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Whitney is Top Collegian in New CSB Rankings

Four U.S. college players cracked the top 11 in the Central Scouting service’s mid-term rankings of skaters, just released. They are Ryan Whitney of Boston University (4th), Jim Slater of Michigan State (7th), Rob Globke of Notre Dame (8th) and Michigan’s Eric Nystrom (11th).

The rankings — released twice each year — are broken down into North American skaters and goalies, and International skaters and goalies. Whitney is the only defenseman among the aforementioned group, and the sceond-highest backliner in the rankings, behind No. 1 Jay Bouwmeester of Medicine Hat (WHL). Forwards Rick Nash (London, OHL) and Scottie Upshall (Kamloops, WHL) are second and third, respectively, while Kitchener (OHL) defenseman Steve Eminger rounds out the top five.

Cornell freshman David Leneveu is the top-rated college goaltender, placing eighth on the list.

The rankings are broken down into rounds, loosely coinciding with the NHL’s Draft procedure. Among the other college skaters in the first round (top 30) are Yale’s Chris Higgins (17), Minnesota’s Keith Ballard (19) and Minnesota’s Barry Tallackson (27).

Other goalies in the top 30 are St. Lawrence’s Mike McKenna (15), Harvard’s Dov Grumet-Morris (24) and Colorado College’s Curtis McElhinney (27).

The final rankings will be released just prior to the June draft.

This Week in the CCHA: Jan. 17, 2002

It’s In the Stars

Hockey fans, I would be remiss if I didn’t warn you about this: From Jan. 18 through Feb. 8, Mercury is in retrograde.

What does this mean, you ask? It means you should stay the course, avoid signing contracts and making major decisions, don’t vary routines, and — for heaven’s sake — observe all hockey-related superstitions.

Come on. You know you’ve got them. And why not? Hockey players are among the most superstitious people in the known universe. Players don their equipment in a specific order. Goaltenders touch the pipes in a certain way.

Superstition is not limited to the ice. I know fans who wear certain jerseys for certain games, or who change the way they dress after losses, fans who eat the same things for weeks when their favorite teams are doing well.

Then there are the folks in the press box. At the start of the third period during the less-than- thrilling 1-1 tie between Lake State and Ohio State (Jan. 11), I happened to gripe about the overtime potential of the slow, penalty-free game. A colleague said, “See? Why did you say that?”

Obviously, the extension of the evening’s “entertainment” was all my fault, all my fault, all my fault.

The following night, a different colleague said — out loud! — the word “shutout” before the end of OSU’s 5-0 win over Lake. I thought the Buckeye SID would lose it.

So in the spirit the times, here’s your Game of the Week, which is always the Grudge as well, when these two meet.

Games and Grudges

No. 6 Michigan State (17-5-2, 12-4-1 CCHA) at No. 8 Michigan (13-7-4, 10-4-3 CCHA) Saturday, 7:35 p.m., Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor, Mich.

The Wolverines are under the sign of Sagittarius, the most optimistic sign of the zodiac. Michigan had better remain optimistic in the face of Mike Cammalleri’s mononucleosis. (See below.)

The new moon on Jan. 13 will have a lasting effect on Sagittarian energy, in spite of Mercury in retrograde. One caution, though, Wolverines: remain alert. A simple slip — too many men on the ice? a bad read? — could cost you big against the Spartans.

There isn’t much activity in the Wolverine/Sagittarius chart in terms of movement, so be prepared to fight hard for points and stay the course even if it feels as though you’re not moving up in the standings.

Of course, Mars moves into your house of true love on Jan. 18, so who knows what will happen?

On to the Capricorn Spartans. Capricorn is the most ambitious sign of the zodiac, which should surprise no one, given this program.

This recent new moon was actually in Capricorn, which means that things should go your way — if you work at it. And we know you’ll work at it. With all kinds of planets on the eastern side of your chart this month, you’ll not only work hard but you’ll be in control of your own destiny as well.

If your significant Capricorn birthday was on or near the date of that full moon — and it was — this year should bring you great things, Spartans.

Jan. 19 is a particularly good night for you, Capricorns — for love, that is. Perhaps you’ll feel the love in Yost Arena?

OK. Now here’s something we hope you’ll really like.

  • The Spartans and Wolverines are meeting for the 234th time in a series that dates back to 1924. Michigan leads the all-time series 119-105-9, and is 61-38-1 in Ann Arbor.
  • The 2001-02 CCHA season kicked off Oct. 6, 2001, with a 3-3 tie between Michigan and Michigan State, in front of a world-record crowd of 74,554 in Spartan Stadium.
  • Michigan State tops the conference standings, while Michigan trails them by two points, in second place. Seem like deja vu? It should. The Spartans and Wolverines have finished No.1 and No. 2 in the final CCHA standings in each of the last four seasons, and were picked to finish that way in the 2001-02 media poll. Michigan tied for second last year and won the CCHA regular-season title the season before.
  • The Spartans enter this contest with a four-game unbeaten streak against the Wolverines (3-0-1). Michigan State hasn’t gone five games without a loss to Michigan since Dec. 11, 1988 – Dec. 10, 1989, when the Spartans won five in a row.
  • A win for the Wolverines will put them above .500 at home (4-4-1). A win for the Spartans will put them above .500 on the road (4-4-0).
  • The Wolverines are 6-2-2 in their last 10, 3-2-2 in their last seven. The Spartans are 8-2-0 in their last 10, and 5-2-0 in their last seven.
  • The Wolverines were unbeaten against CCHA opponents in 11 games until the mighty Nanooks broke that streak Jan. 12 (3-1). The Spartans are 9-3-0 in their last 11 league contests.
  • The Spartans have won just three times in their last 10 trips to Yost, but shut out the Wolverines 1-0 in their last visit (Nov. 4, 2000). Ryan Miller stopped 33 shots in the game, his first shutout of the 2000-01 season.
  • The Wolverines have killed 26 of 27 opponent power plays since returning from the holiday break, and have gone 25 straight penalty kills without allowing a goal.
  • The Spartans and Wolverines will meet just once more during the regular season, a nonconference game in Joe Louis Arena Feb. 16.
  • The Spartans and Wolverines are tied for second in the CCHA in goals per game in conference play (3.35). Michigan State leads the league for fewest goals allowed per game in conference play (1.65), while Michigan is third (2.24).
  • The Spartans and Wolverines are one and two, respectively, in league power-play conversions (.232, .203) and penalty killing (.912, .901).
  • The Wolverines average 20.00 minutes in the penalty box per game to the Spartans’ 12.24.

    Both teams have scoring power and excellent team defense, and the Spartans have, of course, Ryan Miller (1.60 GAA, .939 SV% CCHA), whose stats lead the league and who is second in the country among all D-I goaltenders.

    But the man in the other cage ain’t bad, either. Senior Michigan goaltender Josh Blackburn posted his eleventh career shutout Jan. 11 against Alaska-Fairbanks, tying the school record held by Marty Turco (1994-98). During his last five outings, Blackburn posted a 1.47 goals-against average and .940 save percentage.

    With Mike Cammalleri out for the Wolverines, look for freshman walk-on Charlie Henderson to make some noise. Henderson has a point in five of his last eight appearances (3-4–7), and had a career-high three points in Michigan’s 7-0 shutout of UAF (Jan. 11).

    Another secret weapon of the Wolverines is that this game is designated the annual “Maize-Out,” during which fans are encouraged to wear maize (we call it corn) to the games to match the team, which will be sporting maize jerseys. Hurry to the gate, Wolverine fans! The first 750 people to arrive will receive free maize t-shirts.

    Pick: Something in me tells me that this one will go Michigan’s way, even without Cammalleri. Wolverines 2-1.

    The Bad

    Wolverine junior Mike Cammalleri will be out indefinitely with mononucleosis.

    Cammalleri — arguably among the best forwards in the country — has skated in 19 of Michigan’s 24 games, missing five as a member of silver-medal Team Canada in the 2002 World Junior Championship tournament.

    Second in Michigan scoring with 15 goals and 11 assists, Cammalleri was also named Best Forward in the tourney.

    Said Michigan head coach Red Berenson Thursday, “We were hoping it was on the downside of mono, where you’d get improvement every day and in two or three days he’d be okay, but instead, it’s the other way. It’s worse today, his spleen is tender, and his lymph nodes are starting to swell up, so he’s just getting the symptoms now, so he’s on the front side of it.”

    Berenson said that, obviously, this isn’t good news for the Wolverines, but that “you can’t dwell on it and cry over spilled milk. This gives an opportunity for someone else to step up and fill a big role.”

    Berenson added that this changes the way the Spartan-Wolverine match looks on Saturday. “If we were a favorite or had any home-ice advantage, we still have it, but we’re not as good a team without Mike Cammalleri. We’ve got to prove that we can pick up that slack and overcome that.”

    The Good

    Spartan netminder Ryan Miller is one of 14 finalists for the 2001 Sullivan Award (AAU), given annually by the Amateur Athletic Union to the top amateur athlete in the United States.

    “I feel very fortunate and flattered to just be nominated,” says Miller. “It’s a very prestigious award and I’ll try to live up to the standards they’ve set.”

    Other finalists are Tony Azevedo (water polo), Natalie Coughlin (swimming), Michelle Kwan (figure skating), Matt Lindland (wrestling), Stephen Lopez (tae kwon do), Toccara Montgomery (wrestling), Brandon Paulson (wrestling), Mark Prior (baseball), Jason Reed (rowing), Sean Townsend (gymnastics), Allen Webb (track and field), Angela Williams (track and field) and Roy Williams (football).

