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Former WCHA Commissioner Otto Breitenbach Dies

Otto Breitenbach, the former WCHA commissioner whose impact on college hockey transcended his conference, died Tuesday at a local hospital. He was 82.

Breitenbach, a longtime athletics administrator at Wisconsin, served as the WCHA commissioner from 1983 to 1994, during which time the league added four teams and overhauled its playoff tournament.

His tenure also included a groundbreaking collaboration with the then-fledgling Hockey East Association that included an interlocking schedule where games between WCHA and Hockey East teams counted in the standings.

“There have probably been three people that have been influential in my life, and certainly, Otto is one of them,” WCHA commissioner Bruce McLeod said. “He’s a wonderful mentor and to me, personally, I’m going to miss him dearly.”

Former Wisconsin coach Jeff Sauer issued a statement from Sweden, where he is part of the USA Hockey announcing team at the World Junior Championship.

“I am deeply saddened by the passing of Otto,” Sauer said. “There are very few people that had the ability to build consensus and move organizations forward like Otto. Be it at the University of Wisconsin, the WCHA, or the Badger State Games, Otto led with dignity, class and integrity second to none. On a personal note, he was like a second father to me. He and Pat became close friends to my family and I appreciate the close relationship we enjoyed over the years. Our thoughts and prayers our with Pat, Sarah, Jane, and Bill as well as Otto’s entire family. He will surely be missed.”

Breitenbach, a Madison native, was a successful prep football coach and athletic director before joining the UW as an assistant athletic director in 1973.

His WCHA tenure began in 1983, when the league had only six teams following the departure of four teams to the newly-formed CCHA. In 1984, the league added Northern Michigan and brought Michigan Tech back from the CCHA. St. Cloud State joined in 1990, and Alaska-Anchorage came aboard in 1993.

“There was a lot that happened during his tenure that he guided us through, and we’ll always be grateful for that,” McLeod said.

Breitenbach’s tenure also included the establishment of the three-day playoff championship format that continues today.

The interlocking schedule with Hockey East helped establish both leagues in a time when both needed support. It ran from 1984 to 1989 and gave the WCHA a new sense of pride, those who participated have said.

It also played at least a bit in the role of building roots with Hockey East programs.

“There are some schools out there now that would not be in Division I college hockey if it were not for his efforts,” said Vince Sweeney, Wisconsin’s senior associate athletic director.

Breitenbach’s contributions to the league were honored when the league named its distinguished service award after him in the 2001-02 season, the league’s 50th anniversary.

He was given the Jim Fullerton Award by the American Hockey Coaches Association in 1993. The award recognizes an individual who exemplifies the former Brown coach’s love of the purity of the sport.

“As much as anything for me and I think for the league, I always think of three things: quality, class and what a gentleman,” McLeod said. “Up until this fall, if I was perplexed or had something to be concerned about, I’d still call him and talk to him about it and look for his advice. It wasn’t so much what he would tell me. It was more how to do it, to go about it.

“That’s why I always emphasize the gentleman. He always was classy. He always knew how to do things the right way. And I’m not talking about the logistical part of it. I’m talking about how to go about things. I’ve been around the hockey thing for a long time; I knew about that part of things. But he was always so great with everybody about how to do things. It’s not what you do half the time, it’s how you do it. For me, that’s what he really brought to the table for the WCHA as a whole and certainly for me, personally.”

Breitenbach is survived by his wife, Pat; a son, Bill; two daughters, Sarah and Jane; two brothers, Warren and Donald; as well as six grandchildren and five great grandchildren.

Memorial visitations will be held from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. CST Thursday at the Ryan Funeral Home in Madison and from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. CST Friday at St. Mary of the Lake Catholic Church in Waunakee, Wis., with the ladder to be followed by a mass.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be sent to either the Don and Marilyn Anderson HospiceCare Center, 5395 E. Cheryl Parkway, Fitchburg, WI 53711, or the East Madison Community Center, 8 Straubel Court, Madison, WI 53704.

Minnesota No. 1 Again With 20-Game Unbeaten Streak

A championship at its own Dodge Holiday Classic ran Minnesota’s unbeaten streak to 20 games over the New Year’s weekend, assuring the Golden Gophers another term atop the USCHO.com/CSTV Division I men’s poll, released Tuesday. The Gophers were the unanimous pick of all 40 voters for the third straight time, and finished at No. 1 for the sixth straight poll.

There was a bit of shuffling beneath Minnesota, as Notre Dame swept Northern Michigan over the weekend to run its own win streak to six and climb to No. 2 this time around. Following the Fighting Irish was Maine, which won the Florida College Classic and climbed two spots to No. 3.

