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D-III Women’s East Week 11 Recap: Amherst continues to win, a NESCAC upset, Utica’s quiet charge, & more!

Amherst keeps on winning, now 14-1-0 (Photo by Clarus Studios Inc.)

As we creep closer and closer to conference tournament time, these league games start to mean more and more now that pairwise and the overall tournament outlook is coming together in the final stretch. This week, some top teams continued to roll through their schedule, while one team played spoiler and forced an upset.

Amherst continues to roll

 #4 Amherst (14-1-0), (currently #1 in pairwise) has arguably looked like the best team in the country so far considering what they’ve been able to accomplish and the games they’ve won. Sitting at #1 in pairwise, this means if the season ended today, they’d host the frozen four if they were to win their first game in the NCAA tournament (depending on the NCAA seeding, however, pairwise is typically always the main factor). This past week/weekend the Mammoths won three games, sweeping #14 Connecticut College, winning 3-0 & 3-1. They then shutout #8 Norwich 5-0. The point leaders across all three games were Rylee Glennon (1 goal, 4 assists), Anna Baxter (2 goals, 1 assist), Alyssa Xu (1 goal, 2 assists), & Avery Flynn (3 assists). Goaltender Natalie Stott added a trio of wins to her record, making 38 saves over the three games.

The stat sheet is really where Amherst stands out. #8 Norwich only recorded 9 shots on target in the game, three in each period. Meanwhile, they did the same thing to Middlebury earlier in the year when they swept them, allowing very few shots throughout the game. The defense and overall puck control from Amherst is the most impressive statistic so far considering who they’ve played and how convincingly they’ve won all but one of their games so far.

Amherst visits Wesleyan this weekend for a pair of road games against a Wesleyan team who’s showing a lot of potential this season.

Williams pulls off the upset

Williams College, sitting at 8-6-0, has had an up-and-down season, won some ranked games while also dropping some winnable ones. When competing in the top NESCAC conference, winning games is no easy feat, however, anyone can win on any given night in this league. That happened this past Friday, Williams defeated #6 Hamilton 1-0 on the road to split the weekend series as Hamilton won 4-1 the following night. Snapping the Continentals eight-game win streak (six of those games involved a ranked-opponent).

Williams upsets #6 Hamilton 1-0 (Photo by Julian Spiro)

In this game, the lone goal scored which turned out to be the winner was scored by Maddie Tix, assisted by Maddie Zack & Ellia Chiang at the 12:29 mark of the 2nd period. Two penalties committed by each team, shot totals were 30-15 in favor of Hamilton, faceoffs were tied 22-22, even game for the most part statistically. Goaltender Erin Pye of Williams had a great game, getting the 30-save shutout victory, while Hamilton goaltender Mac Donovan made 14 saves in the loss.

Williams’ is home this weekend for a huge two-game series with #10 Colby.

Hello, Western New England  

I previously talked about the Golden Bears earlier this season after their huge 3-2 OT victory over (at the time) #11 Endicott, to move to 4-2-0 on the season, well, they now sit at 11-3-2. Being their 2nd year as a program, they’ve already smashed their program-best in terms of wins, now they sit #3 in the CCC behind Endicott and Suffolk. Most recently, WNE won four games in eight days, defeating New England College 4-0, Salve Regina (twice) 1-0 in OT & 4-1, then Rivier 4-1. Now, many may say the SOS (strength of schedule) isn’t great compared to others but considering where this second-year-program was last year (7-15-4), they’ve made great strides under Head Coach Katie Zimmerman.

Western New England is off to a program-best start of 11-3-2 (Photo by Chris Marion Photography).

Western New England faces Worcester State this weekend in a two-game home/away series.

Utica, where did you come from?

Utica is currently sitting at a quiet 12-1-1 ranked #13 in the USCHO poll (#12 pairwise) and just had one of their most, possibly the most impressive win yet, a 5-0 shutout victory over formerly ranked Oswego State. This past week, the Pioneers went 3-0, defeating Oswego 5-0 in a Tuesday night matchup, and sweeping Chatham over the weekend, winning 4-0 & 5-2. I was high on Utica to start the year due to them returning an older roster and solid goaltending, also with their newly upgraded facilities with the “Nexus Center”, everything seemed to be shaping up for them to perform well. Last season, the Pioneers had their best season as a program, finishing 21-6, but failed to get past Manhattanville in the second round of the UCHC tournament.

Utica is 12-1-1, eying a UCHC title (Photo by Maxwell LeBuis, YSM Media)

Non-conference games for Utica are massive as the UCHC isn’t giving them much help in terms of SOS rankings, whether we agree with it or not, the conference as a whole doesn’t stack-up statistically with others, so winning non-conference games is a must for them. They have an important stretch of games upcoming, this weekend, a two-game series with Manhattanville, then a few days later on Tuesday, they host #7 Hamilton in their biggest game of the year so far in the Nexus Center. These games, especially Hamilton, will show us Utica’s true potential as we’re late in the season so most of the early season/semester break rust should be gone. It’ll be interesting to see how the UCHC tournament fares with defending champion Nazareth looking more beatable this year than they were last year and Utica showing lots of promise.

D-III West Hockey Game Picks — Jan. 20-21, 2023

Jacob Seitz and the Saints take on St. Olaf in a key MIAC series this weekend. (Photo Credit: Derek Montgomery/St. Scholastica Athletics)

Conference play is in full swing this weekend out west. St. Scholastica and St. Olaf battle in a key MIAC series while UW-Stevens Point takes aim at maintaining its lead at the top of the WIAC standings as it faces off against UW-River Falls.

Adrian and St. Norbert both go into their respective matchups as favorites.

Check out the picks for this week below.

Friday and Saturday

St. Scholastica (8-5-2, 5-0-1) vs. St. Olaf (11-5-1, 5-3)

It’s a battle between two of the top teams in the MIAC. The Saints and Oles are tied for second with 16 points apiece, which means this series is a big deal for both teams.

The Saints have two of the top three scorers in the league Arkhip Ledenkov and Nathan Adrian. The two have scored 13 and 10 goals,respectively. The Oles, of course, have been led by Tyler Cooper, who has come through with 10 goals. This should e one of the more entertaining series of the weekend.
St. Olaf, 5-4; St. Scholastica, 4-3

Concordia (5-9-1, 2-4) vs. Bethel (9-7-1, 4-3-1)

The Cobbers are in dire need of a win after dropping their last five games. They also need to have success against Bethel to keep hope alive for a conference tourney berth. The Royals have a chance to gain significant ground in the stands, sitting just two points back of the Saints and Oles. Based on how this season has gone, a split seems likely.
Bethel, 5-2; Concordia, 4-3

Augsburg (8-6-1, 4-2) vs. Gustavus (2-13-2, 0-7-1)

The Auggies hope to pick up a couple of wins this weekend against the Gusties and begin their climb back towards the top of the conference standings. The Gusties have dropped their last five and have managed only eight goals in that time. The No. 15 Auggies, even with their position in the standings, have an offense that can dominate when clicking on all cylinders.
Augsburg, 5-2 and 4-1

Saturday

Saint John’s (10-6-2, 6-2-1) at Hamline (8-7-1, 1-6)

The Johnnies won Thursday’s game over the Pipers by a 6-3 score and widen their lead in the MIAC standings. Saint John’s now has a four-point lead over second place St. Scholastica. 

The Johnnies can go off at any point in a game, as was the case Thursday when they scored four unanswered to pull away for good. The Pipers showed promise on the power play in the loss, scoring on two of their three opportunities.
Saint John’s, 5-3

UW-Superior (10-6-1, 5-2) at UW-Eau Claire (10-6, 3-3)

The Yellowjackets hope to notch a couple of big road wins this weekend against the Blugolds as WIAC play heats up. UW-Superior ranks third in the conference in goals scored (51) while the Blugolds are fourth (50). Max Gutjahr has been a difference maker in goal for UW-Eau Claire and will be a key to success. The Yellowjackets have depth at goal with Dylan Meilun and Myles Hektor. A defensive series could be on tap.
UW-Superior, 3-2; UW-Eau Claire, 4-3

UW-River Falls (7-9-1, 1-5-1) at UW-Stevens Point (10-3-3, 2-0)

The Falcons have their hands full against the 10th-ranked Pointers. They are just 2-5-1 on the road this season. The two teams last played in December and UW-Stevens Point prevailed 3-1. UW-River Falls has to be able to generate offense early to keep pace with the Pointers, who feature one of the better offenses in the country. They have 56 goals on the year.
UW-Stevens Point, 3-2 and 4-1

Adrian (14-2-1, 8-2) at Lake Forest (6-8-3, 3-5-2)

The Bulldogs come in ranked third in the nation and are tied for the second-best record in the conference. Going on the road, though, is never easy, but the Bulldogs have shown they can thrive away from home, fashioning a 7-0-1 mark. Adrian is one of the hottest teams around, winning nine in a row, and if it plays up to its potential, it will be tough to beat. The Foresters are trying to get back on track after dropping two in a row. They’ve shown they can play top teams tough, tying Aurora twice in a series earlier this season.
Adrian, 5-3 and 5-2

St. Norbert (11-5-1, 8-2) vs. Marian (6-10-1, 3-6-1)

The ninth-ranked Green Knights take on the Sabres in a home-and-home series. St. Norbert has won its last two and has scored 60 goals off 106 assists on the year. Right in the mix for a conference crown, these are two games they Green Knights have to have to keep pace in what continues to be a tightly contested race for the title. Marian will need its best offensive effort of the year to have a shot at the upset.
St. Norbert, 5-1 and 6-2

Fan voting now open for 2023 Hobey Baker Award to help determine top men’s D-I college hockey player

It’s Hobey Baker time.

