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NCAA Division I Council votes to increase men’s, women’s hockey coaches to four per team, effective July 1

NCAA allowing athletes’ uniforms to include patches supporting social justice issuesThe NCAA Division I Council took steps to modernize a number of rules Wednesday at the NCAA Convention in San Antonio, Tex., including modifying personnel rules across several sports.

The council voted to eliminate the voluntary coach designation across Division I, instead including those coaches within a new limit for countable coaches in each of the applicable sports.

By adopting the proposal, the number of countable coaches in baseball, softball and ice hockey increased to four total in each sport. The council rejected an additional increase to five countable coaches in those sports.

The coaching limits rules take effect July 1.

Watch list of 27 players announced for 2023 National Women’s Goalie of the Year award

Northeastern goalie Aerin Frankel led the Huskies to the 2021 Frozen Four title game against Wisconsin (photo: Jim Pierce).

The Women’s Hockey Commissioners Association has announced a watch list of 27 goaltenders who will vie for the title of 2023 National Women’s Goalie of the Year.

The award was created in 2021 to recognize the top female goalie in NCAA Division I hockey.

Northeastern’s Aerin Frankel, who graduated in 2022, was the recipient in the first two years the award was presented.

The goalies to watch come from all five NCAA Division I conferences with 12 from the United States, nine from Canada and six from Europe (two from Sweden and one each from Finland and Germany, Norway, Slovenia and Switzerland).

The conference offices have come up with this initial list of outstanding goalies. A committee of voters — made up of a cross section of coaches, administrators, and media — will pare this list down within the next two weeks and then ultimately choose the winner who will be announced in March during the NCAA Frozen Four.

2022-23 Women’s Goalie of the Year Award Watch List

CHA
Josie Bothun, Penn State (JR – Wyoming, MN)
Sarah Coe, RIT (SO – Brooklin, ON)
Arielle DeSmet, Syracuse (GR – Charlotte, VT)
Carly Greene, Sacred Heart (SO – Minnetonka, MN)
Ena Nystrom, Mercyhurst (SR – Stavenger, Norway)

ECAC Hockey
Logan Angers, Quinnipiac (GR – Winnipeg, MB)
Cate Boudiette, Quinnipiac (JR — Redding, CT)
Pia Dukaric, Yale (SO — Ljubljana, Slovenia)
Hannah Murphy, Colgate (SO — Bradford, ON)
Michelle Pasiechnyk, Clarkson (JR — Ottawa, ON)
Kayle Osborne, Colgate (JR – Westport, ON)

Hockey East
Sandra Abstreiter, Providence (5th – Friesing, Germany)
Andrea Brandli, Boston University (GR — Zurich, Switzerland)
Tia Chan, UConn (SO – Hamilton, ON)
Nicky Harnett, New Hampshire (SR – Plymouth, MN)
Abigail Levy, Boston College (GR — Congers, NY)
Jesse McPherson, Vermont (JR – Chatham, ON)
Gwyneth Philips, Northeastern (SR – Athens, OH)

NEWHA
Molly Elmore, Sacred Heart (JR – Newburyport, MA)
Jill Hertl, Franklin Pierce (FR – Highland Park, IL)
Tindra Holm, Long Island U. (SO — Skelleftea, Sweden)
Allie Kelley, Saint Anselm (SR – East Berne, NY)
Hannah Zukow, Stonehill, SO (Unionville, ON)

WCHA
Raygan Kirk, Ohio State (SR – Ste. Anne, MB)
Cami Kronish, Wisconsin (SR – New York, NY)
Emma Söderberg, Minnesota Duluth (GR – Järved, Sweden)
Skylar Vetter, Minnesota (SO — Lakeville, MN)

Ohio State’s Rohlik talks this season’s Buckeyes, Big Ten: USCHO Spotlight Season 5 Episode 10

Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined by Ohio State head coach Steve Rohlik to discuss this season’s Buckeyes, Big Ten hockey, last weekend’s sweep of Michigan State and this coming weekend’s series at Michigan.

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 NCHC Hockey: No satisfaction for Omaha with Mavericks aiming for higher goals in second half of ’22-23 campaign

Omaha players celebrate a goal in their 5-2 win over St. Lawrence on Dec. 31 (photo: Bonnie Ryan).

It’s been a mixed bag of a season so far for Omaha, but entering the second half, coach Mike Gabinet is taking a glass-half-full approach.

Half the NCHC had last week off, including Omaha (9-9-2), and that might’ve been a good thing for the Mavs following a tough home series Dec. 30-31 against nonconference foe St. Lawrence.

UNO dropped a 2-1 overtime decision in the opener following a questionable non-call around the defensive blue line in the lead-up to the Saints’ winning goal, but on New Year’s Eve, the Mavericks got their own backs in a 5-2 win. Five different UNO players scored as their team ended a three-game skid.

By and large, it was a good first series back for UNO, and not just on the ice. The series opener with St. Lawrence drew the Mavericks’ biggest home crowd in four years, and after the Dec. 31 victory over the Saints, fans were invited to stick around inside Baxter Arena to ring in the new year with their team.

“It was great both nights, great to see so many people out on Friday and Saturday night,” Gabinet said. “After the (second) game, (it was good) to have a big win and get to celebrate with the fans, have that interaction with the fans that I think, for the last few years, we haven’t been able to do as much.

“The thing about our program is there are great people in the program, so any time the guys get to interact with the fanbase and lots of young kids, it’s great to see so many people out there enjoying the evening with our players.”

UNO was off last week after the St. Lawrence series, and that allowed some healing time for what Gabinet said were four or five Mavericks that were banged up. It’s back to the grindstone now, though, and a six-game homestand continues this weekend against Minnesota Duluth before Miami arrives.

“It was a long break, and a quick turnaround after Christmas to get ready to play,” Gabinet said. “It’s nice now to really push the players and work extremely hard here and to make sure we’re ready to go here for conference play.”

It’s all conference games from here on in until the postseason, and although UNO would have home ice in the first round of the NCHC playoffs if they started today, the Mavericks want to build on their 4-5-1 league record.

But, Gabinet doesn’t want them to lose sight of what they’ve accomplished thus far.

“There’s things we have to get better at, there’s no question,” Gabinet said. “There’s areas of growth, you have to take the feedback from the games you play, and look to get better. You can’t get satisfied.

“You have to believe in yourself and keep pushing and keep working. We have a great group of players in there, great staff, and everybody’s working as hard as they can. Nobody wants us to do well more than that group of guys in there.

“You just have to keep going there, and reflect on the good things you’ve done, too,” Gabinet continued. “We’ve had some big-time wins this year and some great series, and that’s not easy to do. Sometimes you have to reflect on the positives just as much as the areas you have to get better at.”

D-III East Hockey Game Picks – January 11, 2023

UNE’s Billy Girard IV and Alex Sheehy will be focused against the No. 4 ranked Endicott Gulls in a pivotal two-game series this weekend (Photo By David Bates)

The USA, represented by D-III players opens tournament action today at the World University Games in Lake Placid, NY. That means many rosters will be without some key players –  like we need any more spice to the schedule being played out over the next couple of weeks (assuming the USA makes the medal round). Last week my picks were a stellar 11-2-1 (.821) which helps bring the season total to 69-33-7 (.665) – 70% success rate is not out of reach with some consistency going forward. I am pulling picks forward one day this week so here are the picks as we hit mid-January:

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Canton v. Potsdam

Both teams are coming off great performances against ranked opponents from the past weekend and are very familiar with each other having played three times this season to date. Home team has taken all the decisions so far and while this is not Maxcy Rink, the Bears find a way to take the “W” –       Potsdam, 4-3

Thursday, January 12, 2023

Fitchburg State v. Framingham State

The Falcons have not been firing on all cylinders yet after the semester break and shouldn’t look past the Rams who can and have surprised teams already this season. Time to play like the playoffs are imminent because they are and seeding does matter in MASCAC. Falcons fly  – Fitchburg State, 5-3

Worcester State v. Westfield State

The Lancers are 5-2-0 in conference play and coming off a strong 6-0 win over St. Anselm on Saturday. Jakob Kulik has been impressive in goal and the offense has seen a number of different players contributing each game. No V2 in goal for the Owls due to the WUG which helps the visitors to a win – Worcester State, 4-2

Friday, January 13, 2023

(4) Endicott v. (14) University of New England  

The Nor’easters are coming off a break this past weekend while the Gulls took a non-conference win over Connecticut College. Much more at stake in this contest and it is the home team in front of Billy Girard IV that takes a win in OT –  UNE, 2-1

Plattsburgh v. Middlebury

The rivalry goes back a long way and generally that means throwing out the records on both sides. In this case, the Panthers have seen their share of struggles this season including being winless on home ice so far. The Cardinals will want to get an early jump and they do to earn a nice road win – Plattsburgh, 3-2

Bowdoin v. Wesleyan

Both teams are very much in the mix in the NESCAC standings and a battle for a home-ice playoff berth which makes the head-to-head matchups even more important come tiebreakers. Going out on a limb but think that Bobby Pearl and company find a way to get past the Cardinals – barely – Bowdoin, 3-2

Manhattanville v. Nazareth

The Valiants are looking to rebound and the Golden Flyers are thrilled to be playing at home to kick-off UCHC play in the second half. Expect this one to be close and a physical battle with the home team taking advantage of a late power play – Nazareth, 3-2

Post v. St. Michael’s

This NE-10 match-up has all the ingredients for some fun hockey. Look for the visitors to push hard in an effort to gain ground on the teams above them in the conference standings. You can’t sweep a weekend series if you don’t win on Friday night. Step one complete –  Post, 3-2

Saturday, January 14, 2023

(1) Hobart v. (11) Babson

The Statesmen dropped a close one at Norwich despite outshooting the Cadets and like many top teams this week play not only without players representing the USA at the World University Games but also their head coach. The Beavers best be ready  for a defensive battle with great goaltending required at both ends –  Hobart, 2-1

Wilkes v. Arcadia

The Colonels showed some glimpses that their game was coming together before the semester break and now really need to but some points up if they want to move up in the UCHC standings. It’s closer than they would like but a win is a win – Wilkes, 4-3

Western New England v. Salve Regina

The Seahawks have found their goaltender in transfer Anthony Del Tufo and they will need him to win a close one against a very energetic and determined WNE squad. One save is the difference, and the home team gets it – Salve Regina, 4-3

Anna Maria v. Rivier

The two independent teams played some very good hockey and if this one goes the way several AmCat games have gone of late expect an overtime thriller in New Hampshire on Saturday night. It does and visitors steal one –  AMC, 4-3

A lot of different dimensions and elements in play this weekend either with players on the ice or coaches behind the bench with many of D-III’s best playing for their country in the World University Games. Next man up never more important – “Drop the Puck!”