New Hampshire, which split at the Florida College Classic, losing to Cornell to end its unbeaten streak at 12 games, made way for the Irish and the Black Bears by falling to No. 4 this week.

The Wildcats were followed by St. Cloud State, which nosed into the top five by winning the Sheraton/TD Banknorth tournament title. The Huskies’ win streak now stands at 10 and their unbeaten streak at 13, second only to Minnesota.

Miami fell two spots to No. 6 after losing to Ohio State in the Ohio Hockey Classic title game, while Boston College was stable in seventh. The Eagles have been idle since Dec. 9, and resume play this weekend.

No. 8 this week was Denver, up two spots after taking the Wells Fargo Denver Cup championship. The Pioneers were followed by No. 9 Clarkson, the poll’s big winner this week. The Golden Knights, who have now won seven straight, rocketed up six spots by winning the Badger Showdown.

Finishing out the top 10 was Michigan State, which reclaimed four spots in the rankings by claiming the Great Lakes Invitational.

The next several spots in the poll were also reorganized by holiday results, with Cornell finishing at No. 11 by splitting in Florida. Colorado College was down four positions to No. 12 after winning one and losing one against Bemidji State, and Boston University was likewise down four slots, to No. 13, in the wake of a split at the Ledyard Bank tourney.

Michigan finished at No. 14 and Vermont at No. 15, followed by No. 16 Quinnipiac and 17th-ranked Lake Superior.

Two CHA teams joined the rankings this week, with Bemidji State coming in at No. 18 and Niagara in 19th. North Dakota rounded out the top 20 despite a sub-.500 record after winning the Ledyard Bank Tournament.

Massachusetts, Alaska and Dartmouth dropped out since the last poll on Dec. 18.

Power Play Sends USA Past Finland, Into WJC Semis

Click for pictorial by Melissa Wade

The United States used four power play goals in the third period on the way to a 6-3 victory over Finland in quarterfinal action at the 31st annual International Ice Hockey Federation World Junior Championship at FM Mattsson Arena.

The win propelled the United States into the semifinals against Canada on Jan. 3. Opening faceoff is set for 4 p.m. (10 a.m. EST) at Ejendals Arena in Leksand, Sweden.

“We’re obviously very happy,” said U.S. head coach Ron Rolston. “I didn’t think we necessarily played our best game, but we got the job done. We have an extremely short turnaround now to get prepared for Canada, but we’ll be ready.”

The USA had a 1-0 lead after the opening period. The goal came at 11:28 when defenseman Erik Johnson put home a second rebound from the side of the right circle. Ryan Stoa and Taylor Chorney picked up assists on the play. U.S. netminder Jeff Frazee was outstanding in the period, including a huge glove save of Oskar Osala from point blank range as well as several good saves on two Finland power plays.

Just 2:11 into the second period, Team USA extended its lead to 2-0 as Erik Johnson held the puck in at the point, moved around a defender and fired a shot at the net. While the puck didn’t go in, Patrick Kane was there to put home the rebound high over Tuukka Rask from the left circle. Finland rallied to tie the game before the end of the period. Jesse Joensuu squeezed one past Frazee from just above the goal line off a rebound as time expired on a Finland power play at 6:38. Then Osala made a nifty move in front to beat Frazee at 10:01.

In a penalty-filled third period, five power play goals were scored, including four by the United States. Team USA took a 3-2 lead just :23 into the final stanza when Erik Johnson’s shot from the right point went off Jack Skille’s shin pad in front and into the net. Just 1:15 later, Osala scored a power play goal of his own as he beat Frazee from the side of the left faceoff circle.

Peter Mueller gave the U.S. the lead for good when he blasted a shot from the high slot home at 7:53 with Team USA enjoying a two-man advantage. After Finland’s Timo Seppanen inadvertently shot the puck out of play from his own zone to give Team USA another two-man advantage, Trevor Lewis was the recipient of a nice pass across the goal mouth from Patrick Kane and he quickly got the puck out of his skates and past Rask for a 5-3 lead at 9:00.

Team USA was forced to kill off three straight penalties after that, including one minute of five-on-three power play time. Jack Johnson fired home a shot from the slot at 19:40 with Team USA up two men to finish the scoring.

Frazee picked up his third win in as many tries at the 2007 World Junior Championship with 31 saves, while Rask also had 31 stops.