Beginning at noon ET today, fan balloting opened for the 2023 Hobey Baker Award.

Awarded annually to college hockey’s top player, the Hobey Baker’s popular fan voting will run from now until Sunday, March 5 at midnight. College hockey fans can cast their vote by going to the voting website. Follow the prompts to make your selection from this year’s outstanding crop of over 80 college hockey players representing 43 NCAA Division I schools.

Detailed bios are available on each candidate.

Phase two of fan balloting will come from the list of Top Ten Hobey Baker finalists beginning March 17 and closing March 26. The fans’ vote accounts for a percentage of the total ballot in each phase in selecting this year’s award recipient.

Award criteria include candidates exhibiting the exceptional character traits of the award’s namesake, Hobey Baker. A legendary American hero, Baker was a World War I fighter pilot and was known as America’s greatest amateur athlete in his day, excelling at hockey and football at Princeton University. Award candidates must demonstrate strength of character both on and off the ice, contribute to the integrity of his team and display outstanding skills in all phases of the game. Consideration should be given to scholastic achievement and sportsmanship.

Key Hobey Baker announcement dates for 2023 include:
• Top Ten list of finalists: March 15
• Hobey Hat Trick of three finalists: March 30
• Hobey Baker Award announcement: April 7

The 2023 Hobey Baker Award winner will be announced from a field of three Hobey Hat Trick finalists on Friday, April 7, during the NCAA Frozen Four championship in Tampa, Fla. The award ceremony will be broadcast nationally on NHL Network and streamed live at hobeybaker.com.

Aurora’s Jaunich having another stellar season

Jack Jaunich is having another stellar season for the Aurora Spartans. (Photo Credit: Aurora Athletics)

Jack Jaunich started playing hockey at a young age, his love of the game growing largely through his time on the pond in Minnesota.

“Playing on the ponds every day, and having access to rinks all over, that was kind of the thing that got me into hockey. I fell in love with the game. It started with the pond,” Jaunich said.

Jaunich has turned that love for the game into a successful career, including his time at Aurora where he is now the program’s all-time leading goal scorer. 

He hit the mark of 35 goals in a 3-1 win over St. Norbert in a battle of nationally ranked teams on Jan. 6. But Jaunich won’t take all of the credit for the accomplishment.

“I think a lot of the credit goes to my teammates,” Jaunich said. “We are always pushing each other in practice. It’s been quite an experience here. I’ve learned a lot. And (the record) is one of the things that came out of it.”

Jaunich has been a consistent contributor throughout his career and seems to have gotten better with time while helping the Spartans surge into the national spotlight.

After tallying four goals and eight assists as a freshman, he struck for five goals and five assists in a shortened season because of the pandemic.

Jaunich had his best season to date a year ago, punching in 15 goals and dishing out 23 assists. He’s at 11 goals and 15 assists so far this season for an Aurora team that is 14-3-2 and has won five in a row. The Spartans are ranked seventh in the nation in the USCO NCAA Division III men’s poll.

One of the highlights of the season was a sweep of St. Norbert at the beginning of January.

“That was great,” Jaunich said. “It’s kind of a culmination of a lot of hard work. We’ve been building this program and have a special group this year.”

The Spartans have scored 81 goals on the year off 148 assists. They have allowed 50 goals. Ten players have tallied 11 or more points. Jaunich leads the way while Adam Keyes has come through with nine goals and 16 assists. He just became the first player to reach 100 career points at Aurora.

Gio Procopio (7 goals, 17 assists), Derrick Budz (8 goals, 11 assists), Hassan Akl (6 goals, 13 assists) and Mat Weber (10 goals, 5 assists) are among the key players as well for Aurora. Kolby Thornton and Tanner Marshall have both played big roles as goaltenders.

As a team, the Spartans are on the right track.

“We’re trending upward at the right time, but it’s not about how you start, it’s how you finish,” Jaunich said. “We know what the ultimate goal is and we want to keep our eyes on that.”

Jaunich is currently representing the United States in the World University Games in Lake Placid. It’s an opportunity he cherishes.

“It’s an unbelievable experience to represent your country in any manner, and it’s an honor,” Jaunich said. ”You get a chance to be a part of something special.”

As for his role with the Spartans, he believes he’s become more of a leader.

“I would say I’ve matured a lot over the past year. Having so many new guys in the room, it’s forced me to step into a bigger leadership role. You try to set a good example in practice and in games.”

While he still has plenty of hockey left to play, he took a little time to reflect on his opportunities with the Spartans.

“Being around the guys every day is the best part. It’s one of the things I’m going to miss,” Jaunich said. “It’s been a great experience so far.”

Team USA qualifies for medal round with 9-1 win over Hungary at WUG

Team USA downed Hungary 9-1 to clinch the top spot in Pool B play and play in this weekend’s medal round in Lake Placid, New York (Photo by Peter Lynch)

Team USA finished their Pool B bracket play with a solid 9-1 win over Hungary helping them to finish atop the pool with a 4-1-0 record. Luke Aquaro (Hobart) jumpstarted the team with goal at 59 seconds and added a second goal for a 2-0 lead just four minutes into the game.

The game was put out of reach with a five goal second period as Mitch Walinski (Salve Regina), Quinn Green (UWEC), Connor Szmul (UWEC), Aquaro’s third for a hat trick and Jack Jaunich (Aurora) put the game out of reach for the Americans who dominated play throughout the game.

The third period saw Matt Hannewall (MSOE) and John Mulera (Salve Regina) sandwich goals around the single Hungarian tally for the 9-1 win. For the game Team USA outshot Hungary by a 67-19 margin. Goaltender Evan Ruschil (Williams College) stopped 18 of 19 shots to earn the win.

With Slovakia’s loss to the Republic of Korea and Team USA’s back-to-back wins over Kazakhstan and Hungary, USA heads to the medal round as the top seed in Pool B and Kazakhstan earning the second spot for Saturday’s semifinal games against either Japan or the Czech Republic and Canada from Pool A (pending the final games from Pool A). The medal round games shift from Scheel Arena at Clarkson to Lake Placid and the championship game will be broadcast live on ESPN on Sunday, January, 22.

This Week in ECAC Hockey: By finding ways to ‘create your own breaks,’ Brown making noise as conference race intensifying

Ryan Bottrill has been steady up front as a freshman this season for Brown (photo: Olivia Hokanson).

My brother Mike is a big reason why I’m involved with college hockey.

He’s been at Brown University since his days as an undergraduate student in the late 1990s, and after a year working as a sports information intern with the athletics department, he started broadcasting for the Bears as part of what eventually became the Ivy League on ESPN package now available on ESPN+.

Seven years younger, I tagged along for several road trips when he was on terrestrial radio during the 2000s, and I eventually migrated into the broadcast booth with his gentle nudging and tutelage.

He’s still at Brown, and though I’m more identifiable for my on-air work with Bentley these days, I occasionally make my way to Providence to ride side saddle for various broadcasts at a place that I’ve called home for the better part of three decades. When I’m not with him, we have a weekly tradition of texting each other updates from each other’s games, and there’s usually a phone conversation or two breaking down our car rides home. Advancements in technology rendered the updates less surprising – I can access scores on an iPhone and follow along in real time on Twitter – but we still catch each other off-guard.

Last week gave us one of those times. Bentley was on the road, and I had barely put my three-month-old to bed when my phone went off with a simple, “Hey go look at the Brown score.” It was eight minutes into the first period, and the Bears were beating Union 2-0.

About 15 or 20 minutes later, he texted me the same thing. There had been another power-play goal to give Brown a 3-0 lead before intermission. A little while later, my phone popped a third time when the Bears scored in the first three minutes of the second period. By the end of the night, a 6-1 win over the Dutchmen gave Brown consecutive wins after the Bears walloped Merrimack in a non-conference game, and after a win over Rensselaer one night later, the surging sons of coach Brendan Whittet vaulted into eighth place with a six-point weekend.

“There was a quirk to the schedule that this was the first time we played Union and RPI,” said Whittet, “and we’d played every team in the league with two games already against Yale, our travel partner, on opening weekend, and I have a ton of respect for [Union coach] Josh Hauge. They played the game very, very hard, but it was a situation where we got off to a good start and started getting downhill a little bit. We were very confident throughout that game, and systematically, we were very structured and played the right way.

“If you do the right things in terms of your responsibility, you can create your own breaks, and I thought we did a good job of doing that.”

Whittet’s teams are historically built around blue-collar hockey pillars like good goaltending and strong defense, but the winning streak seemed to emphasize exactly how Brown could pummel any opponent on any given night with a lethal combination of blue-collar hockey and explosive offense. The 6-2 win over Merrimack featured an early goal and a three-goal advantage over the game’s first 23 minutes before goalie Mathieu Caron systematically dismantled a high-powered offense that’s still averaging a half-goal more than allowed. The Union game followed that trend when Brown jumped out to a 4-0 lead before Caron again made 12 second-period saves, and 20 of his 24 saves stretched the game from after the first period ended.