This Week in CCHA Hockey: Speed, willingness to adjust to change big part of Ferris State’s MacLaren succeeding on Bulldogs’ back end

Brenden MacLaren has compiled nine points so far this season for Ferris State (photo: Ferris State Athletics).

The knot in his stomach when Brenden MacLaren initially took the ice as a defenseman in a real college game is something that he won’t easily forget.

“I remember my first couple games there were a couple times where I’m like, ‘Holy crap, there’s a forward on Mankato ripping full speed down the ice at me,’” the Ferris State senior said. “It’s kind of like a deer-in-the-headlights moment.”

MacLaren, who came to Big Rapids as a speedy, scrappy center, had only ever played defense in one game – an emergency situation during his first year in junior hockey when three or four of his Janesville Jets teammates went down with injury and illness. That game gave him a little taste of what was to come in his college career.

After MacLaren spent his first two collegiate seasons in and out of the lineup as a fourth-line forward, Ferris State coach Bob Daniels noticed something about MacLaren – he could really skate. The Bulldogs, going through something of a personnel crisis last season, needed another defenseman, and Daniels was convinced MacLaren could be the answer.

“He was a good, hard-nosed type player, but for whatever reason, it never seemed to click for him up front,” Daniels said. “Then we went through a situation where we were a little thin on defensemen with injuries and so forth, and I just asked him one day in practice, ‘Will you be a ‘D’ in practice? But I really want you to try this, not just go through the motions.’ We’ve done it with other players in the past, and sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn’t, but for him, almost immediately, his skating allowed him to play well on defense.”

As it turns out, since making the conversion, MacLaren has been one of the Bulldogs’ most reliable blueliners. He’s played in every one of Ferris’ 20 games this season and Daniels now trusts him to play on both the power play and the penalty kill.

Not bad for a player that, less than two years ago, was still fighting to stay in the lineup as a forward.

“It was a pretty crazy transition,” he said. “I’ve played forward my whole life. But I’ve kind of always been known, when I was a centerman, for playing good defense and not getting scored on. Because that was one of the things I hated most, was getting scored on. I’m still learning as I go, pretty much, but I think what helps a lot is how close our team is, especially our ‘D’ corps. I’m learning a lot from those guys, ‘cause they’ve played defense their whole careers. And our ‘D’ coach, Mark Hoffman, has done a great job helping me make that transition.

“I think the hardest part of changing positions would be, say there’s a turnover in the neutral zone or a quick transition, my gap control is by far the hardest thing to learn. Knowing when to turn out on a guy, when to step up, when to not, when to take your ice back. It’s hard because mainly when you’re playing up front you’re always skating forward, never backwards much.”

MacLaren also credits fellow defenseman Matt Slick with helping him improve at his position. Slick, who transferred in from Holy Cross this season, played more than 120 games for the Crusaders before coming to Big Rapids and is, along with MacLaren, a co-captain.

“We knew right when he got here, he was a great fit. He’s a great kid, a great leader,” MacLaren said of Slick. “I watch his game a lot to help my game because he’s played his position his whole life and he’s very good at it.”

One other ironic aspect of MacLaren’s move: He’s scored more as a defender than he did as a center. This year he’s got nine points (two goals and seven assists), adding to 5 a season ago. In his first two seasons, he had six points combined.

“That’s the one thing I was pleasantly surprised about, is that offensively, the numbers started to come for him,” Daniels said. “With the game in front of him, it actually opened things up and made him a better offensive player. Now all of a sudden, he’s on the penalty kill, he’s on the power play unit, and in a lot of ways, it’s really changed his game.”

It’s been a big part of why the Bulldogs (9-9-2, 6-5-1 CCHA) are having something of a resurgence following a few tough years. MacLaren was there for the infamous one-win campaign just two seasons ago.

“I think last year we obviously took a big step from our one-win season,” he said. “We could kind of start to feel it in the locker room in certain games. Last year there were moments where we had a lead on a team, and they’d score one to tie it, and the key moments in the game we would let slip away from us.

“This year we’ve got a really mature group. It seems like we finally know how to win. In my four years here, we didn’t really know how to win. This year we’ve taken an important step. It definitely helps coming in to work every day in practice knowing you’ve got a really good chance to win on a Friday night.”

The Bulldogs have yet to be swept this year and are sitting in good shape in the CCHA standings. They’re currently in the thick of a race for, at the very least, home ice in the first round of the playoffs and aren’t actually too far away from first place in the conference. And with a second-half schedule that features series against conference front-runners Bemidji State, Minnesota State and Michigan Tech – all at Ewigleben Arena – MacLaren and the Bulldogs like their chances.

“I think we want to focus on getting home ice,” MacLaren said. “Nobody likes coming and playing at our rink. But it’s really nice that we play all those teams at home, so that will definitely help our odds there. I’m confident going into any game with this group that we have. I think teams are starting to acknowledge that we’re not the same team we’ve had the last couple years, that’s for sure.”

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Dawning on retirement as conference commissioner, DeGregorio reflects on accomplishments over years

Bob DeGregorio has been involved in college athletics for the past 40 years (file photo).

Last April, Atlantic Hockey commissioner Bob DeGregorio announced that this season, his 20th, would be his last at the helm.

He will also retire as commissioner of the College Hockey America women’s conference, which he has led for 13 years.

At age 76, and after 40 years in college athletics, DeGregorio said that it was time.

“I’ve been blessed to work with great people,” said DeGregorio. “Athletic directors, coaches, and administrators who had the best interests of college hockey in mind. We didn’t always agree on everything, but we all wanted the same thing.”

DeGregorio is the league’s first and only commissioner, which started out as part of the Metro Atlantic Conference in 1998 and transitioned to the hockey-only AHA in 2003.

During his tenure, the league’s profile has changed dramatically, from the list of members (two schools dropped hockey, two more left for other conferences, and four schools were added) to the number of scholarships (from 11 to 18) to the construction of three on-campus areas and the upgrades in facilities at virtually every other school.

When asked for some of the major challenges he’s faced in the past 20 seasons, DeDregorio pointed to two that stood out.

“The formation of the league,” he said. “And, of course, COVID.

“Initially, getting the original schools together was a challenge. Deciding on budgets, scholarships, and bylaws.

“And COVID was the worst experience in my career. I’m so proud of how we all managed it, but it was tough. “We were dealing with different rules in the various counties and states that changed all the time. We had a conference call every Sunday to review the changes and then see which teams were able to play based on that and their testing status. We were shuffling the deck and making the schedule on the fly. Everyone rallied, unbelievably, to make sure that we could play games and have a tournament.”

DeGregorio says that two expansions, the addition of Air Force and Rochester Institute of Technology in 2006 and Niagara and Robert Morris in 2010, were crucial to the conference’s profile.

“They made the league better,” he said. “They elevated what we were trying to do.”

DeGregorio says that he’ll always remember the spirit of cooperation that he felt among the conference’s athletic directors and coaches.

“Some of the changes, like increasing scholarships, which I think is very important to our league being on a level playing field, didn’t benefit everyone,” he said. “But all the schools supported it. Air Force and Army can’t offer scholarships and RIT couldn’t at the time, either. But they stepped up because they knew it would make the league better.”

The commissioner didn’t always get his way. A recent example was the new playoff format, which leaves two teams out of the postseason.

“I think with an unbalanced schedule, it’s not right (to exclude teams),” he said. “I hope that gets reversed at some point.”

When asked what he’d like to see happen under a new commissioner, DeGregorio mentioned a couple of things.

“Expansion to 12 teams,” he said. “And getting another (Atlantic Hockey) team into the NCAA tournament. I think both will happen, it’s just a matter of when. Twelve teams gives you the opportunity for a balanced schedule and postseason.”

DeGregorio isn’t a fan of the transfer portal and hopes that its emphasis decreases in the coming years.

“It’s basically free agency,” he said. “(The portal) has its purpose in some situations to improve the experience for a player, but I think as it exists today, it’s not good for the sport.”

So while there’s a feeling of accomplishment for DeGregorio, there’s also some unfinished business that part of him would still like to tackle.

“Sometimes I wish instead of 76 I was 27,” he said. “So I could do it all over again.”

Century Club

On Jan. 5, Sacred Heart forward Austin Magera scored his 100th career point, a goal, in a 5-0 win against Army West Point.

Currently, the Century Club in Atlantic Hockey consists of just Magera. This is despite several players, including Magera, getting an extra year of eligibility due to Covid.

A few other players are approaching the 100-point mark, including Magera’s teammates Ryan Steele (89) and Braeden Tuck (83).

TMQ: Looking at PairWise numbers, remembering game’s simpler times, what NCAA should do to keep improving college hockey

Cam Thiesing looks to make a play during Ohio State’s weekend sweep over Michigan State (photo: Jay LaPrete).

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.

Dan: Greetings to all of our readers, and a special Happy New Year to you all…and especially Happy New Year to my cohost for the week. It’s been a wild couple of weeks, but I’m thrilled just to be back and discussing hockey with you again, Paula.

As of our conversation yesterday, the most recent USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll is out, and as expected after Denver’s split with Alaska, we have a new No. 1 team. This time, it’s Quinnipiac, which finally broke the western stranglehold with its weekend sweep of Dartmouth and a Harvard team now ranked ninth. The Bobcats are 12-0 in ECAC Hockey play and unbeaten in 16 straight games. They haven’t lost their last five games against ranked teams (shoutout Cameron Boon and the QU sports information staff for those numbers via the Bobcats’ Twitter account this weekend).

Ordinarily, I’d start with a conversation about Quinnipiac in general, but I want to actually take a different approach this week because we’re in the second half of the year and, well, we have a lot of ground to cover today. If you looked at the poll, Quinnipiac is No. 1 with Minnesota, St. Cloud and Denver ranking 2-3-4. Penn State is fifth. Boston University is sixth.

If you look at the Pairwise Rankings, Minnesota is first, Quinnipiac second, with St. Cloud, Penn State, Denver going 3-4-5 and a tie between Michigan and Ohio State (ha, irony!) before BU sits eighth and Harvard ninth.

Basically, the PairWise and the national poll are starting to line up against one another. Normally, I discredit the PWR for being too devoid of emotion and not taking into account how teams look. A bad loss here or an unexpected win there can really throw those numbers off, especially when the season is still in its toddler stage, but it feels like the voters are capturing exactly how college hockey is lining up. The teams receiving top votes are backed up by the numbers this time, and the numbers are reflective of where voters think teams belong.