    The Sullivan Award has been presented each year since 1930, when golfer Bobby Jones was its first recipient. Other notable winners include Florence Griffith Joyner, Carl Lewis, Peyton Manning, Mark Spitz and Bill Walton. Olympic wrestler Rulon Gardner earned the Sullivan Award last year. No hockey player has ever won.

    The AAU will announce a group of five second-round finalists in March, and the winner will be announced at an awards banquet at the New York Athletic Club in April.

    The Good, Part 2

    Here’s something utterly useless, passed along to me by Mike Eidelbes — but it’s worth repeating, if only to give you a glimpse into the sad lives of hockey SIDs.

    UMass-Lowell netminder Cam McCormick leads the nation’s D-I goaltending stats with an astonishing 1.11 goals-against average and .952 save percentage. McCormick began the 2001-02 season with a 10-18-4 career record, a 3.17 career GAA, and a .879 career save percentage.

    (What this says about Blaise MacDonald, I don’t know.)

    McCormick is a big guy, 6-2 and 237 pounds. MSU goaltender Ryan Miller is tall — also 6-2 — but weighs just 160 pounds.

    What Michigan State wants us to know is how Miller stacks up to McCormick, pound-per-pound.

    Yes. Really.

  • Miller is 21, McCormick is 24.
  • Miller has had 23 starts, McCormick 13.
  • Miller has 16 wins; McCormick has 11.
  • Miller and McCormick each have six shutouts this season.
  • Miller has 572 saves this season, McCormick 279.
  • Miller’s saves per pound (SPP) are 3.58, to McCormick’s 1.18 SPP.

    As Eidelbes writes, “The numbers indicate [that] Miller easily leads McCormick in the saves per pound category. Therefore, Ryan Miller is — pound-for-pound — the best goaltender in college hockey today.”

    The Good, Part 3

    With his 5-0 win over Lake Superior State Jan. 13, OSU goaltender Mike Betz set a new school record for shutouts in a single season (5). Betz is in some pretty good company. Jeff Maund did this once (1997-98), and Bill McKenzie did so twice (1969-70, 1971-72).

    It Gets Better

    If the season were to end today, the Alaska-Fairbanks Nanooks would be hosting the Western Michigan Broncos in the first round of CCHA playoffs. The Broncos are in Fairbanks this weekend.

    The CCHA media poll placed Fairbanks last, but this savvy writer (as well as Maverick beat writer Eric Olsen) placed them considerably higher, and staying home postseason has apparently been on head coach Guy Gadowsky’s mind as well.

    “It’s been a goal from day one, since our first meeting,” says Gadowsky. “We still have a long way to go. In this league, just because you play at home doesn’t guarantee anything. We’re playing excellent programs all the way through.”

    Gadowsky credits the character of his team with the Nanook success, while the team clearly credits Gadowsky.

    “We had the highest GPA we ever had last year, and right now it’s January and we already have the most wins we’ve ever had in the CCHA,” says Gadowsky. “The attitudes in the dressing room really brought about a change in all their habits, how they represent themselves in the community, how they represent themselves on the road, how they conduct themselves in classrooms.

    “We have really good people here, and they’ve done a great job in changing the attitude of what it means to be part of this program. I just can’t stress enough the quality of guys like Bobby and Aaron Grosul and Daniel Carriere.”

    Says Grosul, “I think it has a lot to do with Coach Gadowsky and his philosophy and his systems. He’s had time, and he’s got his recruiting classes coming in. The more he has time to teach guys his systems and they start dedicating themselves to his systems and his philosophies, the success is just going to keep coming.”

    Nanooks in Detroit? I wouldn’t bet against it.

    Thanks to Scott Weighart for his research for this section.

    The Downright Ugly

    After his Lakers played two solid games and never gave up in 125 minutes against nationally-ranked Ohio State, LSSU head coach Frank Anzalone said, “We just don’t have the talent.

    “I think where we are showed up. Them seam’s ripped open, and you can only keep stitching it for so long.”

    This week Lakers Ryan Bennett, Andy Contois, Aaron Phillips, and Trevor Weisgerber were given their walking papers.

    Of being shut out by Mike Betz and OSU, Anzalone said, “I think if we were a little stronger offensively, crashing the net … there were a number of times that we didn’t even get a shot off on two-on-ones. He didn’t see the quality shots that … can really test him.

    “We just don’t have that. We are just not at that level. If we had two or three other really good players … I mean, we’ve got two centermen on our that aren’t even on scholarship playing at the Division I level. So, until we regroup and we regain momentum, all the Mike Betzes in the world are going to look good against us.”

    Anzalone added, “That’s not derogatory toward Betz.”

    Not at all — not toward Betz or his own team.

    And from the File of the Greatly Exaggerated

    Some readers have emailed me to ask if CCHA referee Duke Shegos is retiring, as was apparently reported during the MSU-FSU broadcast Tuesday night. (I can’t say for certain what was said, as I wasn’t listening.)

    Here’s the scoop: Duke Shegos is not, at this moment, retiring. “That’s a little premature,” says CCHA commissioner Tom Anastos.

    According to the Commish, Shegos will be unavailable for the remainder of the season because of a conflict with work, and Anastos isn’t ruling out that Shegos will retire at the end of this season, but for now it’s just a leave of absence.

    If we’re lucky, Duke will return for the 2002-03 season. Please, Duke. There’s no one to replace you. Ask the big guy in Marquette.

    FYI

    As promised last week, responses to recent reader email!

    Wayne State

    An astute reader from Michigan wrote, “When is Wayne State going to join the CCHA?”

    My answer is, I just don’t know. It seems odd to have a team in Detroit that isn’t a part of the league, a team coached by Bill Wilkinson, a team playing so many games against CCHA opponents.

    All I know is that if the league goes to 13, the current playoff system will have to change. Woo-hoo!

    Who’s the Greatest?

    In response to my assertion that Ryan Miller is arguably (that’s a qualifier, for those of you playing along at home) the best collegiate goaltender ever, a reader from Michigan wrote, “Obviously you must be a Spartan fan or you would remember who Marty Turco is!!”

    Sure, I think I know who Marty Turco is. If you’re talking about the Marty Turco whose four-year shutout record was broken by Ryan Miller in fewer than two seasons, then I know who Marty Turco is.

    I never said that Turco wasn’t a great goaltender. He was, and he is.

    And can somebody — anybody — from the state of Michigan tell me what the deal is with the whole “C-Ya!” thing? As a native New Yorker, I’d never heard this until I moved to Ohio. In fact, I’d never heard it (or seen it spelled that way) until I started covering hockey.

    The reason I ask is that the reader from Michigan who questioned my goalie judgment also addressed his message, “Dear Ms. Paula (c-ya) Weston.”

    I’ve been called many things before, but never that.

    JB Bittner

    An Ohio State fan wrote, “How about JB Bittner’s contributions?”

    OK. Bitter is an OSU rookie with considerable skill. On the small side, he’s fast and learning how to tough it out along the boards. He’s played with R.J. Umberger for much of his life, so the two of them are natural linemates — they really complement each other.

    It took some time for Bittner to adjust to the college game, but he continues to improve weekly. Fifth on the team in scoring (7-5–12, +3) and now on the first line, Bittner will probably contribute even more in the second half.

    Whither Bowling Green?

    A troubled Falcon fan wrote, “What’s wrong with Bowling Green?”

    I have no idea. Honest. I really don’t know.

    What Is This, the Dating Game?

    An anonymous reader from who knows where asked this pertinent question: “What are the five things that can always be found in your refrigerator?”

    Well, I’m not sure I can think of five things. There’s always beer, green olives, eggs, and mayonnaise. For a fifth, I think it would have to be cheese, or maybe oranges (and neither of those necessarily in good shape, either).

    Just a Comment

    A reader from Michigan wrote, “I was rooting for the mouse.”

    I’m guessing that Stella was, too, since Moxy beat her to it.

    A Great Segue

    Another reader from Michigan asked two questions. “Who cares about your stupid cats, anyway? And how many cats do you live alone with?”

    Well, I’ll overlook that sentence-ending preposition just long enough to answer these important questions.

    First, many readers have written over the past year or so to ask about Moxy, the cat who poisoned herself with a cleaning product last year and who most recently caught a live mouse in my bedroom.

    And, yes, I do live alone with my cats, Mabel, Moxy, and Stella. Moxy and Stella are littermates. Mabel is the old lady of the three. All are girls.

    As for the implication that my cats are stupid, I have to set the record straight. All three of my cats sit on command. Each comes to her own name when called. One cat, Stella, fetches a specific toy on command and has recently been taught to play tag. Mabel and Moxy don’t fetch on command, but they do fetch (sometimes, it feels like a never-ending game).

    My next cat-related goal is to teach Moxy how to jump through a hoop. I’ll keep you all informed, as it annoys so many of you.

    And Finally…

    A concerned reader from Michigan asks how I “manage to be in bed with all the CCHA teams (except ND) if [I’m] so lazy. Sounds like a LOT of work to me.”

    Oh, it’s a tough job.

    Seriously, do y’all (as they say in these parts) realize how horrifying that idea — both metaphorically and literally — would be to any team in the league? The idea that a team has a writer in its pocket is nasty indeed, and reflects poorly on the both the writer and the program.

    But those poor hockey players! I’m, like, old enough to have given birth to them (if I were really naughty in high school, that is). Can you imagine how they’d react to the literal implication?

    Oh, the horror. Horror.