The offense, meanwhile, started cooking and set a pace that Bruno’s opponent couldn’t match. The Bears went high-powered and kicked their Winnebago into a ludicrous speed by peppering the cage through the first two periods. Merrimack’s Hugo Ollas didn’t last past the halfway point of the second period, and Union’s Connor Murphy was forced to endure a multi-pronged attack from emerging players like Lynden Grandberg, who had four points and a plus-4 rating against the Dutchmen, and Ryan Bottrill, who had two assists against Union after peppering five shots against the Merrimack net.

“It’s nice to see [the fast play] play out a little bit,” Whittet said. “I don’t think that’s ultimately what our team is built on because I think we’re built on outstanding goaltending and going from our back end with a good, deep core and forwards that come along and understand what works at this level, but we’ve had some growth from some young guys. There have been some guys that specifically stepped up with the fact that we haven’t had our first line left wing, Jordan Tonelli, for four games, but the guys that stepped up played important, important parts in each of these wins that we’ve had.”

The overall performance turned the RPI game into a 3-0 footnote even as it included another shorthanded goal, and with the six points, a Brown team that started the weekend in 11th place in the ECAC standings rocketed into eighth place. The Bears had been near the bottom of the 62-team Pairwise Rankings but finished the weekend in 37th, ahead of Colgate and St. Lawrence and within shouting distance of Clarkson – the three teams all situated within one weekend’s workload in the conference standings.

Caron improved to 7-9-2 on the season and broke into the top quarter of goalies with a 2.25 goals-against average, and his .927 save percentage ranked him inside the top-5 with the 11th most saves in the nation. He was quizzically left off the Richter Award’s Watch List, though his numbers are offering the best season-long totals since Anthony Borelli won 14 games with a 1.84 goals-against average and a .942 save percentage 10 years ago and are numerically equal to the performances from Adam D’Alba in 2004-2005 – years that preceded the establishment of the trophy.

Both the power play and penalty kill are vastly improved, and the three shorthanded goals against Merrimack and RPI pushed the Bears into a tie for 10th in the nation. A defense that allowed five goals in an overtime loss to LIU and seven goals across two shutout losses to St. Lawrence and UMass gave up four goals over three games with its second shutout of the season, and a team that suffered just under 10 games ending in either a tie or a loss by one or two goals brutalized three teams by a combined plus-11 rating and now heads into its stretch run with its next four games at home before a crucial stretch that ends with a return trip against the Capital District teams, a road trip to Princeton and Quinnipiac, and a home series against Cornell and Colgate – all of which may require head-to-head wins for Brown to clinch home ice and possibly sneak into a conversation for the top four teams.

“You have to make sure that when you’re at home, you’re doing things correctly and playing the right way,” Whittet said. “You have to bring energy, but I think that being at home after having some success on the road, we’re not going to deviate from how we played on the road. We’re going to be a gritty, grind-it-out type of time. Sleeping in your own bed and having the familiarity of the facility, having the home locker room, it’s nice to be at home, but that said, you can’t let opportunities pass you by.

“That’s what we did last weekend, and that’s what we’re going to attempt to do this weekend by focusing on Dartmouth first before worrying about Harvard coming into [Meehan Auditorium] on Saturday.”

Brown plays the Big Green on Friday night at 7 p.m. before turning around to play Harvard the next night at the same time…with the first text message exchange between brothers likely coming before then.

This Week in Big Ten Hockey: Conference standings looking to become clearer as teams starting push for playoff seedings, NCAA tournament berths

Minnesota senior defenseman Ryan Johnson was recently named a nominee for the 2023 Hockey Humanitarian Award (photo: Minnesota Athletics).

How strange is this season of Big Ten hockey? If the season were to end today, five of the conference’s seven teams would play in the NCAA tournament.

Minnesota would be the overall No. 1 seed and Penn State would likely be the top seed in its regional.

How strange? Of the five Big Ten teams currently among the top 16 in this week’s PairWise Rankings, none is lower than No. 12.

Stranger still? One of the five B1G teams in that field, Michigan, has a losing conference record (5-7-0) and is the sixth-place conference team. The fifth-place Fighting Irish are currently on the outside of the PWR field at No. 18. Michigan? No. 8.

And now three Big Ten teams are clustered together in second place, each with 24 points: Penn State (7-6-1-0), Ohio State (8-6-0-0) and Michigan State (7-7-2-2).

To paraphrase the immortal words of David Byrne, well, how did we get here?

Before last weekend’s contests, the Spartans trailed the Nittany Lions by two points with Ohio State sandwiched right between them – and with Minnesota ahead of second-place Penn State by eight points.

That was before Michigan State took four of six points from Penn State at home, Ohio State earned three points in a road split with Michigan, and Minnesota took four on the road from Notre Dame.

With their 3-2 win over the Nittany Lions Friday, the Spartans snapped a five-game losing streak that extended back to Dec. 10, then added a 4-4 tie with shootout point Saturday.

“Going into this weekend, we’ve talked a lot about listening to noise when things are going well and listening to noise when things aren’t going well,” said MSU coach Adam Nightingale, “and I think our guys really got back to playing our way.”

The Spartans trailed in the third period of each game, and it’s how the team played from behind that made the difference, said Nightingale.

“It’s been our message from the start of the year,” Nightingale said. “It’s always about the next shift. You can’t get flustered. You can’t get rattled. You’ve got to play with poise. You’ve got to play with composure.”

After beating Michigan 7-2 Friday, Ohio State coach Steve Rohlik said, “We will keep looking to improve and play a 60-minute game. We know they’ll be better tomorrow, and we will need to be better tomorrow as well.”

And, indeed, the Wolverines were better. After the Buckeyes lost 4-2 Saturday, Rohlik said, “We were not quite good enough tonight and lost the special teams battle. They made a big push, and we weren’t able to match it. It’s back to work on Monday.”

Does that sound cliched? Maybe a little. It also sounds like the story nearly any B1G team will be telling following any weekend of conference play between now and the end of February.

The one exception to this familiar narrative may be Minnesota, the team that everyone is chasing. With an 11-2-1-0 B1G record, the Golden Gophers have been nearly perfect this season, with sweeps over every conference opponent except for the Nittany Lions and Buckeyes. Since returning to play in the second half, though, Minnesota is 3-1-1 in its last five.

“We have not been playing our hockey yet, since Christmas,” said Gophers coach Bob Motzko. “Don’t feel sorry for us. We’re still doing okay. We’re just trying to get it going again. You can’t help it. It’s probably playing out all over the country, too. You take all those days off and you just want to snap your fingers and get back at it.”

Motzko said that the Gophers have played well defensively with strong goaltending but that other factors of their game are slightly off. “We’ve been in the same game now for five straight. Every game since Christmas has been almost a carbon copy.”

He added that this should be a pattern familiar to anyone following Minnesota hockey and that the start of the academic term should be helpful.

“We’ve done this every year,” said Motzko. “We’re rusty to start … kind of get through it. Tuesday was my favorite day. Classes started again. Continuity back in our day, and then all of a sudden it starts to smooth out again. I hope it tracks like it has here in the past and we start playing our better hockey down the stretch.”

No one in the Big Ten is going to have it easy down that stretch, not even the league-leading and PairWise-topping Golden Gophers. The Gophers host Michigan and Michigan State for their next four games, play two at Wisconsin and two at Penn State, and finish the season at home against the Buckeyes. Along with Minnesota, the Wolverines, Nittany Lions and Buckeyes are among the top 10 scoring offenses in the country. The Badgers have scored four or more goals in eight games this season – including in a 6-4 loss to Minnesota. Michigan State has several players who can change the outcome of a game, including goaltender Dylan St. Cyr. Not one game is a gimme for the Gophers.

But Minnesota’s conference success so far has given the Golden Gophers an advantage that no other team in the league possesses: Minnesota is the only team in control of its own fate. If the Gophers win seven of their remaining 10 conference games, they’ll win the regular-season title outright regardless of how anyone else fares.

After Saturday’s tie against Notre Dame capped those first five games of the second half, Motzko said that Minnesota’s done with dodging bullets.

“I think the button’s already been pushed,” Motzko said. “A little desperation. Enough. Let’s start playing better again.”

The Gophers host the Wolverines this weekend, Penn State hosts Notre Dame and Ohio State travels to Wisconsin. Michigan State, the team that has played more conference games (16) than any other B1G team, has a bye this weekend.

This Week in Hockey East: Confidence not waning for New Hampshire as Wildcats have ‘taken steps in how competitive we are collectively’

David Fessenden began his NCAA career at Alabama Huntsville before transferring to UNH (photo: Rick Wilson).

To say that the season to date for New Hampshire has been a difficult one is an understatement.

The Wildcats began the year with two wins at Clarkson and St. Lawrence, a notably tough series over the year. But from that point, UNH had but a single win – a late-October win over Army West point – until an exciting overtime victory over Arizona State in the final game before break.

“It got to a point that no matter what you say in the group, the individual man was probably saying, ‘Are we ever going to win a game?’” said UNH coach Michael Souza. “You say the right things: ‘Trust the process. It’s going to break. It’s going to go our way.’

“In the Arizona State game, we’re up, we’re tied. We’re up again, we’re tied. When things aren’t going well, you find a way to lose games. When things are going well, you create a way to win them. So it was like a sense of relief to go into the break.”

That didn’t translate into automatic wins like a switch flipped. The Wildcats lost twice against Union to start the second half of the year. But after those two one-goal losses, the Wildcats won three straight and the mentality in the locker room has changed.

