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This Week in the CHA: Dec. 5, 2002

Apologies, Apologies

As USCHO.com Editor-in-Chief Scott Brown said, “This has to be right up there with [Arizona Cardinals running back] Thomas Jones breaking his hand going for the phone.”

I think something bit me, given the results, but I had this bump on the bridge of my nose on Wednesday … and when I woke up on Thursday, I was Billy Crystal in Monsters, Inc.: My one eye! Yep, an eye swollen shut. (Yes, Mom, I went to the ER.)

So yeah … this column was typed with one eye swollen up behind my face. If there are oddities, I blame them solely on that.

Goalies, Goalies, Goalies

I swear, the only CHA teams with a stable goaltending situation are Air Force and Bemidji State. Those Serratores … but really, everyone else does have questions.

Alabama-Huntsville: Senior Mark Byrne holds the school record for career shutouts with eight, but he hasn’t reached the level of his sophomore season since breaking both wrists last year. At some point, it becomes a point of concern that Byrne may never be his old self.

[UAH] senior Mark Byrne holds the school record for career shutouts with eight, but he hasn’t reached the level of his sophomore season since breaking both wrists last year.

It’s not all Byrne’s fault, however. He started the bulk of the team’s games during their insane opening stretch, where Denver and Minnesota each hung seven goals on him while his defense pretty much left him flapping in the breeze.

All of this wouldn’t be any kind of concern, though, if not for the stellar play of freshman Scott Munroe. Munroe now holds a school record of his own, having saved 56 of 60 shots in his start against Niagara last weekend. Munroe’s statistics are better than Byrne’s across the board, although there is a difference in the competition level that the two goalies have seen, since Munroe didn’t travel to Denver.

Is there a competition? Sure. Is Munroe likely to pass Byrne? In the words of Chargers assistant Lance West, “That’s an awful lot to ask of a freshman.”

However, Munroe has given the team pretty much everything that they’ve asked for so far, so keep an eye on this as the season progresses.

Findlay: If you’ve read this column for the last year, you know this was coming: free Kevin Fines!

Fines, who won the CHA Rookie of the Year award two years ago but received only 40% of the playing time last year, broke out last weekend when he finally got on the ice. When senior Jamie VandeSpyker had a stranglehold on the job, coach Craig Barnett said, “Kevin’s doing anything he can to get on the ice right now.”

And how. Fines saved 57 of the 60 shots that Holy Cross flung towards his net. The big question has to be, will Fines keep the job? When Barnett addressed the subject earlier this season, he noted that he’d play whoever was at the top of his game. Right now, I’d say that Fines is it for the Oilers.

Niagara: Say it together now: “Whither Rob Bonk?”

Bonk was left home by Niagara coach Dave Burkholder last weekend, and it wasn’t because the big junior was injured. “Bonker came in and asked me if this had anything to do with his last game [against Western Michigan]. I told him, ‘No, it has to do with your whole season.'”

The only constant in the Niagara pipes has been change. After a solid relief stint for the Purple Eagles, sophomore Ryan MacNeil came along with freshman Jeff VanNynatten to Huntsville last weekend. Of MacNeil, Burkholder said, “I couldn’t leave him behind and bring Rob given how Ryan played against Western.” MacNeil didn’t get the start in either game, but relieved VanNynatten after the first period on Sunday.

(Note: Initial reports that MacNeil replaced VanNynatten in overtime on Saturday were entirely false. The freshman was in the entire game, and as I called that game on radio, I have no idea how the box scores were fouled in the first place.)

Wayne State: Maybe it’s the curse of being the preseason CHA Player of the Year. Maybe it’s the pressure of being expected to carry the burden on his shoulders. Or maybe it’s something else — but in any regard, something’s just not right with David Guerrera. I saw him with my own eyes a couple weekends ago, and when the Charger offense — which had been one of the most anemic in the nation early in the season — tacked nine goals on the senior from St. Leonard, Que., I began to wonder if something was wrong.

Freshman Matt Kelly was in net against Michigan Tech for Friday night’s contest, signaling that perhaps a change was in the offing. Guerrera returned to the pipes the next night, but the homestanding Huskies chased him with five goals on just 23 shots in the first two periods. Marc Carlson replaced Guerrera in just his second game since coming back from testicular cancer.

The Warriors are the Road Warriors this week, traveling to Alaska-Fairbanks. Which goalie will Bill Wilkinson use against the Nanooks? We’ll have to wait and see.

Good Riddance?

Some have asked what was up with Matt Ryan leaving Niagara earlier this season. According to Burkholder, “We had a horrible game our first night against Air Force, so I benched three of our forwards, including Matt, in an effort to send a message to the team. The next week, he came to my office and told me that he was leaving for juniors.”

At the CHA Beat, we say that it’s better to have guys that want to be a part of your program than those who don’t want to be there at all. Good luck, Matt, but don’t come crying to the CHA Beat if it doesn’t work out for you.

Crystal Ball Time

All looks into crystal balls are crapshoots … let’s see how the One-Eyed Bandit does peering in there.

Niagara faces Colgate on Thursday night. The Raiders aren’t setting the ECAC on fire, but with nothing but question marks in the Niagara net, the outlook for the Eagles is pretty cloudy. Too bad — you can be sure that Joe Tallari, Barret Ehgoetz, and Jason Williamson will have one of their typically-outstanding performances. Watching that line work together is a lot of fun.

Air Force hosts its annual tournament, in which the Falcons bring Division III schools to Colorado Springs. Things may be tough after two 7-0 defeats last weekend, but look for the Falcons to fly high with a sweep.

Alabama-Huntsville travels to Sacred Heart this weekend. The question is whether the Chargers will play defense with heart for 60 minutes. Until the Chargers make a stronger commitment to team defense for the entire game, their goalies are going to be peppered with shots. No matter who is in net for Doug Ross, he can’t afford to have him see 60 shots. If the defense shows up, expect a sweep; if not, it could get ugly.

As stated above, Wayne State travels to the 49th state to face Alaska-Fairbanks. With the concern over the goaltending situation and the rough travel — the Warriors left on Wednesday, rather than the traditional Thursday for CHA road trips — look for the best the Warriors can pull out to be a split.

Findlay faces MAAC “foe” Bentley this weekend. Go back a couple of years, and the MAAC dissed the Oilers when the young program was making the switch to D-I, forbidding member schools to play them. Ever since, Barnett’s boys have taken MAAC opponents out behind the woodshed. No matter who is in net for the Oilers, look for the team to come back to Ohio with two wins.

Lastly, Bemidji State faces Minnesota-Duluth. The Bulldogs are woofing pretty big, and with reason: they have defeated Denver and tied Colorado College already this season, and they’re tied for second in the WCHA standings. However, the Beavers do have a white-hot Grady Hunt and an offense that is showing signs of shaking off the effects of a summer’s hibernation. With a home-and-home set scheduled, expect the Beavers to pick off the Bulldogs once on the weekend.

This Week in the MAAC: Dec. 5, 2002

How Legit Is Quinnipiac?

Back-to-back one-goal losses for Quinnpiac to Hockey East schools — Northeastern and nationally-ranked Maine — have left people, including yours truly asking the question: “How legit is Quinnipiac?”

It also leads to the natural follow-up question of what steps has the MAAC league made in its five years of existence in closing the gap between itself and the “Big Four” conferences.

I think it’s best to address these one at a time. First Quinnipiac.

Truly, I think as hockey fans we may have seen the first MAAC team to officially “arrive.” The Bobcats, without any doubt in my mind, are a team that can play with the big boys. I’m pretty convinced that Quinnipiac playing at the top of its game could beat any team in the country.

Simply put, they have what it takes. They understand their offensive system, they have a good commitment to team defense, they have excellent special teams and, most importantly, they have solid goaltending. This is a team that, conceivably, should not be stopped.

My first taste of the Braves came two weeks ago at Northeastern. Everything mentioned above happened that night. The offense moved the puck well and, in the zone, cycled the puck consistently. The defense, for the most part, gave up very few quality scoring opportunities, and when those opportunities arose, netminder Jamie Holden — in my mind one of the top goaltenders in the country — was there to make the save. And the Bobcats’ special teams, in that game at least, were excellent, scoring once on the power play and shutting down Northeastern’s man advantage.

On that night, honestly, I felt Quinnipiac deserved to win the game. It would have been the first win ever against a Hockey East opponent for any MAAC school. But, alas, it just didn’t happen.

Even Northeastern coach Bruce Crowder knew his team might have escaped a bit.

“They move the puck well and I thought they forecheck well,” said Crowder of the Bobcats. “I don’t think there was a whole lot of difference between us and them and we just got the break with the shot in the third period and they didn’t.”

Crowder is optimistic for Quinnipiac’s success and he feels that based on his opinions, they’ll likely see play past the MAAC tournament this year.

“Quinnipiac’s a very good hockey team,” Crowder said. “They played us tough and kept coming at us. They’re a team that’s probably going to be back in the NCAA tournament unless they get upset.”

Many, including myself, felt Quinnipiac staying with Northeastern was likely more due to Northeastern’s ability — or lack thereof, in terms of the high-flying teams in Hockey East. But just days after the NU game, Quinnipiac opened more eyes, once again losing, 2-1, to a Hockey East club, this time nationally-ranked Maine.

I can’t speak as much about the Maine game because I wasn’t there. Reports were that, once again, Quinnipiac played a decent game and had its chances to upend the defending national runner-up. Suddenly, it allowed many, myself included, to start forming more concise opinions about Quinnipiac.

I’ve come to the conclusion that the current Quinnipiac team likely is better than the Mercyhurst team that took Michigan to the limit two years ago in the NCAA tournament. Without taking anything away from Mercyhurst, the general level of play in the MAAC simply wasn’t at the level it is now. The current Mercyhurst team is likely even better than the championship club of 2001. But teams have stepped up programs over the year, with, in my opinion, Quinnipiac leading the way.

Which leads us back to our second question: Has the MAAC league closed the talent gap between itself and the “Big Four?” My simple answer: No.

This shouldn’t be taken as a shot at the league. But top to bottom, there has yet to be 11 teams that have stepped to the plate with the commitment it takes to make their programs nationally competitive. That said, teams are in many cases doing their best and it’s my belief that none of the blame, if any should be placed, can be placed on the coaches.

No, I believe that it’s the administration that must give each and every program the resources necessary to succeed on the national level. There are simply too many teams in the league that ARE taking everything seriously to allow other schools to not meet that level of commitment.

Crowder, too, sees that there is a top-to-bottom difference. But he also looks to other parts of the nation as a silver lining.

“[The success of the league] depends on the institutions and what kind of emphasis they want to put into college hockey,” said Crowder.

In specific reference to Quinnipiac, Crowder said: “Obviously, with [athletics director] Jack McDonald at Quinnipiac, hockey is very important. He’s done a tremendous job getting games on TV. They’re making an effort.

“It’s really going to depend on some of the bottom [teams] and what kind of an effort they’re going to put in. That’s going to be the tell-tale sign.”

Still, Crowder believes in the “Rome Wasn’t Built in a Day” cliché.

“You talk to guys like Ron Mason out at Michigan State,” said Crowder, comparing the three-decade old CCHA to the MAAC. “When he started, he was in the CCHA and that league, when it started, was like the MAAC is now. So you can see that it will happen over time.”

Specifically, though, how far away are things for the MAAC? Five years? Ten years? Sooner? Later? Truly, it’s hard to say. The issue that I’ve beaten to death of expanding the scholarship level beyond the current 11 can even be back-burnered.

If every school in the league won’t commit to spending the resources on 11 scholarships, there’s little use expanding further to 15 or the national limit of 18. Instead of improving the league, that likely will just further create plateaus that certain schools simply won’t cross. It’s hard for anyone to expect a school that doesn’t give any scholarship money to compete with a school that gives 11, let alone 18.

Anyone who reads this column regularly knows that this is an issue that can and has been beat to death. So at this time, it’s best to simply close and give credit where credit is due. The Bobcats, for now, deserve to receive the accolades for elevating the program to the level it has reached. Other schools will follow. Soon, hopefully. And this column will be waiting at that time to recognize those efforts.

Weekly Awards

ITECH MAAC Hockey League Player of the Week: Jamie Holden, Quinnipiac sophomore, G, Telkwa, British Columbia

Sophomore goaltender Jamie Holden was the star of Tuesday’s 2-1 loss at No. 4 Maine, especially in the first period. He set a new personal-best with 22 saves in the opening period. His old best was 20 in the first frame of last year’s MAAC final. Holden finished the night with 36 saves for the Bobcats. Holden has a 2.29 overall goals against average, second in the conference. He holds a .931 overall save percentage, best in the MAAC, and holds a .700 overall winning percentage, good for second in the conference.

ITECH MAAC Hockey League Goalie of the Week: Jason Carey, Connecticut junior, G, Oakdale, Minn.

Carey recorded 37 saves in UConn’s 3-1 loss to No. 3 New Hampshire on Saturday. He held the Wildcats scoreless for the first 29:01 of the game, then prevented New Hampshire from scoring in the last period of play, stopping 14 shots in the third. Carey has a 3.85 overall GAA, placing him 10th in the conference. He posts a .898 overall save percentage, putting him in eighth place.

ITECH MAAC Hockey League Rookie of the Week: Michael Hoffman, Connecticut freshman, F, Scituate, Mass.

Hoffman notched the Huskies’ lone goal of the game against No. 3 New Hampshire 37 seconds into the second period. He gave the Huskies the 1-0 lead they held for 10 minutes in UConn’s first-ever game against a ranked opponent. To date, Hoffman has two goals and four assists for six points. He ranks seventh in the conference and ninth overall in freshman scoring.

One Last Time

Though this week was planned to be my last column before the New Year, a change in schedule this week kept me from gathering enough material to make this much of a worthy item. Thus, I will take the option play (columnists are given the option on whether to write next week) and print one last column before 2002 closes. We’ll take a look at recapping a week full of MAAC games and look back at the highs and lows of 2002.

This Week in the Hockey East Women’s League: Dec. 5, 2002

Providence, along with New Hampshire, may be off to the strongest starts in Hockey East so far this year. But on a game-by-game basis, strong starts are where the Friars have most been lacking.

“This season for whatever reason, we’ve been a traditionally slow starter, and a tremendous finisher,” said Providence coach Bob Deraney. “I don’t why, but it’s a terrible habit we’re in right now.”

The No. 7 Friars, the Hockey East preseason favorites, have done justice to their ranking at this early stage of the season. Their 5-2 victory over No. 4 Dartmouth is the conference’s only victory over a ranked team this season. Still, the Friars know they could be doing better than their current 8-3-3 mark.

In a 4-4 battle against No. 8 Brown last Tuesday for the Mayor’s Cup, Providence matched its worst start of the year, falling behind 3-0 in the first eight minutes. Deraney called timeout soon after and the team settled down. The Friars slowly chipped away at the lead until claiming a 4-3 lead in the third period.

It was a similar story for the Friars in a 2-2 tie against Connecticut on Saturday. They fell behind in both the first and third periods and found themselves playing from behind against an opponent they were favored to beat.

The one positive example where Providence did start strong was its victory over Dartmouth. After a scoreless first period, the Friars exploded to take a 3-1 lead in the second. Five different Providence players scored that day, including Hockey East Player of the Month Jenn Butsch.

“We played a tremendous team game,” Deraney said. ” We got out to a very quick start and we finished. It’s much easier to play ahead than it is from behind.”

The win over Dartmouth constrasted sharply to the Friars first meeting with the Big Green. Though Dartmouth’s roster was depleted from the Four Nations Cup, Providence fell behind 3-0 early in the first period. The Friars lost, 3-2, but outshot Dartmouth 20-3 in the third period.

Deraney knows his team needs to get over the slow-start spell to have success this weekend.

“We can’t afford to come out slow against BC or Harvard,” he said.

The Friars know more than anyone not to look past Boston College. Providence lost to the Eagles, 1-0, in the last game of its regular season last year. The Friars can’t be losing many more points to the bottom half of the league if it expects to make a serious run at the Frozen Four.

The 4 p.m. Sunday showdown between No. 1 Harvard and Providence pitches the ECAC favorites against the Hockey East favorites. The Friars might enter the game as underdogs, but they have had more success against the Crimson than any team other than Dartmouth or Minnesota-Duluth over the past four seasons. Harvard has only been shutout twice in the past five seasons. Both of those shutouts came at the hands of the Friars.

Deraney rotated three goaltenders in the past week–Amy Quinlan, Amy Thomas and freshman Jana Bugden. Bugden’s earned the majority of the minutes with 10 of the Friars’ 14 starts ever since she came up strong in the season opener versus then-No. 1 UMD. Thomas and Quinlan both earned starts this weekend as Deraney felt they had earned the playing time, though it was no knock on Bugden’s abilities.

As for Providence’s recent success against Harvard, Deraney considers it irrelevant because the Crimson are so vastly improved.

“They’re a very different team,” he said. “I think we’re catching them at a very hot time, which doesn’t look good for us. They deserve to be No. 1 the way they’re playing right now.”

Playing No. 1 in the nation is old hat this season for Providence, who opened the season with two games against Minnesota-Duluth–both two-goal defeats. Deraney holds Harvard in just as high respect.

“Right now, the way [Harvard] is playing, it’s going to take a perfect effort,” Deraney said. “We’re just going to try to compete the best we can and play Providence-style hockey and see if it’s going to be good enough, but they have some tremendously good players.”

Growing Pains

Providence isn’t the only Hockey East squad that’ll get to test its mettle this weekend against nationally-ranked foes. Northeastern will be hitting the road against the ECAC’s toughest travel partner pair with No. 8 Brown on Friday and Harvard on Saturday.

The Huskies are at a serious disadvantage in their matchup against the Crimson. While Northeastern plays a physically draining game at Brown on Friday, Harvard gets the night off.

“We’re going to have our hands full on Friday, so coming into Saturday, we’re going to have to recover quickly,” said Northeastern coach Joy Woog. “We’re going to have to be ready right from the start.”

Northeastern has done as well as Woog expected with a 24-player roster half full of freshmen. Injuries have made matters even worse. Freshman forward Cyndy Kenyon has been out of action as has senior forward Nancy Collins.