NOTES: Patrick Kane, with a goal and two assists, was named the U.S. Player of the Game for the third time in the tournament. Kane has 4-6–10 through five games… Jeff Frazee is undefeated in four games at the World Junior Championship and is 10-0-0 in his career in IIHF championship events… The 2007 IIHF World Junior Championship features athletes under the age of 20 on international teams including the United States, Belarus, Canada, Germany, Czech Republic, Finland, Russia, Slovakia, Sweden and Switzerland… The U.S. National Junior Team is coming off a fourth-place finish at the 2006 World Junior Championship in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Manhattanville And Oswego Tie Atop USCHO.com D-III Men’s Poll

Manhattanville and Oswego are tied at No. 1 in the first USCHO.com Division III men’s poll of 2007. The Valiants, idle over the break, received eight first-place votes, while Oswego, winner of its first holiday tournament, received the remaining top nods.

St. Norbert stands pat in third place, while league rival Wisconsin-River falls is up one spot to No. 4. Also moving up were Middlebury, from sixth to fifth, and Neumann, up two spots to a best-ever No. 6.

Tied for seventh are Wisconsin-Stout and Wisconsin-Superior; Stout stood at No. 7 in the last poll of 2006, while the Yellowjackets have dropped three places.

Norwich and Hobart follow at No. 9 and No. 10 respectively, the same positions they were at in the previous poll.

No. 11 Bowdoin, still undefeated, moves up two places while No. 12 Utica drops one. Also moving down one position is Mass.-Dartmouth to No. 13, while Amherst stays at No. 14. Entering the poll tied for No. 15 are Curry and Milwaukee School of Engineering.

Other teams receiving votes were Plattsburgh, Skidmore and Geneseo.

The USCHO.com Poll is compiled weekly and consists of 15 voters, including 13 coaches of Division III programs and two hockey writers. USCHO.com provides in-depth coverage of college sports, including hockey, lacrosse, soccer and others.

U.S. Reaches WJC Quarters With Win Over Sweden

Defenseman Jack Johnson’s power-play blast from the side of the left circle propelled the United States to a 3-2 overtime victory over Sweden in preliminary-round play at the 31st annual International Ice Hockey Federation World Junior Championship.

The win vaulted the United States into Tuesday’s quarterfinal round, where Team USA will face Finland at 7:30 p.m. at the FM Mattsson Arena in Mora, Sweden.

“Obviously, that was a very big win for our hockey team,” said U.S. head coach Ron Rolston. “We didn’t get the start we wanted to, but we showed a lot of character and got better as the game wore one.”

Team USA started the night knowing that it needed a win to advance to the quarterfinals.

While the first period was scoreless, both teams had solid scoring chances. Team USA finished with 11 shots on goal in the first period, however, its first shot was a shorthanded effort from the high slot by Justin Abdelkader nearly eight minutes in. Sweden had 12 shots on goal in the stanza but could not solve U.S. netminder Jeff Frazee.

Sweden took a 1-0 lead at 7:16 of the second period in shorthanded fashion as Andreas Turesson put home the rebound of Martin Johansson’s initial shot. Team USA rallied with two goals in a 1:35 span in the back half of the period to stake a 2-1 advantage at 40 minutes.

Kyle Okposo intercepted a Swedish pass behind the net and fed Patrick Kane in front for Kane’s third goal in two games. Then Ryan Stoa banged home the second rebound in tight at 13:25 following Peter Mueller’s initial shot from the left circle and Nathan Gerbe’s rebound attempt.

The U.S. looked like it would win the game in regulation, however, with :14 left in regulation and Sweden netminder Joel Gistedt pulled in favor of an extra attacker, Fredrik Pettersson got the puck by Frazee to tie the game.

That set the stage for Jack Johnson, who scored his second game-winning goal in as many days. Erik Johnson and Jack Skille drew assists on the four-on-three overtime goal.

Frazee finished with 28 saves, while Gistedt had 31 stops for Sweden.

U.S. Tops Slovakia At WJC Thanks To Special Teams

Team USA used outstanding special-teams play and solid goaltending on the way to a 6-1 victory over Slovakia in preliminary-round play at the 31st annual International Ice Hockey Federation World Junior Championship.

In a must-win game for the United States if it hoped to have a chance to move onto the medal round, Team USA came alive with three power-play goals and held Slovakia scoreless on its 10 man-advantage chances.

“We got an all-around team effort today,” said U.S. head coach Ron Rolston. “I’m proud of our guys. We have to get some rest and be ready for Sweden tomorrow.”