“I felt this way at times in the first half, but not consecutive days,” said Souza. “It’s a maturity that players have to go through individually and teams have to go through.

“We weren’t there early in the year; we weren’t detailed to where we need to be. And I’m not saying that we’re a finished product. But we’ve taken steps in how competitive we are collectively.”

Maybe not the only ingredient in UNH’s recent success, but certainly a very key one, has been the play of goaltender David Fessenden. Though he currently holds a decent .914 save percentage and a 2.52 goals-against average, over the last two weekends that save percentage is .977 and his goals against a stingy 0.67.

The switchover for a goaltender is difficult for any coach to understand and define. Souza, though, is okay pointing to the offseason and the work that his fourth-year goaltender has put in.

“No two goalies are alike, I swear,” joked Souza. “David’s a little bit older, he’s the oldest player on our team. He is meticulous in his preparation. At times he gets frustrated, maybe last year, not getting the net more and maybe this year at time. He’s played pretty well all year, aside from a couple of games.

“But he completely transformed his body this year with our strength coach Will Morey. He made a significant body transformation from where he was last year and I think that’s why he’s quicker, he’s more agile. He has the ability to make saves that he wouldn’t have had in the past. Today’s technology makes it more amazing. He’s lost weight but gained lean muscle mass and bone density. All stuff that has helped him become a better goalie.”

The road ahead for New Hampshire isn’t an easy one. They’ve dug themselves a hole, of which Souza is aware. In tenth place and surrendering games in had to almost every team in front, something like hosting a playoff game might seem like a pipe dream.

But Souza also understands that the way the Hockey East tournament sets up – a single-elimination tournament where all teams qualify – all you need is two wins to go from the bottom of the standings to earning a spot in the TD Garden.

“We weren’t excepting to be where we are in the league, but we are where we are and we’ll be where we’ll be,” said Souza. “[Adversity] makes you a little bit harder as an athlete and we’re better for it. The key now is to sustain it. You’ve gotten people’s attention with a couple of wins. They’re going to have their radar up.”

Fast start helps Team USA down Kazakhstan 4-1 at World University Games

Forward Matt Hannewall from MSOE scored two goals for Team USA in a crucial win over Kazakhstan on Wednesday. (Photo by Peter Lynch)

In a must win game for Team USA, the D-III comprised roster took down Pool B leading Kazakhstan, 4-1 on Wednesday morning to remain in a position to make this weekend’s medal round. The team started quickly with Matt Hannewall (MSOE) picking up his first of two goals in the game just 55 seconds into the first period. After the Kazakhs leveled the score, Michael McChesney (St. Norbert College) gave the USA a 2-1 lead with just 27 seconds remaining on the clock.

Two more goals in the second period from Hannewall and Quinn Green (Wisconsin – Eau Claire) gave goaltender Ryan Kenny (Stevenson) more than enough offense for the win. Kenny was outstanding stopping 30 of 31 shots in the game to earn what is believed to be the first regulation win over Kazakhstan in the World University Games ever.

“I am not sure what it was against Slovakia but we didn’t have the jump we had in the first two games,” noted head coach Mark Taylor. “You could see right away we had our skating game today against a very talented team and we played much more of our game with some adjustments to handle some of the things they do to make it difficult on opposing teams. It is a really big win and now the focus needs to be on a win tomorrow against Hungary so we can play for a medal this weekend.”

Team USA plays Hungary tomorrow and guarantees a spot in the medal round with a win over the Hungarians who are 2-2-0 through their first four games in Pool B.

Harvard’s Donato talks Crimson, ECAC Hockey, bouncing back after pandemic season: USCHO Spotlight Season 5 Episode 11

Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined by Harvard head coach Ted Donato. The conversation includes a look at this year’s Crimson, ECAC Hockey, bouncing back from a canceled season, and Harvard’s games this weekend at Yale and Brown.

This podcast is sponsored by the NCAA Men’s Division I Frozen Four, April 6th and 8th, 2023 at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida. Secure your seats at NCAA.com/mfrozenfour

Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Check out all of USCHO’s college hockey podcasts, including USCHO Weekend Review and USCHO Edge, plus our entire podcast archive.

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Sacred Heart’s new Martire Family Arena has successful first game, includes ‘an elevated fan experience’

Sacred Heart fell Saturday night at Martire Family Arena to Boston College but did celebrate two goals in a 3-2 overtime setback (photo: Meg Stokes).

In 2007, I attended my first Sacred Heart game as part of Rochester Institute of Technology’s radio broadcasting crew. The game was played at SHU’s home rink at the time, the Milford Ice Pavilion. The place, to be kind, wasn’t up to the standards of a Division I Hockey program.

In 2016, SHU upgraded and moved to the Webster Bank Arena (now known as the Total Mortgage Arena) in Bridgeport. I got the chance to broadcast from there as well. It’s a much nicer facility, but still off-campus and too big to generate much atmosphere.

But on Saturday, what had been talked about and planned for years finally came to fruition. The Martire Family Arena, a $75 million on-campus home for Sacred Heart’s men’s and women’s programs, opened its doors and hosted its first game, a 3-2 overtime loss by the men to Boston College. The women’s team played on Sunday and defeated Harvard, 2-1 in OT.

Saturday was a success in every way but the scoreboard said Pioneers coach CJ Marottolo.

“It was beyond expectations in terms of the entire atmosphere,” he said. “It was electric. A packed house (3,600), standing room only. The student section gave us a real home ice feel. There was a positive vibe from the time they opened the doors.”

It was worth the wait, something that had been talked about for almost as long as Sacred Heart has had a Division I program.

“I’m not sure how many years in the making,” said Marottolo. “The conversations were taking place well before I came to Sacred Heart (in 2009).”

“There was a vision. A lot of people worked very hard for a very long time. There are lots of fingerprints on this.”

And when the time (and funding) was right, SHU’s administration went all-in, from smart glass windows with “electrically switchable opacity” to a giant oven that makes a dozen pizzas at a time in 60 seconds.

“It’s an elevated fan experience,” said Marottolo. “I don’t think there’s one thing that they’ve left out. And the stuff on the first floor, for the players, it’s state of the art. I have to pinch myself every day when I walk in.”

The team also debuted chrome helmets for the occasion.

“They’re a little polarizing,” said Marottolo. “The players love them. We got great feedback from fans. We wanted to be a little different, a little aggressive. We’ll definitely wear them again on occasion.”

I asked Marottolo if all the buildup was a distraction for his team, which sits in second place in the AHA standings.

“No, and the credit goes to the players,” he said. “We’ve talked about this since the beginning of the year. We talked about being great where your feet are at the moment and not looking too far ahead. They didn’t overlook any practice or any situation until that night arrived.”

Over 200 former players were on hand to see the first game at the MFA, including former stars like Hobey Baker finalist Pierre-Luc O’Brien (’07) and Justin Danforth (’17), currently playing for Columbus in the NHL.

“It was overwhelming,” said Marottolo. “Players came back from every era. We had an alumni game earlier in the day. It was fitting that it was the first game here.

“It was a special night for every Pioneer.”

In two weeks, SHU will participate in the third annual Connecticut Ice Tournament, which features the four Division One teams from the Nutmeg State: Connecticut, Quinnipiac, Sacred Heart, and Yale.

Quinnipiac is hosting this year with future sites/hosts TBD.

“We plan to continue to rotate,” said Marottolo. “We have four great facilities with the new rink at UConn (which also opened last weekend).”

But the immediate focus for Marottolo’s team is this weekend’s series with Holy Cross, the first conference games at the new arena.

“Holy Cross is playing great right now,” said Marottolo. “They’re 5-1-1 in their last seven. We’re focused solely on league play right now and things are tightening up. Every spot is so crucial in terms of how the playoffs are structured this season.”

Hockey Humanitarian Award Foundation announces 15 nominees for 2023 honor

Union’s Josh Kosack addresses the crowd in Boston after being named the 2022 Hockey Humanitarian Award winner (photo: Jim Rosvold).

The Hockey Humanitarian Award Foundation today announced 15 nominees for the 2023 Hockey Humanitarian Award.

The award, which is celebrating its 28th season, is presented annually to college hockey’s finest citizen — a student-athlete who makes significant contributions not only to his or her team but also to the community-at-large through leadership in volunteerism.

The following are this year’s nominees:

Name, Cl., Pos., School, Hometown
Jacob Adkins/Andrew Walker, * Sr., F, UMass Boston, Centennial, Colo./Mason, Mich.
Michael D’Ambrosio, Gr., D, Assumption, Centreville, Md.
Brendan Furry, Sr., F, Minnesota State, Toledo, Ohio
Ryan Herpy, Sr., D, Albertus Magnus, Chagrin Falls, Ohio
Gabbie Hughes, * Sr., F, Minnesota Duluth, Lino Lakes, Minn.
Ryan Johnson, Sr., D, Minnesota, Irvine, Calif.
Jordan Keeley, * Gr., G, Saint Mary’s, St. Peter, Minn.
Alessio Luciani, Sr., F, Adrian, Toronto, Ont.
Emma Maltais, Gr., F, Ohio State, Burlington, Ont.
Spencer Meier, Sr., D, St. Cloud State, Sartell, Minn.
Hannah Price, * Jr., D, Rensselaer, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Will Rosen, Fr., F, Saint Anselm, Washington, D.C.
Addi Scribner, Sr., F, St. Cloud State, Woodbury, Minn.
Raice Szott, Jr., D, Merrimack, Daysland, Alta.
Sarah Thompson, Jr., F, Syracuse, Ottawa, Ont.