  • This Week in the SUNYAC: Jan. 17, 2002

    Back in the Saddle

    My thanks to colleague Russell Jaslow, who dusted off his Underwood to bring you this column last week. Russell covered the SUNYAC here for several years, and it was great to have him put on some familiar shoes.

    Is the Only Road to the NCAAs through the SUNYAC championship?

    Despite the addition of a second Pool C bid, it’s likely that only one SUNYAC team will make the NCAA Division III tournament — the winner of the SUNYAC championship series.

    Plattsburgh’s six losses, five to teams that have been in the USCHO top ten for at least part of the year, have virtually eliminated the Cardinals from defending their national title without first winning the SUNYAC championship, unless a fortuitous set of circumstances occurs.

    First, the Cardinals would have to hope that the best team in each of the other autobid conferences — or at least the top seeds in the NCHA, ECAC East, and NESCAC — win their league tournaments.

    If the second-place team in the NCHA is either St. Norbert, Wisconsin-River Falls, or Wisconsin-Superior, you can count on one or maybe two of those three to nab Pool C bids, which are awarded to the top two teams not winning their conference championships among the six D-III conferences with automatic qualifiers.

    Back east, if Middlebury and Norwich keep up their winning ways, but don’t take their conference tournaments, one of them will undoubtedly get a Pool C bid. And even if they win out, as yet unbeaten Bowdoin might have a shot as well.

    However, if Plattsburgh were to win out, and then lose the championship series, the Cardinals would have eight losses — probably too many to qualify for an at-large bid.

    A Pool C shot is not entirely out of the question for Oswego. Should the Lakers win out, or at least gain a split with RIT this weekend, they could be poised for an at-large berth should they not take the conference, but only if a set of circumstances similar to those outlined above occur.

    Any other squad in the SUNYAC would have to win to be in.

    One Last Week of Nonconference Tilts

    It’s been a fairly successful month and a half for the SUNYAC since the first half of the conference season wrapped with the travel partner games on Dec. 4.

    Plattsburgh is probably not inclined to agree.

    The Cardinals went 3-3 in that stretch, and dropped their fifth decision against a ranked team last Saturday, 4-1, at Elmira.

    Surprisingly, the SUNYAC had a better record against the NESCAC in that stretch, going 5-3, than against the ECAC Northeast, which won four of seven games against SUNYAC squads.

    Last Saturday afternoon, Wentworth, which had beaten RIT in December, downed Cortland in a 6-5 shootout, while Johnson and Wales upended Oswego that evening, 4-3. The Lakers and Red Dragons swapped opponents on Sunday, with Oswego taking Wentworth, 4-1, and Cortland downing J & W, 5-3.

    There’s still one more week of nonconference play before the SUNYAC keeps it in conference for the stretch.

    Lakers and Tigers Renew Rivalry

    In the 1980’s, long before the SUNYAC automatic qualifier, Oswego and RIT were top rivals in the old New York College Hockey Association.

    For many years, Oswego led the all-time series by a wide margin, but now trail the Tigers 29-23-3.

    Despite the fading of the rivalry over the years, the games between the two squads have been physical, hard-fought, and full of surprises. Last season was no exception.

    In the first game of the series, Oswego put the only blemish on RIT’s record with a 3-3 tie on the road. RIT jumped to a 3-0 lead just 2:33 into the contest, with starting goalie Joe Lofberg skating to the bench after the third RIT tally, after making just one save. Tyson Gajda pitched a shutout in relief, making 42 saves, while the Lakers clawed back to tie the game, putting 44 shots on RIT reserve netminder Rob Boope, who got both starts that weekend after a shoulder injury to starter Tyler Euverman.

    The Tigers took the return match the following night at the Romney Field House, 4-2, despite being outshot 47-28. Gajda was in net for Oswego in a penalty-filled affair.

    This season’s series should be a match of teams with similar strengths, although the edge might have to go to the Tigers because of their depth at forward.

    Both squads are strong on the blue line, but with All-American and leading player-of-the-year candidate Jerry Galway anchoring RIT’s deep defensive squad, the advantage there leans toward the Tigers.

    RIT has a top goaltender in Euverman, who, despite a 1.83 GAA and a .928 save percentage, gave up four goals to Fredonia and three to Cortland last week.

    Oswego’s trio of Lofberg, Gajda, and Sebastian Matte make up the deepest goaltending squad in Division III. Lofberg, a junior, has been the hottest in net for the Lakers, with a .941 save percentage and a 1.78 GAA.

    Oswego will need to stay out of the penalty box. The Lakers have allowed nearly six power play opportunities a game, and the potent RIT power play has scored on almost half of its chances.

    The favorite in both matches would have to be the Tigers, but as followers of this series know, anything can — and probably will — happen.

    The Rest of the Schedule

    Buffalo State has a pair at home with Manhattanville. The Valiants are tougher at home than on the road, but gave RIT quite a scare in a pair this season. Manhattanville beat Oswego, 8-4, earlier this season, and has beaten Geneseo twice, 10-1 in New Rochelle, and 8-4 upstate.

    Brockport visits Pennsylvania with a two-game series at Neumann. Look for the Golden Eagles to continue to outshoot their opponents as they have in recent games, but this time around put a few more up on the scoreboard.

    Fredonia takes on two ECAC West opponents, a Hobart squad that beat the Blue Devils 4-1 in November, and its first meeting with the big, young Pioneers of Utica. Despite a 5-4 overtime loss to RIT last Saturday, the Blue Devils scored four goals for only the fourth time this season.

    Geneseo faces Utica in the first game between those teams, while Potsdam visits the southern tier to take on an Elmira squad that seems to win the big ones and lose the ones they shouldn’t.

    Plattsburgh can all but erase the Pool C hopes of Colby as the White Mules visit the Stafford on Tuesday. The Cardinals will want to avoid going 0-6 against teams that have been in the USCHO top ten for at least part of this campaign.

    Trivia

    Last Week’s Question

    While we are on the subject of coaches, what NHL Hall of Famer and Stanley Cup champion, as a player and coach, was an assistant coach for Plattsburgh? For a bonus, when?

    Believe it or not, Jacques Lemaire was an assistant coach with the Cardinals in the 1981-82 season under former head coach Herb Hammond. Plattsburgh went 25-13-2, and lost the NCAA Division II championship game to Lowell that season.

    Lemaire has eight Stanley Cup rings as a player for the Montreal Canadiens, in addition to two as the assistant GM of the Habs, and one as the head coach of the New Jersey Devils.

    The Question Before That …

    When I asked “Who is the only SUNYAC coach ever to win coach of the year in two consecutive seasons,” my source was the SUNYAC media guide, which omitted the 1983 coach of the year from its list. My mistake, but, hey, it gave Russell something to squirm about.

    This Week’s Question

    In school history, which team has beaten Plattsburgh more times than any other opponent?

    Game of the Week

    The games of the week are the home-and-home series between Oswego and RIT. These matches are always physical, hard-fought, and usually have their share of the unexpected. RIT’s depth and experience give them the edge, but some hot goaltending and solid defensive play from the Lakers could place these in the win column for Oswego.

    This Week in the ECAC West: Jan. 17, 2002

    There’s quite a hodgepodge of topics in this week’s column, including game reviews of Elmira’s big win over Plattsburgh, and Neumann’s penalty-filled affair with Buffalo State. In addition, Utica played against its role model, and the Pioneers home rink takes over the top spot among ECAC West arenas.

    A Domeburner

    It was a barnburner — or more appropriately, a Domeburner — at the Murray Athletic Center last weekend, as expected. Elmira defeated Plattsburgh 4-1, completing the season sweep of the defending national champion Cardinals. Elmira beat Plattsburgh in the opening round of the series 2-1 at Plattsburgh in November.

    “It was pretty exciting from the opening faceoff to the last click on the clock,” said Elmira coach Tim Ceglarski.

    Elmira took the body to Plattsburgh right out of the gate, playing a physical forecheck that seemed to
    frustrate the Cardinals.

    “We started to put pressure on their defense right from the opening faceoff,” said Ceglarski. “Part of that was physical, part wasn’t. But when you take young men, put them in a stressful situation in front of a big crowd, sometimes the adrenaline adds something to their hits.”

    The Soaring Eagles played in front of their largest crowd of the season, as over 2,500 filled the Thunderdomes.

    Elmira built up a 3-0 lead midway through the second period to control the game. Jason Cassells (7-5-12), Clark McPherson (7-2-9), and Pierre Rivard (10-13-23) were the scorers for Elmira. Plattsburgh chipped in a goal early in the third period, but that was the only score it could put on the board.

    Dean Jackson (7-9-16) scored the insurance goal with two minutes remaining to seal the victory for Elmira. Jackson also assisted on McPherson’s and Rivard’s goals to lead Elmira with a three-point night.

    “Dean [Jackson] played extremely well,” said Ceglarski. “He moved the puck very well and showed a lot of leadership on the ice.”

    Elmira is now 4-0 when it plays teams ranked in the USCHO.com poll. When asked if he hoped RIT would stay in the poll when it visits Elmira on January 26, Ceglarski artfully dodged the question.

    Model

    When Manhattanville started up its program three years ago, coach Keith Levinthal laid out his plans for the program. He incorporated many tools found in the corporate world into his philosophy: things like Vision Statements, Value Statements, Objectives, and more. Levinthal isn’t the first hockey coach to use these tools, but the way he put them together has been the foundation of the success the program has achieved already.

    When Gary Heenan was named as head coach of the fledgling Utica program in the fall of 2000, he looked around college hockey to see how other teams had built a program from the ground up. He saw Manhattanville and the things they had done, and decided that the Valiants were a good program to choose as a role model.