The United States held a 2-0 advantage after the opening period. Patrick Kane wristed a shot from the top of the right circle and past Slovakia netminder Jakub Macek with Team USA on the power play at 6:51 for a 1-0 edge. Captain Taylor Chorney and Jack Skille drew assists on the play.

Defenseman Jack Johnson made it 2-0 at 14:45 with a delayed penalty on Slovakia in effect. Peter Mueller found Johnson at the side of the left circle and his shot sailed over the glove of Macek. Nate Gerbe also assisted on the play.

Getting his first start of the 2007 IIHF World Junior Championship, U.S. netminder Jeff Frazee was strong in the opening stanza, including a solid stop off an opening-faceoff two-on-one rush. Frazee also made two big stops in less than a minute midway through the period, first on David Buc and then on Juraj Valach.

Team USA scored two more power-play goals in the second period to gain a 4-0 advantage after 40 minutes. Kane had one of the tournament’s most spectacular goals at 4:15 as he came from the side wall, stick-handled through traffic and roofed one into the upper corner of the net on the near side from just outside the goal crease.

Then at 9:00, defenseman Erik Johnson wristed one from the center point that beat Macek and sent him to the bench in favor of Branislav Konrad.

The United States gained a 5-0 lead just 1: 36 into the third period as Konrad inadvertently tipped the puck up over his own shoulder and into his net off an Erik Johnson pass attempt to Mueller. Mueller got credit for the goal despite not touching the puck. Slovakia broke the shutout at 9:46 before James vanRiemsdyk finished the scoring at 16:07 when he put home the rebound of a Justin Abdelkader shot from in close. Blake Geoffrion started the play.

Frazee finished with 28 saves, while Macek and Konrad combined for 23 stops for Slovakia.

Recaps from Saturday

Here’s the recaps:

Mine for the Consolation

Russell Jaslow’s for the Championship

Final Thoughts from Oswego

Two close games today – the championship was closer than the 4-1 score would indicate.

The All-Tournament Team:

F – Kevin Rollwagen (St. Thomas), Justin Joy (Elmira), CJ Thompson (Oswego)

D – Greg Moore (Elmira), Rich Zalweski (Oswego)

G – Ryan Scott (Oswego)

MVP – Ryan Scott (Oswego)

Those were on my ballot for forwards and goalie. I had Trevor Turner from NEC and Tyler Laws from Oswego as my defensemen.

And, next year’s field was announced: Oswego (duh), Curry, Amherst and St. Norbert. That will bring me back!

Thanks to Joe Gladziszewski, Sports Information Director at Oswego, for all his help this weekend…and for the bacon pizza in the pressbox.

Livebogging the Championship

Oswego has taken a 1-0 lead over Elmira at the midway point of the first period. Ryan Woodward, behind the Elmira net, banked the puck off a defenseman. Before that, Elmira had most of the scoring chances. Oswego goalie Ryan Scott was shaken up at about the six minute mark, but looks fine.

And the first period ends 1-0. Shots are 10-9 in favor of Oswego. The Soaring Eagles will have 1:34 of a power play to work with to open the second.

Things were quiet in the second period until Jan Velich lifted a backhand past Ryan Scott to make it 1-1 at 6:19. It’s still that way with 12 minutes to play in the second.

Lots of action but no goals as the period ends 1-1. They are using a five minute overtime then shootout format, so no matter what, I’ll be back in Rochester by midnight.

Ryan Ellis makes it 2-1 Oswego at 4:22. He took a pass, broke down the right side, and beat Casey Tuttle high-stick.

About eight minutes to go now…Oswego going to a 2-3 forecheck, playing a little more conservatively now.

Two quick Oswego goals seal this one. Musselwhite on a three-on-one and then, after Elmira pulls Tuttle, Whitehead into the empty net with 1:54 to play.

..and that’s the final. Just turned in my ballot for the all-tourney team. Will post the team when it’s announced.

Back for Round 2 – St. Thomas vs. New England

I’m back in the pressbox in Oswego for the consolation game of the Pathfinder Classic. Just underway between St. Thomas and New England. As opposed to yesterday, I’ll do the game in one long blog entry.

Midway thought the first and there’s no score. St. Thomas has had the better chances so far, but Pilgrim goaltender Ron Baia has come up big. Both teams are starting different goaltenders than last yesterday. Cameron Voss is in net for the Tommies.

St. Thomas draws first blood at 12:25. Nick Pernula came out of the penalty box and generated a three-on-one. His shot was stopped by Baia, but Kevin Rollwagen was there on the weak side to bang in the rebound.