* Repeat finalist

Finalists for the 2023 Hockey Humanitarian Award will be announced in February. The 2023 recipient will be announced on Friday, April 7 during the NCAA Men’s Frozen Four weekend in Tampa, Fla.

Union’s Josh Kosack was honored as the 2022 Hockey Humanitarian Award recipient last year in Boston.

For more information, visit www.hockeyhumanitarian.org.

D-III East Hockey Game Picks – January 18, 2023

Matt Toporowski and the Mammoths look to stay atop the NESCAC standings with a key game against Hamilton on the schedule this weekend (Photo by Amherst Athletics)

The teams you expect to step up pretty much did so last week and while it was never easy or even pretty, the resulting wins continue to build confidence as the regular season and conference play heat up for the next month. Last week my picks came back down to earth from the prior week going 7-4-1 (.625) which brings my season total to  76-37-8 (.661). So just like the teams looking to get on a roll at the right time of the season, so too do I need to step up my game. Here are the picks as we hit the last month of the regular season:

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Morrisville v. Brockport

The Golden Eagles found a lot of offense against Franklin Pierce and now need to turn it on in SUNYAC play starting with the Mustangs in a mid-week game. Home ice is the difference in this one and it may take extra time to decide a winner – Brockport, 4-3

Thursday, January 19, 2023

Plymouth State v. Worcester State  

The Panthers are unbeaten in MASCAC play but right behind them at 7-2-0 are the Lancers who have had this game circled on the schedule for a while. The Lancers have not surrendered a goal in three games or lost in their last five games but face the league’s best and deepest offensive team. An empty-net goal provides insurance in a close game – Plymouth State, 4-2

Friday, January 20, 2023

University of New England v. Nichols

The Nor’easters are coming off a sweep to league-leading Endicott and need a bounce back weekend against the Bison who also suffered at the hands of Curry last week. Look for the road team to settle their game back and earn a much-needed win –  UNE, 3-1

Albertus Magnus v. Neumann

The Falcons are 13-5-1 so far this season as they pursue a 20-win campaign. Neumann always plays tough at home and the visitors will need Logan Bateman to be at this best to earn the win –         Albertus Magnus, 3-2

Amherst v. Hamilton

The Mammoth sit atop the NESCAC standings right now but face a hot Continentals team in what is always an entertaining travel partner game. Special teams have been key for the Mammoth who need a fast-start to keep a pesky Hamilton squad in check – Amherst, 3-2

(5) Norwich v. Skidmore

The Cadets are winning all the close ones which usually means great goaltending and opportunistic scoring. No surprise here the goal total  is low in a typical Cadet win backstopped by Drennen Atherton between the pipes – Norwich, 2-1

Southern New Hampshire v. Post

This Penmen and the Eagles need to get going following last weekend’s sweeps at the hands of Assumption and St. Michael’s respectively. Both teams are still looking for some consistency in their game and get a streak started. Friday is a good start for the Penmen – SNHU, 3-2

(6) Oswego v. Plattsburgh

Can you say déjà vu? Yes, it was only a couple of weeks ago that these two SUNYAC rivals played for a tournament title. Stakes are conference points this time around and those may be more important than a trophy come playoff time. Same result as last time in a familiar locale out but overtime needed – Oswego, 3-2

Saturday, January 21, 2023

(1) Hobart v. Elmira

The Statesmen picked up a big road win at Babson to complete a weekend sweep in NEHC play last weekend. The travel partner home-and-home series is always a battle with Elmira who will not need much motivation to want to knock-off their rival on home ice. It’s close but these are the type of game the  visitors are built for – Hobart, 2-1

Chatham v. Stevenson

Both teams have rounded into good form recently and are certainly striving to move up in the UCHC standings. The Mustangs make things very difficult on opposing teams at home and that is the case for the Cougars who come close but not close enough – Stevenson, 4-3

Hamilton v. (8) Geneseo

The Knights really want to get their game going entering the final month of the season and Hamilton will challenge them in all three zones. Special teams and some home-ice advantage enough to help earn a one-goal win – Geneseo, 4-3

Salve Regina v. (4) Endicott

The Seahawks have been playing good hockey and will have a great chance to benchmark their status against the top team in the CCC. The Gulls seem to be dangerous in any on-ice situation and take advantage of some special teams excellence to take a close contest – Endicott, 4-3

It now gets to the time where we are counting remaining games in single digits approaching late January. Time to get it going men! – “Drop the Puck!”

This Week in CCHA Hockey: Postgame Diamond Cutter celebrations becoming more prevalent as Bowling Green gains more victories

JESS

If you’ve ever followed Bowling Green’s hockey social media account, you’ll notice an odd tradition. They call it “The Diamond Cutter:”

Every time the Falcons complete a weekend series sweep, longtime BGSU equipment manager Scott “Scooter” Jess leaps off a cooler in the locker room and does a wrestling move inspired by former WWE and WCW superstar “Diamond” Dallas Page.

Scooter is always egged on by the entire Falcons team. Usually, he gets high fives and chest bumps.

Occasionally, he will invite other fans into the mix.

It’s a goofy, fun ritual – squarely in time-honored tradition of “Dudes Rock.”

“Everybody that follows social media can see right there how excited our players get when we win that second game on the weekend and they start the ‘Scoot’ chant, and he gets going, and then he just, I don’t know what happens, transforms or has some sort of out of body experience or something like that,” BGSU coach Ty Eigner said of the team’s post-sweep custom. “It’s been neat to give people the opportunity to see what our guys see and feel it.”

The Falcons have recently shown their fans a lot of the Diamond Cutter this past month. Their home sweep of Bemidji State this past weekend was their third in a row, and followed sweeps of RPI and Lake Superior State in the two previous weekends.

“You know how hard it is to sweep in college hockey, and we’ve been fortunate enough to string together three in a row here,” Eigner said. “So when you do that, winning fixes a lot of ailments, individually and collectively.”

It’s been a nice reversal of fortunes for Bowling Green (14-12-0, 11-7-0 CCHA), who ended the first half of the season on the other end of sweeps at the hands of Minnesota State and Ohio State. The Buckeyes outscored the Falcons 14-6 over the two legs of their home-and-home series, while BG managed to score just three goals against the Mavericks.

Coming back from the break, the Falcons seemed to have improved their scoring touch – they’ve averaged 4.5 goals per game during this six-game win streak. That could partly be due to the fact that RPI and LSSU are in the bottom third of the Pairwise rankings compared to Ohio State (No. 6) and Minnesota State (No. 15). But goals are still goals, and they build confidence. And besides, BG’s problem this season really hasn’t been scoring – their 3.4 goals per game are the most in the CCHA.

“We have players that are capable, and we’ve had different stretches over the course of the first half where we have scored goals,” Eigner said. And, case-in-point: Austen Swankler leads the league with 36 points while Ryan O’Hara is tied with three other players for second in scoring with 25 points. In all, five of the top 11 scorers in the CCHA so far are BG players.

“The thing we’ve been most focused on is giving up less goals, and they go hand-in-hand,” Eigner said about BGSU’s defensive record, which has been mediocre. They have given up 3.12 goals a game. “If we defend better, that means we spend less time in our own end and we can get to the offensive zone, which is a lot more fun and guys enjoy that part a lot better. [In the past six games] we’ve defended better, which leads to us playing in the offensive zone and scoring more.”

The consecutive wins against Lake Superior State and Bemidji State also allowed the Falcons to earn some valuable conference points and move into first place in the CCHA standings – if only temporarily. BG has 35 points through 18 games played and is five points ahead of second-place Minnesota State and seven ahead of third-place Michigan Tech. However, both the Mavericks and the Huskies have played just 16 games while Bemidji State and Ferris State (in fourth and fifth place) are also in striking distance and have played only 14 games each.

In other words, the Falcons do not control their own destiny when it comes to a possible CCHA championship.

“Everybody’s looking at the standings, let’s be honest. Everybody knows where we sit,” Eigner said. “What we’ve tried to talk about with our team is, we’re going to take it weekend by weekend, because there are two weekends where we won’t play, and we won’t have the opportunity to earn points on this weekend where other teams will.”

The Falcons travel to Minnesota this weekend when they will take on St. Thomas. They already swept the Tommies in their earlier season series in Ohio, but both games were hard-fought 3-2 wins. And St. Thomas is coming off a signature road victory against Michigan Tech.

“We’ve played as many league games as anybody, so teams are going to have an opportunity to catch us and we need to make sure that in the remaining CCHA series we have, we’ve got to do the best we can to get as many points as possible,” Eigner said. “It’s important to bank as many of those points as we can.”

This Week in NCHC Hockey: Despite losing two teeth against St. Cloud State, Colorado College netminder Mbereko ‘has arguably been our best player all year’

Kaidan Mbereko makes a save earlier this season against Minnesota Duluth (photo: Casey B. Gibson).

It’s usually before Christmas, not after, when you hear about missing front teeth.

Don’t tell Colorado College freshman goaltender Kaidan Mbereko about that, though, or Tigers coach and former Union and professional goalie Kris Mayotte. They’ve now both lost teeth during games, after getting hit in just the right spots on their masks.

Mbereko and backup Matt Vernon combined for 42 saves Friday in CC’s 4-2 upset win at third-ranked St. Cloud State. Mbereko made 20 saves in the first period and had to leave the game late in the second after an SCSU shot broke his two front teeth.