    Heenan and the Utica Pioneers have seen their efforts pay off this season, achieving a respectable 7-7-2 record so far.

    Last Friday, the student met the mentor for the first time on the ice, with Manhattanville winning 2-0 and the goaltenders for both teams having outstanding games. Jake Miskovic (.909 SV%, 2.73 GAA) for Utica stopped 34 of the 36 shots he faced. Manhattanville’s Jon Peczka (.885 SV%, 3.31 GAA) pitched the shutout, stopping 33 shots. The win moved Manhattanville into sole possession of third place in the league standings.

    Being in the position of a role model has been a little awkward for Levinthal and the Manhattanville team.

    “Utica is a lot like us in our first year,” said Levinthal. “They work hard and can play with almost anyone.”

    Even with the loss to Manhattanville, and with the success Utica has seen so far this year, Heenan believes that there is still much to be learned by following the “Manhattanville Model.”

    “The Manhattanville program is going in the right direction,” said Heenan. “They are a step ahead of us, so they remain a good role model for us.”

    Time in the Box

    Neumann hosted Buffalo State for a pair of games last weekend, and the series turned into penalty-fests. The two teams combined for an incredible 244 minutes of penalties over the two-game span.

    Friday night, Buffalo State beat Neumann 8-1, outshooting the Knights 51-27. Neumann racked up 60 minutes in penalties, while Buffalo State contributed 30 minutes. Half of Neumann’s penalty time was from three misconducts; the rest was all from minors.

    The game started out close — at least for the first few minutes. Neumann’s Jeff Marinari (6-1-7) answered an early Buffalo State goal at 2:36 to tie the game 1-1. But Buffalo State retook the lead just two minutes later and it was all downhill from there for the Knights.

    Saturday’s game was more of the same. Buffalo State won this one 10-2, outshooting Neumann by a similar 48-27 margin. But the penalty totals in this game were even higher. Neumann managed 79 minutes in penalties while Buffalo State contributed 75 minutes of its own to the totals.

    Three game disqualifications, three majors, four misconducts, and a boatload of minors were spread evenly between the two teams. Buffalo State built a 3-0 lead by the end of the first period and never looked back, as far as the scoreboard was concerned.

    Buffalo State has been known off and on through the years as a team that likes to get under its opponent’s skin with physical hockey. And Neumann has had problems with staying out of the box in many games this year. Put those two teams together in a series of games, and the fireworks were bound to explode.

    Utica Rink Tops the List

    RIT’s Ritter Arena and Elmira’s Murray Athletic Center are both fine facilities for these perennial ECAC West competitors. Both rank among some of the best facilities in Division III. However, at least in my opinion, their position atop the list of ECAC West facilities, and perhaps in Division III as a whole, has been replaced.

    Utica Memorial Auditorium

    Utica Memorial Auditorium

    The new champion is the Utica Memorial Auditorium, home of the Utica College Pioneers. This arena gives the college game a real pro hockey feel.

    The Aud, as it is affectionately known, was built between 1958 and 1960, and was last renovated in 1998. It seats 4,000 in a U-shaped bowl, with a stage encompassing the flat end of the ‘U.’ The Aud was one of the first arenas constructed with a two-layer, pre-stressed cable suspension system to support the roof.

    The building has been home to many different hockey events over the years. In 1962, the Aud hosted the Division I Final Four, where Michigan Tech won its first of three championships.

    Pro teams that have played there are the Mohawk Valley Prowlers (UHL ’98-’01), Utica Blizzard (CoHL ’94-’97), Utica Bulldogs (CoHL ’93-’94), Utica Devils (AHL’87-’93), Mohawk Valley Stars (ACHL ’81-’87), Utica Mohawks (NEHL ’78-’79, EHL ’79-’80), and the Mohawk Valley Comets (NAHL ’73-’77). With the demise of the Mohawk Valley Prowlers last summer, Utica College is now the highest level of hockey played there.

    An interesting sidebar is that the movie Slap Shot was filmed in the Utica Aud in 1975. After visiting, you will need to rush home and re-watch the movie to see if you can spot the scenes that were filmed in the rink.

    Utica built new NHL-style locker room facilities prior to the season for both the men’s and women’s teams. The additional facilities also include offices for the coaches, a training room, and storage room. Visiting teams use the older locker rooms of the rink.

    The usher staff is plentiful and helpful and concessions are available. Without gushing too much, I would rank the Aud right up there with any Division III rink across the country.

    It is worth a visit if you are ever in the area on game night. Utica has been drawing crowds in the 1300-1500 range, which is respectable for any Division III hockey program, let alone a first-year team.

    One caution, though. Plug your ears when Utica scores a goal. That horn is loud.

    For the record, my list of the ECAC West rinks in order of preference is:

    1) Utica’s Memorial Auditorium — gives the game a pro feel with great seats and amenities.

    2) RIT’s Ritter Arena — nice rink with great amenities and intimate feeling.

    3) Elmira’s Murray Athletic Center — this rink can get rocking when the fans get going.

    4) Hobart’s Geneva Community Rink — new varsity room, boards, and ice are all great improvements, but they still need to add a wall.

    5) Manhattanville’s New Roc City Rink — nice bleacher seating for the fans, but poor visiting locker rooms, no press facilities, and an incredibly gaudy paint job lower the score.

    6) Neumann’s Ice Works — typical community rink setup. Last time I was down there renovations were incomplete, so my assessment may not be fair.

    Game of the Week

    The annual renewal of the RIT/Oswego series is on tap for this weekend. These two teams traditionally play a home-and-home series in January, and the rivalry goes back a long ways. This is the way hockey should be played: home and home on back to back nights, which reinforces natural rivalries; the fans, players, and coaches always look forward to it every year. A sweep or split by RIT will give the Tigers a leg up on Elmira in the common-opponents category in NCAA Pool B tournament qualifying.

    But Oswego won’t roll over for RIT. These are the last nonconference games for Oswego before the second half of the SUNYAC schedule gets going. A sweep of nationally-ranked RIT could put Oswego back on the map to contend for a NCAA bid.

    Fortitude of a Leader

    It’s a little more than an hour before game time at the National Hockey Center. The building which will soon be alive with excitement is now quiet and empty.

    A lone player sits in silence on the Huskies’ bench in this still before the storm, soothing his mind, being at peace with himself and his surroundings. For St. Cloud State assistant captain Nate DiCasmirro, a pregame is not time for heavy metal music or talking it up with teammates. Pregame for DiCasmirro is a time to be an island unto himself, perhaps remembering where he’s been or where he may go this evening.

    St. Cloud assistant captain Nate Dicasmirro is a big reason why the Huskies are a national title contender.

    St. Cloud assistant captain Nate Dicasmirro is a big reason why the Huskies are a national title contender.

    “Sitting on the bench by myself before I get dressed … It just helps to calm me down.” DiCasmirro said. “I like the feeling I get.”

    DiCasmirro, a senior forward from Burnsville, Minn., is currently ranked fifth in the nation in scoring with 36 points and fourth among D-I players with 23 assists. In his stellar career at SCSU, DiCasmirro has 122 points, which places him 8th in the Husky records. His 47 career goals places him 12th on the career charts at SCSU, and his 75 career assists is sixth in team history.

    He was born in Ontario before moving to Virginia on [nl]Minnesota’s Iron Range, then to Duluth at a very young age. It was at the Duluth Entertainment and Convention Center where he remembers first being on skates.

    “I remember hanging onto the boards the whole time,” DiCasmirro said.

    He and his family moved to Burnsville before he was old enough to go to school. He grew up with friends near Highway 13 in the northern part of the suburb, doing the stuff that boys do. But, even at an early age, DiCasmirro knew he wanted to point his life in a different direction. Instead of following the road most had taken, as a 15-year-old, he and his best friend left Burnsville and their high school girlfriends to play Midget AAA hockey in Marquette, Mich.

    “Those first months in Marquette were hard. We had some people we knew there, but, oh, were we homesick. It wasn’t until after Christmas that we got used to it,” DiCasmirro said. “I realized that you only get one chance at a hockey career, so I want to do everything I can to make that happen. You always hear about the player that will do an extra set of reps and that player will have an edge on you. I never wanted anyone to have that edge on me.”

    "There’s sometimes a feeling I get before I have a really good game. … I don’t know how to describe it. That night everything you touch seems to go in. I just don’t know how that works."

    — Nate DiCasmirro

    Being on his own forced DiCasmirro to learn, perhaps by default. He had to learn to manage his money. He had to learn to be away from his mother and father. He had to learn to be alone … Just as he is every game night on the player’s bench.

    Back in [nl]Minnesota, his life has also taught him lessons, either by bussing tables at Benchwarmer Bob’s, or folding jeans at the County Seat store, or laying erosion-control tarps with Ryan Malone and Mike Walsh for five weeks one summer a couple years ago.

    “I learned that I don’t want a regular job. That’s not for me. Hockey is what I want to do,” DiCasmirro said. “I want to play for as long as I can.”

    After playing in Marquette, he played for two years at North Iowa of the UHSL. In his second season he and former Husky Tyler Arnason were the two top scorers in the league.

    The combination of Midget and USHL experiences, and now his experience at St. Cloud State, have given DiCasmirro an opportunity to see things and places that many people have only read about. Hockey has taken him all over North America, to Alaska and even to Europe twice. He’s met hundreds of people and logged thousands of miles. But on one of his trips, Dicasmirro found himself in a place that has nothing to do with hockey, a place he said he will remember until he is 90 — the Nazi concentration camp at Dachau, Germany.