How have you seen things line up? Are these teams that are respected on both sides really that good, even though we all understand that things can change on a dime in the next month?

Paula: Dan, my friend, it’s good to be talking college hockey with you again – especially when you use words like “stranglehold” to describe any reference to western hockey.

You’ve asked two really good questions here and I will address them, but first I want to address an underlying assumption in your opener, that the “teams that are receiving top votes are backed” by the PWR, and that “the numbers are reflective of where voters think teams belong.”

While we are seeing more of an alignment between the poll and the PWR, couldn’t the opposite of what you’re saying be true, that voters are looking more at the PWR and that the data is influencing their votes?

In the end, we all know that two things determine who makes it into the NCAA tournament field of 16: the autobids that go to conference playoff champions and data that the selection committee uses to fill out the field. (Where teams are placed to play is an entirely different discussion.) I think it’s conceivable that some voters begin to consult the PWR at about this time of the year to norm their ballots.

I do look at PWR but only in the first half, when it’s statistically less reliable. Hear me out. I find myself disagreeing in significant ways with parts of the poll early on, and when I see a team in the poll where my own perception of where they should appear is so very different from the field, I look at the PWR to see whether I’m missing something in terms of what the PWR measures. Sometimes it helps to see that my own eyeballs aren’t lying to me, that Team X really should be No. 16 instead of No. 6, for example, and sometimes a glance at the PWR helps me see past some of my own personal biases.

In the first half of the season – especially very early – win percentage helps me to determine where some of my votes should go if I have doubts. Because I like some data to back up my decisions, voting for the Ivies early in the season is really difficult for me to do. That by-reputation voting is something I like to avoid altogether after the first couple of weeks of the poll, regardless of number of games played.

So I am thinking that I’m not the only voter who consults the kind of data that the PairWise rankings can provide to determine how to vote.

But I do want to circle back to something else you said, about faulting the PWR for its lack of feeling. That is, in my opinion, its chief strength – the strength of all data. Taking emotion out of the process of determining the NCAA field should be a primary objective, and the best way to do that is to consult the numbers.

Yes, that potentially harms some teams that get hot in the second half and help teams that had really good first halves or early good play against opponents ranked high at the end of the season. I get that.

But the primary difference between the PWR and the weekly poll – again, my opinion only – is that the PWR is a tool to determine the NCAA field and the poll is a snapshot of how things are going right now. In poll voting, especially in the second half, I often vote teams that are hot in the moment higher than teams that are not but that are significantly higher in the PWR. And I often vote teams into the poll that aren’t even bubble teams in the PWR.

Are the poll and PWR aligning right about now? It appears so, and I don’t think this is uncommon.

Are the teams that are high in the PWR that are getting love in the poll that good? Yes, I think for the most part they are – but, as you said, things can change and it doesn’t take much.

Here’s my question for you, since you bring up changing on a dime: What do you think may be likely to transpire in the next month to change fortunes for any of the teams that are currently in your line of vision?

Dan: Honestly, I wouldn’t be surprised to experience more of what we saw these past two weekends when teams rated highly in the Pairwise Rankings took an absolute beating in the statistical numbers. I know one game doesn’t necessarily dictate an entire season, but a good number of teams took some damage to their postseason hopes because of bad results against teams rated very low by the numerical algorithms.

This is a point Jim and Ed mentioned last week, so I won’t dive too much into the conversation about Alaska Anchorage’s wins over UMass Lowell or Northeastern’s loss at Bentley. What I will say is that some of these results continued this week when Merrimack lost to Brown and dropped into 10th one day after it tied Yale. Those were two of the lowest-seeded teams in the PWR, and they narrowed the razor thin margin for a team that was as high as third, if my memory serves me correctly.

Given what we know about the Pairwise, games against 18th-seeded Providence and Northeastern, which is still mired in the 30s, are now big games where they might have been a one-off giveaways for losses. The late season series against Lowell looms, and Maine and Vermont, both teams in the 40s, could be critical missteps for a team that was right there in the thick of the running for the No. 1 overall seed.

But that’s kind of life at this stage of the season. One game won’t change any of that, but there are highly-touted teams currently fighting for their postseason lives. Providence and Minnesota State are on the outside, and Connecticut – a team I once ranked No. 1 in the nation – is down in 16th with a Notre Dame team that keeps losing games on Friday night. Michigan State came back to reality this past weekend in its own right. Boston College is sneaking around the bubble, and as much as everyone mapped Arizona State’s independent path to the NCAA tournament, Alaska is in 21st with maybe enough juice to sneak into the conversation if it doesn’t lose a game to LIU or Lindenwood.

Stepping off the ice, last week and this week are going to bring some arena talk to the forefront. I don’t know if ironic is the right word – I tend to overuse it – but last week’s celebration of the oldest continuous rink in college hockey history – Princeton’s Hobey Baker Rink – is now leading to the grand opening of college hockey’s newest arenas on Saturday night. Both are in Connecticut, a state that I’ve been watching for years as the potential challenger to Massachusetts in the Northeast. In Fairfield, Sacred Heart’s Martire Family Arena is going to host Boston College at 7 p.m. on Saturday while UConn launches the Toscano Family Ice Forum against Northeastern with a puck drop that starts a half hour later.

I kind of smiled when Princeton celebrated Hobey Baker’s centennial last weekend because it gave us a chance to remember games from simpler times. The rink – a good, old fashioned rink – is as old school as it gets and is a treasured piece of college hockey history. It’s been modernized without losing its rustic feel, and more than a few people told me how it fits Princeton perfectly. New arenas, though, are glittery and gorgeous and are capable – cough, cough, Arizona State, cough, cough – of hosting an NHL team, but I can’t help but reminisce about old times in barns. Heck, I grew up at Walter Brown Arena, practically.

I’m curious where you stand when you walk into a rink. Happy to be in a new place or do you long for those simpler times?

Paula: Well, Dan, when I began covering college hockey in 1995, I lived in Columbus and Ohio State’s rink was the venue I could attend regularly. The old OSU ice rink is a place easy not to miss. You had to walk through the home bench to get to the ladder-like stairs that led one short flight up to an open press box that hung over the benches, a press box that provided an extraordinary view of the rink in addition to the smell of each team.

If you needed to leave the press box between periods to use the restroom – which was in the fabled St. John Arena, a really great old building once home to many OSU sports, including basketball – you needed to make it back before the teams took their benches again or you couldn’t access the press box for that period.

Also, while the press box gave a remarkable proximity to the game – I’ve heard things, man – it was without glass and dangerous, as I learned the hard way with a puck to the head and a trip to the hospital in 1998 (insert punchline here). It was also freezing, separated from the outside by a thin sheet of corrugated plastic. The single time an SID tried to provide a much-needed space heater, the wiring shorted out. I know that our good friends Ed Trefzger and Chris Lerch have stories of rinks completely open to the elements from when they first began covering hockey, too.

So yes, Dan, I enjoy modernity.

I will say, though, that old barns that are retrofitted perfectly – like Yost Ice Arena and Munn Ice Arena, just to keep it in the Big Ten – provide the college atmosphere that I crave. Newer arenas that take into account the things that lead to a good college atmosphere, like Notre Dame’s Compton Family Ice Arena and Steve Cady Arena at Miami, are things of beauty. Every aesthetic can work from the old-time to the modern, as long as the design fits the purpose of the building.

Weirdly, I think this goes back to our discussion about the PWR vs. the poll – what works now as opposed to what worked (or was just adequate) once upon a time. Yes, I do long for some simpler times, as Jimmy Connelly and I discussed at the end of the first half of the season in regard to holiday tournaments. And some people long for the smoke-filled rooms in which sports tournament fields were once debated.

I, however, like shiny new buildings that work as much as charming older ones that do. In short, make it work for everyone and I’m good. Coffee in the press box helps, too.

Dan: You know, it’s funny, because I love the Bentley Arena and wouldn’t ever want to return to the old days, but there’s a part of me that remembers the JAR so fondly. My wife’s introduction to Division I college hockey game was in that building because I invited her to come watch Bentley play Air Force for a New Year’s Eve game. I didn’t tell her about the building, and I think she showed up thinking we were going to some palatial arena (this despite the fact that she went to Bentley). A couple guys on the team figured out who she was when she was sitting and watching warmups, and they flipped a puck over the glass into the row of seats behind her to rattle her cage a bit. I made dinner for us that night after the game and got so nervous I boiled six cups of white rice because I thought the pot didn’t look full enough.

I also remember the first time she walked into the Bentley Arena, though, with big, bugged-out, proud eyes saying, “This is where I went to school.”

I suppose we could wrap there, but I need to let you have the final word this week. It’s New Year’s still (technically? maybe?). Tell me one New Year’s resolution that college hockey should have as we wrap things up in the second half of this year.

Paula: I can give you three things that college hockey can resolve to do.

First, fix the problem with regionals. Ideally, the regionals should return to campus sites or should figure out a way to attract fans to neutral sites.

Second, work on convincing more programs that potentially can sustain a D-I program to explore doing so – especially schools that have club hockey teams with devoted fan bases. This kind of expansion lends itself to large universities; it needs to be done in such a way that existing smaller programs aren’t further disadvantaged and that potential programs from small schools can be welcomed.

And finally, do something to find homes for current independent teams. I don’t know how much realignment may need to take place for this to happen, but something needs to happen and soon – or we risk losing independent programs that need conference membership to survive. Without a solution for the independents, we also risk condemning programs like Arizona State – those that can thrive without conference membership – to a future without much promise of postseason play.

D-III Women’s West Week 10 Recap: A new member of the 100-point club & a weekly recap of the west!

UW-Eau Claire’s #6 Sophie Rausch joins the 100-point club in the Blugold’s 4-2 win over St. Norbert College (Photo by Shane Opatz, UWEC Photo).

The first full weekend of women’s hockey out west since the long winter break was a success, a player joined the 100-point club and there were no upsets occurring this weekend. Some teams were eased back into their playing groove as they opened up the second half with some statistically easier games compared to others who were thrown into the fire with tough matchups to start.

Sophie Rausch joins the 100 Point Club!

Sophie Rausch, a senior forward for UW-Eau Claire joined the 100-point club in the Blugolds win over St. Norbert College on Saturday, January 7. Rausch, who had played her previous three years of college hockey at Hamline University, had two goals in the Saturday victory and is well on her way to having her highest career point total for a season. Currently, she has 28 points (19 goals, 9 assists) through 14 games, her previous season-high at Hamline was 35 points (15 goals, 20 assists) during her freshman campaign. She also had 34 points her junior year at Hamline, consistency is a good trait to have, and she’s had that every year of her college hockey career.