“One completely broke off, and the other was cracked all the way through but still hanging there, so he had to get those taken care of first,” Mayotte said. “The puck hit where the top of the chin meets the bottom of the cage. If it hits you in the right spot, it pushes that part of the mask where your mouth is back into your teeth.

“St. Cloud’s team doctors came over, and we got an appointment where he went to the dentist at 9 a.m. Saturday. They put in two fillings on top, so he had two half teeth, and now that we’ve got back to Colorado Springs, he gets more extensive dental work done. He’s going to get a second opinion on Thursday in terms of how deep the crack on one of them goes to see if he needs a root canal or not, but as of right now, they just put crowns on them.”

The efforts of Mbereko and Vernon weren’t all that led to what Mayotte called the Tigers’ most gritty win from his year and a half to date at CC.

Co-captain and top-two defenseman Bryan Yoon missed most of the game after a blocked shot forced him to seek X-rays on what ended up being a bone bruise in his knee. Fourth-line winger Ray Christy also missed time, but in the end, two Tyler Coffey goals and strong performances in net and by CC’s remaining five defensemen gave the Tigers a fourth win from their last five games.

Mbereko was back between the pipes Saturday, and made 23 saves. CC lost 4-0, but Mayotte felt the final score was indicative of how most of the game went. Three St. Cloud goals in the final 10:04 put the hosts out of sight.

Mayotte heralded Mbereko’s resiliency in a time where, across the world of sports, treatment of head injuries has mainly changed for the better.

“I remember this happening to me, I think in my first year of pro, and I turned around to the ref and showed him my tooth and said, ‘Hey, I lost my tooth,’ and he said, ‘Well, there’s nothing I can do about it,’ so I put my mask back down and kept playing,” Mayotte said.

Hindsight helped him laugh as he finished the sentence.

“Fortunately, Vern has been really good this year when called upon,” Mayotte said. “Kaidan has arguably been our best player all year, so to lose him is a big blow, but we had ‘Vern’ ready to step up.”

And Vernon saw out a CC win Friday that snapped The Tigers’ 11-game skid against SCSU since Nov. 2019. Even better, at least for a day, the victory pulled CC level with the Huskies for second place in the NCHC standings.

“To beat a top-five team on the road, in and of itself, is something we hadn’t been able to do,” Mayotte said of a CC team that is on pace for its winningest season in a decade. “That was a big win, but to find a way to do it the way that we did and have a next-man-up mentality where we had the guys step up was really impressive.

“It was (junior defenseman Chase) Foleys’ first game back from an injury, and on St. Cloud’s (Olympic-sized) rink, our plan was to limit him to 15, 17 minutes, and when we went down to five ‘D’ right away, we had guys who we asked a lot of, but they all rose the occasion, and Vern came in cold but was great for us.

“It was one of those games where the team proved something to themselves that they weren’t sure they had in them,” Mayotte continued. “When you’re trying to build a program, confidence and belief are huge parts of what you can accomplish, and to that end, Friday was huge for us.”

St. Thomas announces record-breaking $75 million gift for multiuse arena, goal to break ground in 2024

The Lee and Penny Anderson Arena will soon be home to the St. Thomas men’s and women’s hockey teams (rendering: St. Thomas Athletics).

The $75 million Lee and Penny Anderson Arena will soon be the new home for St. Thomas hockey and basketball.

The single largest monetary gift ever given to a Minnesota university will bring hockey onto campus for the first time at St. Thomas.

St. Thomas on Tuesday announced the $75 million lead naming gift from Lee and Penny Anderson of Naples, Fla. – two long-standing benefactors of Minnesota’s largest private university – to construct a multiuse, on-campus arena in St. Paul that will be home to its Division I men’s and women’s hockey and basketball programs. The donation is one of the 10 largest known collegiate athletics gifts ever received nationally.

Designs are still being finalized for the Lee and Penny Anderson Arena, but the historic gift officially kicks off fundraising to raise $131 million for the venue on the university’s south campus. Project costs are estimated to be $175 million. Partnering with design-build specialists Ryan Companies US, Inc. and Crawford Architects, St. Thomas aims to break ground on the new facility in 2024, with a target opening of fall 2025.

Aside from hockey and basketball games and hosting special events, the arena is being envisioned as the new home for St. Thomas commencement ceremonies, academic convocations, speakers, career fairs and other events for the university and broader community. The arena will also provide potential opportunities for St. Thomas to partner with local schools, youth sports organizations, nonprofits, businesses and other organizations.

“This is about more than just hockey and basketball games – this is a gift that will be transformative for our entire St. Paul campus, enhance the experience of our students, and raise visibility for the university as a whole,” said St. Thomas president Rob Vischer in a statement. “It also creates a new community and economic asset for the Twin Cities, the state of Minnesota, and the region.”

With their latest gift, the Andersons are officially the university’s largest donors, and the couple’s philanthropic efforts have played a major role in St. Thomas’ decades-long evolution from small, Catholic liberal arts college to comprehensive, national Catholic university with global impact. In 2010, for example, the university opened the Anderson Student Center as well as the Anderson Athletic and Recreation Complex (AARC), St. Paul campus centerpieces that have dramatically enhanced the student experience, and the Anderson Parking Facility (which will serve as the primary parking structure for guests of the new arena). The AARC’s Schoenecker Arena is the current home for Tommies basketball, which competes in the Summit League conference.

The basketball and hockey programs are among the university’s varsity sports portfolio that made history in 2021 as the first Division III institution in the modern NCAA era to transition directly to Division I athletics competition. Currently, both men’s and women’s hockey teams – which compete in the CCHA and WCHA, respectively – play at the St. Thomas Ice Arena (operated by Saint Thomas Academy) in Mendota Heights.

“For 138 years, St. Thomas has demonstrated commitment to excellence in all that it does, and this arena shows that same commitment to our Division I transition,” said Phil Esten, St. Thomas vice president for athletics. “Tommie hockey and basketball compete in some of the country’s best conferences, and this new arena will provide practice, competition and fan experiences expected of a Division I program. This gift helps St. Thomas to continue its upward trajectory in athletics and as an institution.”

The $75 million gift surpasses a previous $60 million donation made by the Andersons in 2007 for the construction of the Anderson Student Center, AARC and Anderson Parking Facility. At that time, the gift was the largest-ever single donation made to any university in Minnesota. In addition to being the largest gift in St. Thomas’ 138-year history, this latest donation is the ninth-largest known gift to college athletics nationally.

In total, the Andersons have donated nearly $140 million – including multiple gifts to scholarships and in support for veterans’ resources – to the mission-driven, Catholic university. In addition to St. Thomas, the couple is recognized as one of the largest benefactors at the United States Military Academy; Lee Anderson is a 1961 West Point graduate who served as a U.S. Army officer until 1964 when he returned to his native Twin Cities.

“Higher education is one of the world’s most important institutions because it truly has an ability to have a positive impact on the world, and the world needs St. Thomas’ students and graduates. For the first time ever, Minnesotans have a private university option for D-I caliber education and athletics and we’re proud to be part of making this vision a reality for young people in Minnesota and beyond,” Lee Anderson said.

“St. Thomas has a higher calling in that it develops graduates who are leaders with strong moral character who believe in the mission to serve the common good. These are the kinds of leaders the world needs now more than ever,” said Anderson. “Additionally, St. Thomas’ vision for this new arena is not only good for the university, but for all of St. Paul, the Twin Cities and Minnesota.”

In addition to contributing to nationwide initiatives supporting veterans, his legacy includes expanding St. Paul-based APi Group into a multibillion-dollar business with over 40 independently managed specialty construction companies in almost 300 locations worldwide.

Since officially transitioning from college to university in 1990, St. Thomas has opened new campuses in downtown Minneapolis and Rome, Italy, as well as several new facilities. But the evolution from liberal arts college to comprehensive university has encompassed more than buildings.

St. Thomas has also expanded its academic offerings by introducing engineering and law schools, as well as the nationally renowned Schulze School of Entrepreneurship, the Morrison Family College of Health and the Susan S. Morrison School of Nursing. It also founded its Racial Justice Initiative and its two-year Dougherty Family College serving underrepresented students with high financial need.

Shortly after its move to Division I athletics, St. Thomas also broke ground on what will be its largest academic building – the Schoenecker Center for science, technology, engineering, arts and math education. The new Lee and Penny Anderson Arena will be located just across the way from the Schoenecker Center, which is scheduled to open in 2024.

“Even though St. Thomas has been advancing knowledge, changing lives, and strengthening communities for 138 years, our culture of innovation and remarkable philanthropic support make clear: We’re just getting started,” Vischer said.

D-III Women’s West Week 11: Adrian shines with a pair of career milestones and St. Norbert makes a statement!

Adrian Head Coach Shawn Skelly gets career win #100 in the team’s win over Lawrence University this past weekend (Photo by Carly Costello)

Another weekend of career and personal milestones for coaches and players in the western region of D-III Women’s hockey. We also saw a team establish themselves with a key weekend sweep that will play a vital role as we make the late season push now that the last half of play is underway.

Adrian’s Head Coach Shawn Skelly gets #100!