Seniors have accounted for four of Northeastern’s top five scorers, yet the freshmen have started to contribute–most notably Rebecca Paul who now leads all Husky forwards with seven goals.

With Hockey East Goaltender of the Month Chanda Gunn in net, Woog has reason to believe Northeastern is capable of pulling an upset. Though the Huskies haven’t been winning consistently–posting a 5-7-1 record so far–Gunn ranks second in the nation in save percentage.

“We feel we have stronger goaltending than Harvard, by far,” Woog said. “And I think that clearly they have a deeper team than we do.”

One area where Woog does have the highest respect for Harvard is the power play, where the Crimson is converting at a rate of 42 percent.

“We can’t take penalties against Harvard,” Woog said. “The only problem that Harvard has is where to score on their power play. Do we score from the back door? Do we score from the point? Do we score from the side? Where do we score from-that’s the biggest question for them to answer.”

Hockey East Awards

TPS Louisville Player of the Week-Kristine Butt, Sr., F, UNH
ITECH Rookie of the Week-Kristin Blundo, Fr., F, BC
Defensive Player of the Week-Shannon Murphy, So., G, UConn
TPS Louisville Player of the Month-Jenn Butsch, Sr., F, Providence
ITECH Goaltender of the Month-Chanda Gunn, Jr., G, Northeastern
ITECH Rookie of the Month-Vicki Davis, Fr., F, New Hampshire

This Week in the WCHA Women’s League: Dec. 5, 2002

With this week’s being the final column of 2002, let’s review each of the WCHA’s seven teams over the first two months of the season.

Minnesota-Duluth (11-1-2, 7-0-1 WCHA, tie-1st place)

The Bulldogs jumped into the driver’s seat in the WCHA last weekend with a pair of wins at Minnesota, tying the Gophers for first place in the league standings with two games in hand. They defeated the Gophers by using not only their stars, such as Maria Rooth and Hanne Sikio, but role players as well, with Tricia Guest providing a hat trick in Sunday’s 6-5 win.

UMD’s size and strength was on display in both victories over Minnesota as it scored several goals by converting rebounds and putting home loose pucks in front of the Gopher net.

Where the Bulldogs have gotten themselves in trouble this season is with penalties. They are averaging 18.6 minutes per game and are allowing nearly seven power plays per game. Fortunatley for coach Shannon Miller and her charges, their penalty kill is operating at a .937 efficiency.

However, both goals by Harvard, in UMD’s only loss of the season, came on the power play. They also gave up four power-play goals to Minnesota, including three on Sunday, and had to battle from behind in both games due to those goals.

The few shortcomings the Bulldogs have, though, have been overcome by brute force offense. UMD averages 5.36 goals per game and nearly 41 shots on goal, putting pressure on opponents’ defense and allowing other teams little time in the attack zone.

A weekend off for the Bulldogs immediately before Thanksgiving was key in their wins over the Gophers as they appeared well-rested. They will close out 2002 with a home series this weekend against St. Cloud State followed by a home-and-home series with Bemidji State.

They will have nearly a month off before returning to action but will need to be on top of their game immediately as they host No. 4 Dartmouth and No. 9 Wisconsin in their first two weeks back. A key for UMD will be will be the health of Rooth, the team captain. She suffered a separated shoulder in Sunday’s game and will not be available until after the start of the new year.

The most important thing for the Bulldogs is that they’ve put themselves in position to claim one of the four spots in the NCAA Frozen Four, which they will host on March 21 and 23. With 18 games left in the regular season, anything can happen but UMD is in the enviable position of controlling its destiny.

Minnesota (13-2-1, 7-2-1 WCHA, tie-1st place)

After this weekend’s series at Minnesota State, the Gophers will be off for nearly a month, their first break since beginning the season 10 weeks ago. The break couldn’t come at a better time.

Despite coach Laura Halldorson’s protestations to the contrary, her team looked tired in two losses to UMD. Although the Bulldogs used their size and strength to beat the Gophers in one-on-one matchups, Minnesota made mistakes that seemed could only be attributed to fatigue.

Goalie Jody Horak, the league’s leading goaltender, took the blame for Saturday’s 4-3 loss. Although it’s hard to place the blame on any single player ever, she gave up three bad goals despite a solid 35-save effort. With a career goals against average of 1.47, Horak has gone for weeks at a time without giving up a soft goal. Saturday marked the 12th time in 15 games she has started in net for Minnesota this season after starting just 16 times last season.

National scoring leader Krissy Wendell, who has been nothing short of sensational this year, also showed signs of fatigue Sunday. With UMD already leading 2-1, she coasted past Bulldog defenseman Krista McArthur at the right point. By the time she returned to the play, Tricia Guest had given UMD a 3-1 lead. It was one of several times Minnesota players coasted through plays rather than stopping and starting to get back into a play.

It’s hard to blame the Gophers for being tired. They played 10 games in a 31-day span, eight of which were against ranked opponents. Halldorson said she and her staff had looked at the schedule in October and felt a 7-3 mark would be good. They went 7-2-1 and, despite falling from first to third in the national rankings, are in a good position with a 6-2 mark against ranked teams.

Wendell and fellow rookie Natalie Darwitz have taken the WCHA and nation by storm, ranking first and second nationally in scoring, combining for 33 goals and 73 points in just 14 games. The two keyed Minnesota’s 14-game unbeaten streak to start the season and will be keys down the stretch as the Gophers try to defend their WCHA title.

Ohio State (5-9-2, 4-6-2 WCHA, third place)

Although third in league standings, the Buckeyes also have played more conference games than any other team in the league and, to maintain their position, will need help from some other teams.

Inconsistency has been OSU’s Achilles’ heel through the first two months of the season. The Buckeyes are averaging 5.40 goals in five wins but five of their nine losses have been shutouts.

They scored seven power-play goals in two wins over Minnesota State to open the season and added two more in a pair of wins over St. Cloud State last weekend. In 12 games in between, they scored just five times on 66 power-play chances.

The team’s goaltending has not lived up to expectations either. Senior April Stojak has posted just an .873 save percentage and is the only WCHA netminder who has played at least one-third of her team’s minutes with a mark under .900. Freshman Natalie Lamme, who had split time with Stojak through the season’s first 10 games, saw her first action in three weeks Saturday and promptly posted her first career shutout in a 6-0 win over the Huskies.

The next six games, all of which are on the road, could prove vital for OSU. They are off this weekend before facing No. 10 Princeton on Dec. 13 and 14. The Buckeyes will have two weekends off before returning to play Jan. 2 and 4 with games at No. 4 Dartmouth and No. 5 St. Lawrence before going to St. Cloud State for their first WCHA games of the new year.

Wisconsin (9-4-3, 3-4-3 WCHA, 4th place)

Unbeaten in six non-conference games, the Badgers have struggled during conference play, thanks in no small part to injuries. Key among them is one to sophomore defenseman Carla McLeod, who broke a leg Oct. 25 and will not return to the lineup until after the new year.

Fellow blueliners Kerry Weiland and Sis Paulsen also have missed games and coach Mark Johnson surely is looking forward to the time when his group of defensemen, maybe the best in the nation, has everyone healthy and together again.

Wisconsin also has given away several unexpected points, losing at home to St. Cloud State earlier and needing a pair of third-period goals to earn a tie with Minnesota State at home Saturday.

Depth has not been a problem for the Badgers but, in back-to-back series against UMD and Minnesota, key players such as Meghan Hunter and Kendra Antony were not able to keep pace offensively with their Bulldog and Gopher counterparts. The duo, which entered the season with 118 combined goals, has managed just eight this season. Hunter, who entered the season with 65 goals in her first two seasons, has just two this year.

As always, Wisconsin has relied on senior Jackie MacMillan in goal. She has played every minute through the team’s first 16 games and may not get a rest all season. Despite posting a 2.22 GAA and .906 save percentage, she has had her moments. In the last two weeks, she has posted two shutouts, making 49 saves in the two games. In two ties over the last two weeks, she has allowed six goals on 41 shots.

Nevertheless, the Badgers know they are capable of making a second-half run like they did last season when they went 15-3 after Jan. 1, including three wins against eventual national champion UMD.

After a road series at Bemidji State this week to concluded 2002, Wisconsin returns to face St. Lawrence on the road and will host No. 6 New Hampshire on Jan. 24 and 25, and also will have rematches with both Minnesota and UMD during the season’s second half.

Bemidji State (5-5-3, 3-3-2 WCHA, 5th place)

Despite residing in fifth place, the Beavers have the third-best record in league play. With only eight league games under their belts, they host Wisconsin this weekend and face UMD in a home-and-home series next weekend to close out 2002, a tough four-game stretch which will set the tone for the second half of the season.

In their favor is that, after being swept in their season-opening series at Mercyhurst, the Beavers have not lost consecutive games. They also put the first blemish on Minnesota’s record this season with a 2-2 tie on Nov. 9.

BSU has neither been swept nor completed a sweep in four conference series so far, an inconsistency which has kept them from rising about the .500 mark in conference play. Whether the Beavers can step up from that level will be determined in the next two weeks, a stretch that will follow a break of two weekends without a game.

A key for Bemidji State so far has been its goaltending, primarily that of junior Anik Coté, who ranks second in save percentage and third in goals against average in the WCHA. The trio of Coté, senior Bre Dedrickson and freshman Jill Luebke have combined for a 2.04 GAA, third best in the conference.

Finding a consistent source of offense has been the Beavers’ biggest problem to date. Senior Amber Fryklund leads the team in scoring with 13 points in 13 games, but the team averages just 2.46 goals per game. She and junior Guylaine Haché have combined for 11 goals, more than one-third of the team’s total of 32.

With three of its last four games before the break on the road, BSU has its work cut out. Coach Bruce Olson and his charges will be extremely happy to maintain their .500 pace through the four games. Doing so for the remainder of the season will mean the team has taken another step forward from last season’s 12-13-8 mark and fifth-place league finish.

St. Cloud State (3-10-0, 3-7-0 WCHA, 6th place)

The Huskies are more than a little disappointed with their current position but injuries decimated the team early in the season and, with a full contingent, they ended a six-game losing streak early in November with a 5-3 win at Wisconsin.

A two-game series at UMD followed by a non-conference series at North Dakota will round out 2002 for St. Cloud State and the Huskies will have a much-needed opportunity to regroup for a second-half run at moving up in the league standings and earning a playoff spot.

The early absence of junior captain Kobi Kowamoto from the lineup displayed the team’s biggest weakness: the inability of its defense to consistently move the puck out of its own zone. That’s a big reason they are allowing 36 shots per game. Senior goalie Laura Gieselman has been steady, posting a .901 save percentage, but freshman Brie Anderson has stopped just 81.2 percent of the shots she has faced in five starts with a 7.02 goals against average.

Offensively, the team hasn’t found its stride either, scoring just 20 goals in 13 games. Senior Abby Cooper and sophomore Melanie Pudsey share the team lead with just four goals apiece while junior Roxanne Stang, who scored 72 points in her first two seasons, has managed just three points thus far in her third year.

Coach Jason Lesteberg turned Bemidji State around last season and will look to do the same during the second half of the season with his Huskies. He will hope to have a full complement of players available and ready when the team returns from its break to face Quinnipiac at home on Jan. 7.

Minnesota State (3-10-1, 2-7-1 WCHA, 7th place)

Despite occupying last place in the league standings, things are improving for the Mavericks, as witnessed by Saturday’s 3-3 tie at Wisconsin, their first point against the Badgers in four seasons.

Minnesota State’s five points this season has surpassed their total of three from the last two seasons combined. Although the Mavericks have received solid, at times spectacular, goaltending, it’s the offense that has been the main reason for the Mavericks’ surge.

Junior Amanda Osborn has scored seven goals after recording just five in 67 games the previous two seasons. Senior Tristin Stephenson has eight points in 14 games, doubling her output of last season. A pair of newcomers, freshman Devon Nichols and sophomore transfer Melanie Salatino, have chipped in with six and five points, respectively.

Most noticeable about the Mavericks’ offense is that they take the puck to the net more often and with more urgency than in the past.

MSU has not had complaints about its goaltending with the combination of junior Shari Vogt and senior Katie Beauduy in the past, and the same holds true this season. Despite seeing nearly 41 shots per game, the duo has combined for a .911 save percentage. Aside from a horrific series at UMD, Oct. 18-19, in which they allowed 18 goals and a whopping 129 shots, Vogt and Beauduy have allowed just 2.75 goals per game.

Vogt’s .922 save percentage, in spite of seeing 447 shots in 11 games is testimony to why she is being considered as one of the nation’s top goalies. She set a school record with 63 saves in a 6-0 loss to UMD this season and has proven she can, singlehandedly, win games for her team.

Defensively, the Mavericks need to improve in their own zone. Lack of size and strength is the team’s biggest problem, one which was exploited by UMD. Opponents are allowed to spend too much time in the Minnesota State zone and around its net for the Mavericks to be successful on a consistent basis.

In MSU’s favor is that it has 12 of its final 20 games on home ice. They will round out 2002 this weekend with a pair of home games against No. 3 Minnesota before returning to action on Jan. 4 and 5 to face Quinnipiac at home.

An Apology Owed

Being the former sports information director for the Minnesota women’s team, I’m fortunate to call a great number of people around the WCHA, both men’s and women’s leagues, friend. Few more so than Halldorson.

After spending four seasons working with her, I have told many stories about the woman whom I considered one of the finest coaches I have been priviliged to work with. All of the stories have been based in truth and only slightly exaggerated.

With that said, I am making a public apology and calling a moratorium on Laura Halldorson stories due to the fact that I backed my boat through her garage wall, putting a four-foot crack in her bathroom wall, while storing my fishing boat for the winter at her home.

All I can say is Forrest Gump’s mom was right. Stupid is as stupid does!

Minnesota State Adds Blueliner for 2003

Minnesota State signed defensemen Kerri Wallace (Rocky Mountain House, Alberta) to a National Letter of Intent, bringing the total of players signing with WCHA schools to 15.

Wallace currently is playing with the Calgary Oval X-treme in the National Women’s Hockey League, where she has two goals and one assist in eight games.

Last season, the 5-foot-9 defensemen was a rookie in the NWHL with the Vancouver Griffins.

WCHA “House”hold Hints

Saturday’s game between Wisconsin and Bemidji State has been pushed ahead one hour to 2:05 p.m. … The Beavers have had the past two weekends off. … After killing 79 of its opponents 81 power plays, UMD gave up four power-play goals on 14 chances to Minnesota. … WCHA offensive player of the week Hanne Sikio recorded her 100th career assist in the Bulldogs’ 6-5 win Sunday. … The Gophers’ Ronda Curtin, playing center for the first time this season, recorded her 150th career points in the same game. … Minnesota State’s tie at Wisconsin last Saturday was its first point against the Badgers in 13 games. … Ohio State’s weekend sweep of St. Cloud State were the Buckeyes’ last WCHA games of 2002. … Their next league games will be Jan. 18 and 19 at St. Cloud State. … For the second week in a row, Wisconsin got goals from all three of its Saskatchewan natives in a single game. Senior Kendra Antony and sophomores Jackie Friesen and Amy Vermeulen accounted for the Badgers’ goals in Saturday’s 3-3 tie with Minnesota State.

WCHA Awards

Offensive Player of the Week–Hanne Sikio, sr., F, Minnesota-Duluth Defensive Player of the Week–Emily Hudak, sr., D, Ohio State Rookie of the Week–Krista McArthur, fr., D, Minnesota-Duluth

Coming Up

No. 9 Wisconsin at Bemidji State (Friday-Saturday)

Wisconsin is 13-1 all-time against Bemidji State, including a 6-0-0 record at the Beavers’ John Glas Fieldhouse. … Badger sophomore Amy Vermeulen has two goals in four games after joining the team following Wisconsin’s soccer season. … She had two goals in 25 games last season. …. Saturday’s tie gave the Badgers a 2-2-1 record this season when they’ve trailed after two periods. … Bemidji State has taken at least one point and given up one point in each of four conference series this season. … The Beavers have pulled their goalie for an extra attacker seven times in 13 games this season. … They’ve scored twice with the extra attacker to earn ties. … BSU enters the weekend with a modest three-game unbeaten streak.

No. 3 Minnesota at Minnesota State (Saturday-Sunday)

The Gophers own an 18-0 record against the Mavericks, including eight wins in Mankato. … Only once in those 18 games has MSU scored more than one goal, getting shut out seven times. … Minnesota goalie Jody Horak and Brenda Reinen allowed career highs in goals, with four and six respectively, in the Gophers’ series with UMD. … Saturday’s 4-3 loss snapped a 31-game unbeaten streak by Minnesota when leading after two periods. … MSU’s leading scorer, junior Amanda Osborn, has 12 points this season, one more than Ryann Geldner scored last season to lead the team. … Her seven goals this season match Geldner’s team-high total of last season. … Osborn had 10 points in 67 career games entering this season.

St. Cloud State at No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth (Saturday-Sunday)

The Bulldogs are 9-2-1 versus St. Cloud State, including a 4-1-1 mark at home. … The Huskies, however, won the teams’ last meeting, 3-0 in Duluth on Feb. 24. … With a four-point weekend at Minnesota, UMD junior forward Jenny Potter climbed to within seven points of the 200 mark for her career. … She scored 71 as a freshmen with the Gophers and has 122 in two seasons at UMD. … Four Bulldog players have scored at least 170 career points. … Senior captain Maria Rooth is the team’s all-time leader with 197. … Seven of St. Cloud State’s eight freshmen skaters have contributed points this season. … The Huskies are 3-0-0 when even with or ahead of their opponents after two periods.

This Week in the CCHA: Dec. 5, 2002

Editor’s note: Due to an emergency, USCHO.com roving reporter Sam Bohney is filling in for Paula C. Weston.

Michigan Shines At Showcase

The College Hockey Showcase’s most successful team added to its accomplishments over the weekend. Michigan went down a goal to Wisconsin in the early going Friday, but that was the last time the Wolverines trailed against either the Badgers or their Sunday opponent, Minnesota.