Funny enough, via UW-Eau Claire Head Coach Erik Strand’s tweet on Sunday congratulating his player. He made mention that it was also Sophie’s birthday on Saturday in the win. A nice added touch to the team’s victory and her own personal milestone.

In regard to the game’s that took place for Eau Claire this past weekend, the Blugolds split the two-game series with a tough St. Norbert team who’s fighting atop the NCHA standings, coming off a year where they fell to Aurora in the league title game. While both games were played at St. Norbert, the Green Knights took game one 2-1 and Eau Claire won game two 4-2. The point leaders of the weekend: Sophie Rausch & Hallie Sheridan with 4 points apiece for UWEC, while Natalie Hogan tallied 3 points for SNC. Goaltender Brynn Waisman of SNC had 45 saves in the two games, while Stephanie Martin of UWEC had 22.

As the season progresses, Eau Claire will need to string together a lot of wins without many bumps in the road as their at-large bid hopes rely on them putting up a huge number in the win column with the WIAC lacking a conference championship auto-bid. Their biggest games are actually their last two regular-season games, a home/away series with a familiar WIAC rival #2 UW-River Falls on February 17/18.

Adrian sweeps a conference leader from out East

#4 Adrian sweeps Suffolk, winning 3-1 & 3-0 to improve to 12-1-0 on the season (Photo by Mike Dickie).

#4 Adrian swept Suffolk University, defeating them 3-0 & 3-1. The Bulldogs now move to 12-1-0 on the season. The point leaders for the weekend on Adrian were Karmen Anderson with 3 (2 goals, 1 assist), while three players recorded two points, Maya Roy, Reaghan Pietrowski & Kathryn Truban. Goaltender Sophie Goldberg recorded a 30-save shutout victory and a 29 save victory to go along with it. Outside of #2 UW-River Falls, Adrian has arguably the best résumé of any team out west in terms of strength-of-schedule and the number of ranked opponents they’ve faced. Say what you want about Suffolk, but for those of you who may not be familiar with them, they’re currently nearing pace for their best season as a program and lead the CCC standings.

UW-River Falls riding their momentum

UW-River Falls swept Concordia (Minn.), winning 4-0 & 9-2 convincingly. These were the first games for the Falcons since their massive two-game series with #1 Gustavus in which they fell 2-0 in game one but won game two 3-0. In their latest games vs Concordia, the weekend point leaders were: Bailey Olson (5 points, 1 goal, 4 assists), Megan Goodreau (5 points, 2 goals, 3 assists), & Maddie McCollins (5 points, 2 goals, 3 assists).

#2 UW-River Falls sweeps Concordia (Minn.) winning 4-0 & 9-2 (Photo by Jenna Stockinger – UWRF Photo).

UW-River Falls has a busy week as they face St. Scholastica at home on Tuesday 1/10 (today), then a two-game road series against UW-Stevens Point on Friday/Saturday 1/13-1/14.

Other Notable Results

#11 Aurora defeated Northland convincingly 9-0 & 4-0.

Lake Forest tied Castleton 2-2, fell to #8 Middlebury 4-0, and defeated Saint Michaels 1-0.

Marian defeated Nichols 2-1 & Bethel 4-1.

Concordia (Wis.) defeated Bethel 4-3 in OT & lost to Nichols 4-1

UW-Stevens Point defeated Hamline 1-0 & lost to Saint Mary’s 2-1 in OT.

UW-Superior shutout Finlandia 7-0 & 11-0.

 

Looking forward to another week of D-III Women’s hockey out west as we enter the final few months to determine who’s going to be with us until the end in the NCAA tournament!

Quinnipiac collects 40 first-place votes, takes over top spot in USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll

Quinnipiac players celebrate after a goal last Saturday night against Harvard (photo: Rob Rasmussen).

Quinnipiac is the new No. 1 team in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll, getting 40 of 50 first-place votes in this week’s rankings.

The Bobcats rise one spot from their No. 2 ranking of one week ago.

Minnesota is up one to No. 2, picking up five first-place votes, while St. Cloud State moves up one with two first-place votes to sit third this week.

Former national No. 1 Denver is down three to No. 4, collecting the remaining three first-place votes.

USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll – Jan. 9, 2023

Penn State remains No. 5, Michigan is up one to No. 6, Boston University falls one to No. 7, Ohio State rises four to sit eighth, Harvard jumps one to No. 9, and Merrimack drops two place to sit 10th in this week’s poll.

Connecticut falls out of the top 10, going from No. 9 to No. 11 this week.

The lone new team to enter the rankings this week is Boston College at No. 20.

In addition to the top 20 teams, 12 other teams received votes.

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.

Women’s Division I College Hockey: Weekend Wrap January 9, 2023

(8) Minnesota Duluth at (2) Wisconsin

The Bulldogs went to Madison and swept the Badgers, holding them to a single in both games. Emma Soderberg made 72 saves in the series. It was Wisconsin’s third loss in a row, something that hadn’t happened since 2012 – the stretch was also the last time UMD swept Wisconsin. On Saturday, the Badgers scored first thanks to a goal from Casey O’Brien, but UMD scored three unanswered to earn the 3-1 win. Anneke Linser, Katie Davis and Gabbie Hughes each lit the lamp for the Bulldogs. On Sunday, Linser scored her second of the weekend midway through the final frame and that would be enough to down the Badgers. 

(3) Yale at (11) Clarkson

Charlotte Welch lit the lamp early in the first to put Yale up 1-0. Anna Bargman scored in the second and the third to give the Bulldogs a 3-0 lead. Sena Catterall got one back for Clarkson and spoiled the shutout, but the Golden Knights couldn’t put together more of a comeback and Yale took a 3-1 in. 

(3) Yale at St. Lawrence

Once again, Charlotte Welch struck early to put her team up 1-0 and this time it was for her 100th career point with a top-shelf snipe. Ray Jordan and Elle Hartje scored less than two minutes apart midway through the first to triple the lead to 3-0. Emma Seitz scored on the power play :25 into the third to extend the lead to 4-0. Kennedy Wilson and Aly McLeod scored late in the third as St. Lawrence began to rally, but it was too late as time expired on a 4-2 Yale win. 

Harvard at (4) Quinnipiac

Olivia Mobley’s shorthanded goal in the first period was the perfect start to a conference win for Quinnipiac in a snowy Fenway Park. Nina Steingauf extended the lead in the second. Early in the third, Shannon Hollands got one back to Harvard to make it a 3-1 game, but the Bobcats did not panic. Less than a minute later, Madison Chantler got the goal back and Quinnipiac would go on to win 3-1. 

Dartmouth at (4) Quinnipiac

Zoe Uens scored her first career goal to open the scoring for Quinnipiac. Olivia Mobley scored late in the first to make it a 2-0 game. After a scoreless second, Dartmouth cut the lead to 2-1 on a goal from Laura Fuoco. However, Mobley’s second of the game was another shorthand to make it a 3-1 Bobcat lead. Caroline Appleyard brough the lead back to one with a goal midway through the third for Harvard, but Quinnipiac buckled down and held on for a 3-2 win.

Merrimack vs. (5) Minnesota

Taylor Heise had her second-straight hat trick and Abigail Borreen, Catie Skaja and Nelli Laitenen each had a goal and two assists as Minnesota took a 9-2 win over Merrimack. Katie Kaufman and Alexa Pongo scored for the Warriors in the loss. 

New Hampshire vs. (5) Minnesota

Grace Zumwinkle recorded her 100th career goal as the Gophers cruised to an 8-1 win over the Wildcats. She had two goals and four assists on the night. Abbey Murphy tallied two goals and two assists while Emily Zumwinkle had three assists. Emily Pinto was the goal scorer for New Hampshire. 

RPI at (6) Colgate

After playing scoreless hockey for more than half the game, Colgate began to pull away. Kas Betinol scored late in the second. Danielle Serdachny, Dara Greig and Katie Chan lit the lamp in the third to secure the Raiders a 4-0 win. 

Union at (6) Colgate

Colgate’s 10 goals set a new program record in the ECAC. Danielle Serdachny and Kaitlyn O’Donohoe each had two goals and two assists in the win. Sydney Bard and Jenna Duarte each added three assists. 

BU at (7) Northeastern

Chloe Aurard had a goal and three assists – the second of which was the 100th for her career – to lead the Huskies to a 6-0 win. Alina Muller added two goals and an assist in the win.

(9) Providence at (13) Vermont

Rookie Laura Beecher had her first multi-goal game and that’s all the Catamounts needed to win on Friday. She was persistent, putting the puck back on net multiple times in the second minute of the game and the fourth time was the charm to give Vermont a 1-0 lead. Early in the third, she roofed a shot from a close angle to make it a 2-0 win for UVM. On Saturday, junior goalie Jessie McPherson earned her 33rd career win, setting a new program record. Natalie Mlynkova, Corinne McCool and Beecher all scored in the first to put the Catamounts 3-0 and Providence was not able to claw back into the game. Hunter Barnett scored in the second to make it 3-1, but Lilly Holmes’ empty-netter secured the 4-1 win and weekend sweep. 

Union at (10) Cornell

Avi Adam scored her first career hat trick to lead Cornell to a 7-2 win over Union. Gillis Frechette and Grace Dwyer each added a goal and two assists in the win. Paige Greco and Carmen Merlo scored late in the third to ruin the shutout, but it wasn’t enough to overcome Cornell’s early lead. 

RPI at (10) Cornell

Leah MacSween’s second-period goal would prove to be enough for Cornell to outlast RPI in a defensive battle on Saturday. 

Brown at (11) Clarkson

Maddie Morgan’s early goal had Brown up 1-0, but Clarkson responded midway through the first with a power play goal from Nicole Gosling. Darcie Lappan’s goal in the second made it 2-1 and would prove to be the game-winner for the Golden Knights. Holly Gruber earned her first win in net with Clarkson. 

New Hampshire vs. (15) St. Cloud State

JoJo Chobak earned her third shutout of the season as Allie Cornelius scored twice, Klára Hymlárová lit the lamp once and Courtney Hall had three assists to lead the Huskies to a 3-0 win.

Merrimack vs. (15) St. Cloud State

Klára Hymlárová had two power play goals and Addi Scribner lit the lamp once to lead SCSU to a 3-1 win over Merrimack. Katie Kaufman scored on the power play for Merrimack. 

Looking at Alaska, Quinnipiac, Michigan Tech, plus Hockey East’s PairWise predicament: Weekend Review Season 5 Episode 15

Hosts Jim Connelly, Derek Schooley, and Ed Trefzger look at the games of the past weekend and the news of the week in this D-I college hockey podcast.