Entering this past weekend, Adrian Head Coach Shawn Skelly had a career record of 98-16-7, he finished the weekend 100-16-7 (.841). Skelly, who had an impressive career at Adrian as a player from 2007-2011, racking up 229 points (102 goals, 127 assists) in 113 games, also playing at various pro levels for six years, eventually returned to his alma mater as an assistant coach for the women’s program in ‘16-’17 and then the men’s team in ‘17-’18. After taking the head coaching job with the women’s program in 2018, he’s had nothing but success. Winning 20+ games in his first four seasons as HC and is well on his way to a fifth consecutive year of 20+ as his Bulldogs sit at 14-1-0 and ranked #5 in the USCHO poll.

Looking back at when I spoke with Coach Skelly before the season started, he was very confident in the group he has this year consisting of many veteran players and leaders that can help get Adrian to the next level after their season ended in disappointing fashion last year. With their 14-1-0 start and some very winnable games (on-paper) ahead, this team could do some special things. Their biggest remaining matchups are NCHA games which happen to be their last two weekends of play, where they visit Aurora for a pair of games (2/10-2/11) and then head to St. Norbert 2/17-2/18). Those games will be crucial to see how the NCHA league standings pan out to determine conference tournament seeding.

Congratulations to Head Coach Shawn Skelly of Adrian on this impressive milestone of 100 career wins with many more to add to the column!

Adrian’s Une Bjelland gets career point #100!

Another Adrian Bulldog personal milestone from this past weekend, this time it’s Senior Une Bjelland. Bjelland, from Stavanger, Norway, who’s played on Team Norway since 2013 (WJC-18 D1, Olympic Games Qualification, & WC-D1A) tallied her 100th career point in the two-game series vs Lawrence where she and her team dominated in all aspects. Adrian won by scores of 14-0 & 9-0, but Bjelland racked up 8 points in game one (5 goals, 3 assists) & 5 points in game two (1 goal, 4 assists) for a total of 13 on the weekend. Currently, she has 104 points after starting her weekend with 91.

Adrian’s Une Bjelland gets her 100th career point in her 13-point weekend vs Lawrence University (Photo by Carly Costello, via Adrian Women’s Hockey on Instagram “@adrianwhockey”)

Une just didn’t want to give her coach all of the spotlight, so she decided to tally 13 points in one weekend to share the limelight with Coach Skelly, however, her play solidified his two wins, so it all worked out in the end for the two of them.

Adrian returns to play this weekend with a two-game series at home versus Finlandia University (1/20-1/21 at 3:30pm and 12:00pm ET).

St. Norbert makes an NCHA statement

St. Norbert entered the weekend 10-3-2, coming off a series split with #10 UW-Eau Claire. They had #12 Aurora in their crosshairs in a battle between two of the top three NCHA teams. The Green Knights swept the series, winning 2-0 & 3-2 on the road in Aurora. For anyone who overlooked St. Norbert, it’s time to face reality that they could be an NCAA tournament team this year. 3rd year Head Coach A.J. Aitken, coming off the program’s first ever 20-win campaign and NCHA conference championship appearance, is now on pace to set the program record for wins as his team sits at 12-3-2, ranked #15, which I’d argue should be higher considering their body of work compared to some of their counterparts in the rankings, but that’s neither here nor there.

St. Norbert sweeps NCHA foe Aurora this past weekend, winning 2-0 & 3-2 (Photo by Patrick Ferron)

In the two games vs Aurora, the point leaders were Natalie Hogan with 3 points (1 goal, 2 assists), Kelsey Ross with 2 points (1 goal, 1 assist), and Jordan Moore with 2 points (1 goal, 1 assist). Goaltender Brynn Waisman also had another stellar weekend, getting a pair of wins, recording a 27-save shutout and a 32 save victory to improve her overall record to 8-2-2. Norbert now sits atop the NCHA with an 8-0-0 record, with Adrian the only other team perfect in league play, sitting with a record of 6-0-0. These two teams meet in mid-February for the last weekend of regular season play in St. Norbert.

#15 St. Norbert takes the ice next versus Lake Forest College at home this weekend 1/20-1/21 at 7pm and 3pm CT.

Other Notable Results

#1 Gustavus swept Saint Benedict, winning 5-2 & 5-1.

#2 UW-River Falls swept UW-Stevens Point, winning 4-2 & 3-1, and also defeated St. Scholastica 5-1 earlier in the week on Tuesday.

#10 UW-Eau Claire swept UW-Superior, winning 3-1 & 3-0.

Trine swept Finlandia, winning 4-1 both games.

Hamline defeated St. Catherine’s 4-3 and tied 3-3 (St. Kates won the shootout 2-0).

TMQ: Will building new college hockey arenas become new trend as teams try to keep pace with one another?

Boston College and Sacred Heart opened SHU’s new Martire Family Arena last Saturday night (photo: Meg Stokes).

Each week during the season, we look at the big events and big games around Division I men’s college hockey in Tuesday Morning Quarterback.

Jim: Well, Ed, this weekend felt like a statement weekend for a few teams around college hockey and probably none more than Denver. After the Pioneers fell to Alaska two Friday’s ago, dropping them from the No. 1 spot in the polls, they had an impressive bounce back weekend with a pair of 7-0 victories over Miami.

That included a hat trick from Carter King on Friday and a four-goal game from Tristan Broz on Saturday. And for good measure, let’s throw in a pair of shutouts for Magnus Chrona, his second and third of the season.

After last weekend, you had to expect this result for a Pioneers team that is further cementing its spot atop the highly-competitive NCHC.

I know there were a handful of sweeps across college hockey this weekend, but to me this was the most impressive.

What do you think?

Ed: Jim, I think right up there with the Denver sweep has to be Western Michigan’s pair of road wins at North Dakota, getting revenge for giving up five NCHC points in Kalamazoo at the end of last semester.

While it has been a bit of a down year for the Fighting Hawks – though the host team put up a good fight on Saturday – what’s really impressive is the goal-scoring machine that is WMU. The Broncos lead the nation in goals per game and have scored 27 in their last four. Hobey hopeful Jason Polin has 21 tallies so far this campaign, including five hat tricks. His linemates, freshman Ryan McAllister (10-29–39) and Max Sasson (8-22–30) have combined for 102 points and are arguably the most potent line in D-I men’s hockey this season.

Minnesota State also picked up a couple of strong road wins over the weekend and it seems as it has righted the ship with four straight wins on what has been an up-and-down season. But the Mavericks’ victories last weekend came at the expense of Arizona State and that has all but ended the Sun Devils’ hopes for an at-large NCAA bid.

While it wasn’t a sweep, Michigan State got four points at home with a 3-2 Friday overtime win and a shootout point after a 4-4 tie the next night. Where do you see the Spartans right now in a very competitive Big Ten?

Jim: I’ve liked Michigan State all season, so it was nice to see Sparty get back to normal with its four-points versus Penn State, both games feeling like a win.

I think it is difficult when a team comes out of break, and coaching players that return after a 15-plus day hiatus from normal training and practice can be difficult. You never know what the first game or two will look like. The more difficult coaching scenario is when that expands into game three, four and five.

We’ve seen that this season with a team like Merrimack, which probably wishes the break never happened. Everything seemed perfect before the break for the Warriors. Then they needed overtime to survive against Dartmouth in the Ledyard Bank, and then got smoked by Providence twice and Brown.

Saturday night, though, the Warriors found a road back to normalcy and a 3-0 victory over Providence. Part of be believes that could right the ship for Merrimack.

But as I lay out this scenario, I also wonder what your thoughts are on how a break – whether it be 15-20 days or even longer for some school – can impact a team?

Ed: If you’re rolling along and have some momentum, then I think you want to keep playing. If you lose, then you want to get back on the ice and erase the memory.

On the other hand, if you have injuries, then a break can often help. But I know teams also can suffer on the ice if there’s not a weekend off at exam time in December. I mean, it’s only fair to allow student-athletes to be completely free to concentrate on academics.

We saw a few teams have more than a month off during this past semester break because of scheduling or weather issues. That’s too long. When I think back to the COVID-19 season of 2020-21, I remember coaches talking about the difficulty of keeping things fresh when there were long stretches with no games.

Three weeks or so seems about right. This is where holiday tournaments and exhibitions at semester break can come in handy.

Speaking of “fresh,” two programs opened new arenas last weekend: UConn and its new Toscano Family Ice Forum (kudos for keeping the “Ice Forum” nomenclature that the Huskies used at Freitas) and Sacred Heart’s new Martire Family Arena. Add in Mullett Arena at Arizona State and Colorado College’s Ed Robson Arena last season, and you’ve got four beautiful new venues for college hockey.

This is great for the sport and for the fans. But how do you think these new homes will affect – or have affected – these clubs?

Jim: Modern buildings are critical for this sport. Certainly, the two that opened this weekend along with Colorado College and Arizona State bring four brand new venues, something that could ease recruiting challenges for all four of these schools.

The reality is that student-athletes want THE best facilities, not just in which to play, but most importantly to train. The best weight facilities mean a lot of these players, which, to me, also doesn’t always mean a new building.

Let’s think of the aforementioned Michigan State. Munn Arena was old and dingy. But a well thought out renovation that included new locker rooms and training areas for the players makes this building one of the best. Retrofits often don’t work – sometimes they look like lipstick on a pig – bit a well-done retrofit can make a classic arena compete on a national level.

You must have a few buildings in your head that could be retrofit?

Ed: You’re putting me a little on the spot in naming names here, so I think I’ll point to some success stories first.