In the end, Michigan beat Wisconsin 4-1 and the defending NCAA champion Gophers 3-1. Rookie netminder Al Montoya — he of the impressive early-season run — was one of the keys to both wins, stopping 57 of 59 shots total.

“He’s given us everything we expected and more,” said Michigan head coach Red Berenson of Montoya. “This is good experience for him.”

A second key was special teams, which the Wolverines rode all weekend. Michigan scored a power-play goal and a shorthander in each contest, adding a four-on-four Friday and an empty-netter Sunday for good measure.

But of the two victories, there was little doubt which one meant more. Minnesota beat Michigan last April to advance to the NCAA title game, and though Berenson discounted revenge as a factor, he affirmed the importance of the win Sunday.

“No question, it’s the biggest win of the year, because it was our strongest opponent in a great environment,” he said.

Laker Struggles Continue

Lake Superior will host Nebraska-Omaha this weekend with a dubious streak in play: after 10 league games, the Lakers are still looking for win number one in the CCHA. They fell to 0-10 with a weekend sweep at the hands of Western Michigan.

Head coach Frank Anzalone was brutally honest after the loss Saturday.

“It’s hard; I’ve never been 0-and-10,” he said. “I’ve never experienced this. I’ve always been able to pull teams through storms and find ways to do stuff, but we’re just not at the level of a lot of the teams in our league right now. This is just an example of where the program went, and how long and hard it is going to be to bring it back.

“You can only go one weekend at a time and just keep recruiting and developing, and hopefully a year or two down the road, we’re answering questions like ‘What a great sweep’ or ‘What a great split at Michigan State.’ But right now, we’re at ground zero and we need to keep going forward the best we can.

“We can’t score. We don’t have snipers yet. It’s very rare that you get a freshman that can come in on a team like ours and score a lot of goals; we don’t a strong supporting cast. So even if we had a freshman who could do that, he’d be better off on a stronger team to do that.

“When you’re on a team that’s not real strong depth-wise, that freshman can’t show it anyway, and we don’t have scoring in the upperclass. For us, it’s a battle. We don’t have natural skilled guys, and those we do are in the younger class. I can understand and make sense of this all, I just don’t really like the taste of it. … We are moving forward despite the fact it doesn’t look like it.

“We have to keep sucking up tough losses. This is a very tough situation, but it’s where we are. I don’t think we’re going to be able to change it simply.”

The Lakers will play the Mavericks, who escaped with a tie and a win over Merrimack last weekend. UNO, which got a great boost from Greg Zanon, looks to carry the momentum into the U.P.

“It is a boost of confidence for a team that has been struggling as much as we have,” Maverick coach Mike Kemp said. “It’s nice to get the experience of coming back from a deficit, battling through a difficult time even though it was at home, and coming up with a win over Merrimack.

“Any time you’re in a situation like we’re in, where things have not gone as well as you expected, you are in a position where you’re looking for any kind of optimism. I think we can take some optimism from last weekend, knowing that our guys didn’t quit. They showed perseverance and real dedication.”

Which Western?

It’s been up and down for Western Michigan this season, sometimes in extreme ways. The Broncos’ last eight games include a four-game losing streak and a four-game winning streak.

The most recent string — the winning streak — gets put to the test this weekend when former assistant coach Mike Schafer brings his Cornell Big Red into town.

“Coach Schafer has done a great job with that program,” said coach Jim Culhane. “They’re coming off a win over Boston University and have been ranked most of the season. They have a lot of talent coming back from their NCAA tournament team of a season ago, so we have our work cut out for us.”

The Broncos will have to keep up their scoring pace; they are averaging 4.50 goals per game in the four wins. In the previous four, the Broncos scored just five goals, a scant average of 1.25.

Needless to say, that will be a daunting task against a Cornell team that has only given up 1.33 goals per game on the year.

Momentum Wanted

Michigan State and Ferris State face off in a home-and-home this weekend, both with a little momentum.

Michigan State — which has struggled at times after losing All-World netminder Ryan Miller and head coach Ron Mason — took three points this weekend in the College Hockey Showcase. Ferris had the week off, but swept Ohio State the weekend before.

The Spartans couldn’t hold on to a lead against Minnesota and ended up with a 5-5 tie, but then defeated Wisconsin 2-1 in overtime.

“Unfortunately, in the last three games, we’ve lost leads, but at least we’re at the point where we’re getting them,” coach Rick Comley told the Lansing State Journal. “We kept fighting and scrapping. For a young team to get three points and still be in the middle of a long road trip, it’s a positive. Now we get to go home and have a good week of practice.”

“Our goal was to come out of here with two solid games and scrounge up whatever points we could,” MSU senior defenseman and captain Brad Fast told the Journal. “Three points is great for us at this point in the season.”

Ferris took four points and holds the lead in the CCHA standings. The Bulldogs’ level of success has surprised many — even head coach Bob Daniels.

“We’ve gotten beyond the point where we feel like the little stepson,” Daniels told ESPN.com. “We don’t feel like we’re second fiddle. But we surely didn’t expect the start we’ve had, either.”


Thanks to Pat Host for letting me use his soul.

This Week in the ECAC: Dec. 5, 2002

Before you do that double-take, relax. Nothing has happened to the esteemed Jayson Moy and Becky Blaeser. In the holiday spirit, USCHO’s dynamic duo of the ECAC has graciously allowed me to take a shot at running down the rumblings and grumblings of our favorite college hockey conference. Besides, they have shopping to do.

Return to Normalcy?

The Mark Morris story at Clarkson will not go away.

After American Hockey Coaches Association President, Hockey East Commissioner, and USCHO.com contributor Joe Bertagna complained about Morris’ sacking in the [nl]Potsdam-Massena Daily Courier-Observer, Clarkson President Denny [nl]Brown finally cleared the air as to the results of the university’s investigation:

In a written response, Brown said, “Mr. Morris hit the player in the face and neck with the stick, lifted off the player’s helmet with the stick, and hooked his stick in the player’s genital area, pulling the player towards him, all the while shouting obscenities.”

While the university still struggles with the aftermath of firing the most successful men’s hockey coach in its history, the team itself has moved on. From afar, it appears to be business as usual in [nl]Potsdam, N.Y. Since Fred Parker took over as interim coach, the Golden Knights have gone 4-3-1, including wins over Brown and a 4-0 shutout of Providence this past Friday.

“We’re doing just fine,” Parker said. “Everyone here just wants to play hockey and that is what we are doing.”

Anchoring Clarkson’s success has been the play of senior goaltender Mike Walsh. Against the Friars, Walsh made 23 saves and he followed that by surrendering just two third-period goals to Northeastern in a 3-1 loss on Saturday. Both goals came on five-on-three power plays. For his efforts, he was named the ECAC Goaltender of the Week.

“We have a great situation in goal,” Parker said. “Walsh is a leader on this team as he should be as a senior.”

The netminder from Downington, Pa., has elevated his game this season, when his teammates probably needed a rock in net more than ever. He has 1.59 goals against average and a very stingy .939 save percentage, good for fifth overall in the nation.

Should Walsh falter at all this year or need a rest, the Golden Knights have an understudy ready to slide between the pipes. Freshman Dustin Traylen has played admirably in his four games of work this year, with a respectable .903 save percentage.

“We have three good goalies on our roster,” Parker said. “I don’t care if you are 17 years old or 23 years old, the bottom line is whoever is playing has to be the goalie and stop the pucks. Walsh has been the goalie.”

Walsh will have his work cut out for him this weekend when his squad travels to the Whittemore Center to face No. 2 New Hampshire. The Wildcats’ speed, along with their Olympic-size ice surface and boisterous home crowd, will be a good test to gauge the development of the team. After New Hampshire, the Golden Knights head to the Mullins Center to face Massachusetts.

Parker was coy about his strategy for the weekend.

“We just need to play good sound hockey for 60 minutes,” he said. “If we vary from what we are about as a hockey team, than we’ll run into trouble. We obviously have to prepare for the big surface, but we should be good.

“Our confidence is there. We have been in every game we’ve played this year. We’re fine.”

Under Morris, Clarkson had a penchant for strong second halves of the season. Considering the circumstances, the Golden Knights have been pretty strong all along this year.

O Canada!

[nl]Potsdam, N.Y., is pretty close to the Canadian border and sometime in the offseason, officials at Clarkson — along with those at Colgate — decided to take a trip to the land where everything is paid for in Monopoly money.

More college players make the NHL every year and on December 14, Ottawa Senators fans at the Corel Center will have the opportunity to witness the real thing. Before the Senators and my beloved New Jersey Devils square off at 7 p.m., the Knights and Raiders will play a nonleague contest at 2 p.m..

“[The game] came about in collaboration with Colgate coach Don Vaughan,” Parker said. “We had the idea to show the people of Canada what N-C-2-A hockey is all about, seeing Clarkson-Colgate live.”

The Senators feature former Clarkson All-American Todd White. Meanwhile, college hockey fans will no doubt recognize all 5-7 of former Boston College star Brian Gionta speeding around for the Devils.

The Game, Hockey Style

No. 12 Harvard travels to Princeton and Yale this weekend (more on Princeton below) and the traditional lead-in for a Crimson trip to the Whale goes like this: “During its championship season, Harvard lost just three games. One of them was at Ingalls Rink. This weekend, the Crimson returns to [insert New Haven joke here] where it has rarely emerged with a victory.”

All kidding aside, the renewal of the ancient rivalry should prove a good litmus test for both teams. The Crimson, while it has steadily climbed in the polls, has yet to make a statement game to dispel the quiet feeling that last season’s trip to the NCAA tournament was a little fluky considering the number of overtime contests it had to win (although nobody ever mentions that Harvard took finalist Maine to sudden death as well in the first round, coming the closest to eliminating the Black Bears until Minnesota did it in the finals — in OT). Harvard has lost its two games against top teams this year, falling at No. 13 Boston University and No. 7 Cornell.

Harvard and Yale both play a fast-paced, good skating style, each with its own star players. The Crimson has a little more size and aggressiveness — although the Bulldogs have been surly at times this year. When the two teams square off there is always the possibility for some electricity. Just two years ago, Bulldog forward Lee Jelenic was benched by coach Tim Taylor for taunting former Dryden Award winner Oli Jonas, and the Harvard-Yale playoff series that year featured a brawl in the stands at Bright Hockey Center.

That’s the past and most players involved in that have since graduated. The player to watch is Yale sophomore Chris Higgins. The ECAC Rookie of the Year last year was off to a bit of a slow start, but broke out for a five-point weekend against Princeton, notching three goals and two assists.

Even with Higgins not cranking out the offense, the Bulldogs have displayed plenty of firepower with Evan Wax, Ryan Steeves, Christian Jensen and Vin Hellmeyer.

In terms of depth of offensive talent, no team in the ECAC can match Harvard. The Crimson put ten goals in the net last weekend, including seven against Union. But then again, Harvard teams don’t win at the Whale. If the Crimson do prevail, it would be a statement game simply because of history [Insert Ancient Eight joke here].

At the Bottom

The other third of Harvard-Yale-Princeton is doing, well, not as good. While the Crimson and the Elis are programs on the rise, the Tigers have floundered with only one victory. With just nine upperclassmen on the roster (and not that many start), Princeton is squarely in rebuilding mode as third-year coach Len Quesnelle struggles to mold the team in his image.

Ever the optimist, Quesnelle sees strides the team has made even if a casual glance at the league standings don’t reveal any.

“The progress is definitely there,” he said. “We have young guys throughout the lineup and they are getting power play time and penalty kill time and developing.”

The rookies are making the biggest impact.

Look at [freshman forwards] Doug Sproat, Patrick Neundorfer, and Sebastian Borza,” Quesnelle said. “Borza scored two goals this past weekend in his third and fourth college games ever. That’s pretty good.”

In addition to the freshman class, Princeton does have a handful of promising sophomores including forward Neil Stevenson-Moore, Mike Patton, and Chris Owen. Nobody on the team has more than six points, but each has shown glimpses of potential.

In its lone win of the season, Stevenson-Moore had two goals, including the game winner.

“Stevenson-Moore has the opportunity to be a big-time goal scorer for us,” Quesnelle said early this year. “He has a very deceptive shot and the goal he scored [then] was a result of him working hard.”

Still, Princeton has a long way to go, including deciding upon a number-one goaltender. Quesnelle has implemented a three-man platoon and neither Trevor Clay, Eric Leroux, or Nate Nomeland has distinguished himself enough to grab the mantle.

“No one has emerged yet; they are three capable goalies,” Quesnelle said before defending the fact that holding an open audition with three goalies limits the playing time of each. “I don’t think playing three goalies is much of a problem.”

While Leroux leads the team in goals against average at 4.40, in fairness, each netminder has been shelled this season. Princeton allowed 105 shots on net over its past three games.

“We have to even up the scoring chances,” Quesnelle said. “I don’t mind giving up 30 shots a night as long as we are getting 30 shots at the other end, but some nights we are getting out-chanced two-to-one.”

With Harvard and Brown coming into Hobey Baker Rink, this would be a good opportunity for Princeton to develop in a hurry and ease some of the sting of its early defeats. The Tigers had a mediocre year last season, but put a very pleasant cap on it by shutting out Harvard on the last regular-season game.

Quesnelle is not so concerned about rivalry this year.

“We have got to put our own house in order before we get ready to face Harvard or Brown,” he said. “We have to pay better attention to detail, and just go shift-by-shift.”

Visions of Sugar Plums

With Christmas fast approaching, now is the time for a little holiday cheer, some shopping and cozying up next to a warm fire, with a cup of hot chocolate, a nice warm blanket and slowly drifting off into …

But no matter what you use for a down comforter, it’s hard to find anything as smothering as the Cornell defense.

One could write volumes on the best team defense in the nation both last year and this year, thus far, allowing a miniscule 1.33 goals per game. However, Boston University coach Jack Parker said it best after being swept by the Big Red, 5-1, 4-1 over the weekend:

“They just beat us to every puck, pounded us when they had to, they defended us in front of their own net better than we’ve seen teams do against us, and we didn’t do any of that stuff.”

Enough said. The seventh ranked-team in the country’s star should keep rising this weekend as Cornell travels to Western Michigan.

Coming Attractions

This is the last ECAC column until after the holidays, so here is a quick rundown of the holiday tournaments for all your favorite teams. First team listed is their first-round opponent. Comments may follow.

Brown — Northern Lights Ice Classic (Grand Forks, N.D.) North Dakota, Bemidji/Manitoba. Can Yann Danis upset North Dakota?

Clarkson — Denver Cup (Denver, CO) New Hampshire, Miami/Denver. Golden Knights get another crack at the Wildcats, this time on neutral turf

Colgate — Badger Showdown (Milwaukee, WI) Wisconsin, Harvard/Northern Michigan.

Cornell — Everblades College Classic (Estero, FL) Maine, Ohio State/UMA. Presumably slower southern ice surface should be even more advantageous to Big Red’s defensive style.

Dartmouth — Ledyard National Bank Auld Lang Syne Classic (Hanover, NH) Notre Dame, Mass-Lowell/Vermont. Always wondered how among the ECAC teams, Dartmouth is one of the squads that actually hosts a holiday tournament.

Harvard — Badger Showdown (Milwaukee, WI) Northern Michigan, Wisconsin/Colgate. Another chance for the Crimson to topple quality out-of-conference foes.

Princeton — Rensselaer/HSBC Holiday Hockey Tournament (Troy, NY), Wayne State, RPI/ Merrimack.

Rensselaer — Rensselaer/HSBC Holiday Hockey Tournament (Troy, NY) Merrimack, Wayne State/Princeton.

St. Lawrence — No holiday sojourn for the Saints; they break for Christmas with a weekend deuce versus Lake Superior State and then gear up for Cornell/Colgate in 2003.

Union — Two games at Minnesota-Duluth. A nice, cold location for the Skating Dutchmen to get focused after a rollercoaster start.

Vermont — Ledyard National Bank Auld Lang Syne Classic (Hanover, NH) Massachusetts-Lowell, Notre Dame/Dartmouth. Has anybody noticed Jeff Miles has 11 goals this season?

Yale — Dodge Holiday Classic (Minneapolis, MN) Minnesota, BC/Bowling Green. The Bulldogs test themselves against the defending champs on their pond, and after this tournament come back home to face UNH on Jan. 3

The Good

Cornell’s defense

Absolutely suffocated Boston University this weekend. As long as it scores goals, the Big Red are going to be awfully hard to beat.

The Bad

Union’s defense Friday night

Gave up 46 shots in a 7-4 loss to Harvard. Saved from “The Ugly” by virtue of the much more consistent play of …

The Ugly

Princeton defense.

Three games, 105 shots against. Ugh.

Happy Holidays

Finally, a very happy holidays to all of you loyal college hockey fans who keep coming back to USCHO.com. Thanks for reading my first crack at the ECAC. Becky and Jayson will be back after Christmas.

Post Mortem

As you now prepare to study the predictions I made for December, you should probably be forewarned. My junior year of college I was so accurate predicting games that I got the score right almost every night … just the wrong team. You can ask my partner in crime that year, former USCHO arena reporter Jennie Sullivan.

Special thanks to Adam Wodon for contributing to this report.

This Week in the ECAC West: Dec. 5, 2002

Advantage at Playland

It hasn’t taken long for Manhattanville to get comfortable in its new home this year. The Valiants moved in to Playland Ice Casino during the summer after three seasons at New Roc City, and are undefeated at home so far this year. Including the early-season exhibition against Canadian team Seneca College, Manhattanville is 5-0-1 in the friendly confines of Playland, and have kept five of those six opponents to only two goals per game.

“We want to establish ourselves that when you come down to Manhattanville, it is a tough place to play,” said Manhattanville coach Keith Levinthal. “And that’s all that we are looking to do.”

The latest conquest at home was against Williams, which Manhattanville defeated 6-3. The game swayed back and forth throughout most of the first two periods. Each team led by a single goal at various times before the other would tie it back up.

“It was a pretty fast game,” said Levinthal. “I had a few people say after the game that that was the fastest game they have seen played at Playland in the last 10 years. There was a lot of flow to the game.”