    “There wasn’t much talking. It was weird. You look at things you’ve only read about, like where they incinerated the people and where they slept … seeing pictures of when scientists would come in and do tests to see how cold the body could get … It’s something I’ll never forget.” DiCasmirro said. “To think the way people were treated …”

    Hockey has provided access to so much for DiCasmirro, yet one facet that comes across is how cordial and personable he is. He’s friendly and outgoing, easy to talk with. He knows how to treat others with respect, and his best role model in that manner may be his mother, Linda, who now works for the [nl]Minnesota Wild.

    “She used to work for the North Stars and, when I was young, I’d go outside the visitor’s locker room and try to get autographs. Sometimes they wouldn’t sign, and my mom said, ‘Now remember how you felt when they told you no’,” DiCasmirro said. “So every time a little kid comes up and wants an autograph, I picture my mom’s face.”

    The picture most Huskies fans have of DiCasmirro is as a gifted hockey player and fan favorite, his No. 13 flashing up and down the ice. And announcer Chuck Claussen, with the crowd in unison, announcing Nate DI…CAS…MIRRO!! into the starting lineup.

    “The first time the crowd did that? I still get chills every time I get to start and hear that,” DiCasmirro said. “I have a little friend of mine, Dylan, and I walked into the basement one day and one of his friends did that. He just looked at him like, ‘What are you doing?’ It was cool.”

    Cool. Calm. Ideally, DiCasmirro’s relaxed and at ease as he gets ready to leave his place on the player’s bench. One last thought, one last chance to see if tonight is going to be one of those games where he will bring the crowd out of their seats.

    “There’s sometimes a feeling I get before I have a really good game. I always feel a certain way before a game, but sometimes the feeling is a little different. I don’t know how to describe it,” DiCasmirro said. “That night everything you touch seems to go in. I just don’t know how that works.”

    A thought for another moment. The energy is starting to build as fans start to fill the arena, Dogg Pound first. Time for Dicasmirro to leave his place, only to return a short time later to that oh-so-familiar chant of the crowd.

    This Week in Hockey East: Jan. 17, 2002

    How ‘Bout Them Hawks?

    With a weekend sweep of Boston College, which had been ranked 10th at the time, UMass-Lowell moved into sole possession of first place in Hockey East, took over the number three spot in the USCHO.com poll and earned the runner-up position to Denver in the PairWise Rankings.

    Not too shabby!

    Especially when you consider what happened in the rest of the Hockey East games. The River Hawks were the only league team to grab all the points available to them on the weekend.

    It gets even better when you look at the rest of the country. Of the teams ranked in the Top 15 at the time, Denver and Lowell were the only ones to escape the weekend unscathed. Boston University and Ohio State tied unranked teams. Every other club suffered at least one loss, the vast majority coming at the hands of unranked teams. Check out the details:

    No. 1 St. Cloud lost to unranked Minnesota-Duluth.
    No. 3 New Hampshire lost to unranked Providence.
    No. 4 Minnesota lost to unranked Wisconsin.
    No. 6 Michigan State lost to unranked Western Michigan.
    No. 7 Boston University tied unranked Providence.
    No. 8 Michigan lost to Alaska-Fairbanks.
    No. 9 Northern Michigan lost to unranked Notre Dame.
    No. 10 Boston College lost twice to UMass-Lowell.
    No. 11 Maine lost to and tied unranked Northeastern.
    No. 12 Colorado College lost to unranked MSU-Mankato.
    No. 13 Cornell lost to unranked Dartmouth.
    No. 14 Ohio State tied unranked Lake Superior.
    No. 15 Alaska-Fairbanks lost to Michigan.

    Two things made the sweep of BC even sweeter. First, the River Hawks had entered the season with a 15-game losing streak to the Eagles hanging over their heads. That unenviable mark had spanned four years.

    Even better for the Lowell program was the first Tsongas Arena sellout since the year the building opened. In fact, the building was over-capacity for the Saturday night game since 300 standing room only tickets were sold.

    “Having a big crowd in the house has been a dream for this team and myself,” said coach Blaise MacDonald. “We’re a team of passion and to see that crowd and their spirit — you could almost sense the pride they had for what we were doing — it gave us a much-needed boost. And I mean a much-needed boost in the third period, especially with BC scoring the first goal.

    “Quite honestly, it’s hard to put into words the feeling of looking up from the bench and seeing this beautiful arena just jam-packed and yet have two rows deep of people standing around the edges.”

    The River Hawks had to deal with some adversity to secure the sweep, playing without top forwards Ed McGrane and Laurent Meunier on Friday night and Meunier on Saturday. (More on McGrane later.) They also had to overcome an ordinary-at-best performance by goaltender Cam McCormick on Saturday night in which he gave up more than two goals for the first time all season.

    The senior has been so extraordinary all year that some casual observers have concluded that Lowell is a one-man team. A case in point was an email from a UNH fan last week who ripped yours truly for ranking the River Hawks ahead of New Hampshire. The fan wrote of Lowell, “If they didn’t have McCormick, they would be just another unheard-of Division I team.”

    Of course, that’s nonsense. Anyone who has watched the River Hawks this year knows that McCormick has given them outstanding goaltending that has bordered on the incredible. Even so, Lowell is also a very intelligent, hard-working squad with several other terrific players and a deep cast of significant contributors.

    Perhaps most importantly, it is a very strong defensive team. Care to guess who allows the fewest shots in Hockey East? The following table shows the average number of saves per game (all games included).

    20.90 UMass-Lowell
    22.09 Boston College
    23.26 Boston University
    23.81 New Hampshire
    26.14 Northeastern
    26.45 UMass-Amherst
    26.68 Maine
    30.86 Providence
    32.36 Merrimack

    One-man team? Gimme a break!

    “Our philosophy is that we want to create our offense off our defense,” said MacDonald. “Really, it starts with a smothering defensive-zone scheme. We’ve executed that very well physically and positionally, but I also believe it’s our players’ mindsets in terms of how important defensive play is. That’s allowed us to really limit our Grade A chances against.”

    Of course, having the mindset isn’t sufficient if the athlete hasn’t also prepared himself over a long period of time for the physical requirements.

    “These guys have paid a dear price over their careers to get into the condition they’re in now,” said MacDonald. “When you pay that great a price, you want to put forth a great effort. Our conditioning has clearly been a driving force in our success.”

    McCormick has also been incredible, no doubt. Not until after this weekend did his goals against average begin with a digit other than zero. Even after allowing four goals on Saturday, his GAA stands at 1.10 and his save percentage at .952. Both numbers are still the best in the country. His record is 11-1-1.

    But Lowell is anything but a one-man team, as evidenced by the 8-4 win at the Tsongas.

    “It’s good to see that our team doesn’t fall apart when he lets in a couple goals,” said MacDonald. “I think he’d want a couple of goals back that got by him, but it’s another experience where our team just said, ‘Yeah, we’ve just got to get more than the other team.’

    “Cam will be the first one to tell you that if you win 15-14, that’s okay.”

    MacDonald is making sure that his team doesn’t get full of itself. There were more mistakes against BC than he knows his team can get away with over the long haul. The River Hawks may be 12-1-1 in their last 14, but a team can quickly cross the razor-thin line between winning and losing by making one key extra mistake at the wrong time. As a result, the first-place milestone and the season’s sweep of BC did not result in an ebullient Lowell locker room on Saturday night.

    “The problem is that sometimes Old Coach MacDonald doesn’t let them get excited,” he said. “The way I looked at it is, we got through it. But there were a lot of coaching moments [arising from breakdowns]. We have to get better as a team and the team knows that.

    “If the [NCAA Tournament] Selection Show was tomorrow, we’d be really excited. But we have a lot of hay to put in the barn yet.”

    And some of that hay harvesting is going to come with a depleted roster. Meunier is not expected to play this weekend, after which he and his fellow members of the French National Team, Yorick Treille and Baptiste Amar, will leave for the Olympics. They could miss as many as 10 games depending on how well the French team plays. Not to mention the usual war of attrition that teams must cope with at this time of year which could become critical after this weekend.

    “We’re not looking at yesterday or tomorrow,” said MacDonald. “We’re only focussed on the precious present.”

    Do What You Love

    Ed McGrane, UMass-Lowell’s top forward, received the sad news last week that his grandmother, Cathy McGrane, 72, had died as a result of pneumonia. The junior flew back home on Thursday night to Hamilton, Ontario, to be with his family.

    “It was pretty tough,” he said. “I said my blessings and stuff. I know that she’s with me. I was fortunate enough to have her for 23 years; it was good to have her.”

    McGrane was then faced with the decision of whether to remain with his family or return to Lowell for the Saturday game against BC.

    “I had told him to take a week if he needed it,” said MacDonald.

    The choice wasn’t easy.

    “I sat down with my parents and we talked about it,” said McGrane. “I was finding it rough. I was really finding it tough, but I knew my Nana; she was a hard woman. She had a lot of love, but she wouldn’t have wanted me to sit around and sulk about it.

    “So my parents just said, ‘You know what? Do what you love and she’ll be with you.’ And that’s what I did.

    “I’m dedicating the rest of the year to her. I’m going to play for her. It just gives me that extra boost, that extra motivation to play and work my hardest for her because I know that she’d want that.”

    McGrane got up at three in the morning to catch a flight back to Boston that arrived at 7:50. As it turned out, he scored two of the first three Lowell goals, playing like one of the league’s top forwards as is his wont.