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

Topics include:

  • Alaska splits with No. 1 Denver and is in the NCAA hunt
  • Quinnipiac continues to roll
  • Minnesota, St. Cloud split
  • Michigan Tech wins Desert Hockey Classic
  • Hockey East has slowly fallen from the PairWise graces
  • North Dakota is back inside the PWR bubble
  • Frozen Fenway and outdoor games in general
  • Are 12-minute intermissions too short for proper ice conditions?

Subscribe to this college hockey podcast on Apple podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Find our college hockey podcast archive at USCHO.com/podcasts

D-III East Hockey Weekend Wrap-up – January 9, 2023

Norwich celebrated a come-from-behind victory over previously unbeaten Hobart on Saturday keeping the NEHC race wide open in the second half (Phot by Norwich Athletics)

The great action continued this weekend and now there are no unbeatens in D-III hockey as Norwich snuck by Hobart, 2-1 on Saturday. Canton stunned Geneseo by the same score on Saturday as well and there were a host of other thrilling OT games and tight conference battles that spiced up the scoreboards this past weekend. Here is the wrap-up for the East:

CCC   

After a thrilling overtime win over Anna Maria (see Independents section) on Friday night, Curry traveled to face Salve Regina in CCC action on Saturday. A playoff atmosphere was present as both teams challenged the goaltenders but no one could break the ice in the first two periods of play. In the third period, Nick Favaro finally solved the Seahawks’ Anthony Del Tufo for the one goal that would stand up as the game winner in a 1-0 final. Goaltender Reid Cooper was outstanding for the Colonels stopping all 34 shots he faced as Salve Regina outshot Curry by a 34-23 margin for the game. The win moved Curry to 11-2-0 overall and 7-2-0 in CCC play.

Nichols played host to the Boston Landing Collegiate Invitational tournament over the weekend and skated away with the championship with wins over Rivier and Brockport over the weekend. On Saturday, the Bison took advantage of third period goals from Luke Harvie and Nathan Carl to break a   2-2 tie on the way to a 4-2 first round win over the Raiders. On Sunday, Nichols faced Brockport who knocked off Lebanon Valley in the first round for the championship. Trailing 2-1 midway through the second period, Carl would jumpstart the Bison with a shorthanded goal to tie the game at 2-2. Josh Dickson would give Nichols the lead before the end of the second period and in the third period Carl picked up his second of the game, also shorthanded and Hunter Fraser finished the scoring with a power play goal and a 5-2 win for the tournament title. Goaltender Mathias Backstrom made 24 saves in the win and earned tournament MVP honors for the Bison.

Independents

After being dominated in a 7-0 whitewash at the hands of Geneseo on Friday night, Canton rallied to play a terrific hockey game and knocked off the Knights in the second game of the weekend series. Evan Pringle gave the Kangaroos a 1-0 lead after the first period and the score held through the second period with Canton playing an energetic game and goaltender Hooper Kelson playing great. Peter Morgan tied the game for the Knights just over a minute into the third period but Canton stayed resilient and with just under ten minutes remaining in regulation, scored the game-winning goal off the stick of Filip Jakobsson and a stunning 2-1 road win over Geneseo to split the weekend series.

Anna Maria played an overtime thriller on Friday night against Curry. The AmCats surged to a 3-1 lead in the first period only to see the Colonels rally back with three unanswered goals to take a 4-3 lead. With just over five minutes remaining in regulation, AMC’s Brandon Della Paoler stunned goaltender Roland Polasek with “a Michigan” goal from behind the right goal post and the game went to overtime tied at 4-4. In the extra session, Curry’s Timmy Kent scored an unassisted goal to give the Colonels a 5-4 win. On Saturday, the AmCats also found themselves in overtime against the Golden Bears from Western New England. Kyle Knight helped WNE to 2-1 and 3-2 leads with a pair of goals but AMC’s Matthew Byrne tied the game at 3-3 sending it to overtime. Pearce Baker wasted no time with his goal just 35 seconds into the extra session to give Anna Maria the win.

MASCAC

The big battle between Fitchburg State and Plymouth State proved to be a fireworks show that the Panthers ultimately pulled out the win with a three-goal third period. Tied at 4-4 entering the third period, Ted Austin scored his first of the season to break the tie and Connor Tait’s second goal of the game and Anton Jellvik’s late tally added insurance for the 7-4 win. Myles Abbate chipped in with three assists as the Panthers moved to 7-0 in MASCAC play. PSU continued their winning ways in MASCAC with a 4-0 win over Westfield State on Saturday. Cameron Patton scored two goals and goaltender Brendahn Brawley made 22 saves in the shutout win.

Zach Dill scored twice in the first eight minutes of play to jumpstart Salem State to a quick lead over Framingham State and the Vikings never looked back in a 6-3 win on Thursday night. Dill completed his hat trick with a second period goal in the first minute of play and added an assist for a four-point night to give the Vikings their first conference win of the season. On Saturday, the Vikings found themselves on the short-end of a 3-1 loss to Fitchburg State. Cole Archambeault and Wyatt Wilmshurst broke a 1-1 tie with goals in the third period for the Falcons win.

A big scoring night for Shane Prifrel also helped Worcester State to a 6-3 win over Massachusetts-Dartmouth on Thursday night. Prifrel scored twice in the first period, completed his hat trick with a second period goal and added two assists to lead the Lancers to the conference win. Massachusetts-Dartmouth rallied back with a 5-2 win over Framingham State on Saturday. Five different players provided the scoring for the Corsairs.

NE-10

After dropping a mid-week game to Bowdoin, St. Anslem returned to NE-10 play with a game against cross-town rival Southern New Hampshire. After a 1-1 score at the end of the first period, the Hawks reeled off five unanswered goals including two shorthanded tallies from Chase Reynolds and Luke Linart on the way to a comfortable 6-1 win.

NEHC

Norwich showed it is ready to play playoff-style hockey with a pair of 2-1 wins over Elmira and previously unbeaten Hobart over the weekend. The Cadets surrendered the first goal in both games only to rally back to earn the wins with Paul Schmid providing the game-winner against Elmira while Brady Gaudette scored the winning goal against Hobart. Goaltender Drennen Atherton was outstanding in both games stopping 60 shots in the two games, including 36 against the Statesmen on Saturday night. The wins moved Norwich closer to the top at 7-1-1 in NEHC play.

Skidmore also went 2-0-0 on the weekend with wins over Johnson & Wales and Massachusetts-Boston. On Friday night, the Thoroughbreds took advantage of four points from Kaeden Patrick on the way to a 5-2 win over the Wildcats. On Saturday, four different players helped Skidmore to a 4-1 lead in the third period and the Thoroughbreds had to survive a Beacons rally to hold on for a 4-3 win.

Babson needed a late power play goal from Andrew Holland and 30 saves from Nolan Hildebrand to eke past Southern Maine by a 3-2 score on Saturday night. The win was head coach Jamie Rice’s 300th and moved the Beavers to 5-2-2 in NEHC play.

NESCAC

Trinity picked up a pair of wins over the weekend in conference play. On Friday, the Bantams shutout Williams 3-0. A goa in each period and 22 saves from Devon Bobak was the formula for the shutout win. On Saturday, the Bantams had to rally from behind to down a determined Middlebury team by a 2-1 score. Nolan Moore gave the Panthers a 1-0 lead after two periods of play but goals from Andrew Troy and Devan Tongue earned the Bantams the win a weekend sweep in conference play.

Wesleyan downed Middlebury 6-2 on Friday night and then played a thrilling 3-3 overtime tie with Williams on Saturday. Four unanswered goals snapped a 2-2 tie for the Cardinals in Friday’s win while Saturday’s game saw Wesleyan take one-goal leads on three occasions only to see the Ephs rally back for the overtime tie.

After dropping a 3-2 decision on Friday to Bowdoin on Friday night for their first conference loss, Amherst rallied back on Saturday with a 3-0 road win against Colby. Matt Toporowski scored a pair of goals and Alex Wisco and Connor Leslie combined on the 28-save shutout for the Mammoths.

SUNYAC

With Wentworth the lone non-SUNYAC representative, Plattsburgh played host to the Comfort Inn Complex Winter Classic. While the first round saw the Cardinals easily handle Wentworth by a 5-2 score to reach the championship game, Oswego and Potsdam played a far more dramatic affair. The Bears took leads of 2-0 and 3-1 before the Lakers found goals from Jackson Arcan and Shane Bull to tie the score at 3-3. Goaltender Stephen Friedland was immense in goal as Oswego outshot Potsdam by a 55-29 margin. Overtime couldn’t decide the contest so a shootout was required to decide which team would face the host team for the championship. Cal Schell stopped all three Bears’ shooters while Rocco Andreacchi would solve Friedland for the shootout win.

In the championship game, Adam Tretowicz gave the Cardinals an early lead just under two minutes into the first period. Two power play goals from Daniel Colbuto and Quinn Warmuth, the second coming with just 33 seconds remaining in the period proved to be all the scoring Cal Schell and the Lakers would need to earn the 2-1 win and take home the tournament championship. Schell finished with 27 saves on the night to earn the win and tournament MVP honors for the Lakers.

UCHC

The marque match-up of the weekend was a hot Manhattanville squad going up against Utica in conference play. On Friday night, the game was as close as expected with neither team able to score in the first two periods of play. Jakob Breault broke the ice early in the third period for the Pioneers who needed empty-net goals from Buster Larsson and Lucas Hermann to seal a 3-0 win. Goaltender Bryan Landesberger made 21 saves to earn the shutout. On Saturday, the offense was more prevalent for both teams in a seesaw affair. The Valiants raced out to a 3-1 lead with second period goals from AJ Bella and Mason Emoff less than a minute apart but Breault would again be a big factor in a Pioneers rally. Breault scored two goals and added an assist as Utica scored four straight goals and held on for the 5-4 win and weekend sweep.

After a tough trip out west and losses to Trine and Adrian earlier in the week, Stevenson returned to UCHC play and swept a two-game series with King’s. On Friday, Liam McCanney’s two goals led to an offensive eruption for the Mustangs in an 8-1 win over the Monarchs. On Saturday night, McCanney and Alex Rivet helped Stevenson to an early 2-0 lead and Olson  and Austin Master scored third period goals to seal a 4-1 win. With the wins Stenson moves to 7-8-0 overall and 3-5-0 in UCHC play.

Three Biscuits

AJ DiChiara – Bowdoin – backstopped the Polar Bears to a 4-0 shutout win over St. Anselm on Tuesday night stopping all 23 shots he faced.