That kind of high-tempo game played right in to the hands of Valiant sophomore Jason Kenyon. Kenyon broke the 3-3 tie early in the third period, and then put away the game with two more goals. The natural hat trick was a spectacular way for Kenyon to score his first goals of the season.

“Jason had a great game even before the third period started,” said Levinthal. “That was the perfect kind of game for him. He is a tough, hard-nosed kid, but he is pretty crafty. Williams is much more of a skating team, but Jason was a man amongst boys. He is a good hockey player.”

The best home unbeaten streak for Manhattanville at the old New Roc City facility was a 4-0-2 span during the middle of the 2001-2002 season. It appears that the Valiants are enjoying their new home very much.

Elmira Coming Together

After a disappointing pair of losses at St. Norbert to open the season, Elmira has pulled together and rattled off a 4-1-1 record. A sputtering offense and porous defense both appear to be improving, helping Elmira to win games.

The Soaring Eagle offense has tallied 34 goals in the last six games, and it is the youth of the team that leads on the scoreboard. Three sophomores are on top of the Elmira scoring chart, and account for all four of the team’s game winning goals. Jarrett Konkle leads the team with nine goals and five assists, totaling 14 points. Justin Siebold (8-3-11) and Jason Cassells (3-9-12) are not far behind.

“I always thought that we would generate a lot of offense with this team,” said Elmira coach Tim Ceglarski. “What we needed to do was buckle down and play good defense in front of three inexperienced goaltenders. The guys are starting to gel a little bit, but we still have a lot more to do.”

After allowing 14 goals in the St. Norbert series, the Elmira defense has clamped down and only allowed 18 in the last six games. The game last week against Lebanon Valley shows how team defense, goaltending and a stronger penalty kill have come together to spell success for Elmira.

Junior Ben Sadler made his first start of the season in net against the Flying Dutchmen, and pitched his first career shutout. Sadler benefited from a solid performance by the defensemen, and held up his end of the bargain with several spectacular saves.

“Ben has, for the last two weeks leading up to that Lebanon Valley game, worked extremely hard,” said Ceglarski. “As an upperclassman, he earned that start by working hard in practice. We felt it was a good time to get him in net and he performed very well. Our experience back on defense helped us quite a bit, and Ben made some good saves.

Killing penalties is another area where Elmira has struggled this season. Opponents like Utica and Plattsburgh seemed able to score at will with the extra skater, with a combined six goals on 11 opportunities in the two games.

Hence, the penalty kill is one area of focus in practice, and it appears to be paying off. The Soaring Eagles kept Lebanon Valley’s power play off the board, despite having 11 opportunities including four separate 5-on-3 situations spanning 2:17.

“Our penalty killing the first five or six games was atrocious,” said Ceglarski. “We spent a great deal of time working on it in practice. My assistant coach Aaron Saul has taken over that aspect of things, specializing in the penalty killing. Our guys have really bought in to what we are trying to do.”

Grudge Matches Revisited

Two nonleague grudge matches were highlighted in this space before the holiday. In a surprising twist of fate, both games ended in ties.

Going into the games on November 16, the pundits thought that the Elmira versus Plattsburgh game would be the more interesting contest. This long and storied rivalry was tied all-time at 33-33-1, but Elmira had won the last three meetings with the Cardinals.

The contest was a see-saw affair, with four lead changes and huge swings in momentum.

“It was a great college hockey game that went back and forth,” said Ceglarski. “Both teams had opportunities to win it in overtime.”

Elmira watched Plattsburgh jump out to a 2-0 lead midway through the first period. But the Soaring Eagles roared back, scoring two goals in a 23-second span to end the period tied. Elmira carried the momentum into the second period, when Pierre Rivard tallied his second goal of the game to give Elmira its first lead.

Fickle momentum shifted again just a few minutes later when Plattsburgh got back in to the lead with a pair of goals, and the swaying continued in the third period. Elmira tallied another pair of goals to retake the lead, only to have Plattsburgh answer with less than three minutes to go to tie the game 5-5.

Neither team could score in overtime, despite having several chances, and the series moved to an all-time record of 33-33-2.

The second grudge match found RIT trying to gain some redemption for a loss to Wentworth last season. But it wasn’t to be. After coasting to a victory against Johnson & Wales the previous night, RIT came out flat against the Leopards.

Wentworth took advantage of its opportunities to build a 2-0 first-period lead. The Tigers poured on the pressure over the final two periods, outshooting Wentworth 33-16 over that span. Leopard goaltender Raj Bhangoo stood on his head, and the best RIT could earn was a 2-2 tie.

Game of the Week

Manhattanville is undefeated at home this season. RIT has never lost or tied against the Valiants, a span of eight games. One of those streaks will fall this Saturday when the Tigers visit Playland Ice Casino to take on Manhattanville. The last three contests between these two teams, spanning back to last season, have been decided by two goals or less. Don’t look for this matchup to be any different.

“[Our home winning streak] doesn’t mean anything if we don’t do well this weekend,” said Levinthal. “The games that mean the most are your conference games. It really comes down to how well we execute this weekend. We can’t look by Hobart. Both games are critical to us. In the end, you just have to play well.”

This Week in the ECAC Women’s League: Dec. 5, 2002

SLU’s Barrie is the Barrier to Princeton Success

Princeton coach Jeff Kampersal needs no reminder of the opposing player who can make or break his team’s weekend games at St. Lawrence –goaltender Rachel Barrie.

“Rachel Barrie for two years in a row has killed us,” Kampersal said. “We’re hoping to get her back this weekend.”

St. Lawrence’s junior tri-captain Barrie has allowed just six goals to the Tigers in four career starts — all of which were one-goal victories. That does not bode well for No. 10 Princeton, who hopes its long bus ride out to Canton, N.Y. will result in its first points against the No. 5 Saints in four years. The Tigers, seeking their first victory against a ranked ECAC opponent of the season, will be facing Barrie as she comes off one of the most impressive series’ of her career.

Barrie’s 90-save weekend in two games against Dartmouth earned her USCHO.com Defensive Player of the Week Honors. In Saturday’s 3-2 defeat, she made 41 saves to keep the game tied until the final two minutes. She bounced back a day later and stopped 49 shots to preserve a 1-0 shutout.

She made 21 saves in the third period alone. Dartmouth was on the power play for nearly four consecutive minutes shortly after the Saints took the lead. Barrie stopped several chances from point-blank range during the stretch as the Saints were on their heels, and Dartmouth finished 0-for-7 on the power play for the day.

“She bought us that two points I felt,” said St. Lawrence coach Paul Flanagan.

The youth of St. Lawrence on the defensive end has made Barrie’s play all the more crucial. She hasn’t had the benefit of Canadian national team defenseman Isabelle Chartrand roaming the ice since her freshman year, when the Saints made the national championship game. This season the Saints are regularly rotating three freshmen defensemen, who have progressed confidently with Barrie backing them up.

“Rachel’s been her typical, consistent self,” Flanagan said. “She plays with a lot of confidence and certainly the players feed off that. There are times when you feel she’s an extra defenseman, pumping rebounds into the corner and helping us out, not just leaving things out front. When she’s on it’s as good as it gets.”

While Barrie has a history of single-handedly winning games for the Saints, her success hasn’t extended to the top level of competition out west. Barrie is 0-6-1 between three career starts against Minnesota-Duluth and four against Minnesota. She has yet to hold either team to fewer than three goals for a game.

St. Lawrence’s two worst outings of the season were losses to Minnesota by scores of 5-2 and 7-2, as the line of Krissy Wendell, Natalie Darwitz and Kelly Stephens punished the Saints. While those outings were far from Barrie’s best performance, Flanagan felt the results could have best been easily improved by matching up better against the Gophers’ speed –specifically doing a better job of slowing down Minnesota through the neutral zone, thus providing more support for the defensemen.

Having played four games in a row against the nation’s top four teams, Flanagan feels his team should be better prepared to face Princeton. He was quick to note, though, the Tigers were a challenging foe last year, and they should be even better this year with two U.S. national team players — Annamarie Holmes and Andrea Kilbourne — back in the lineup, as well as a strong freshman class. Kilbourne is Princeton’s leading overall scorer with eight assists and three goals — two of them short-handed.

Kampersal, on the other end, feels his team isn’t anywhere close to its full potential yet. The Tigers are coming off a weekend that included a disappointing 2-2 tie versus Maine, where Princeton floundered done the stretch, and Kampersal admitted the Black Bears probably deserved to win. A 6-2 win over Northeastern the next day, however, was much more encouraging.

“I still don’t think for the most part our best players have played their best,” he said. “Hopefully that’s a good sign that we can get better as the season gets going.”

Princeton hasn’t come together as quickly as anticipated largely because of a wrist injury to forward Gretchen Anderson, which caused her to miss the first six games of the season. Yet despite having played just four games, she still leads the team with five goals.

“We’re still working to get on the same page with Gretchen being back,” Kampersal said. “She’s an all-the-time threat which makes our team a little more scary with her out there. It takes the pressure off some of our other players.”

One stumbling point that Kampersal doesn’t think will be a factor is the long bus ride. Princeton has already made long trips to New Hampshire and Mercyhurst earlier this season. The Wildcats, Princeton’s first road opponent of the year, were not kind hosts as Princeton had to come back at 2 p.m. on Sunday following a 2-1 loss that started 7 p.m. on Saturday. The result was the Tigers’ worst outing of the year-a 7-3 defeat where the team’s one-on-one defense fell well short of expectations. Princeton fared better with a win and tie at Mercyhurst a week later, however, and expects even more improvement this weekend.

“We’re used to traveling on the bus now, and because we got a slap in the face at UNH, I think we’ll be more mentally prepared for the next day,” Kampersal said.

St. Lawrence, having played four games against two of the nation’s top four teams in the past week, justifiably feels it has been better tested leading up to this weekend’s games. And, unlike Princeton who hosts Ohio State next week, these are the Saints last two games of the year before winter break.

“Our last four games haven’t been patsies, so we’d like to think that we’re psychologically ready,” Flanagan said. “It’s the end of our semester and we’d like to crank it up and go out with a sweep.”

We’ve Been Here Before

For the second year in a row, defending ECAC champion Brown is not off to a strong start at 4-4-2.

The Bears last season pulled off one of the greatest turnarounds in the history of women’s college hockey when they started the year 4-5-1 and finished 21-3-1 before falling in the national championship game to UMD, as Kristy Zamora ended her college career with Frozen Four MVP honors. Expecting two miracles in a row might be a little much, but Brown coach Digit Murphy has no doubts of her team’s ability to come through in the end, again.

“In my opinion it doesn’t matter where we’re ranked, we’re always going to be in it, because our team near the end of the season historically has always found a way to win,” she said.

Murphy has given considerable playing time to many of the nine freshmen on her roster, so she sees a steep learning curve there, especially in their ability to adjust to speed of the top teams like Harvard and the Minnesota. Freshmen figured in all the Bear goals in Brown’s 5-3 loss to Minnesota and recent 3-2 loss to Harvard.

Murphy is looking forward to an immediate boost in January, when she hopes Krissy McManus will return to the lineup after missing all the season thus far with a groin injury. McManus was Brown’s third-leading goal-scorer last season, and she has the explosive speed that can produce the instant offense Brown’s young forward lines need.

“Right now I think we miss McManus a lot,” Murphy said. “We need her touch. We don’t have the snipers that Minnesota and Harvard have.”

Brown’s schedule started tough with half of its games against top ten teams — including each of the top four teams-and the Bears have kept the games close every time.

“We’ll find the combinations in the end,” Murphy said. “It’s never been pretty at the beginning of the season for Brown. It’s part of who we are — our history.”

On Top Again

Following Sunday’s victory over Brown, Harvard moved to the No. 1 ranking in the USCHO.com poll for the first time in three seasons.

Harvard captain Jamie Hagerman said that earning the No. 1 ranking was a great honor and a testament to the team’s hard work, but staying at No. 1 would be a much greater challenge.

“No. 1 is great, but it’s December 2nd, and we want be No. 1 in the last weekend of March. That’s what matters,” she said.

This week’s opponents Northeastern and Providence are, ironically, the opponents Harvard faced the last time it held the top rank in February of 2000. That weekend didn’t go so well, as the Crimson fell 1-0 to Providence and tied Northeastern 1-1.

Against Northeastern on Saturday — a likely preview of the Beanpot final in February — Harvard should have a clear advantage, seeing that it is idle on Friday while the Huskies play a typically draining battle against Brown.

No. 7 Providence, meanwhile, has historically been a nemesis for Harvard. The Friars dealt the Crimson its worst loss of the season — a 6-0 pasting last season — and took the 2001 Harvard team to overtime before bowing out in the ECAC quarterfinals. Providence is the only team to shut out Harvard over the past three years — and it has done it twice. The Friars have been strong but inconsistent this year, especially this past week where they could only muster ties against Brown and UConn after falling behind early.

ECAC Awards

Player of the Week-Gretchen Anderson, Jr., F, Princeton
Rookie of the Week-Carrie Schroyer, Fr., F, Harvard
Goaltender of the Week-Rachel Barrie, Jr., G, St. Lawrence

This Week in the SUNYAC: Dec. 5, 2002

Lone Champion

Four SUNYAC teams competed in Thanksgiving weekend tournaments, but only Oswego came away with a first-place trophy despite three schools making it to the finals. Oswego easily won the first game of the Ben McCabe Tournament at Amherst. The Great Lakers defeated Trinity 8-3, jumping out to a 3-0 first-period lead, and never looked back. Don Patrick and Jocelyn Dubord each got a pair of goals. Joe Lofberg got the win with 26 saves.

The championship game saw Oswego face Wentworth, a team that has registered a number of surprises this year. Oswego would not be victim to one of them, as it took the title with a 5-1 win. Don Patrick, who was named Tournament MVP, scored another while Andy Rozak scored twice. Tyson Gajda had a shutout going till late in the third period, ending up with 33 saves for the win.

Oswego had an excellent week, also beating Williams, 5-4, the day before Thanksgiving. The winning goal by Mike Lukajic came with under two minutes left in the game.

The Great Lakers wrapped up the past two weeks with a key conference win over their travel partners, Cortland, 7-0. Five first-period goals set the stage for the shutout. Lukajic was the only player to score more than once, notching a pair. Lofberg got the shutout with 18 saves, as Oswego outshot the Red Dragons, 47-18, and scored four power-play goals.

There may not be a hotter team in the SUNYAC than Oswego, which has gone 6-0-1, averaging over six goals a game since getting off to a slow 1-3 start. Oswego travels to Brockport and Geneseo this weekend, two games it should win, especially with the way it has been playing lately.

Shootout In The Shootout

I suppose it is appropriate that the PrimeLink Great Northern Shootout would have a shootout. And, I suppose it is convenient for this columnist that the shootout occurred between the two SUNYAC schools — Plattsburgh and Potsdam. It was a see-saw battle all game. Louis David-Demers gave the Bears the first lead just 1:24 into the game. Jordan Smith tied it up on a shorthanded goal. Scott Craig scored in the final minute of the opening period on the power play to give Potsdam the 2-1 lead at intermission.

Plattsburgh came back to take a a 3-2 lead on two goals by Dave Young, the first on the power play in the second period, and the go ahead goal in the third. However, John Bernfell, a former Cardinal who transferred to Potsdam, tied the game with 54 seconds left with the extra skater.

Potsdam outshot Plattsburgh, 7-0, in the extra five minutes, but the game would end up tied. That’s how it will go down in the team’s respective records. However, in order to determine who would advance in the tournament, a shootout commenced.

Plattsburgh managed just one goal, scored by Brendon Hodge, as Ryan Venturelli stymied them. Potsdam didn’t even need its last shooter as it took the shootout, 2-1, on goals by Chris Lee and Mike Snow.

Tony Seriac of Plattsburgh made 45 saves in the game, while Venturelli made 33.

This put Potsdam in the finals, where the Bears fell to number-one Norwich, 5-2. Potsdam stayed close, down 2-1 on a goal by Tim Powers, heading into the second, and outplayed and outshot the Cadets in that middle period. However, the Bears didn’t score, and let up a shorthanded goal with 13 seconds left. That broke their backs, and they never recovered, even letting up another shorthanded goal in the third. Craig scored the other Potsdam goal.

Potsdam did play earlier in the week, defeating Hobart for the second time this year, this time by a 4-3 score. Eric Peter-Kaiser scored twice while Scott Craig and Jim Quilty got the other scores. Venturelli only needed to make 20 saves for the win.

Meanwhile, that tie against Potsdam seemed to have woken Plattsburgh up, and the Cardinals rolled over Middlebury, 6-1. Six different players scored, and Craig Neilson got the win with 36 saves.

Play It Again, Sam

Four days after the North Country rivals squared off in the Shootout, they met again in Potsdam for a conference game. This time it wasn’t close at all. Well, for the first ten minutes it was, and then Plattsburgh just crushed Potsdam, with five goals in the last ten minutes of the first period, rolling to a 9-1 win.

Rob Retter was the only player who scored more than one, netting two. The rest of the scoring was spread out, and it included two power-play goals and one shorthander.

The wipe out allowed Curtis Crabbie to get some action between the pipes, as the freshman has been out with an injury all year. He made eight saves as Craig Neilson stopped 10 shots in the first two periods.

On the other end, Venturelli’s streak of playing every minute in goal this season came to an end as he was replaced by Matt O’Connor after the eighth goal.

The shutout was broken with 19 seconds left in the game on a power-play goal by Peter-Kaiser.

Shutout Tuesday … Almost

That late goal by Potsdam prevented Tuesday from being a night of all shutouts. We already mentioned Oswego beating Cortland, 7-0. The other game saw Fredonia whitewash Buffalo State, 6-0, scoring three power-play goals and a shorthander. Tom Briggs scored twice, with Erik Hlavaty, Jim Gilbride, Max Catelin, and Riley McTaggart getting the others. Will Hamele got the shutout with 30 saves.

Fredonia was well rested, as that was the only game it played in the past two weeks. Not so for Buffalo State, who played a pair at Manhattanville, and dropping both of them, 3-2 and 4-2. Joe Urbanik and Dave Cadarette scored the goals in the first game, while Adam Horvath made 36 saves.