Midway through the second and the Pilgrims are on the board. Sustained pressure by NEC pays off when Jeff Armand, behind the St. Thomas net, finds Joe Garofalo alone in the slot. He beats Voss low on the stick side to tie things at one each.

The teams trade power plays before Rollwagen gets his second of the game and third of the weekend. He picks up a lose puck along the boards and beats two defenders to the net and puts the puck past Baia on the short side. 2-1 Tommies.

And that’s the end of the second. NEC’s Pauls Ruta gets pulled down on a shorthanded breakaway attempt, so we’ll start the third skating four on four.

New England ties it just 21 seconds into the third. On their first rush up the ice, Turner wrists on past Voss to tie the game at two all.

St. Thomas has regained the lead at 2:49. On the power play, Nick Pernula’s shot from the point finds its way past Baia.

With 4:11 to play, St. Thomas takes a penalty and New England coach Tom Caroll calls his timeout. He send five forwards out for the power play, and parks 6-4 freshman Jon Globke in front of the net. Globke bangs in a rebound to tie the game.

St. Thomas takes another penalty, but the Tommies kill it off. With just ten seconds to play, St. Thomas’s Nate Ryan sneaks behind everybody and AJ Pachenko hits him with a homerun pass. Ryan scores on the breakaway, and it’s 4-3 Tommies.

And that’s your final. Wow.

Tyler Hirsch Dismissed From Minnesota Gopher Team

Minnesota announced today that senior forward Tyler Hirsch has been dismissed from the team.

Tyler Hirsch (photo: Melissa Wade)

Tyler Hirsch (photo: Melissa Wade)

“Tyler Hirsch’s hockey career at the University of Minnesota has come to an end,” head coach Don Lucia said. “This is a private and confidential matter between Tyler and the coaching staff, and there will be no further comments from any members of the hockey program or the University of Minnesota. We wish Tyler success in his future endeavors.”

Hirsch played in 15 games this season, scoring four goals and tallying 18 assists. In his career Hirsch made 144 appearances for the Gophers, gathering 117 points (31 goals and 86 assists).

Hirsch’s career at Minnesota was plentiful in the scoring department, but also became controversial. In 2005 after a game at the WCHA Final Five, Hirsch had a post-game incident that made many wonder about him.

Hirsch came back at the start of the 2005-06 season, played in two games and scored two assists, but then decided to file for a hardship waiver as he missed the rest of the season due to personal reasons.

Recaps of Friday’s Games

Recap for Elmira-St. Thomas

Recap for Oswego-NEC 

Game Over

Oswego takes this one 5-2. The Lakers will take on Elmira in the championship game tomorrow, while it’s New England and St. Thomas in the consolation.

Look for recaps later.

Midway Through the Third

New England’s had plenty of chances in the third period, but has been unable to convert. it’s still 5-2 Oswego with eight minutes to play.

Linda Cohn

While roaming around the rink in between periods, I spotted a nice display on the history of women’s hockey at Oswego. In one picture of a team from the early 80’s, there’s a picture of former goaltender Linda Cohn, a longtime anchor at ESPN. She’s grinning from ear to ear with a frizzy haircut. Awesome picture.

Oswego Leads 5-2 After Two

A power play goal from Brendan McLaughlin with 2:30 to go has staked Oswego to a 5-2 lead after two period. Shots unofficially are 27-15 in favor of the Lakers.

Pace

I was remarking to Chris Lerch that this game had the feel of a D-I game, which I’ve seen about 40 of, compared to a handful of D-III games, in the past year and a half.  That lasted until about the midway point of this game when it opened up.  End to end action is what I’ve always loved about the D-III game.

Trading Goals, Again

NEC cut the lead to 3-2 at 12:42, but the Lakers answered just 20 seconds later. Micky Serra scored on a breakaway for the Pilgrims, and Thompson completed the hat-trick off a feed from Tyler Laws. 4-2 Oswego with 4:28 to play in the second.

Atmosphere

I remember the days when they had chain link fence at the Golden Romney Field House. Even after they put in glass, the good-old-fashioned Romney still had this close, intense feel. I wondered if I’d miss that atmosphere here in the new Oswego barn.  I don’t.

In the Campus Center Arena, everyone has a real seat.  Everyone can see. And the volume still gets loud.

I’ve been to Kreitzberg; been to Kenyon. Oswego has my new favorite D-III barn.

Underway in the Second

It’s still 3-1 about six minutes into the second period, with neither team able to generate much offense. A flurry by Oswego comes up empty, with Lyon making some key stops.

Mike Carmody, NEC’s top offensive weapon, is still out of the lineup due to injury.

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