Shane Pifrel – Worcester State – scored a hat trick and added a pair of assists for a five-point game in the Lancers 6-3 win over Massachusetts-Dartmouth on Thursday night.

Zach Dill – Salem State – recorded four points with a hat trick and an assist in the Vikings’ 5-3 win over Framingham State on Thursday night. Dill also won 74% of his face-offs on the night.

Bonus Biscuits

Reid Cooper – Curry – stopped all 34 shots he faced in backstopping the Colonels to an important road win over Salve Regina by a 1-0 score on Saturday night.

Daniel Friedland – Potsdam – stopped 52 of 55 shots in helping Potsdam earn a 3-3 overtime tie with Oswego on Friday afternoon.

Kaeden Patrick – Skidmore – scored two goals and added a pair of assists for a four-point game in Skidmore’s 5-2 win over Johnson & Wales on Friday.

The results never cease to amaze and if you don’t like the polls or the standings, just wait another weekend because it is all subject to change. The level of competition is exactly what everyone wants to see so get ready for a fast and furious finish to the regular season and what should be an immense playoff run.

Monday 10: No. 1 Denver splits with unranked Alaska, Michigan Tech romps to Desert Hockey Classic title, Quinnipiac continues hot streak

Michigan Tech celebrates its Desert Hockey Classic championship Saturday night in Tempe, Ariz. (photo: Michigan Tech Athletics).

Each week, USCHO.com will pick the top 10 moments from the past weekend in our Monday 10 feature.

1. Another No. 1 falls as Alaska beats Denver

The Nanooks scored two power-play goals in the first half of the second period Friday – one by Jonny Sorenson, one by Brady Risk, both assisted by T.J. Lloyd – and added Garrett Pyke’s empty-net goal to beat the Pioneers in Denver 3-1 Friday night.

With that win, the unaffiliated, unranked Nanooks improve to No. 18 in the PairWise rankings with a record of 11-9-2, including six wins in their last eight games.

The loss, Denver’s fifth of the season, snapped the Pioneers’ seven-game win streak. Denver rebounded the following night with a 7-2 win over Alaska.

2. The dominant Bobcats

Quinnipiac is unbeatable – at least in ECAC hockey so far this season. With the Bobcats’ 3-0 win over Dartmouth and 4-1 win over Harvard, Quinnipiace remains undefeated in the ECAC with a perfect 12-0-0 record in conference play.

The Bobcats are now 15-0-1 in their last 16 games and have won their last nine home games.

3. 70 miles and a couple of goals apart

No. 3 Minnesota and No. 4 St. Cloud State split a pair of home-and-home games, with the Huskies blanking the Golden Gophers 3-0 at home Saturday and Minnesota winning 2-1 in overtime at home Sunday.

Aidan Spellacy’s third goal of the season at 9:09 in the second period was the game winner for the Huskies Saturday. Jaxon Castor made 23 saves in his first shutout of the season, the third of his career.

Logan Cooley had the game winner for Minnesota with 20 seconds remaining in OT Sunday. It was the 11th goal of the season for Cooley and his third GWG.

4. Frozen Fenway surprises

Two unranked teams picked up conference wins at Boston’s Fenway Park Saturday, as Northeastern beat No. 9 Connecticut and Boston College beat No. 15 Massachusetts.

Northeastern had gone 2-7-1 in the previous 10 games before the 4-1 win over Connecticut. Justin Hryckowian’s 11th goal of the season put Northeastern up 3-1 in the third.

The Eagles’ 4-2 win over the Minutemen was Boston College’s fourth straight win at Fenway Park, where they are 4-1-0 all time.

5. Twice is nice for Michigan Tech

After beating host Arizona State 4-2 Friday, No. 15 Michigan Tech defeated No. 6 Boston University 3-2 in the title game of the Desert Hockey Classic in Mullet Arena.

Goaltender Blake Pietila, named tournament MVP, said that the tourney offered some much-needed redemption. “It feels good after coming off the GLI and our rough showing in the first game.”

The Huskies won the inaugural Desert Hockey Classic in 2015.

6. Ohio State rolls

With a decisive home sweep of Michigan State, the Buckeyes gain six points and move into third place in the Big Ten standings, a point behind Penn State and nine behind first-place Minnesota. It was the second sweep of the season for Ohio State, a team that is picking up momentum with five straight wins.

After winning 3-1 Friday night, Ohio State shut out the Spartans 6-0 Saturday. Jakub Dobes made 32 saves in his second shutout of the season, the fifth of his career.

7. Friday night lights out?

Most teams strive for consistency, but this is the kind of consistency that Notre Dame can do without: for their past six series, the Fighting Irish have lost on Friday night.

At least they’re winning Saturdays.

Notre Dame dropped a 2-0 game to Wisconsin Friday, continuing a streak of seven Friday-night losses that dates back to a 4-1 game against Minnesota Nov. 4. The Irish last won on a Friday night Oct. 28, a home win over Michigan State.

As they have six of the last seven Saturdays, the Irish rebounded with a Saturday win, 6-4 over the Badgers.

Related: Friday’s win was the second conference win of the season for Wisconsin.

8. Lindenwood pushes some boundaries

North Dakota came from behind – twice – to beat Lindenwood, 4-3 and 4-2. The Lions took a 3-2 lead into the third period of the Friday game and led 2-0 after the first period Saturday.

Lindenwood has pushed other traditional hockey powerhouses this season, showing in their first season that the Lions are striving for more than their 5-15-0 record indicates.

In a 6-4 loss to Minnesota Oct. 2, the Lions tied the game 4-4 early in the third and less than a week later (Oct. 7), the Lions led the Wolverines 2-1 after the first period of a 7-4 loss. More recently, Lindenwood gave Denver all the Pioneers could handle when the Lions tied the game 4-4 late in the third period of Denver’s 5-4 win (Dec. 17).

9. Tiger, tiger burning bright

RIT returned to conference play and winning ways with a solid sweep of Bentley in which the Tigers outscored the Falcons 6-1 in two games.

The series followed two losses to Penn State (Dec. 30-31), a series that capped a midseason rough spot for RIT. After going 10-2-0 in their first 12 games of the season, the Tigers were 4-4-0 in the eight games previous to their series with Bentley.

Picked to finish fourth in the Atlantic Hockey preseason coaches’ poll, RIT leads the conference with a record of 12-2-0-0 and sits at No. 20 in the PairWise Rankings.

Ohio State’s Cam Thiesing gets his postgame dog time (photo: Ohio State Athletics).

10. Hockey is for the dogs – quite literally

For their Saturday game against the Spartans, the Buckeyes welcomed canine fans to Value City Arena in an effort to benefit the Franklin County Dog Shelter and Adoption Center.

And for the Husky-on-Husky action at Fenway Park, UConn’s Jonathan made an appearance.

Rankings roundup: How the top 20 NCAA hockey teams fared, Jan. 6-8

Minnesota starts its overtime celebration Saturday night at 3M Arena at Mariucci after defeating St. Cloud State (photo: Jim Rosvold/USCHO.com).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll of Jan. 2 fared in games over the weekend of Jan. 6-8.

No. 1 Denver (17-5-0)
01/06/2023 – RV Alaska 3 at No. 1 Denver 1
01/07/2023 – RV Alaska 2 at No. 1 Denver 7

No. 2 Quinnipiac (17-1-3)
01/06/2023 – Dartmouth 0 at No. 2 Quinnipiac 3
01/07/2023 – No. 10 Harvard 1 at No. 2 Quinnipiac 4

No. 3 Minnesota (16-6-0)
01/07/2023 – No. 3 Minnesota 0 at No. 4 St. Cloud State 3
01/08/2023 – No. 4 St. Cloud State 1 at No. 3 Minnesota 2 (OT)

No. 4 St. Cloud State (15-5-0)
01/07/2023 – No. 3 Minnesota 0 at No. 4 St. Cloud State 3
01/08/2023 – No. 4 St. Cloud State 1 at No. 3 Minnesota 2 (OT)

No. 5 Penn State (17-5-0)
Did not play.

No. 6 Boston University (13-6-0)
01/06/2023 – No. 6 Boston University 5 vs Air Force 1 (Desert Hockey Classic)
01/07/2023 – No. 6 Boston University 2 vs No. 16 Michigan Tech 3 (Desert Hockey Classic)

No. 7 Michigan (12-7-1)
01/06/2023 – U.S. NTDP* 6 at No. 7 Michigan 7

No. 8 Merrimack (15-5-1)
01/06/2023 – Yale 3 at No. 8 Merrimack 3 (OT)
01/07/2023 – Brown 6 at No. 8 Merrimack 2

No. 9 Connecticut (13-6-3)
01/07/2023 – Northeastern 4 at No. 9 Connecticut 1 (Frozen Fenway)

No. 10 Harvard (10-4-1)
01/06/2023 – No. 10 Harvard 4 at Princeton 3 (OT)
01/07/2023 – No. 10 Harvard 1 at No. 2 Quinnipiac 4

No. 11 Providence (10-6-5)
01/06/2023 – New Hampshire 2 at No. 11 Providence 0
01/08/2023 – No. 11 Providence 3 at Army 3 (OT)

No. 12 Ohio State (14-7-1)
01/06/2023 – No. 14 Michigan State 1 at No. 12 Ohio State 3
01/07/2023 – No. 14 Michigan State 0 at No. 12 Ohio State 6

No. 13 Western Michigan (12-9-1)
Did not play.

No. 14 Michigan State (12-11-1)
01/06/2023 – No. 14 Michigan State 1 at No. 12 Ohio State 3
01/07/2023 – No. 14 Michigan State 0 at No. 12 Ohio State 6

No. 15 Massachusetts (9-8-3)
01/03/2023 – Brown 0 at No. 15 Massachusetts 3
01/07/2023 – No. 15 Massachusetts 2 at RV Boston College 4 (Frozen Fenway)

No. 16 Michigan Tech (14-6-3)
01/06/2023 – No. 16 Michigan Tech 4 at RV Arizona State 2 (Desert Hockey Classic)
01/07/2023 – No. 6 Boston University 2 vs No. 16 Michigan Tech 3 (Desert Hockey Classic)

No. 17 UMass Lowell (11-8-1)
01/07/2023 – No. 17 UMass Lowell 4 at RV AIC 2

No. 18 Cornell (10-5-1)
01/06/2023 – No. 18 Cornell 6 at Union 1
01/07/2023 – No. 18 Cornell 6 at Rensselaer 4

No. 19 Minnesota State (12-9-1)
01/06/2023 – No. 19 Minnesota State 5 at Northern Michigan 2
01/07/2023 – No. 19 Minnesota State 5 at Northern Michigan 3

No. 20 Notre Dame (10-10-2)
01/06/2023 – No. 20 Notre Dame 0 at Wisconsin 2
01/07/2023 – No. 20 Notre Dame 6 at Wisconsin 4

RV = Received votes
* = Not eligible for poll

D-III West Hockey Weekend Wrap-up: Spartans sweep battle of nationally ranked teams

Jack Jaunich and the Aurora Spartans swept St. Norbert over the weekend. (Photo Credit: Steve Woltmann/Aurora Athletics)

Derek Budz was clutch when it mattered. In overtime, in a game featuring two of the nation’s best NCAA Division III hockey teams, the Aurora star delivered Saturday night.