The second game saw Rocky Reeves score shorthanded and Cadarette get another. Steve Thering and Nick Berti split the duties in net, making 13 and 12 saves, respectively.

Brockport Success

Considering how their season has been going, the Golden Eagles had a successful two weeks, splitting four games and making it to the finals of the Babson Invitational Tournament.

It started with a 4-2 win over Salve Regina as Brockport unleashed 48 shots on net. Bryan May, Brian Bauman, Michael Cameron, and Paul Stasko scored the goals. Brian Tefft got the win with 39 saves.

Then, Brockport lost to Curry, 5-3, falling behind 3-0 and 5-1. The goal scorers were Mike Blais, Peter Stasko, and Mark Digby. Steve Tippett made 29 saves.

The Golden Eagles won the first round of the Babson Invitational over Stonehill, 4-3. Unlike the shootout in the PrimeLink, this tournament was decided by overtime, no matter how long it went. Digby got the winner at 9:55 of the extra period. Brockport needed goals by Kevin Collins and Nate VanKouwenberg to tie the game after falling behind, 3-1. Digby led off the game by scoring before Stonehill scored three straight goals. Tefft got the win with 30 saves.

Brockport got to play the host team in the finals, and was no match for Babson, losing the game 9-2. Thirty penalties were called, 15 aside, for a total of 87 minutes. The game was tied at 1-1 after one on a shorthanded goal by Nick Smyth. Babson opened up a 6-1 lead before Mick Utzig got one for Brockport on the power play.

Cortland Non-Success

On the opposite side of the ledger, Cortland had a miserable time around Thanksgiving, letting up 22 goals in three games, and only scoring three times (Scott Louis, Matt Donskov, and Ryan Schmidt). Cortland lost to Hobart, 7-1, where all three goalies saw action, to Hamilton, 8-2, and the aforementioned 7-0 loss to Oswego.

In fact, since beating Plattsburgh, it has been all downhill for Cortland, which has lost five in a row, letting up 33 goals and only scoring nine, with four of those coming in one game.

This weekend Cortland gets to play Geneseo and Brockport. Which version of the team will show up?

Lest We Forget

With all this action going on, we didn’t even mention the Plattsburgh-Elmira game. These two extreme rivals went at it in Stafford Arena, and perhaps appropriately, came away with a 5-5 tie.

This was definitely a game of momentum shifts. Plattsburgh jumped out to a 2-0 lead on goals by Brendon Hodge and Jason Kilcan. Elmira then took a 3-2 lead. Plattsburgh came back to take a 4-3 lead on goals by Doug Carr and Dave Young, only to see Elmira regain the lead 5-4. Kilcan tied it up with under three minutes to go in the game with his second on the night. Craig Neilson made 30 saves.

The Featured Word: Light

I have always found it interesting how so many cultures from around the world tend to have similar holidays and/or traditions at certain times of the year.

Take this time for instance when darkness dominates the day, at least in the northern hemisphere. Modern technology has caused us to lose the appreciation of how much the dark was feared by our ancestors. Unable to easily escape it with a simple flick of a switch, with candles being a poor substitute while casting long, scary shadows, the night was a dreaded affair. When the night stretched towards its maximum heading for the winter solstice, with the crops long dormant, and cold setting in, it was a time of despair and concern. And back in the caveman days, it was a time when our predators had the advantage.

So, it is no wonder that ancient cultures devised ways to overcome this.

I will be submitting this column to my editors on the seventh night of Hanukkah — The Festival of Lights.

In a few weeks, Christmas will be here, a time to celebrate the birth of Christ, even though most scholars believed he wasn’t born in December. Yet, Christmas was moved to the winter solstice some 1,600 years ago, and the Christians adopted many of the Pagan traditions including decorating evergreens with candles, leading to doing a similar thing on the house, eventually to the modern day light shows in our neighborhoods.

The Muslims celebrate Eid al-Fitr at the end of Ramadan, the month long fasting and praying, which this year also falls when my editors are reading this column, wondering what’s gotten into me. Eid al-Fitr is a festive and joyous occasion, accompanied with decorations, including … you guessed it … lights.

The Chinese New Year, celebrated in February, consists of fireworks (which they invented) to light up the sky. In Scandinavian countries, there’s a tradition to leave a large candle to burn all through the night on winter solstice. In Iran, there is the observance of Yalda, sometimes referred to as Sada, where people light huge bonfires on the seashore at sunset.

It is probably appropriate, that hockey, the one sport that requires it be played in the winter (before artificial ice) in the dark, cold nights, is the only sport that has lights as a significant aspect of it’s game. The red light for goals, and the green light for the end of the period.

Light. Appreciate it. And cheer it. Especially when your team makes it go red.

Game of the Week

Just like old times — a Plattsburgh-Fredonia game that means so much.

Everybody keeps waiting for Fredonia to falter. It hasn’t happened with a 5-0 conference record, maintaining first place by three points, and seeming to get stronger.

Meanwhile, it has been Plattsburgh that has struggled with a 3-1-1 league mark, including a loss to Cortland and tie against Oswego. However, Plattsburgh is hot lately, scoring 15 goals and letting up just two in the last two games against ranked opponents.

Is Fredonia for real? Is Plattsburgh ready to start making its run? We’ll find out Friday evening at Fredonia. At the end of the year, we may be pointing back to this game as the pivotal moment of the season.

Sejna, Howard Earn IHCCA Honors

Colorado College sniper Peter Sejna of Liptovsky Mikulas, Slovakia and Maine netminder Jim Howard of Ogdensburg, N.Y. earned the inaugural Commissioners’ Choice awards as Division I men’s college hockey’s top player and top rookie for the month of November the Ice Hockey Collegiate Commissioners’ Association (IHCCA) announced today.

A 5-11, 198-pound junior, Sejna has been an offensive catalyst for the red-hot Tigers, who currently own the nation’s longest unbeaten streak at 12 games (10-0-2). Over eight games this past month, Sejna scored six goals and assisted on 11 others for 17 points as Colorado College went 7-0-1. He had at least one point in all eight games last month, owns a 15-game point scoring streak overall, and shares the Division I points lead with 13 goals, 16 assists and 29 points in 14 games played.

Two of Sejna’s six goals in November were game-winners, coming in a 7-3 road win at Minnesota and in a 10-2 triumph over Mercyhurst on Nov. 30, and he also assisted on the decisive goal in a 4-1 home victory over Alaska Anchorage. He was named both the Western Collegiate Hockey Association Offensive Player of the Week and USCHO.com National Offensive Player of the Week on November 18th after producing five points on three goals and two assists in the Tigers’ win and tie at Minnesota during a Nov. 15-16 league series.

A two-time All-WCHA Third Team choice and former WCHA Rookie of the Year, Sejna has already produced 68 goals, 69 assists and 137 points in two-and-a-half seasons at Colorado College.

Howard, a freshman netminder for Maine is the Commissioners’ Choice Rookie-of-the-Month. He finished November with a 1.28 goals against average and a .956 save percentage, yielding a perfect 5-0-0 record, including four wins that came against tough Hockey East competition. He recorded a career-high 36 saves in 7-3 win at Boston University (ranked No. 7 at the time) and followed that up with 35 saves in a 2-1 overtime victory over second-ranked New Hampshire.

Howard set the Maine record for consecutive scoreless minutes when he blanked opponents for 193:45 during a string of three straight shutouts spanning October and November. He also tied the Maine record for shutouts in a season by a goaltender when he posted his third shutout on Nov. 9 vs. the Massachusetts Minutemen, who have gone 6-1 since being humbled by Howard. His three shutouts put him in a tie for the national lead this season.

Howard was recently honored by Hockey East as both Rookie of the Month and Goaltender of the Month. He is 7-1-0 overall this season with a 1.33 goals against average (third best in the nation) and a .949 save percentage (second best in the nation).

The IHCCA, with a mandate to address common issues and concerns at a national level, is comprised of the six commissioners of NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey conferences; the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA), College Hockey America (CHA), the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference (ECAC), Hockey East Association (HEA), the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) and the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA).

IHCCA Commissioners’ Choice Awards
November 2002

National Player-of-the-Month
Peter Sejna, LW, Colorado College, WCHA

National Rookie-of-the-Month
Jim Howard, G, Maine, Hockey East

Honorable Mention Player-of-the-Month
Lanny Gare, F, New Hampshire, Hockey East
Brian Herbert, F, Quinnipiac, MAAC
Grady Hunt, G, Bemidji State, CHA
Mike Kompon, F, Miami, OH, CCHA
David LeNeveu, G, Cornell, ECAC

Honorable Mention Rookie-of-the-Month
Hugh Jessiman, F, Dartmouth, ECAC
Myles Kuharski, F, Bemidji State, CHA
Al Montoya, G, Michigan, CCHA
Tony Quesada, G, Holy Cross, MAAC
Thomas Vanek, F, Minnesota, WCHA

Higgins Leads List of 17 Collegians on U.S. Junior Team

Repeat selection Chris Higgins of Yale leads a list of 22 players picked for the U.S. National Junior Team, which will compete in the International Ice Hockey Federation World Junior Championship in Nova Scotia, Canada, Dec. 26-Jan. 5. Of the 22 players, 17 play for U.S. colleges.

Last year, Higgins — then a freshman — led Team USA in scoring with four goals and two assists, as the U.S. had the tournament’s best record despite finishing without a medal.

The U.S. team includes six players who have previously competed in the World Junior Championship and nine who won a gold medal in May with the U.S. National Under-18 Team at the 2002 IIHF World Under-18 Championship in Slovakia. Tim Gleason, a forward from Livonia, Mich., who plays for Windsor of the Ontario Hockey League, will be participating in his third World Junior tournament.

Higgins, a first-round pick of the Montreal Canadiens, is one of 10 NHL drafted players on the team.

The team is led by Lou Vairo, who coached the 1984 men’s Olympic team. Former Wisconsin coach Jeff Sauer, Mike Hastings and Ron Rolston are the assistants.

The roster, with hometown and college team in parentheses:

Forwards
Dustin [nl]Brown, Ithaca, N.Y.
Patrick Eaves, Fairbault, Minn. (Boston College)
Gino Guyer, Coleraine, Minn. (Minnesota)
Dwight Helminen, Brighton, Mich. (Michigan)
Chris Higgins, Smithtown, N.Y. (Yale)
Ryan Kesler, Livonia, Mich. (Ohio State)
Greg Moore, Lisbon, [nl]Maine (Maine)
Eric Nystrom, Syosset, N.Y. (Michigan)
Patrick O’Sullivan, Sterling Heights, Mich.
Zach Parise, Fairbault, Minn. (North Dakota)
Ryan Shannon, Darien, Conn. (Boston College)
Brett Sterling, Pasadena, Calif. (Colorado College)
Barry Tallackson, St. Paul., Minn. (Minnesota)

Defensemen
Tim Gleason, Clawson, Mich.
Matt Greene, Grand Ledge, Mich. (North Dakota)
Matt Jones, Naperville, Ill. (North Dakota)
Mark Stuart, Rochester, Minn. (Colorado College)
Ryan Suter, Madison, Wis.
Ryan Whitney, Scituate, Mass. (Boston University)
James Wisniewski, Canton, Mich.

Goalies
Jim Howard, Ogdensburg, N.Y. (Maine)
Bob Goepfert, Kings Park, N.Y. (Providence)

Clarkson President Demands Apology Over Bertagna Letter

The situation surrounding the termination of Mark Morris at Clarkson has taken another step.

In a letter to the editor of the [nl]Potsdam-Massena Daily Courier-Observer on Dec. 3, 2002, American Hockey Coaches Association Executive Director and Hockey East Commissioner Joe Bertagna stated his displeasure at the termination of Morris.

“It is clear that forces at work on the Clarkson campus wanted hockey coach Mark Morris removed all along and the incident that took place at Cheel Arena on Nov. 2 gave Clarkson officials the chance to do just that,” Bertagna wrote.

Bertagna questioned why Morris was targeted and then asks why no action was taken against Zach Schwan.

“What is not clear to us is why this successful coach was so targeted and why no action was taken against the student-athlete that initiated the physical confrontation that sparked this incident,” Bertagna said. “This student was even allowed to play while Coach Morris was placed on administrative leave.

“The nation’s hockey coaches can only infer that Clarkson President Denny [nl]Brown deems it acceptable for a 21-year old athlete, in peak physical condition and wearing full protective equipment, to take an unprovoked run at a coach twice his age, wearing only sweats.”

"Mr. Morris hit the player in the face and neck with the stick, lifted off the player’s helmet with the stick, and hooked his stick in the player’s genital area."

— Clarkson president Denny [nl]Brown

He then called the actions taken a “slap” to all amateur coaches.

“The lack of an appropriately measured response against the student-athlete is a slap at amateur coaches across the country, particularly those working at the intercollegiate level.”

Today, [nl]Brown responded to Bertagna’s letter with a letter addressed to Bertagna, but released to the media.

[nl]Brown states that Bertagna does not know all the facts and demands a retraction and apology.

“I am writing to express Clarkson University’s indignation with the unfounded allegations about Clarkson’s termination of hockey coach Mark Morris in a letter to the editor of the Courier-Observer newspaper,” said [nl]Brown. “It is particularly disturbing that you would make such statements on behalf of your national organization when you are not aware of the facts of the situation and made no effort to contact Clarkson to determine the facts.

“I ask that you retract your false statements and apologize in a letter to me with a copy to that newspaper and any other individuals or media to which you made those allegations.”

[nl]Brown then clears the air with the results of the investigation that Clarkson conducted.

“In light of the innuendo and rumors that have been appearing in the media, I feel it is necessary to provide clarification about the termination of Mark Morris. Although we normally do not like to carry on conversations such as these in a public forum, since you aired your false statements in the media, we are also sharing this letter with the media in order to assist with clearing up the misinformation.

“As the University has said on earlier occasions, the statements that we received from six witnesses to the incident on November 2 contradict the account Mr. Morris has given after his termination.

“The witnesses provided written and signed accounts that were consistent: the player made light contact with Mr. Morris on two occasions while performing ‘rub-offs.’ The player did not check Mr. Morris into the boards and was not more forceful than was typical for those games. After the first rub-off, Mr. Morris commended the player, saying that was the type of aggressive play he wanted from his players.

“Mr. Morris reacted to the second rub-off in a way that shocked all those present — after the rub-off was concluded and the player was skating away, Mr. Morris hit the player in the face and neck with the stick, lifted off the player’s helmet with the stick, and hooked his stick in the player’s genital area, pulling the player towards him, all the while shouting obscenities. Another coach separated Mr. Morris from the player. The player never fought back, and after that left the ice.”

[nl]Brown went on to restate that Morris never participated in the investigation, despite the University’s urging, and stood by his decision to terminate Morris.

He closed his letter to Bertagna by once again asking for a retraction and apology.

“I hope that in the future you will be more prudent about spreading false allegations regarding situations of which you have no direct knowledge,” said [nl]Brown. “I anticipate your retraction and apology.”

Harvard New No. 1 In Women’s Poll

While Minnesota-Duluth got two huge wins against traditional rival Minnesota this weekend, the big winner was Harvard, which climbed to No. 1 in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Women’s Poll. The Crimson captured ten of the fifteen first-place votes after a 3-2 win over No. 8 Brown, and ascended to the top with the win, combined with last week’s No. 1, Minnesota, losing twice.

The biggest games of the weekend were at Minnesota’s Ridder Arena, where Minnesota-Duluth emerged with two one-goal victories. On Saturday, the Bulldogs overcame a 3-1 deficit in the third period, scoring three unanswered goals, including the game-winner in the final minute of play. Sunday saw a see saw battle between the two teams, as the game was tied five different times in the 6-5 Bulldog win. Once again, the game’s winning goal was scored late in the third period. Nearly 5500 people attended either Saturday or Sunday.

No. 4 Dartmouth and No. 5 St. Lawrence traded victories in a weekend series, each game being decided by just one goal. New Hampshire won a pair of games against Niagara, improving to an impressive 12-1-1 and climbing to No. 8 this week. The record is a little deceptive, however, because only four of the 14 games have come against ranked opponents and the Wildcats are 2-1-1 in those four games.

Next week sees No. 10 Princeton and No. 5 St. Lawrence square off for two games, and new No. 1 Harvard gets a taste of Hockey East, traveling to Northeastern Saturday and No. 7 Providence Sunday. Mercyhurst, relegated to the “receiving votes” section of the poll the last two weeks, will attempt to get back in the thick of things with a game at No. 8 Brown.

The USCHO.com Poll is compiled by U.S. College Hockey Online, and consists of 15 voters, including 11 coaches of Division I programs and four women’s hockey writers.

Despite Tie, Elmira Holds Onto First

Things tightened up quite a bit in this week’s USCHO.com Division III Women’s Poll, although in the end, Elmira still captured the No. 1 spot as it has all season long.

Elmira is 1-2-1 in its last four games, although two of those games — both losses — were to a Division I team, Wayne State. The other mark on its record came in a 2-2 tie against No. 2 Bowdoin in the Utica Women’s Hockey Tournament on Saturday. Elmira rebounded in a 5-1 win over Colby Sunday afternoon.

With the tie and a 5-0 win over host Utica, Bowdoin took over the second spot, and garnered two first-place votes. The Polar Bears moved past Manhattanville, which won two games over New England College by a combined score of 16-1.

The other first place vote went to Middlebury, which improved to 4-0-0 with two dominating wins, 7-0 over Wesleyan and 8-0 over Trinity. The first trial of the young season comes this weekend for the Panthers, as they host No. 7 Plattsburgh and No. 1 Elmira. No. 9 Williams will also play both teams, as some of the best in the east go head to head.

The USCHO.com Poll is compiled by U.S. College Hockey Online, and consists of 12 voters, all coaches of Division III programs.