    Although any player tries to keep his focus solely on the task at hand, McGrane couldn’t help reflecting on his circumstances.

    “You try not to, but it’s tough,” he said. “It [was] for me. I mean, it kind of hit me a bit. But I know she’s watching.

    “It actually felt good. It wasn’t a sad moment. It was actually a good feeling for me. It felt really good to see [us] put forth a good effort like that.

    “The team was all behind me. They were great. They sent flowers and were real supportive.”

    His fellow River Hawks had also supported him in another way by defeating BC on the road Friday night in his absence.

    “I went on the Internet [to USCHO] and saw that they won,” he said. “It was definitely a great boost. It made me feel real good. Going to BC, it’s tough to beat them there any night. [The guys] just worked hard. Simple hockey, that’s what we’ve been taught all year.”

    Of course, for anyone who has watched McGrane this season, his performance following his return was no surprise despite the difficult personal circumstances. While other players around the league may be flashier and capture more headlines, McGrane is one of the league’s true unheralded, quiet stars.

    “I kind of like that,” he said. “I like just doing my job. I like to put forth an effort and if people notice me, then they notice me. If they don’t, they don’t. That’s good.

    “I’ve just got to worry about myself and how I play. It’s good to have your name talked about here and there, but it just comes down to you doing it for yourself. That’s the main thing. That’s the thing you’ve got to look at.”

    Three Out Of Four Ain’t Bad: Intro

    Although no team matched Lowell’s 4-for-4 weekend, three teams earned three out of four possible points. Ironically, all three are in the bottom half of the standings, making the points like manna from Heaven.

    Providence tied BU and then defeated UNH. Northeastern hosted Maine for two games, the first being an overtime win and the second a tie. And Merrimack went 3-for-4 the hard way in a home-and-home series with UMass-Amherst, winning on the road.

    For reasons both common and different, last weekend’s performances could prove vital to all three teams.

    Three Out Of Four Ain’t Bad: Providence

    Providence certainly had a disappointing first half of the season, so taking three points from Top 15 teams like BU and UNH could be the shot in the arm that the Friars need for a successful stretch run.

    “We started games pretty quickly,” said coach Paul Pooley. “We got up 2-0 on both teams. It gives you a little more room for error. You know that those teams are going to make a charge, but we started quick, which was big for us because we haven’t been doing that.”

    Could the quick starts have been the confidence boost that a struggling team needs, especially one projected to finish first that has stumbled out of the gate?

    “I don’t know if we self-evaluate ourselves before we hit the ice, but every team sorts out its own personality [in terms of] who gets the guys going,” said Pooley. “Last year, obviously we had a couple guys [Matt Libby and Jay Leach] who got the guys going. This year, it’s a different group of leadership and people. It’s taken us a little time to say, ‘Hey, we’ve got to get going.’

    “We’ve made some changes in their pre-game routine and they’ve made some changes. The importance of starting quickly has really hit home and we’ve tried to do that the last few games. We’ve really worked on that.”

    The Friars now face three nonconference teams — Connecticut, No. 2 St. Cloud and Brown — before returning to league play. Unfortunately, those looming Hockey East games are a gauntlet of the league iron. Of those final 11 games, nine are against Top 15 teams, beginning with Boston College. As a result, the need to keep the momentum going in nonconference games is clear.

    “Right now, every game is important for us,” said Pooley. “We want to get better as a hockey club. We want to continue to execute what we’re trying to do. Whether it’s UConn or St. Cloud or BC, we need to play well because we really don’t have any room for error anymore. We’ve got to be ready to play. We’ve got to get better and fine-tune the things we’re trying to do here.

    “Obviously we want to make a stretch run here and be the best we can be as a team. Wherever that puts us, we’ll have to find out.”

    Pooley cites four keys to the remainder of the season: goaltending, team defense, specialty teams and faceoffs.

    “When we’re playing well, we’re winning faceoffs,” he said. “Those [four keys] are things we’ve tried to emphasize with our club with specialty teams and team defense probably being the most important.”

    Three Out Of Four Ain’t Bad: Northeastern

    Northeastern faced a make-or-break six games to open the second-half league schedule: two-game sets with BU, Maine and UMass-Lowell. Four games into the six, the Huskies have done anything but break, splitting their home-and-home series with the Terriers before taking three points from the visiting Black Bears.

    “I think we’ve been making small little jumps all along as the season’s gone on,” said coach Bruce Crowder. “One of the things we’ve mentioned all year long is that we needed to get better play out of our goaltending position and right now Keni Gibson has been giving that to us over the last few games.

    “As any team knows, you get a guy who’s making some saves for you and everybody feels a little better, a little stronger, a little bit cockier and maybe takes some chances that maybe they wouldn’t [otherwise] when they know they have a kid back there who can bail them out. Right now we’re playing it that way.

    “We’re keeping it simple. We’re not getting the offense that maybe we’re hoping for, but we definitely have been getting some chances over the last few games. That’s been encouraging.”

    Gibson (7-3-1, 1.89 GAA, .931 Sv%) has been even better than advertised now that he’s over a back problem that sidelined him early in the season. Recruited from the Ottawa Jr. Senators with some of the top statistics in all of Canadian junior hockey, he was seen as someone who could possibly take over the number one role, but freshmen goaltenders come with no guarantees.

    “I don’t think you ever expect [what Gibson has done so quickly],” said Crowder. “It’s not like you’re going to rubberstamp it with kids coming in. Even the best blue-chip kids that all the big-name schools are after for some reason never really have the freshman years that you thought they were going to have. So you don’t know.

    “You go on the fact that [Gibson] did this well and he did that well and he’s a great kid in the locker room and has a great work ethic. Put all that together and figure that if you give him a chance, maybe he can do it for you. That’s where Keni fit in.

    “We didn’t recruit him with the idea, ‘Hey, Keni, you’re our number one guy.’ We recruited him with the idea that we needed better play out of goaltending position. At times, [Jason] Braun has given it to us. At times, [Mike] Gilhooly has given it to us. But we really haven’t had the consistency that we felt we needed to compete in this league.

    “If you look around the league, the teams that are doing well are getting good goaltending and the goalie becomes a difference-maker.”

    Defenseman Jim Fahey has led the scoring and the top line remains Mike Ryan, Willie Levesque and freshman Jason Guerriero, but the other lines have made increasing contributions. Second-liners Eric Ortlip and Chris Lynch had big games against Maine on Friday night, and the third line of Brian Tudrick, Leon Hayward and Trevor Reschny figured in both of the Husky goals one night later.

    “We’ve been able to have a little more balance,” said Crowder. “That was nice to see that we’re spreading it around. We’re not getting as much as we hope to compete in this league, but [we] have guys coming in and contributing and our special teams have been decent all year long. When you can do that, it puts you in a pretty good position to win some hockey games.”

    Actually, the special teams have been more than decent. In Hockey East games, the Huskies have now risen to second in the league in power-play percentage (21.1 percent) and are tops on the penalty kill (88.0 percent).

    Interestingly enough, the power-play seems a bit schizophrenic. There will be stretches where the Huskies struggle to get the puck in the offensive zone and much of the advantage appears frittered away. Once they get to set up, however, they can be deadly. Seven other Hockey East coaches would love to be converting at a 21.1 rate.

    And the special teams combination is a one-two punch that turns a lot of close losses into points.

    “Anytime you look at penalty killing, it’s going to correlate pretty well with how your goaltender is going,” said Crowder.

    “On the other side, the power play is a matter of putting the right guys in to make the right plays. We’ve got a lot of confidence on the power play right now. They’re moving it around pretty well right now and getting plenty of opportunities. We’re making the most of our chances. You need that.”

    The Huskies conclude their six-game gauntlet with a home-and-home series against second-ranked UMass-Lowell this weekend.

    Three Out Of Four Ain’t Bad: Merrimack

    With nine of Merrimack’s next 10 games coming against Hockey East teams ranked in the Top 15, a strong weekend against UMass-Amherst was mandatory. Taking three points gained some separation with the Minutemen and continued the momentum begun last Tuesday with a 2-2 tie with Lowell.

    “It’s obviously better than the 10-1 loss we had in New Hampshire,” deadpanned interim coach Mike Doneghey.

    In a curious way, the humiliation inflicted by UNH two weeks ago may have been the best possible thing for the Warriors.

    “That game may turn out to be a turning point in our season,” he said. “We had two options. We had to regroup and play Lowell, which at that time was the number five team in the country, or things could have gone south and we could have packed it in for the rest of the year.

    “The guys really came together in that Sunday and Monday before the Lowell game. They know that you’ve got to get points every weekend. Our goal in those four games between the New Hampshire game and [the three against] the two UMasses was to get four points and we did it.

    “It doesn’t matter if there was a 10-1 loss in there or not. We went 1-1-2. The kids are coming together strong.”

    At Amherst, goaltender Jason Wolfe reprised his strong performance against Lowell to gain the win and earn Hockey East Defensive Player of the Week honors. His sudden success could have a positive effect on top duffel bag Joe Exter, either pushing him to better performances or making it so that the responsibility doesn’t weigh so heavily on his shoulders.

    “Joey can relax a little bit and know that if he does get tired or mentally worn down, there is a guy behind him,” said Doneghey. “Wolfie has worked hard. He deserved to be in there.”

    Of course, the recent momentum could prove short-lived if the Warriors look at nine of the next 10 games coming against Top 15 teams and roll over and die like they did against UNH.

    “[It’s] not only against ranked teams, but the other one is against Northeastern, which obviously is middle of the pack right now,” said Doneghey. “But you’ve got to try to get points every weekend.