He scored a goal with 9.7 seconds remaining in a three-on-three OT session to help the 12th-ranked Spartans edge No. 5 St. Norbert 3-2

That goal punctuated a big weekend for Aurora, which swept the Green Knights to remain atop the NCHA standings.

A sweep didn’t seem possible late in the action of Saturday’s game. The Spartans trailed 2-0 with 3:40 to go after goals earlier in the game by Michael McChesney and Curtis Hammond.

Coming out of a timeout, the Spartans came to life. Adam Keyes cut the deficit to one. Hassan Akl then forced OT off his goal with 5.4 seconds left.

Jack Jaunich dished out a pair of assists, including on the game-winning goal, and Kolby Thornton also played a big part in the victory recording 47 saves. He finished the weekend with more than 100 saves after recording a school-record 65 on Friday.

Friday was historic for more than one reason. The series opener also marked the first time Aurora has ever beaten St. Norbert achieving the feat with a 3-1 win.

Jaunich became the all-time leader in school history in goals scored (35) with his power play goal in the second period.

Keyes and Alec Schwab also scored in the win.

The Spartans, winners of three in a row, are now 12-3 overall and unbeaten in the NCHA at 8-0-2. The Green Knights are 9-5-1 overall and 7-2 in conference play.

Falcons stun Auggies

UW-River Falls hasn’t had the easiest season, but the Falcons enjoyed a big moment Friday as they knocked off Augsburg, the fourth-ranked team in the DCU/USCHO NCAA Division III men’s poll.

Three first-period goals were key for the Falcons, who had won only one game in their previous nine outings. They capped the weekend with a 5-2 win over Bethel Saturday.

UW-River Falls stunned nationally ranked Augsburg on Friday. (Photo Credit: Pat Deninger/UW-River Falls Athletics)

But it was Friday’s game that grabbed the most attention.

Noah Roofe, Connor McGrath, Mike Gelatt and Billy Feczko all scored goals for the Falcons. Dysen Skinner made 31 saves in the victory. Dean Buccholz stopped 18 shots in Saturday’s win over Bethel while Dylan Smith scored two goals against the Royals. The Falcons are 6-8-1 on the year.

Pipers pull off upset

With barely any time left on the clock, Brunson Adams delivered a clutch goal for Hamline in its upset of No. 9 UW-Stevens Point on Friday night.

Adams scored with 56 seconds to go to secure a 3-2 win for the Pipers, who defeated UW-Stevens Point for the first time since November of 2017.

Carson Simon scored at the 14:58 mark of the third period to tie the game at 2-2 before Adams came through with the game winner.

Kevin Lake was solid in goal as he racked up 47 saves. He made 18 saves in the opening period. Hamline jumped in front on a goal by Ike Taraszewski near the end of the period. Andrew Poulias tied the game at 1-1 and Conor Witherspoon put the Pointers up 2-1 going into the third.

Pointers win top 10 showdown

UW-Stevens Point dominated Augsburg in a battle of top 10 teams Saturday night, winning 4-0 to bounce back in a big way after a 3-2 loss to Hamline one night earlier.

Ranked ninth nationally, the Pointers held a 44-27 advantage in shots and got two goals from Nick Gonrowski as they improved to 9-2-3 on the season.

Jake Theis and Andrew Poulias also scored for UW-Stevens Point, which led the fourth-ranked Auggies  2-0 after one period and 3-0 going into the third.

Alex Proctor made 27 saves to record his first career shutout. Samuel Vyletelka stopped 40 shots for Augsburg, which fell to 7-5-1.

Saints sweep Cobbers

St. Scholastica earned two big wins in MIAC play over the weekend, sweeping Concordia to stretch its win streak to three games.

Arkhip Ledenkov scored two goals for the second consecutive night while Filimon Ledenkov tallied three assists as the sibling duo worked together to help the Saints improve to 7-4-2 overall and remain unbeaten in conference play with a 5-0-1 record.

Jack Bostedt made 31 saves for the Saints. Jack Nelson tallied 17 saves for the Cobbers.

Braden Costello and Jack Westlund both scored for the Cobbers, who have lost their last three and are 5-7-1 overall and 2-4 in the MIAC.

St. Scholastica opened the weekend with a 7-3 win over Concordia to notch its first win of 2023. In addition to a air of goals by Arkhip Lendenkov, Jacob Seitz, Nathan Adrian and Nick Lanigan all scored goals. Bostedt made 35 saves. Aaron Dickstein tallied 26 saves for Concordia. 

Johnnies sweep Gusties

Mason Campbell scored twice and Bailey Huber picked up his first career shutout as Saint John’s capped a MIAC sweep of Gustavus with a 4-0 win Saturday.

Campbell scored the first two goals of the game, both coming in the second period, while Huber racked up 12 saves for his sixth win of the season. Huber has a 1.38 goals against average and has stopped more than 94 percent of the shots he’s faced.

The Johnnies defeated Gustavus 4-1 on Friday and are 49-13-9 against the Gusties since 1995, including nine consecutive wins in the series.

Eight players tallied a point in Friday’s victory, with Campbell tallying a goal and an assist. Huber had 17 saves. The Johnnies, unbeaten in their last four, are 8-5-2 overall and 5-2-1 in MIAC play. Gustavus is 2-12-2 and 0-8-1 in the MIAC.

Blugolds win showdown with Oles

Two of the better teams in the west region squared off Friday and UW-Eau Claire prevailed in the end, beating St. Olaf 3-1 for its fifth home win of the season.

Seven players tallied a point for the Blugolds, who jumped ahead 2-0 early and never looked back.

Max Gutjahr won his eighth game of the year in goal, stopping 27 shots. Cade Lemmer, Dawson Klein and Quinn Green all scored for UW-Eau Claire. Tyler Cooper scored the lone goal for the Oles.

The Blugolds completed the weekend with a 4-1 win over Saint Mary’s at home on Saturday. 

Four unanswered goals in the final two periods lifted UW-Eau Claire to the win.

Thomas Magnavite gave the Cardinals an early 1-0 lead before Quinn Green tied the game at 1-1 late in the second. Ryan Green, Jordan Randall and Blake Kryska all scored in the third as the Blugolds improved to 9-5. Gutjahr was again in goal for UW-Eau Claire and made 21 saves.

Double the fun

A pair of hat tricks helped propel Adrian to a 7-2 win over Lawrence Friday night in the opening game of a two-game series on the road.

Matus Spodniak and Riley Murphy both scored three goals apiece as the Bulldogs dominated their NCHA opponent. Murphy added an assist in the win. Jaden Shields played a key role in the offensive success as well as he dished out three assists. Nic Tallarico made 16 saves.

On Saturday, Adrian won 4-1 over Lawrence, stretching its win streak to seven games. Dershahn Stewart made 18 saves. Bradley Somers tallied a goal and two assists. The reigning national champions improved to 12-2-1 overall and 6-2 in conference play. Adrian is 7-0-1 on the road this year.

SATURDAY RECAP: Northeastern, BC pull off upsets at Fenway Park; No. 16 Michigan Tech wins Desert Hockey Classic; No. 12 Ohio State finishes convincing sweep of No. 14 Michigan State; No. 2 Quinnipiac stays red hot, beats No. 10 Harvard

Northeastern celebrates one of its four goals at Fenway Park, earning.a 4-1 win over Connecticut during Frozen Fenway. Boston College defeated UMass in the nightcap (Photo: Steve Babineau/Hockey East)

Liam Walsh picked a big stage to score his first goal of the season for Northeastern, tallying the eventual game winner at historic Fenway Park in a 4-1 victory over No. 15 Massachusetts, 4-1.

After Aidan McDonough opened the scoring at 10:36 of the first, Walsh fired a shot off UConn netminder Arsenii Sergeev (22 saves) less than five minute later to extend the lead heading to the fist intermission.

The game remained that way until Matthew Wood scored his 18th goal of his rookie campaign with 7:34 left. The Huskies, though, responded immediately as Justin Hryckowian scored just 35 seconds later.

Jack Williams fifth goal of the season seal UConn’s fate and Devon Levi earned the victory making 29 saves.

SCOREBOARD  |  USCHO.com POLL  |  PAIRWISE RANKINGS

Boston College 4, No. 15 Massachusetts 2 (at Fenway Park)

In the night game at Frozen Fenway, transfer Cam Burke scored his first two goals of the season and Mitch Benson made 23 saves as Boston College upset No. 15 UMass, 4-2.

Similar to Northeastern in the early game, the Eagles never trailed, taking an early lead on Cutter Gauthier’s 11th goal of the season. Michael Cameron answered for UMass on the power play at 9:28 but BC answered with a power play goal of its own, Burke’s first off the game, at 12:41.

In the second, Burke scored again, this goal being the eventual game-winner at 12:55. UMass drew within a goal with another power play tally with 16:45 remaining in regulation.

But as the Minutemen were pressing for the equalizer, a failed challenge for a head contact penalty after UMass had already used its timeout resulted in a late delay of game minor penalty. BC’s Eamon Powell scored a power play tally into the empty net with eight second remaining.

No. 16 Michigan Tech 3, No. 6 Boston University 2 (Desert Hockey Classic)

Michigan Tech scored three first period goals and then held on as Boston University rallied late to earn a 3-2 victory in the title game of the Desert Hockey Classic at Mullett Arena in Tempe, Az.

Logan Pietila, Kyle Kukkonen and Tristan Ashbrook all scored in a span of less then nine minutes in the opening period to shock the sixth-ranked Terriers early.

Matt Brown scored at 5:33 of the second to close the gap and Devin Kaplan’s fourth goal of the season with 9:10 left brought BU to the brink of the comeback.

But Blake Pietila finished the third period with nine saves and a total of 31 in the game to take the title in Arizona State’s tournament.