North Dakota Takes First in USCHO.com Poll

Capitalizing on a wild weekend among the top teams, North Dakota used a 6-6 tie and a 5-4 win over Minnesota State to improve to 12-1-1 and capture first place in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll. North Dakota moved up when last week’s No. 1 team, Boston College, lost to unranked Dartmouth on Tuesday and fell to No. 4. The next three teams all climbed one spot.

No. 2 is New Hampshire, which won its only game of the week, outlasting Connecticut 3-1. UConn led 1-0 midway through the contest, before the Wildcats scored three goals in the latter part of the second period.

The Maine Black Bears finish at No. 3, winning a close 2-1 game against a MAAC opponent, Quinnipiac. Three of Maine’s 10 wins this season have come against teams from the MAAC.

No. 5 Colorado College held steady in the fifth spot with two lopsided wins, 7-0 over Air Force and 10-2 over Mercyhurst. The first five teams in this week’s poll all received at least one first-place vote.

Making waves this week is No. 7 Cornell. While the Big Red didn’t move from the No. 7 spot from last week, the point differential with No. 6 Denver went from over a hundred points (444 to 343 last week) to fourteen (399 to 385 this week). Cornell was impressive with two home wins over No. 13 Boston University. The Terriers look forward to a breather in their difficult schedule, as they have seen teams ranked in the top 15 in six of their last eight games.

A big Hockey East match-up is on tap for this weekend, as No. 3 Maine battles No. 4 Boston College in a two game set at BC’s Kelley Rink. Also, the ranked teams from Ohio face off when No. 11 Miami and No. 14 Ohio State play a pair of games. In the WCHA, arch rivals No. 5 Colorado College and No. 6 Denver will be trading blows in what promises to be a spirited two games.

The USCHO.com Poll is compiled by U.S. College Hockey Online, and consists of 40 voters, including 28 coaches from the Division I conferences and 12 beat writers from across the country. The poll is published weekly by the Associated Press.

Primelink Winner Norwich Makes Case For No. 1

Norwich won two games at the Primelink Great Northern Shootout, which featured a remarkable field with the Cadets being joined by No. 7 Middlebury, No. 8 Plattsburgh and No. 10 Potsdam. With a 5-4 win over Middlebury Friday and a 5-2 win over Potsdam, Norwich took the title and, in the process, narrowly edged out Wis.-River Falls for first place in the USCHO.com Division III Men’s Poll. Last week, the two teams were tied for first place; this week, a single point separates them.

In the other games in the Shootout, Potsdam and Plattsburgh tied at 3 in the first semifinal, before Potsdam advanced with a 2-1 shootout win. In the consolation game on Saturday, Plattsburgh put the hurt on Middlebury, 6-1. Correspondingly, this week Plattsburgh climbs a spot while Middlebury drops two places.

Elsewhere, St. Thomas eked out a 1-1 tie with unranked Wis.-Eau Claire, before handing defending national champion Wis.-Superior a 2-1 setback.

No. 5 Bowdoin delivered a convincing win over Curry, 10-2 in the second game of the Face Off Tournament, after dropping an exhibition bout with the US Under-18 Team, 6-1. Bowdoin improved two places to No. 5 with the win.

Coming up this week, No. 14 Colby, new in the poll this week, faces No. 5 Bowdoin on Tuesday. The fate of the SUNYAC might become clearer on the same day, as No. 10 Potsdam hosts No. 8 Plattsburgh in an attempt to resolve the 3-3 tie the teams played to in the Primelink Shootout.

The MIAC and the NCHA continue to do battle, this time as No. 6 St. Thomas takes on No. 2 Wis.-River Falls on Friday and No. 11 St. John’s hosts No. 9 Wis.-Superior on Saturday.

The USCHO.com Poll is compiled by U.S. College Hockey Online, and consists of 15 voters, including coaches and beat writers from across the country.

The Spirit of College Hockey

When Michigan Tech took the ice this season, WMPL radio brought Houghton all the play-by-play action for the 33rd straight season. Unlike the previous 32, however, Bob Olson was not behind the microphone.

That would be interesting enough, but it doesn’t begin to explain Olson’s contribution to Michigan Tech hockey, or all of college hockey, for that matter. A warm, engaging, deeply religious, and — even into his 70s — highly-energetic man, Olson was an innovator until the day he retired.

Picture the Stone Ages, six long years ago, before the Internet was in its heyday … before USCHO was born. A mere 35 percent of the nation had a personal computer, and less than 10 percent were online. The lifeline between coaches, parents, sports information directors, and the rest of hockey was WMPL’s score service.

When the score service began at Olson-owned WMPL in 1970, it was to college hockey then what USCHO was in 1996; not necessarily the best place for that kind of information, but the only place.

In reality, most people in college hockey never knew Bob Olson. They knew Edda, his wife, even if not by name. When you called that famous number, Edda was likely on the other end. When Edda died two years ago, so did the scoreline.

Without his wife, without the scoreline, and with younger voices itching for an opportunity, Olson knew it was time to get out. He sold the station, and retired from broadcasting after 55 years.

“At the station, we had a young guy that was doing high school hockey,” says Olson. “It was time for the young guys to get in there, and the station wanted to have their own guy. And then Tech said they wanted the farewell tour [for me]. So the doors were just kind of closing.”

Though retired from broadcasting, Olson hasn’t just sat back, moved to Florida and hit golf balls. Today, he’s still innovating and building, working as a missionary in Ohio for Presentation Ministries, building communities that Olson describes as a “monastery for lay people.”

“It’s not like I’m looking for stuff to do, it just kind of finds me,” Olson says. “I always like to do exciting things. I’ve still got a lot of energy.”

Humble Roots

His evangelism for the sport of hockey did not begin right away. Growing up in Superior, Wis., where hockey had yet to take off in popularity, Olson had an interest in the theater. That led to an interest in radio, a radio school in Minneapolis, and finally his first radio job in Ironwood, Mich.

“I don’t think I had a big desire to go on and be an actor, but I knew I wanted to do something like that,” says Olson. “In the first grade in Superior, we had a big station there and I sang a French song on the radio. So maybe that’s where I got the bug.”

But first the army came calling, in 1951, during the Korean War.

“I never had any combat and I didn’t get out in the field much,” says Olson. “I was in the public information office doing radio work. When they found out I was a radio man, they put me in the morse code thing for a while.

"[John MacInnes] knew we had a good reputation, but we were basketball people, and we wanted to keep doing the basketball. We said we’d do the hockey too, but we had a knock-down drag-out session for four hours one night."

— Bob Olson

“The guys who flunked out of the morse code, they wound up in Korea. That’s what they did with the guys who flunked out. So I wasn’t gonna flunk out.”

Serendipitously, he was stationed at Fort Carson in Colorado Springs, home of the Broadmoor Arena, which hosted the first 10 NCAA championships from 1948-57. The seeds of his love for college hockey were born.

It was high school football, however, that got him out of the army six months early.

“If you had a seasonal job, like a farmer, and the planting season was coming up, you could get out early,” says Olson. “I got out because football season was coming up. … It was legitimate, it was a thing they had going in the army. We stretched things a little bit, but the [radio station] had to say, ‘We need him to come back and do football.'”

So through the 1950s and ’60s, Bob Olson was broadcasting high school football and basketball at a station in the remote town of Ironwood, Michigan, located on the Upper Peninsula on the [nl]Wisconsin/Michigan border, halfway between Houghton, Mich. and Duluth, Minn.

And true to his character, if it was going to be high school sports, Olson made sure his station was the most devoted, forward-thinking high school sports station there was.

“We were doing three to four games a night. We were switching, and we were going from one game back to another throughout the whole area,” Olson says. “So we were really doing a lot of innovative things like that. And, in fact, we had some women broadcasters. Before women were even on the radio, we had them doing sports.

“The only hockey I did then … North Dakota couldn’t send their broadcaster up to Michigan Tech. So I went up there to do a couple games on the weekend. That was in the ’60s, before I went up to Houghton.”

Of course, when doing high school sportscasting, even today, being innovative is often a necessity.

“Once I was doing a football game on the ground from the 35-yard line and every time they got down to the end zone, the players would stand up and I couldn’t see anything,” says Olson.

“One time, a guy I had working for me, he had a tournament basketball game. They forgot to put the telephone line in. He had to do the game from the hall in the phone booth, and he could see one basket. And he put a mirror up on the door so he could see the other basket.”

Hello, Houghton

All the while, Michigan Tech, at that time a powerhouse program with two national championships under its belt, never had radio coverage. But legendary Tech coach John MacInnes had heard a lot about this station down in Ironwood doing a great job covering prep sports in the Upper Peninsula. And Olson’s crew had just bought the station in Michigan Tech’s hometown of Houghton.

MacInnes called Olson for a meeting, one that didn’t begin too smoothly.

“He knew we had a good reputation,” says Olson, “but we were basketball people, and we wanted to keep doing the basketball. We said we’d do the hockey too, but we had a knock-down drag-out session for four hours one night.

“He says, ‘If you’re going to do the hockey, you’re going to do the hockey exclusively.'”

MacInnes was a forceful personality, but Olson nevertheless resisted at first, “until we realized, this is Division I hockey, and if we wanted to be the top sports station, we better do it.

“We wanted to do it, but we wanted to do it on our terms, and John was pretty adamant about it. When we did get it, he insisted that the sports information director or an assistant coach was the color man, because he didn’t trust us until later.”

Olson still wasn’t all that interested in broadcasting Michigan Tech hockey full time, so he picked an employee to do the play-by-play, someone who also happened to be president of the local amateur hockey organization, the Portage Lake Flyers.

“John wasn’t happy about that because he considered them competition,” says Olson. “When we first made the deal, I said the only way we would broadcast the games was if one of my guys was one of the broadcasters … because I didn’t want to build up this thing up for three years then have them pull the thing and put it on another station. But then John felt he was competition, and he said ‘You’re gonna have to get somebody else.’

“I was the only other guy, so I kind of got it by necessity. I didn’t really have a big desire to do it.”

The rest, as they say, is history.

Bob Olson (second from left) acknowledges the crowd during a pre-game ceremony in his honor. Standing with him are MTU coach Mike Sertich, daughters Ramona, Kristina, Julie and Perian, and two granddaughters.

Bob Olson (second from left) acknowledges the crowd during a pre-game ceremony in his honor. Standing with him are MTU coach Mike Sertich, daughters Ramona, Kristina, Julie and Perian, and two granddaughters.

Olson grew to love it, especially as Tech continued to put out powerhouse teams, highlighted by three straight NCAA title game meetings with Minnesota and the 1975 national championship. Soon, MacInnes would retire and the program would slowly decline, going through multiple coaches in Olson’s last 20 years. But by that time, he loved the sport and the program so much, he couldn’t think to leave.

“The first 12 Great Lakes tournaments, I never broadcast a consolation game,” says Olson. “And then for the [most part], I guess I never broadcast a championship game. That’s the way things work.”

Despite the cantankerous start between two sturdy personalities, in reality, there couldn’t have been a more perfect match. MacInnes, always a forward-thinker himself, knew WMPL was the place for Michigan Tech hockey.

“He knew we had the promotional ability to do the games, not so much our expertise on the play-by-play, but more to bring in the crowd and the fans,” says Olson.

The marriage of Bob Olson and WMPL, with John MacInnes and Michigan Tech hockey, would not be complete, however, without a marriage of the much more conventional sort; the one between Olson and his loyal cohort and partner, his wife, Edda. In fact, for people in hockey, it’s impossible to think of Bob without thinking of Edda too.

“She was a big sports fan because she had brothers,” says Olson, who met Edda at a church spaghetti dinner in Ironwood before getting married in the mid-’50s, “and she always used to have to listen to Harry Heilman on the [Detroit] Tigers games, because her brothers were working, and she had to listen to the games so she could tell them what happened when they got home.

“She was the original recorder.”

When they bought the station in Houghton, Edda began helping out. Combine that with Bob’s dedication and desire to go the extra mile, and it led to the two projects that put tiny WMPL at the center of the college hockey map for the next 30 years.

For the Good of College Hockey

The WMPL media poll was started right away.

“At that time, the AP and UPI had football and basketball [polls]. There was no hockey,” Olson says. “Jack Vivian, who was the new coach at Bowling Green when they were emerging, he liked it. A lot of those emerging programs liked it, because when teams came into town, people had a better idea of who the competition was, by their ranking. There wasn’t the publicity then.”

The score service was born because Olson couldn’t stand the hole in coverage. Just like the state-wide coverage of high school basketball, it wasn’t enough for him to just have a myopic view of the sport. Having all the scores accessible, allowed everyone some perspective on the big picture.

“It took a while, but people were really looking for a place to get the scores,” says Olson. “We used to get the mothers of the players in North Dakota calling, and [late Maine coach] Shawn Walsh’s dad was calling. And the scouts would all come up and say, ‘You still got the same number eh? 482-37-hundred?’ I said, ‘Yeah, that’s it.’

“One time Dave McNab called me from Czechoslovakia about 6 o’clock in the morning. He said, ‘Hey, this is Dave calling from Czechoslovakia, everybody here wants to know who won the games last night.’

“I felt we were doing it for hockey.

“I got that from John, too. MacInnes was always the first guy to play these emerging teams. He was the first guy to play Northern Michigan, Wisconsin, Maine, Bowling Green … He always said for the good of college hockey, we need more teams, and that was our whole philosophy.”

All the while, Edda was there. While Bob was busy running the station or calling the games, Edda was calling the coaches, compiling the poll, recording the scores. It was that way right up until she passed away before the 2000-01 season. The poll and score line were retired, and soon Bob Olson was too.

Along the way, Olson was duly honored. He’s one of just two media members to have received the WCHA Distinguished Service Award; he’s in the Michigan Tech Sports Hall of Fame; and he’s received the American Hockey Coaches Association Jim Fullerton Award for someone “who gave as much as he received and never stopped caring about the direction in which our game was heading.”

As a sendoff before his final season, Olson received more high recognition when Tech named the press box at MacInnes Arena after him.

Michigan Tech sports information director Dave Fischer genuinely reveres Olson, and has helped Olson get the recognition he came to deserve. Fischer is particularly fond of remembering Olson’s penchant toward going the extra mile for the program.

“Bob was always up to help us in any way,” says Fischer, someone Olson calls his personal publicity man. “One year we were home for Halloween and had a costume contest. The Halloween game was on Saturday and I asked Bob on Friday if he’d do a preview and dress up as a goaltender. He agreed. He broadcasted the whole game in a goalie’s full uniform.

“During the first intermission, we had him stand up on the counter in the press box, put the spotlights on him, and read a script to promote the next night’s Halloween Costume Contest. I was worried he was going to fall forward right off the front of the counter and into the stands.

“Our athletic director Rick Yeo wrote a song to the tune of ‘Take Me Out To The Ballgame’ one year, called ‘Take Me Out To the Ice Rink,’ and Bob was our Harry Caray. We sent it up to him in the press box and he led the crowd in ‘Take Me Out To the Ice Rink’ on several occasions over the years.”

All of which made Olson a beloved figure in Houghton, but his reach didn’t end there.

“One year, I drove to Madison with him,” Fischer says. “We pulled up to the parking attendant and I was kind of anxious because I didn’t arrange for parking. Bob had told me earlier not to worry about it. So, we pull up, Bob rolls down the window, and the guy at the parking booth says, ‘Hi Bob. How are you. Great to see you. There’s a spot right up near the door for you.'”

All his friends in hockey — from the coaches to fellow broadcasters, ex-players and parking attendance — are what Olson says he’ll miss most. And it’s clear the feeling is mutual.

“Bob’s love for the game and understanding of the key role Michigan Tech played in the development of the NCAA Division I game is an integral pillar in its very foundation,” says longtime Colorado College broadcaster Jeff Thomas.

“For years, with the WMPL Poll and the WMPL hotline, he served as the forerunner of U.S. College Hockey Online. He defined the game’s importance, which has helped lead to the growth in teams and leagues. And he did it without an ounce of self-gratification. For him it was a labor of love for which he had an overabundance to give.”

You get the sense that Olson could have gone on forever. But in the mean time, he sold WMPL. He could have still done the play-by-play, but felt it was time to step aside.

“I wasn’t necessarily ready to quit broadcasting,” Olson says. “I had so many friends all over the place. You love to go every place and see all the friends.

“It wasn’t the only thing I could do, so … I had a busy life, because I was doing the ministry work all that last year. I was travelling all over the U.P. there. I had six inner healing groups that I was doing, so it wasn’t like I was just sitting around.”

The Next Chapter

Olson has climbed Pike’s Peak, has run the Boston Marathon seven times, starting in the 1970s, and a number of other marathons. And don’t for a minute think he’s done.

“I’m going to try in Cincinnati this year,” he says. “It’s called the Flying Pig and I’ve never run that one.”

And lest you think he was just meandering along, Olson says he used to run the marathon in 2 hours, 45 minutes, which, at the time, was only about a half hour off the world record.

“Now if I do under four hours, I’m doing good,” Olson says. “I’m not training though. I don’t have the desire to train anymore. I’ll train so I can finish, but that’s it.”

With his life now devoted to ministry work, Olson figured his radio career was over. But again, Olson couldn’t resist some creative thinking to enhance his new pioneering efforts.

“The priest I was working with died of cancer after I got here, so now I’m recycling all his old radio shows so we can continue,” Olson says. “I never thought I’d get back into radio.”

Olson continues to touch lives just as he influenced college hockey for 32 years.

“He’s influenced me in many ways — faith, kindness of heart, and passion — to name a few,” says Fischer. “He’s a neat man, someone I’m thankful to call my friend. I feel very blessed that I had the opportunity to work with him for 15 years.”

College hockey was blessed as well.

This Week in the WCHA: Nov. 28, 2002

Woog On the Clock

Doug Woog has a seven-to-10-minute window to speak at his induction into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame next week, so he’s working on limiting what he’ll say.

Good luck.

Woog, along with Mark and Scott Fusco and the late Joe Riley, will be inducted on Wednesday at Touchstone Energy Place in St. Paul, Minn. — a fitting venue for one of the Twin Cities’ most recognizable hockey figures.

That gives Woog, the former Minnesota coach and All-American as a player there in the 1960s, a few more days to get prepared for his time in front of the microphone.