    “It doesn’t matter who you play; you’ve just got to try to get points whether you’re playing the 11th team in the country or the 25th team in the country. You’ve got to show up every night. One mistake can get you a couple points.”

    Shields the Super Sniper

    Maine’s Colin Shields has proven to be more than worth the wait. After sitting out last year because of eligibility problems, he’s come out of the gate like gangbusters, scoring 18 goals along with nine assists for 27 points.

    Those totals leave him tied for sixth in Hockey East overall scoring, and in striking range of the top spot in the nation’s goalscoring race.

    “I’m a little bit surprised, but I’ve worked pretty hard, especially last year [while I was] not playing,” he said. “[I’ve] come in as a first year player, but I’m 21 years old so I’m not a true freshman. I thought I was pretty ready to get going at the start of the year, but I was little surprised to get off to such a good start.”

    Skating alongside Martin Kariya and Mike Schutte certainly hasn’t hurt.

    “Marty is a great playmaker and makes a lot of good passes,” said Shields. “Mike is a big guy and works pretty good down low, but he’s also got good hands in front of the net and makes good plays with the puck.”

    His success this year is the payoff for a “lost” year last season, when he suddenly found out that he would not be eligible.

    “It was the toughest year of hockey I’ve ever had in my life,” he said. “I had to sit down and look at all the options I had. It turned out that the best option for me was to stay at Maine, of course, and be a part of this program.”

    International hockey, which had helped him gain attention in the World Juniors, once again became a welcome venue when he played in the World Championships in April.

    “Playing there was very important,” he said. “That gave me a big confidence boost coming into this season and playing against older guys in a tournament of that stature.

    “It gave me a little bit of a gauge to see where I was at and see about all the things I’d worked on over the course of the year while I sat out. It prepared me for this year.”

    Quick Notes

    BC’s Ben Eaves will be sidelined for four-to-six weeks with his rib injury. “I keep saying four weeks because that’s what I’m hoping for,” said coach Jerry York, who can hardly afford to see his top offensive weapon sidelined for that long.

    BU’s Ryan Whitney has been ranked as the nation’s top collegian in the Central Scouting Bureau’s list. Whitney ranks fourth overall.

    Trivia Contest

    Last week’s question asked which Hockey East school gained notoriety involving the polls recently and why. The following hint was given: think beyond men’s hockey.

    The answer was Boston College, which simultaneously had its hockey, football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball teams nationally ranked.

    The first to answer correctly was Bob Hatcher, whose cheer is:

    “Let’s go Eagles! Soar over the Terriers this weekend and make it a season sweep!”

    Special credit is also due to Keith Tode, who claimed that George W. Bush’s ceremony at UNH qualified. Get it? A political “pol” as opposed to a “poll.” Yeah, it went over my head the first time, too.

    This week’s question asks which Hockey East player earlier this year scored goals on his team’s first shot on net in back-to-back games? Email Dave Hendrickson with your carefully researched answer.

    And Finally, Not That It Has Anything To Do With Anything, But…

    It certainly seems that 95 percent of the quality movies are released this time of the year — as opposed to the summertime when it seems that your brain is expected to be in hibernation — so here are a couple nutshell reviews from your humble typist.

  • A Beautiful Mind ****: Outstanding! If you only see one film, make this the one.
  • Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone ****: A perfect piece of fantasy that I wouldn’t have changed a bit. I had never gotten around to reading the books, but after the movie I promptly ordered and listened to the audiobook. Every writer should have movies made so faithfully of her work.
  • Vanilla Sky ***1/2: A very different movie that has you often wondering what the heck is going on, but ultimately proves very satisfying. Written and directed by Cameron Crowe, who last year was robbed by the Oscar nitwits who failed to select Almost Famous as one of the year’s best.
  • Lord of the Rings ***: As a Tolkien fan for a couple decades, I liked this a lot but still felt that something was missing a bit, though I’m not quite sure what. Perhaps that can just be laid at the feet of an almost one-hour delay due to a fire alarm in the middle of the movie. Either that or the moronic teenager behind me who talked during about three hours of the 3:08 film despite repeated polite requests to stop. Such evil creatures belong in Mordor.
  • Kate and Leopold ***: An enjoyable time-travel tale.
  • The Royal Tenenbaums *: Exceptional acting by Gene Hackman — a comment which borders on the redundant — but this occasionally funny movie is loaded with so many ludicrously unbelievable characters that it comes off as a caricature of a movie instead of a watchable one. For what I believe is the first time in my life, I actually fell asleep in the theatre … at least until my snoring prompted an elbow in the ribs.
  • This Week in the ECAC: Jan. 17, 2002

    Remembering the First Half

    We like talking about the past here, so here are out best moments for each team this season thus far, from our perspective. If you have a different one, feel free to email us and let us know.

    Brown

    It would be easy to say that the whole season has been a good moment for Brown, a team that collected a mere two league points all of last season. But there are two games that have provided highlights for this team.

    The first was a league-opening 4-2 victory against road partner Harvard back in November. The one win provided head coach Roger Grillo with the ammunition to go back to his team and proclaim that the hard work during the offseason did indeed pay off. The upperclassmen felt a sense of redemption, while the youngsters had visions of ECAC greatness in a Bear uniform.

    Then there was the big 2-1 win against Wisconsin at the Badger Showdown. Forgot for one moment about the championship debacle, and focus on the fact that the win over the Badgers put the Bears in the national spotlight for the first time in years. The buzz around the nation that night was about the ECAC team from Providence. It may have been a short-lived moment of greatness, but those types of experiences are what create a foundation for a program moving forward.

    Clarkson

    The Knights have had two moments that stand out this season. One was the big 8-5 victory over New Hampshire in December, but the one that we’ll pick is the ECAC season opener at home against North Country rival St. Lawrence.

    Clarkson led the Saints 3-0 and then 4-1 to end the first period of play. Then the Saints stormed back to tie the game at four heading into the third period. In the third, the Knights took a 6-4 lead before the Saints came back with two goals to answer and tie the game at six goals apiece.

    In the overtime, captain Kerry Ellis-Toddington put home the game-winner to start the Knights off with a win in the ECAC, 7-6. The Knights are still undefeated in the league.

    Colgate

    The Raiders have not had a great start to the season, but they seem to be picking up steam with a three-game winning streak: an overtime win against Iona, 3-2, and last weekend, a sweep in the ECAC.

    The Raiders were down 2-0 to Dartmouth, but then stormed back to take out the Big Green, 3-2. The next night the Raiders finished off the sweep with a convincing 4-1 win over Vermont. The Raiders may well be ready for the playoff drive.

    Cornell

    The Big Red renewed their storied rivalry with Boston University this season, and in game one of the series in Boston, controversy ensued as the Big Red dropped a 5-3 game to the Terriers.

    The next afternoon, the Big Red were down 2-0 after one period of play, but the Big Red never gave up and a pair of goals from Matt McCrae tied the game up for the Red. In the third period Doug Murray’s power-play goal gave the Red the lead, and an empty-net goal by Krzysztof Wieckowski gave the Red the 4-2 win to gain the split and put a good restart on the rivalry.

    Dartmouth

    Having Nick Boucher make a return to the Big Green starting lineup and posting 33 saves en route to a road 5-3 win over Cornell last weekend — that is hands down the best moment this team has experienced all season long.

    The weekend sweep against Yale and Princeton back in November was key in terms of maintaining a foothold in the ECAC race, but it pales in comparison to the impact of possibly having a confident Boucher in net. The only way that this team will come close to living up to expectations this season is by having strength in the back.

    Harvard

    The fact that the Crimson is sitting comfortably in first place heading into exam break is a good moment in and of itself. But the real turning point was the weekend sweep of Union and Rensselaer.

    A 5-2 win over Rensselaer and a 3-2 win over Union in early January was a series assured the team of its strong standing heading into January and it also pushed the envelope in terms of the team’s ability to maintain focus and battle back from deficits. The ability to stand strong in the face of adversity is something that the players will most likely encounter quite a bit throughout the rest of its extremely challenging last half of the season which includes road trips to Cornell/Colgate, St. Lawrence/Clarkson and Princeton/Yale.

    Princeton

    With the odds firmly stacked against them, the Tigers entered Harvard’s barn last weekend and stole two points away from the league-leading Crimson with a 2-1 win.

    It wasn’t pretty and it wasn’t certainly wasn’t overpowering, but Princeton fought and scrapped until the final moment and earned every bit of that victory. Two points alone is important to this team, but the win showed head coach Len Quesnelle that his team can grit it out and pull out some key games. Although the team couldn’t complete its first weekend sweep in two years, the players walked away with some much-needed confidence heading into the second half of the league season.

    Rensselaer

    The best moment came in the second week of the season as the Engineers opened up their home schedule against Hockey East powerhouse and current No. 3 team in the nation, New Hampshire.

    The Engineers got two goals and an assist from Marc Cavosie and Kevin Kurk made 31 saves as the Engineers outgunned the Wildcats, 6-4.

    St. Lawrence

    Against Providence, the Saints were down 3-2 with nine seconds left. A timeout was called and Charlie Daniels scored with just six seconds left on the clock to tie the game for the Saints.

    In the overtime, Rich Peverly sent a puck towards the net and it deflected off of a Friar skate for the overtime win.

    It gave the Saints two wins in a row, the only time this year that the Saints have done that. They have another chance this Friday at Vermont.

    Union

    The Dutchmen opened the season with a sweep of Notre Dame, but just last Wednesday, the Dutchmen beat Rensselaer, 5-4, and took the season series from their Capital District rival.