Three facilities that have had upgrades in the past several years include Rensselaer’s Houston Field House, St. Lawrence’s Appleton Arena, and a still-in-progress retrofit of Air Force’s Cadet Ice Arena. I only had to climb up into the rafters and catwalks a couple of times at RPI, though our colleague Jayson Moy broadcast for a number of years on a vertigo-inducing open grating above the benches.

It’s tough with historic buildings, such as Princeton’s century-old Hobey Baker Rink (where they’ve done a lot over the years) or Yale’s Eero Saarinen-designed Ingalls Ice Arena. I could see doing something at each of those, but I’m not sure how, though Yost Ice Arena at Michigan has done a great job keeping current every so often, starting with its conversion from a 50-year-old field house to an ice arena in 1973.

Improving facilities for the student athletes needs to be reviewed at every arena just to stay competitive, whether we’re talking about weight training, lounges, or dressing rooms. And amenities for fans also need upgrades periodically, whether it’s a massive video scoreboard like the one at Northeastern’s Matthews Arena (which was part of a multi-million dollar renovation), or LED lighting, better concessions, or just refreshed rest rooms.

Sometimes it’s just not possible to upgrade sufficiently. Union, for example, is working on a new facility to replace an aging rink.

There’s really a bit of an arena and facilities arms race going on that programs will need to participate in to stay competitive. Let’s hope it doesn’t get so heated that schools find it impossible to keep pace.

D-III West Hockey Weekend Wrap-up: Pipers extend win streak

Ryan Brandt helped lead Hamline to a victory over UW-Superior. (Photo by Carle Cheesebrough/Hamline Athletics)

Hamline highlighted its weekend with a pair of big non-conference wins, capping it off with a 2-1 overtime win over UW-Superior on Saturday. 

The Pipers have won their last five games and are now 8-6-1 on the season.

Ryan Brandt came through with the game-winning goal at the 1:05 mark of OT to lift the Pipers to their fifth win of the season over a WIAC opponent. Hamline finishes 5-1 against the WIAC this season.

Andrew Erwin scored in regulation for Hamline before C.J. Walker tied the game at 1-1.

Brandt then cashed in on a turnover by UW-Superior (10-6-1), going coast to coast with the puck before scoring from 10 feet away to give Hamline its third consecutive OT win over a WIAC opponent.

Keven Lake made 30 saves Hamine. Myles Hektor stopped 20 shots for the Yellowjackets.

One night earlier, the Pipers defeated UW-Eau Claire 3-2 in OT. 

Down 2-0 going into the third period, the Pipers struck for two goals in the final 20 minutes of regulation before Erik Dahl scored a little over three minutes into the extra session.

Brandt and Jackson Willie both scored in the third to force OT.

Cade Lemmer and Ian Carpenter had given the Blugolds (10-6)  a 2-0 lead in the second.

Johnnies stun Pointers

Bailey Huber was on top of his game Saturday night for Saint John’s. And that worked out well for the Johnnies.

The sophomore netminder made a career-best 41 saves and to help Saint John’s stun nationally ranked UW-Stevens Point, marking the first win for the program over the Pointers since November of 2007.

Peter Tabor, Spender Rudrud and Jack Johnson all scored goals for the Johnnies, with Johnson putting the Johnnies ahead for good at the 11:51 mark of the third period. It was the first goal of the season for Johnson and the 15th of his career.

The win is the ninth of the year for the Johnnies (9-6-2), who got a much-needed bounce-back win after losing 3-1 to UW-Stout the night before.

The Pointers (10-2-3), ranked 10th in the USCHO.com poll, got goals from Mick Heneghan and Fletcher Anderson. UW-Stevens Point defeated Concordia on Friday behind two goals from Andrew Poulias.

Royals earn split with Auggies

Bethel and Augsburg split a key MIAC series over the weekend, with the Royals winning the opener 4-1 before losing 3-2 to the Auggies in the finale on Saturday.

Friday’s victory for Bethel was its first over Augsburg since 2012. The Auggies came into the game ranked 12th in the nation.

Dylan Schneider gave Augsburg an early 1-0 lead before Dylan Giorgio tied it for Bethel.

Tyler Braccini put Bethel ahead for good late in the opening period.

Jack Bayless and Caydon Meyer added goals in the second and third periods, respectively, to seal the deal.

Bethel (9-7-1, 4-3-1) wasn’t as fortunate on Saturday as the Auggies (8-6-1, 4-2) scored twice in the third to secure the win.

Gavin Holland gave Augsburg the lead for good with 8:05 left in the game. 

Bethel is currently in fourth place in the MIAC standings. Augsburg is sixth. The teams are separated by three points.

Cardinals and Oles split series

St. Olaf salvaged its weekend MIAC series with Saint Mary’s, scoring five goals in the third period on their way to a 5-2 win on Saturday night.

The Cardinals (8-8-1, 4-4) had beaten the Oles (11-5-1, 5-3) 8-2 on Friday but couldn’t keep things rolling in their direction Saturday.

Matthew Pointer scored twice in the period, including the go-ahead goal while Sean Walsh, Troy Bowditch and Jonathan Panisa all scored as well in the third. Lukas Haugen made 32 saves, including 17 in the third, to help St. Olaf seal the deal.

In Friday’s game, the Cardinals jumped in front 4-0 after one period and never looked back. Brady Lindauer scored a pair of goals to pace the offense. The eight goals by Saint Mary’s were the most since the Cardinals scored eight against Hamline in February of 2014.

Saint Mary’s is in fifth place in the standings and St. Olaf is third.

Blugolds bounce back

After losing 3-2 to Hamline on Friday, UW-Eau Claire defeated St. Scholastica 6-3 on Saturday.

The Blugolds took control early with four goals in the first period.

Jordan Randall tallied a goal and two assist while Kyle Oleksiuk finished with a goal and an assist. Max Gutjahr won his 10th game of the season as he stopped 33 shots.

Carsen Richels led St. Scholastica with a goal and an assist.

The Blugolds improved to 10-5 while the Saints fell to 8-5-2.

Raiders split with Thunder

MSOE won its third consecutive game Friday night with a 2-1 overtime win over Trine in the first of two NCHA games against the Thunder. 

Kevin Paganini scored the game winner just under two minutes into the OT period. Jackson Hughes scored the other goal for the Raiders, won won despite being outshot 29-18.

On Saturday, Trine avenged the loss with a 5-2 win, scoring three goals in the second period. 

Five different players scored goals for the Thunder and Thad Marcola dished out three assists. Kyle Kozma made 22 saves.

MSOE is now 11-6 overall and 6-4 in the NCHA. Trine is 12-6-1 overall and 7-5 in conference play. 

Green Knights record sweep

St. Norbert finished off a sweep of Lake Forest on Saturday with a 5-2 win. The Green Knights improved to 11-5-1 overall and 8-2 in the conference.

The No. 9 Green Knights scored twice three times in the third to seal the deal after earning a 3-1 win in Friday’s opener.

Michael Spethmann scored twice and dished out an assist in Saturday’s victory. Ben Schmidling added a goal and two assists. Liam Fraser tallied three assists.

Bulldogs dominate Lions

Third-ranked Adrian cruised past Finlandia over the weekend by the scores of 6-0 and 7-1.

Hunter Wendt scored twice in Friday’s shutout win. Ryan Pitoscia also scored a pair of goals. Riley Murphy punched in two goals in Saturday’s game while Jackson Bernard made his collegiate debut and made five saves.

Adrian is 14-2-1 overall and 8-2 in the NCHA after the sweep.

 

Spartans sweep Falcons

Aurora scored four times in the opening period on Saturday and rolled to a 6-1 win. 

Adam Keyes scored a goal and dished out two assists while Gio Procopio came through with two assists in the win. 

The seventh-ranked Spartans are now 14-3-2 overall and remain unbeaten in NCHA play with a 10-0-2 record. Kolby Thornton made 35 saves in the victory, the fifth in a row for the Spartans.

The game was much closer on Friday as Concordia scored four times in the third to make things interesting late. Aurora held on for a 6-5 win.

Keyes record the 100th point of his Aurora career in the win off a power-play goal. Carson Riddle scored his first career goal for the Spartans. Keyes, meanwhile, is the first player in Aurora history to get to the 100-point mark.

The Falcons tied the game in the first 10 minutes of the third before Jacob Brockman scored the go-ahead goal.

Quinnipiac remains No. 1 team in USCHO.com Division I Poll as Bobcats pick up 39 first-place votes

Quinnipiac players celebrate a recent goal against Harvard (photo: Rob Rasmussen).

With 39 first-place votes this week, Quinnipiac remains the top-ranked team in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

Minnesota is again No. 2, getting six first-place votes, while Denver moves up one to sit third, picking up four first-place votes, and St. Cloud State drops one spot to No. 4 and collects the last first-place vote.

USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll – Jan. 16, 2023

Boston University rises two to No. 5, Penn State falls one to No. 6, Ohio State jumps up one to No. 7, Michigan falls two spots to No. 8, Harvard holds steady at No. 9, and Western Michigan moves up two slots to sit 10th this week.

Merrimack falls out of the top 10, dropping one spot to No. 11, and RIT is the lone unranked team of a week ago to be in the top 20 this week, coming in at No. 20.

In addition to the top 20 teams, 11 other teams received votes in this week’s rankings.

The USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll is compiled weekly and consists of 50 voters, including coaches and media professionals from across the country. Media outlets may republish this poll as long as USCHO.com is credited.

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