He said he doesn’t want it to be a biography, but there’s so many people to mention. It starts with family, but it includes the coaches that taught him hockey as a youth, his high school coaches — in both hockey and football — the people responsible for him getting into Minnesota and eventually becoming its coach, those who helped him as a coach and the players that gave him their all.

“So I’m trying to put that into about 10 minutes,” Woog said. He was told his tale took about 10 minutes. “Yeah, but I didn’t even get into the stories.”

Woog said that when Minnesota legend John Mayasich called him last summer to tell him of his election to the Hall, he had doubts as to whether he deserved such an honor ahead of others who had yet to make it.

“It’s become more of an honor as I’ve had a chance to think about it,” Woog said. “Obviously, it’s a hell of an honor. But you have to edge yourself into rationalizing whether or not you’re deserving.

“One of the satisfying things about it is that some of the people from the East have to vote for you. Sometimes in your own back yard issues happen, but it’s kind of nice when people nationally look at it and say the guy did a pretty good job.”

The South St. Paul native was 389-187-40 behind the Gophers’ bench from 1985 to 1999. He took the Gophers to an NCAA-record 12 straight national tournaments. Six of those trips ended in Frozen Four appearances.

He also was an assistant coach with the 1984 U.S. Olympic team after seven years as the head coach at South St. Paul and six with the St. Paul Vulcans of the United States Hockey League.

As a player at Minnesota, he was the team’s MVP in his senior season and was an All-American and the leading scorer in his junior season.

All this from someone who was a basketball hopeful before, in fifth grade, a doctor told him he couldn’t play roundball. “I would have been a 5-7 guard who couldn’t jump,” he said.

“You live in the moment you’re in, and I think that’s why it’s hard to think about accomplishments,” Woog said. “You really deal with today all the time. You don’t sit back in the rocking chair … and yarn about old times and how great you were.

“You always hear guys talk about the hall of fame and how they can’t take that away from you. People respond in a real positive way. There’s probably some people out there saying, ‘What the hell did he get in for?’ It’s a funny thing, they don’t come in front of you.”

Today, Woog works as a consultant to the university in selling suites for hockey and basketball games. He also does color commentary for Gophers games on Fox Sports Net and operates a summer hockey camp in Breezy Point, Minn.

That roughly three-hour drive to Breezy Point is one of the farthest locales to which Woog has had to pick up and leave to make a living as a college hockey coach.

“I never looked at a puck as my salary,” he said. “It was really kind of interesting that I taught for 17 years at South St. Paul and never had to leave the area to be involved in hockey. How many guys had that opportunity?

“I’m pretty blessed with opportunities falling for me. A lot of guys chased the thing for a long time and never get the chance. I’m pretty lucky.”

Speaking of Wooger

Woog will be honored before Sunday afternoon’s Gophers game against Michigan at Mariucci Arena.

In addition, the first 10,000 fans will receive what the school is describing as a limited-edition trading card of Woog, which he will be available to sign after the game.

Tickets for the hall of fame induction ceremony and dinner are $75 and can be purchased by calling the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame at (800) 443-7825.

The Showcase

OK, so the WCHA has a less than memorable record in the College Hockey Showcase. Or, in the case of Wisconsin, a downright awful record.

But Wisconsin (2-15-1 in the CHS) and Minnesota (9-8-1) will go at it again this weekend against CCHA and Big Ten rivals Michigan and Michigan State, this time on the campuses of the WCHA teams.

Here’s a look at the Badgers and the Gophers at this point in the season; for the Wolverines and Spartans, check out Paula C. Weston’s CCHA column.

Sore Badgers

In the first practice since one of the most embarrassing performances of Mike Eaves’ brief tenure at Wisconsin, the Badgers worked. And worked. And worked.

We’re talking length-of-the-ice crawling (without the help of knees). We’re talking skating, and a lot of it. And we’re talking a conditioning session so rigorous that when assistant coach John Hynes slipped up and instructed them to go to the wrong line in a skating drill, the players yelled to correct him, almost in a pleading way.

This was Monday at the Kohl Center. This was the first time the Badgers had taken the ice since a 3-2 loss to North Dakota last Saturday. That game will be remembered more as the one in which UW was outshot 19-1 in the first period and after which Eaves told reporters to put the onus on his players than one which the Badgers almost rallied to tie.

“At times, it looked like men vs. boys,” Eaves said. “They were just blowing down the wall on us. We had no containment. That’s just the maturity level of our team, being there one night and not being able to reproduce that same type of focus and desperation. We focus on Friday because it’s been an issue for us. We play pretty well on Friday and we absolutely don’t show up on Saturday. We still have to mature as a team.”

Eaves wouldn’t deny that Monday’s practice was at least in part fueled by Saturday’s events, but added that it wasn’t too much different than most practices.

Not all of the Badgers may be accepting that level of conditioning. As with every coaching change, there’s a period of adjustment.

But when asked whether the team was latching on to the new regime’s focus on conditioning, UW defenseman Dan Boeser said, “Some guys yes, some guys no.

“I think there’s going to be players on every sports team that are happy with some things and not happy with others,” Boeser said. “Some guys adjust well and some guys don’t. It’s going to take time. We’re still going through the coaching change and still trying to get used to everything.”

Eaves reaffirmed his long-held belief that his team will start to be more consistent after it returns from Christmas break. He said his hope is that the peaks and valleys won’t be as distinct by then.

But the Badgers are 1-5 in the WCHA, and going into break at 1-7 isn’t out of the question with a series against Minnesota next weekend. Will the second semester be too late?

Boeser prefers to think the next games will be the ones that turn things around.

“I don’t like to look at a date far off and say, ‘That’s our goal to start playing well,'” he said. “I think our goal is to play well on Friday night.”

Gophers Going for Repeat

It was about this time a year ago that Minnesota coach Don Lucia realized his team was going to make some waves in the postseason.

His Gophers beat Michigan 5-2 behind a Jeff Taffe hat trick and tied Michigan State 4-4.

“To me, the Michigan and Michigan State games are a great measuring stick,” Lucia said. “At that point [last season], that’s when I knew that our team was going to be good enough to have a shot. We could compete with the best teams in the country. Whenever you play Michigan and Michigan State, they’re usually the top two teams year in and year out in the CCHA. It gives you a better opportunity to see how you’re going to stack up nationally.”

A repeat of those performances this weekend would be a welcome sight for a Minnesota team that hasn’t been as strong in its last few games as it was at the end of last season or early this season.

The Gophers swept Michigan Tech last weekend, but somewhat unconvincingly. The week before, they managed only a tie in a home series against Colorado College.

“I can’t say as a team the last couple weeks we’ve played real well,” Lucia said. “For whatever reason, we don’t seem to have the same energy or hop to our step as what we had the first month of the season. Why, I don’t know. We seem to have played better on the road this year. We seem to be a little more tentative at home that what we’ve been on the road.”

The Gophers, however, have won 13 straight nonconference games at Mariucci Arena. On the other hand, that dates back to Nov. 23 and 25, 2000, when the Gophers lost both games in the Showcase.

Meanwhile, Travis Weber is settling in as the Gophers’ No. 1 goaltender. Since Justin Johnson allowed six goals in a 7-3 loss to CC on Nov. 15, Weber has played all three games and has allowed five goals in that span.

“He’s given us three real strong outings in a row,” Lucia said. “I think that’s been, to me, the best part of the last few weeks. We’ve been searching, and it’s tough to win if you’ve got an 87 save percentage (Johnson is at 86.6 percent) — the standard you’re hoping for is 90 or better. [Weber has] given us that over the last three games he’s played. I think that’s why we’re 2-0-1, because of that.”

Not the Same Sioux

If North Dakota wins the MacNaughton Cup this season, it might not be with the kind of offensive firepower it had in previous championship seasons.

In six WCHA games this season, the Sioux are scoring 2.67 goals per game. In the 2000-01 season, they averaged 4.11; in 1998-99, 5.07; in 1997-98, 4.54; and in 1996-97, 4.28.

Even last season, when the Sioux finished tied for sixth in the league, they averaged 3.68 goals per WCHA game.

This is not your typical North Dakota scoring punch, but it’s nothing that concerns coach Dean Blais, either.

“Sooner or later, we’re going to break out of scoring two or three goals and we’re going to get right back to five and six,” he said. “If the other team’s a little bit off in goaltending or in defensive play, we’re going to fill the net.”

This 11-1 start has indicated a kind of charmed existence to date for the Sioux. Question the strength of schedule, yes, but don’t forget to credit the Sioux for doing what they’ve had to do at just about every step along the way.

Blais credits a comeback from a two-goal deficit against Michigan in the second game of the season for getting North Dakota started in the right direction. Tight-checking nonconference games along the way and contests that were anyone’s game entering the third period have prepared the Sioux well, Blais said.

“We slugged it out there, and it set the tone for the whole year,” he said.

Yet that game against Michigan also may have been the last time anyone’s seen North Dakota at its best in terms of execution on the offensive front, Blais added. During that down period in scoring, the Sioux defense — lately including goaltender Jake Brandt — has turned up as the strength.

Brandt has allowed just two goals in his last three games. Two of those were shutouts, one against Alaska-Anchorage and one against Wisconsin in which he turned away six good chances from in front of the net.

“We’ve been getting shots on net, they just haven’t been going in,” Blais said. “It’s a little bit of bad luck as far as hitting pipes and coming out, missing wide-open nets. But defensively, we’ve really been strong, allowing [an average of 19] shots against. It doesn’t seem to matter who we play, we’ve been good defensively.

“You can’t control your offense with the other goaltender, execution and missed passes. But you can control hard work, and that’s what defense is.”

Friday Night Flameout

Denver coach George Gwozdecky has seen one too many lax Friday nights from his team this season. Last weekend, it cost a number of players a chance to play on Saturday.

The Pioneers dressed only 15 skaters in Saturday night’s 3-1 victory at Alaska-Anchorage, a direct result of Gwozdecky’s disappointment with his team in a 2-2 tie a night earlier.

Interestingly, Saturday’s win with only three-plus forward lines may have been one of the Pioneers’ best efforts of the season.

Out of the lineup on Saturday after playing Friday were forwards Kevin Ulanski, Jeff Drummond and Luke Fulghum, and defensemen Brett Skinner and Ryan Caldwell.

“There were probably others we were seriously considering, but we need to have enough guys on the bench so we could properly spell the guys and give them some rest,” Gwozdecky said.

Gwozdecky has made it a point of emphasis this week to show some Friday-night fire.

“We’re at a point in our team’s development where, as a staff, we’re not so much concerned about whether we’re playing conference or nonconference games,” he said. “Our focus of attention is on the way we’re playing as a team from one night to the next. We’ve developed a little bit of a trend of not playing that well on Friday night and coming back and playing much better on Saturday night. That’s something that we’re working on and we need to improve on this coming weekend.”

Concerning the Huskies

Peter Szabo and Mike Doyle are only part of the chain at St. Cloud State, but coach Craig Dahl this week expressed concern at the lack of production he’s receiving from those sophomores.

Szabo and Doyle set the bar pretty high for themselves with 33- and 32-point freshman seasons, respectively. Twelve games into this season, however, they’re both mired at one goal and five assists.

Dahl said he didn’t see opponents keying on the sophomores.

“They’re just not getting it done,” he said. “So we’re going to work through that with them.”

That’s just one concern with a 6-5-1 team that has looked uncharacteristically average, at least in comparison with the last few seasons.

The Huskies’ longest winning streak has been two games, drawn from winning the second game of a series with Minnesota State-Mankato and the first game of last weekend’s series with Minnesota-Duluth. Each weekend has seen some sort of Jekyll & Hyde act — the best series was a win and a tie against Mankato in late October.

For Dahl, it all goes back to a disjointed start to the season because of injuries to key offensive and defensive players.

“When you go through what we went through early with all the injuries, you’re not able to develop any consistency,” he said. “Then, when you get the guys back, they’re one, two, three, four weeks behind everybody else that has been there. It’s just going to take us a while to get that consistent behavior.

“It can be a little maddening in a way, but the morale of the team is good.”

The saving graces have been the solid production from seniors Ryan Malone, Joe Motzko and Jon Cullen and a 30.8 percent efficiency rate on the power play.

Bulldogged

The appeal of the two-game suspension to Denver’s Max Bull was half-successful. The WCHA’s executive committee cut the suspension in half after a conference call on Tuesday, and Bull will sit out Friday night’s home game against Mercyhurst.

Bull appealed the suspension, which was handed down by WCHA commissioner Bruce McLeod last Thursday for a collection of events in the two weeks previous, and played last weekend at Alaska-Anchorage.

Bull was involved in a knee-to-knee collision with UMD forward Jesse Unklesbay on Nov. 9, a play on which Unklesbay’s left tibia was broken but no penalty was called. Bull was issued a warning by the league after Bulldogs coach Scott Sandelin asked that the league review the play.

Against Michigan Tech on Nov. 15, Bull was given a five-minute major penalty and game misconduct for checking from behind. One day later, he was whistled for a checking-the-goaltender minor penalty.

“I was somewhat surprised at the severity of the suspension,” Gwozdecky said. “Like the league did, we did our due diligence on investigating it and analyzing not only the play that resulted in the warning but the subsequent plays after that. We felt we had a pretty good case in support of Max.”

High Praise

Count St. Cloud State’s Dahl among those believing in Minnesota-Duluth goaltender Isaac Reichmuth.

“That Reichmuth is as good as I’ve ever seen,” Dahl said after splitting with the Bulldogs last weekend. “He was unbelievable against us both nights. … He was phenomenal and he was really big for them in the third period down here [a 4-2 UMD victory last Saturday].”

Reichmuth still must face the test of time in the WCHA, though, and show that he won’t run out of big saves.

“That might tell you whether he’s big time or not,” Dahl said. “I told Scotty [Sandelin] before Saturday night’s game, he keeps playing like this, you’ll be talking about when he used to be here.”

On the Shelf

  • At Wisconsin, defenseman Dan Boeser said he’s been cleared to play by team doctors. But Eaves said the junior’s return may come next week against Minnesota.

    Also, forward Adam Burish and defenseman Andy Wozniewski are questionable for this weekend’s games because of shoulder injuries.

  • At Denver, the Pioneers are taking it slow with the return of goaltender Wade Dubielewicz, who sat out last weekend’s series with a leg injury. They don’t want to put the defending WCHA goaltending champ into a game without a handful of days of practice beforehand. Adam Berkhoel should get his second straight series of solitary goaltending duties this weekend.

    “He’s going to have an opportunity to go back to back games again this weekend,” Gwozdecky said of Berkhoel. “Wade is probably going to start skating a little bit toward the latter part of this week. The following weekend, we’ll see.

    “We’re not going to push Wade to get back. When he does feel good and comfortable, he’s going to need at least two or three days of good practice before he’ll feel comfortable going back into the net in a game situation. We’re very fortunate that we don’t have to push him back. The most important part of the season is the second half of the schedule. Not that I think it’s going to take that long, but if need be, we’ll let Wade get healthy. If it takes two weeks, great; if it takes five weeks, fine.”

  • At St. Cloud State, goaltender Jason Montgomery suffered a leg injury in the weight room, and he’s being plagued by an infection.
  • At Minnesota, forward Barry Tallackson may return from a separated shoulder this weekend. Forwards Jon Waibel and Jerrid Reinholz came back from injuries last weekend, but Reinholz suffered a sprained shoulder last Saturday and is doubtful for this weekend.

    In Other Words

    Minnesota-Duluth becomes the second WCHA team to close the league portion of its schedule for 2002 this weekend (Michigan Tech did so last weekend), and with a pair of home wins over Alaska-Anchorage could take 14 points from the first 12 games. Not too shabby considering the Bulldogs had 15 points in 28 games last season. … Alaska-Anchorage’s Ales Parez became the first Seawolves player to reach double figures in points last weekend when he reached 10 points. … Now that’s quick: Colorado College has scored twice in the span of a minute or less on five occasions this season. …

    Sometimes you watch Michigan Tech and just wonder when the Huskies will finally be rewarded for a good effort. Last weekend provided two of those times. … After this weekend’s series at North Dakota, Minnesota State-Mankato will have a seven-game homestand that includes a Dec. 17 exhibition against a traveling Italian team. …

    Players of the week were Minnesota’s Paul Martin on offense, North Dakota’s Brandt on defense and UMD’s Tim “Buster” Stapleton as the top rookie. … This weekend in Houghton, Mich., Wayne State coach Bill Wilkinson will go up against son Peter, an assistant for Michigan Tech. … Minnesota has set Jan. 19 for its annual Skate with the Gophers event. It runs from 1 to 4 p.m. at Mariucci Arena, and admission is $5 for adults and $3 for university students and children under 18.

    One Last Thought

    Politics aside, you have to be impressed with Ralph Engelstad’s dedication to the North Dakota hockey program through the years.

  • This Week in the MAAC: Nov. 28, 2002

    Thanksgiving … MAAC Style

    We’ve once again arrived at that time of year where I can take advantage of the Thanksgiving holiday to help me find content for this often insomnia-curing column. So as has become a tradition, here’s this year’s version of the list of things that people around the MAAC hockey league can be thankful for.

  • We start this year with Quinnipiac Athletic Director Jack McDonald. After doing yeoman’s work as chair of the NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey Committee last year, Jack saw his longstanding vision of tournament expansion come true last season.

    After years of tireless work, the NCAA finally recognized McDonald’s and the college hockey community’s efforts to expand one of the NCAA’s fastest-growing and most profitable sports. Now if McDonald can only convince the powers that be at the national polls to expand, then he’ll only be a Quinnipiac national championship away from dying in peace.

  • And staying in Hamden, Conn., we can look at Jack’s head man, Rand Pecknold, who is giving thanks this holiday for the mental health of goaltender Jamie Holden. The standout netminder was a bit shell-shocked in the NCAA tournament last year when he surrendered to his nerves and got hit for two quick goals in a 6-1 loss to Cornell.

    But folks who worried about Holden can rest assured he is more than stable this season. Back-to-back 2-1 road losses this week at Northeastern and at No. 7 Maine proved Holden’s worth. Having seen about 15 teams from various leagues play this season, I can say that Holden is the best netminder I’ve seen. And I guarantee he’s licking his chops to get back to the NCAA tournament.