No. 2 Quinnipiac 4, No. 10 Harvard 1

College hockey’s hottest team extended its unbeaten streak to 16 games (15-0-1) as No. 2 Quinnipiac knocked off No. 10 Harvard, 4-1. It is the seventh straight win for the Bobcats, who could become the nation’s number one team on Monday following Denver’s loss on Friday to Alaska.

Collin Graf and Ethan de Jong scored in the opening period and Cristophe Tellier extended the lead to 3-0 in the second.

Though Harvard struck back on Alex Gaffney’s goal at 4:52 of the third, Quinnipiac closed the game out with Skylar Brind’Amour’s late empty-net goal.

No. 12 Ohio State 6, No. 14 Michigan State 0

Joe Dunlap scored twice and four other players tallied multi-point games as No. 12 Ohio State routed No. 14 Michigan State, 6-0, to complete a two-game sweep of the Spartans and extended the Buckeyes winning streak to five games.

Michigan State, conversely, is heading in the wrong direction having lost five straight and seven of its last eight.

The host Buckeyes scored three goals in the first, two in the second and completed things with a single tally in the third. Jakub Dobes stopped 32 shots to earn the shutout.

Women’s Division I College Hockey: 2023 IIHF U18 Women’s World Championships player commitments

ÖSTERSUND, Sweden – The 2023 IIHF U18 Women’s World Championships begins Sunday. At press time, 41 of the 46 women on the US and Canadian rosters have already announced their commitment to play NCAA DI women’s hockey. Four players (G Layla Hemp, D Megan Healy, F Bella Fanale for US, F Éloïse Caron on Canada) are as yet undecided and one Canadian player, Abby Lunney, will be playing USports in Canada (Nipissing).

Particularly with the 2022 version of this tournament happening in Madison in June, I expect that we’ll see commitments from players on the European squads announced in the future. In the meantime, here are the players and where they are committed to further their education and play hockey.

Canada: 

Goalies
Hannah Clark Minnesota
Arianne Leblanc Clarkson
Farah Walker Colgate
Defenders
Gracie Graham Minnesota
Piper Grober Cornell
Keira Hurry Colgate
Ava Murphy Wisconsin
Avery Pickering Colgate
Maya Serdachny UConn
Emma Venusio Wisconsin
Forwards
Mackenzie Mackenzie Princeton
Jocelyn Amos Ohio State
Alexia Audin Colgate
Jordan Baxter Ohio State
Éloïse Caron
Morgan Jackson Northeastern
Caitlin Kraemer
Minnesota Duluth
Shelby Laidlaw Clarkson
Alex Law Boston University
Emmalee Pais Colgate
Charlotte Pieckenhagen Wisconsin
Abby Stonehouse Penn State

 

USA

Goalies
Annelies Bergmann Cornell
Danielle Strom St. Thomas
Defenders
Rose Dwyer Cornell
Ellah Hause St. Thomas
Molly Jordan Boston College
Gabrielle Kim Princeton
Elly Klepinger Minnesota
Cailin Mumm St. Thomas
Forwards
Lindzi Avar Cornell
Peyton Compton Northeastern
Lucia DiGiralamo Princeton
Kendra Distad Minnesota
Joy Dunne Ohio State
Cassie Hall Wisconsin
Alexandra Lalonde Northeastern
Ava Lindsay Minnesota
Finley McCarthy Wisconsin
Maggie Scannell Wisconsin
Josie St. Martin Ohio State
Samantha Taber Boston College

FRIDAY RECAP: Alaska drops top-ranked Denver; No. 2 Quinnipiac blanks Dartmouth; New Hampshire shuts out No. 11 Providence; No. 6 Boston University, No. 16 Michigan Tech win at Desert Hockey Classic

Denver’s Shai Buium and Alaska’s Matt Koethe battle for position in Friday night’s game at Magness Arena (photo: Adri Meyer).

No. 1 Denver returned to home ice at Magness Arena Friday night only to be defeated 3-1 by Alaska in what can be considered a major upset.

Jonny Sorenson and Brady Risk each had a power-play goal and an assist for the Nanooks, while TJ Lloyd posted a pair of assists and Garrett Pyke getting an empty-net goal in the win, Alaska’s first all-time at Denver.

In goal, Matt Radomsky made 19 saves, only allowing a Massimo Rizzo goal on a power play with 3:07 to play in the third period.

“They made it really hard, and we struggled to adapt to how we need to play,” said DU coach David Carle. “Our fourth line was pretty good at being able to advance pucks up the ice. We actually got pucks below the goal line and were able to generate some chances, but it was definitely way too inconsistent with our other three lines unfortunately.”

Friday’s game marked DU’s first outing in nearly three weeks, as the team last played on Dec. 17 against Lindenwood.

Magnus Chrona finished with 30 saves for the Pioneers, who lost for the first time since a 3-0 setback Nov. 25 at home to Omaha, winning seven straight since then.

The Nanooks have now won six of their last seven games.

No. 2 Quinnipiac 3, Dartmouth 0

Behind a pair of goals form Ethan de Jong, Quinnipiac won its sixth game in a row by blanking Dartmouth 3-0 on Friday night at M&T Bank Arena.

de Jong added his second multi-goal game of the year and fourth of his career as he notched the first and last tallies of the night en route to the shutout victory.

CJ McGee scored 17 seconds after de Jong’s first of the night, quickly giving Quinnipiac a 2-0 advantage at the 6:01 mark of the opening frame.

Yaniv Perets made 14 shutouts for career shutout No. 15 and the fourth of the 2022-23 campaign.

The Bobcats’ unbeaten streak is now 15 games, the nation’s longest active stretch in the country. They also have won seven in a row at home, also the longest active streak nationally. Quinnipiac is also 24-1-2 in its last 27 home contests.

Cooper Black made 40 saves in goal for Dartmouth.

New Hampshire 2, No. 11 Providence 0

Goalie David Fessenden recorded his first shutout of the season with 35 saves as New Hampshire defeated No. 11 Providence 2-0 on Friday night at Schneider Arena.

Cy LeClerc and senior captain Chase Stevenson each scored for UNH.

Philip Svedebäck stopped 21 shots in goal for the Friars.

No. 6 Boston University 5, Air Force 1 (Desert Hockey Classic)

Wilmer Skoog scored two goals and Jeremy Wilmer recorded three assists as No. 6 Boston University defeated Air Force 5-1 in the first game of the Desert Hockey Classic at Arizona State’s Mullett Arena.

Jamie Armstrong scored 22 seconds into the game and the Terriers never looked back, with Skoog scoring twice in the first period to give BU a 3-0 lead.

Brian Carrabes collected two points with a goal and an assist while senior Sam Stevens added an empty-netter. Devin Kaplan secured two assists and goaltender Drew Commesso turned aside 29 of the 30 shots he faced to notch the win.

Clayton Cosentino scored for the Falcons and junior Maiszon Balboa, making his first career start, made 32 saves in the game.

“We got off to a horrendous start, but I am proud of our guys for battling back,” Air Force coach Frank Serratore said. “BU played at a speed limit that we haven’t seen in a while. After we got down 3-0, we basically played them even the rest of the game. They are a very, very talented team. But the way our guys battled, I think we earned some respect. Our success this weekend will be determined tomorrow. The question is, can we play the way we played in the second and third period and carry that over to tomorrow?”

No. 16 Michigan Tech 4, Arizona State 2 (Desert Hockey Classic)

Four different players – Evan Orr, Tristan Ashbrook, Jack Works, and Ryland Mosley – scored for the Huskies and Blake Pietila stopped 24 shots for the win in goal at Mullett Arena.

MTU led 1-0 after one period and 2-1 through 40 minutes.

For the host Sun Devils, Robert Mastrosimone scored twice, Jack Judson assisted on both, and goaltender TJ Semptimphelter kicked out 23 shots.

“The guys found a way to win against a good team in their rink,” Michigan Tech coach Joe Shawhan said. “I thought our defensive unit played really well, and Blake saved our bacon on a lot of instances. We’re going to have to be a lot better tomorrow if we want to have a chance against a really good BU team.”

“[Michigan Tech] is a good team,” said ASU coach Greg Powers. “They’re a top-20 team and they’re ranked for a reason. They’ve won a lot of games and have been tough to beat. They’re tough to gain speed through on neutral ice, especially in the third period. I thought they were a nidge more opportunistic tonight than us. I thought it was a pretty even game. I thought we controlled the last two periods for the most part. Their goalie made some huge saves. It was a game that just went their way, it’s that simple.

“It wasn’t like the ice was really tilted either way. They were more opportunistic and we scored two goals. You’re not going to win a lot of games scoring two goals.”

BU and MTU will play Saturday for the tournament title, while the Sun Devils and Air Force square off in the consolation game.

No. 12 Ohio State 3, No. 14 Michigan State 1

With a goal in each period, No. 12 Ohio State toppled No. 14 Michigan State 3-1 Friday at the Schottenstein Center.

Tate Singleton opened the scoring less than two minutes into the game and Stephen Halliday’s second-period power-play goal pushed the Buckeye lead to 2-0 through 40 minutes.

The Spartans made it a one-goal game midway through the third on a goal by Jesse Tucker before Joe Dunlap sealed the win with an empty-net goal in the final minute.

Jakub Dobes made 27 saves in the Buckeyes net and Mason Lohrei had two assists.

Ohio State has now won its last four games.

Spartans goalie Dylan St. Cyr finished with 34 saves.

Minnesota Duluth 1, Bemidji State 1 (UMD wins shootout 1-0)

Early in the third period, Bemidji State’s Kaden Pickering netted the first goal of the night at the Sanford Center

In a late effort to tie the game up, UMD pulled goalie Zach Stejskal with just 2:26 left. Thirty seconds later, a BSU player tried to clear the zone, but Wyatt Kaiser stopped the puck at the blue line and sent a rocket past Mattias Sholl to tie the game.

In overtime, UMD led in shots 6-3, but nothing was settled.

During the shootout, Dominic James scored the lone goal for UMD and Stejskal stopped all three shots he faced.

Sholl made 33 saves for the Beavers.

Atlantic Hockey announces rescheduled Canisius-Air Force, Sacred Heart-Canisius conference series

Atlantic Hockey today announced a pair of changes to its 2022-23 conference schedule.

The previously-postponed Canisius at Air Force series originally scheduled for Dec. 30-31 will now be played Feb. 13-14 at Cadet Ice Arena in Colorado Springs. Both games will start at 7:05 p.m. MST.

Additionally, the Sacred Heart at Canisius series scheduled for Feb. 17-18 will now be played Feb. 18-19 at the LECOM Harbor Center in Buffalo, N.Y. Both games of that series are scheduled for 4 p.m. EST starts.

Both series will stream live on FloHockey.tv.

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