  • Pecknold won’t be the only coach thankful for goaltending. Holy Cross’ Paul Pearl knew entering the season that the biggest question for his club was between the pipes. It didn’t take a rocket scientist to watch last year’s quarterfinal that saw Holy Cross fall, 6-5, to Connecticut and realize that the one thing this high-powered offensive team was missing was solid goaltending.

    Well, it appears the call for a tender is answered in rookie Tony Quesada. Boasting a 7-2-0 record, Quesada will likely be called upon through the second half of the year to carry a Crusader team that is proving itself solid as a competitor for the league title.

  • Iona coach Frank Bretti will give thanks Thursday for breaking the Erie jinx. Having always had a tough time on the road versus Mercyhurst when his Gaels were contending for the league title in past years, Bretti figured out the formula to beating the Lakers: sandbag.

    This year, Iona entered the game against Mercyhurst without a single win to its credit. The Gaels left with one, though, knocking off the Lakers in overtime and shellshocking the preseason favorite. One word of wisdom: watch out for Iona come March. The 0-9-1 start does not reflect the ability of this team, and when it gels, come playoff time, the Gaels will be the most dangerous team in the famous one-and-done playoff format.

  • Fairfield coach Jim Hunt has to be thankful for the smashing success that the inaugural Connecticut College Hockey Showcase two weeks ago at Bridgeport’s Arena at Harbor Yard. Fairfield served as the sole host for the event (as opposed to what was reported on these pages last week, when Sacred Heart was mentioned as the host) that saw one of the largest MAAC crowds ever, 2,072, turn out.

    Though for Hunt to truly be happy this Thanksgiving, he might need the guarantee that his club can start winning. The Stags have become victim of what seems like one-goal loss after one-goal loss, and if something doesn’t change in that cycle soon, they could be replacing perennial cellar-dweller Bentley at the bottom of the MAAC.

  • Speaking of Bentley, athletic director Bob DeFelice will sit down at his Thanksgiving table with gratitude for his new head coach, Ryan Soderquist. Young and still a bit wet behind the ears, Soderquist has seen his team win three MAAC games before the Thanksgiving holiday. That, in itself is a miracle considering last season the club won only four league games all year and the year prior only three. Continued success for the Falcons might allow for the club to make the playoffs for the first time since 2000, when Soderquist himself served as Bentley’s fiery captain.
  • Heading north to Buffalo, Canisius coach Brian Cavanaugh should be thankful for his ability to manage expectations. Sporting a preseason roster of mostly underclassmen, Cavanaugh had this writer believing that his Griffs might never win a game all year. That impression, though, was thrown in the trash barrel quicker than Ralphie’s hairpiece on The Sopranos when the Griffs reeled off five wins in seven league games — two on the road. Entering the Thanksgiving holiday, the Griffs sit nicely in third place in the league standings. So much for a rebuilding year.
  • And staying north, we can look at the Thanksgiving table for Mercyhurst coach Rick Gotkin. Sadly, he’ll be missing from his family Thanksgiving dinner, likely leading his team in some buffet turkey dinner in Colorado Spring. The Lakers are making an unenviable trip to face Colorado College and Denver this weekend. Thankfully, though, this is the end of the nonleague schedule and Gotkin and his Lakers can being making up the host of games in hand they posses with the hopes of making a charge.
  • Sacred Heart’s Shaun Hannah and Connecticut’s Bruce Marshall both are thankful to be free of one another for nearly four months. Both coaches know that, for some reason, when these two clubs get together the matchup is simply unpredictable. A couple of weeks ago, Sacred Heart dominated the Huskies on Friday night only to fall on the road a night later, much to the dismay of Hannah. It should, though, be interesting to see these two teams square off in their final battle on the final night of the season. Who knows what will be on the line in that game?
  • AIC’s Gary Wright and Army’s Rob Riley might wish that this were Christmas rather than Thanksgiving, as both coaches likely would rather be asking Santa Claus for help rather than giving thanks.

    Both would likely appreciate the same thing: consistency. While each team has shown glimmers of brilliance, best highlighted in Army’s 3-1 win over Quinnipiac last Friday night, the teams’ inability to put together a consistent trail of wins might serve costly later in the season. Both teams do share one thing: decent goaltending. But in a league where goaltending is the deepest position on the roster, each club will need to dig a bit further to get the wins to reach postseason play.

  • And last, but certainly not least, we can look to the MAAC office where commissioner Rich Ensor and director of championships Ken Taylor are both giving thanks for a sold-out Frozen Four.

    With the league hosting its first-ever national championship this year in Buffalo, the fact that the event has been sold out since last spring will allow the MAAC, along with co-hosts Canisius and Niagara, to focus on making the event itself the highlight of the college hockey year. Ensor is particularly happy to have the Frozen Four this year distract a little bit of the attention that usually would be paid to increasing the league’s scholarship issues.

    But that’s a conversation for another day…

    So as our look around the MAAC Thanksgiving table concludes, let me take this opportunity to wish all of my readers a very happy and healthy Thanksgiving and holiday season!

    Weekly Awards

    Though this is an abbreviated version of the regular MAAC column, I’d be remiss is I didn’t recognize this week’s league award winners:

    ITECH MAAC Hockey League Player of the Week: D.J. Miller, Connecticut Senior, F, Mount Lebanon, Penn.

    Miller netted a hat trick in UConn’s 3-2 win over second-place Holy Cross on Friday night to snap the Crusaders’ seven-game win streak. Miller netted the first two goals, including one on the power play, in the very first and last minutes of the second period. The eventual game-winner was scored 3:32 seconds into the third stanza to give the Huskies their second straight win and third victory of the season. Miller has six goals and eight points this season.

    ITECH MAAC Hockey League Goalie of the Week: Eddy Ferhi, Sacred Heart Senior, G, Charenton, France

    Ferhi made 44 saves in a defensive-oriented weekend. He shutout AIC in a rare scoreless tie. The next evening, Ferhi made 20 saves, holding AIC to just two goals. Ferhi has a 1.75 goals against average in league play and a 2.07 GAA overall. Both stats place him top of the league. Ferhi also holds a .920 save percentage in league matches and a .927 save percentage overall, second in the league in each.

    ITECH MAAC Hockey League Rookie of the Week: Brad Roberts, Army Freshman,G, Cassville, N.Y.

    Roberts made 53 saves and posted a .981 save percentage against MAAC-leading Quinnipiac Friday night, the most by a goalie in a MAAC contest this season, a Tate Rink record and an Army home-game record. His effort was the second-best in a single game in the NCAA this season. The 53 saves is also a career-high for the freshman netminder. Army’s win over the Bobcats ended Quinnipiac’s five-game win streak and nine-game unbeaten string. Roberts posts a 2.79 GAA in league play and a 2.81 GAA overall, tied for fourth in the league. Roberts also has a .915 save percentage in conference play and overall.

    Looking Ahead

    As we return to the regular column next week, we’ll be taking a look at Quinnipiac. The Bobcats may not be plastering the college hockey world with upsets, but their recent back-to-back 2-1 road losses to Northeastern and Maine prove that this club cannot be taken likely. Next week we’ll examine just how good it really is.

    We’ll also be recapping the MAAC’s first-ever trip to the Colorado powers of CC and Denver when Mercyhurst returns from the high altitude.

    All this, and plenty more, to look forward to one week from now.

  • This Week in the WCHA Women’s League: Nov. 28, 2002

    Neither Minnesota nor Minnesota-Duluth has a loss in conference in play, and the two are ranked first and third, respectively, in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Women’s Poll.

    The battle for early-season supremacy in the WCHA takes place this weekend as the league’s top teams face each other at Ridder Arena on the University of Minnesota campus.

    The Gophers, 13-0-1 overall and atop the league standings with a 7-0-1 record and 15 points, are the defending WCHA champions and have won the last two regular-season titles.

    The Bulldogs, 9-1-2 overall and second in the league at 5-0-1 with 11 points, have won two WCHA titles and are the reigning, two-time NCAA champions.

    The rivalry between the two teams has escalated into one of the most anticipated matchups in women’s hockey each season with the winners laying claim to the North Star Trophy, currently in Minnesota’s possession following a 1-0, 3-1 season sweep of UMD in Minneapolis last Feb. 18-19.

    With one exception — Wisconsin’s Jackie Friesen leading the league with four power-play goals — either a Gopher or Bulldog tops all of the league’s statistical categories and one of the two teams lead every team category.

    The top two teams in the league during the WCHA’s first three seasons, they have separated themselves again this year.

    For UMD, which trails Minnesota by four points but has two games in hand, this weekend’s series is a chance for redemption after a loss to Harvard and tie with Brown in its last action, Nov. 16-17. The two games dropped the Bulldogs from first to third nationally.

    The Gophers meanwhile, with home wins over the same two teams, climbed to number one nationally and solidified that standing with a pair of road wins over St. Lawrence this past weekend, earning a unanimous number-one ranking. Minnesota can virtually guarantee its spot at the top of the league standings through the holiday break by downing UMD this weekend.

    Coming off a weekend which they didn’t play, Bulldog head coach Shannon Miller feels her team is prepared for the upcoming series.

    "I think it will be a good gauge of where we are this season. … It will be important down the road in terms of league and national tournament ramifications."

    — Minnesota coach Laura Halldorson, on this weekend’s UM-UMD series.

    “They came back very rested,” she said of her team. “They came back hungry and ready to play the Gophers.”

    Minnesota, which will have played eight games against ranked opponents in 31 days by the end of the weekend, is completing the toughest part of its schedule. However, head coach Laura Halldorson knows their is added significance to this weekend.

    “I think it will be a good gauge of where we are this season,” she said. “It will be important down the road in terms of league and national tournament ramifications. But’s it’s still early in the season and we know we’ll see them later.”

    Halldorson is also happy with where her team is after the stretch that the Gophers have been through.

    “We started the month saying that this was going to be a difficult month and a real challenge for us,” she said. “We knew that at the end of the month would know a lot more about ourselves. I’ve been very happy with the results so far. I think we’re going into the final weekend of this month in pretty good shape and, hopefully, we can keep it going for one more weekend.”

    Both teams have had to play important games during the month of November, and both have had to do without key players. UMD was without five of its top players in a weekend sweep of Ohio State three weeks ago while the Gophers were missing four players when they suffered the only blemish on their record, at 2-2 tie with Bemidji State, the same weekend.

    Several Bulldog players were in and out of the lineup and now, with her team finally having significant practice time with everyone present, Miller believes her team is set to have a positive finish to the 2002 portion of the schedule.

    “Now we’re together and it’s important that we move forward,” she said. “It’s important that we find each other and develop some chemistry. Going into the weekend it’s important that we’re together and now we need to move forward and progress.

    “I’ve told the team that it’s a long race and, no matter what happens, everyone has time to recover. We just want to get better and better each week. Where we’re ranked doesn’t matter, but we want to feel good about where we’re at when we go into the (Christmas) break.”

    With one final “big” weekend facing them, both the Bulldogs and Gophers realize their work is far from over. But this weekend’s battle for the North Star Trophy promises to be a factor in both teams’ success this season as well as an intense and exciting weekend of hockey.

    UM-UMD To Be Aired By Fox Sports North

    Editor’s note: it was previously indicated that Sunday’s UM-UMD contest would be televised on a tape-delayed basis, when in fact Saturday’s game was telecast. USCHO.com apologizes for the error.

    Saturday’s game between Minnesota and Minnesota-Duluth can be seen on Fox Sports North on Saturday on a tape-delayed basis.

    Both Minnesota’s men’s and women’s team’s will be playing Sunday at the same time in the adjoining Mariucci and Ridder Arenas. The men’s game, with Michigan, will be carried live by FSN with the women’s game slated for a 6 p.m. CST air time, a change from its originally scheduled time of 7 p.m.

    Seven More Sign With WCHA Schools

    Two-time defending NCAA champion Minnesota-Duluth added four players during the early signing period while St. Cloud State inked two players and Ohio State one, bringing the total of players signing with WCHA schools to 14.

    The Bulldogs’ four recruits represent four different countries and include three Europeans and one American.

    Forward Jessica Koizumi (Simi Valley, Calif.) returns to her native Minnesota. Currently a member of the California Selects U-19 team, she was raised and played hockey in Silver Bay, Minn.

    UMD’s European contingent of recruits is led by forward Evelin Samuelsson (Marsta, Sweden), who scored both of Team Sweden’s goal in their 2-1 bronze-medal win over Finland at the 2002 Olympics. She is joined by defenseman Suvi Vacker (Jyvaskyla, Finland), a member of Finland’s U-22 National Team who plays with the Jyvaskyla Cats club team along with former Bulldog goalie Tuula Puputti, and goalie Riitta Schaublin (Basel, Switzerland), who has played for Team Switzerland along with current UMD goalie Patricia Sautter.

    With nine players leaving after this season, head coach Shannon Miller knows the recruiting process is a long ways from over.

    “This is a good start,” she said. “But we still need more depth. We must work very hard at recruiting throughout the season to ensure we have a strong team next year.”

    The Huskies have landed their first two recruits under new head coach Jason Lesteberg, adding forward Marie-Michel Lemieux (Boisbriand, Quebec) and goalie Lauri St. Jacques (Sturgeon Falls, Ontario).

    Lemieux, at five feet, 11 inches tall, adds size to the SCSU front line. The MVP of the Boisbriand Junior A squad last season, she currently players for the St. Jerome Cheminots.

    St. Jacques is no stranger to the WCHA, having played in exhibition games against the Huskies, Minnesota and Minnesota State earlier this season for the North York Junior Aeros. While playing three games in three days, she stopped 45 of 56 shots in 90 minutes, 19 seconds during the Aeros’ three-game trip.

    The Buckeyes first member of their 2003-04 freshman class is Tessa Bonhomme (Sudbury, Ontario), a 5-7 defenseman with the Sudbury Wolves midget AA team.

    A multi-sport athlete at Lasalle Secondary School, Bonhomme was the leading scorer for her school team last season and is currently leading the Wolves in scoring.

    Bemidji State Changes Game Time With Wisconsin

    Bemidji State announced that a new time has been set for its game with Wisconsin, Saturday, Dec. 7.

    Originally slated for a 3:05 p.m. faceoff, the start time has been pushed ahead one hour to 2:05 p.m. The teams’ game scheduled for Friday, Dec. 6, will remain a 5:05 p.m. start.

    WCHA “House”Hold Hints

    Saturday, Wisconsin senior goalie Jackie MacMillan became the first goalie in WCHA history to play 100 career games … She celebrated the accomplishment with a 25-save shutout in a 4-0 win over Ohio State … Minnesota freshman Natalie Darwitz scored her second natural hat trick of the season in Saturday’s 7-2 win at No. 5 St. Lawrence … She scored her three goals in just over eight minutes and had a hand in each of the Gophers’ goals during a five-goal first period … Darwitz was named the league’s rookie of the week for the third time this season … She and linemate Krissy Wendell have combined to earn that honor six times in the first seven weeks of the season … Each has also been cited as the league’s player of the week once this season …

    St. Cloud State begins a six-game road swing this weekend to conclude the 2002 portion of its schedule … The Huskies will played five of eight games at home in both January and February … Minnesota junior forward La Toya Clarke reinjured her sprained ankle this past weekend at St. Lawrence but is expected to be in the lineup to face the Bulldogs … Wisconsin will be without the services of sophomore defenseman Carla McLeod and freshman forward Nikki Burish until after Christmas … Both are out with broken legs … Badger sophomore forward Amy Vermeulen, who missed the team’s first 12 games while playing soccer for Wisconsin, scored the game-tying goal in Friday’s 3-3 tie with Ohio State in her first game of the season.

    WCHA AWARDS

    Offensive Player of the Week–Krissy Wendell, Fr., F, Minnesota
    Defensive Player of the Week–Jackie MacMillan, Sr., G, Wisconsin
    Rookie of the Week–Natalie Darwitz, Fr., F, Minnesota

    COMING UP

    No. 3 Minnesota-Duluth at No. 1 Minnesota (Saturday-Sunday)

    Minnesota owns a 6-5-3 edge in the all-time series … The Gophers have won the last four meetings on their home ice … Seventeen of the league’s top 25 scorers play for either Minnesota or UMD … Nine players between the two teams competed in the Four Nations Cup earlier this month … The Gophers have not allowed more than three goals in a game this season and the Bulldogs have not allowed more than three goals since their season-opening 6-4 win at No. 6 Providence … UMD senior forward Maria Rooth is six points shy of becoming the first player in school history to score 200 career points … She has 106 career goals in 106 games … Despite allowing a league-high 7.5 power plays per game in WCHA games, the Bulldogs are 45-for-45 killing penalties … They’ve allowed just two power-play goals in 81 chances overall.

    Minnesota State at No. 9 Wisconsin (Saturday-Sunday)

    Wisconsin is 12-0-0 against Minnesota State … The Badgers have shutout the Mavericks in the last three meetings and have held them scoreless for over 11 periods, a span of 226:02 … Wisconsin senior Jackie MacMillan and MSU junior Shari Vogt have combined for 4,130 career saves … Vogt, who is facing nearly 41 shots per game, ranks 11th nationally with a .923 save percentage … MSU’s four points in league games is more than they have accumulated in the past two seasons combined.

    St. Cloud State at Ohio State (Saturday-Sunday)

    Ohio State is 8-5-1 all-time against St. Cloud State and owns a three-game winning streak in the series … However, the Huskies own a 4-1-1 mark in six games at OSU Arena … Despite outshooting its opponents in its last four games, the Buckeyes are just 1-3-0 during that span … OSU has held opponents to 16 or fewer shots in each of its last three games … Saturday’s 4-0 loss at Wisconsin was the Buckeyes’ fifth shutout loss of the season … Each of St. Cloud State’s three wins this season has come in the second game of a series … SCSU freshmen twin sisters Ashley and Kelly Stewart have accounted for the Huskies’ three game-winning goals … The game-winning goals are the only goals the duo has scored this season.

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