    The senior class for the Dutchmen becomes the first class to have a winning record against the Engineers, with a 4-3-1 mark.

    Vermont

    It’s been one long disappointing season for the Catamounts. Following last year’s Lake Placid berth, the team was hoping for another huge year. Unfortunately, the Catamounts have only two big wins this year — 5-1 over Harvard and 3-2 over Dartmouth.

    Those unfortunately are the two biggest, and only, moments of the season.

    Yale

    The Bulldogs have been cruising along the first half of the season, making some noise but not too much. The moment that defined this team early, however, came at home against Cornell and Colgate. The first night, freshman phenom Chris Higgins proved that he can be a big-time scorer by netting the game-tying tally and helping his team escape with a 1-1 tie over the then nationally ranked Big Red.

    The following night witnessed the breakout of another Yale player — goaltender Dan Lombard. In what Tim Taylor called a “zone-like state,” Lombard shut the door on Colgate, posting 34 saves en route to the 5-0 shutout victory. The emergence of both Higgins and Lombard this season has helped this developing Yale team prove itself as a legitimate contender for home ice come playoffs.

    He’s Back

    Some have said that players never come back the same after playing for the U.S. World Junior team. So when Yale’s Chris Higgins took off for his adventure in the Czech Republic, many waited with bated breath until his return.

    And what a return it was. The freshman collected six points in two games against Harvard and Brown. To show you just how much of an impact he has been, take a look at his game-by-game statistics:

    11/09/01 @ St. Lawrence 1-0–1
    11/10/01 @ Clarkson 0-1–1
    11/13/01 Boston University 0-1–1
    11/17/01 Dartmouth 0-2–2
    11/18/01 Vermont 1-0–1
    11/20/01 @ Princeton 0-0–0
    11/24/01 Princeton 1-1–2
    11/30/01 Cornell 1-0–1
    12/01/01 Colgate 2-0–2
    12/07/01 @ Rensselaer 0-0–0
    12/08/01 @ Union 0-0–0
    01/11/02 @ Brown 2-2–4
    01/12/02 @ Harvard 1-1–2

    Totals: 9-8–17

    “Chris Higgins coming back makes all our lines more functional,” said Yale head coach Tim Taylor. “It gives us four capable lines that can skate against pretty much anyone.”

    Ouch

    Clarkson was getting healthy. With injuries starting to heal, the Knights were poised to make it interesting in the stretch run of the ECAC.

    At the beginning of the season, the Knights had plenty of guys out, including last season’s Rookie of the Year, Rob McFeeters.

    McFeeters came back and was playing well, but then went down once again last weekend against Rensselaer.

    “It looks like we may have lost Robbie for a long time,” said Clarkson head coach Mark Morris after Friday’s game. “He got kneed at the blue line and we’re fearful that it’s going to be a long time.”

    Not only is McFeeters likely out for the season, impressive freshman Jay Latulippe is still out with a sore back against Mercyhurst at the beginning of January.

    “Latulippe is still out,” said Morris. “He’s still out because of the sore back from a hit from behind, and he and McFeeters are two valuable guys for us. The injury bug hasn’t been kind to Clarkson in the first half and we’re afraid there’s a couple of more we’ve had in the last two weekends.”

    Oh yes, the Knights face Vermont on Saturday for the first time since last March. It should be interesting.

    If It’s So Easy, You Try It

    Hmm. Another challenger has tied us. This is getting weary. We are invincible! This should not be happening. At least Vic did not beat us — a tie, yes, but not a win. So, once again, John Beaber and Lisa McGill, bring your skills to the chopping block!

    The competition thus far:

    Vic Brzozowksi t. The Iron Columnists — 7-2-1
    The Iron Columnists d. Vic Brzozowksi8-3-1 to 7-4-1
    Ben Flickinger d. The Iron Columnists — 11-4-2 to 10-5-2
    The Iron Columnists d. Ben Flickinger5-1-4 to 4-2-4
    John Beaber and Lisa McGill t. The Iron Columnists — 6-7-0

    John and Lisa, bring your finest prognostication skills to USCHO Stadium and let’s see what you have once again. How will the Iron Columnists defend? Whose picks will reign supreme?

    The Picks

    (Standard Disclaimer — All comments are made by the challengers and do not reflect anything the Iron Columnists think.)

    Friday, Jan. 18

    St. Lawrence at Vermont
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Watashi no kiyoku ga tashika naraba, SLU mo Vermont mo dame desu yo. Kyoo no loo-saa wa, kore desu: Vermont 3, St. Lawrence 2
    Becky and JaysonSt. Lawrence 5, Vermont 3

    Clarkson at Dartmouth
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Dartmouth’s on a roll and Clarkson’s due to lose. Dartmouth 4, Clarkson 3
    Becky and JaysonClarkson 3, Dartmouth 2

    Colgate at Cornell
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Two losses at home, not gonna happen. Cornell 5, Colgate 3
    Becky and JaysonCornell 5, Colgate 1

    Bowling Green at Rensselaer
    John and Lisa’s Pick — RPI continues to slide. Bowling Green 3, Rensselaer 1
    Becky and JaysonRensselaer 4, Bowling Green 2

    Findlay at Union
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Findlay? Who’s Findlay? Union 4, Findlay 3
    Becky and JaysonUnion 5, Findlay 2

    Yale at Ohio State
    John and Lisa’s Pick — OSU doesn’t care what an Eli is… Ohio State 4, Yale 1
    Becky and JaysonOhio State 3, Yale 2

    St. Cloud at Brown
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Ummm, yeah… St. Cloud 9, Brown 2
    Becky and JaysonSt. Cloud 5, Brown 3

    Saturday, Jan. 19

    St. Lawrence at Dartmouth
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Dartmouth keeps moving up the standings. Dartmouth 5, St. Lawrence 2
    Becky and JaysonDartmouth 4, St. Lawrence 3

    Clarkson at Vermont
    John and Lisa’s Pick — With Clarkson on their heels. Clarkson 5, Vermont 3
    Becky and JaysonClarkson 6, Vermont 2

    Colgate at Cornell
    John and Lisa’s Pick — The Big Red are back with a shutout on the road. Cornell 3, Colgate 0
    Becky and JaysonCornell 3, Colgate 1

    Bowling Green at Rensselaer
    John and Lisa’s Pick — RPI no longer RIPs. Rensselaer 4, Bowling Green 2
    Becky and JaysonRensselaer 5, Bowling Green 3

    Findlay at Union
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Ohio ranks 18th in oil production, better than Findlay in the CHA. Fundlay 3, Union 3, ot
    Becky and JaysonUnion 6, Findlay 1

    Connecticut at Brown
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Enough of this nonconference stuff, we need Harvard to kick around… Brown 3, Connecticut 1
    Becky and JaysonBrown 7, Connecticut 2

    Sunday, Jan. 20

    Yale at Ohio State
    John and Lisa’s Pick — But maybe they should… Yale 5, Ohio State 3
    Becky and JaysonOhio State 3, Yale 2

    Tuesday, Jan. 22

    Brown at Providence
    John and Lisa’s Pick — The Rhode Island Subway Series? Does Rhode Island have subways? Providence 5, Brown 2
    Becky and JaysonBrown 4, Providence 2

    And remember that if you are interested in putting your money where your mouth is, drop us an email to be eligible when John and Lisa bite the dust.


    Sean Peden contributed to this column this week.

    Philadelphia 4, Providence 0

    Only four teams in the league have scored fewer goals than the Providence Bruins, and all of them are in last place.

    The Bruins have a winning record because of their defense. Problem is, Saturday night, they were playing a team with the best defense in the league. That left little margin for error.

    When the errors did come, they came in waves. The Philadelphia Phantoms scored three goals in a 2:59 span of the second period, to break open what had been a scoreless game, and went on to a 4-0 victory at the First Union Center.

    In that three minutes, Providence coach Bill Armstrong witnessed a complete meltdown by his defense. Instead of lulling the other team to sleep, they lulled themselves.

    “We have to win with a team system and go out there and try to outwork clubs,” said Armstrong. “I don’t think our effort was top notch, and if you’re gonna be a club like we are, [we have] to be successful through work ethic.”

    Phantoms coach John Stevens wasn’t as harsh on his opponent. Providence outshot the Phantoms 8-4 in the first period.

    “They played well in the first period and caught us by surprise, and out-worked us to be honest,” said Stevens. “We regained our composure and got skating, and got some goals, and then some key saves where it could’ve gotten closer.”

    The three-minute onslaught started when Vaclav Pletka wheeled out of the corner, and found Phantoms defenseman Brad Tiley sneaking in. No one picked him up, and Tiley re-directed a cross-ice pass into the net.

    About two minutes later, again, no one cleared James Chalmers from the front of the net. John Slaney flipped it towards the cage, and Chalmers deflected it in for a 2-0 lead.

    That prompted Armstrong to call timeout. He wanted his team to just stay close.

    “We knew Philly was gonna come hard at some point,” said Armstrong. “They were all over us there.”

    So much for that. It took just 56 more seconds for the Phantoms to score again. This time, it was Tomas Divisek who came out of the corner unmolested, and found a cutting Kirby Law. Law made a few moves towards the net, shot a backhander that Bruins goalie Andrew Raycroft stopped, but followed up the rebound into a wide open net.

    “We were giving them way too much room to skate,” Stevens said. “In the second period, our ‘D’ closed things up and we had better pursuit on the puck, and they weren’t able to skate as much.”

    The Bruins had trouble throughout the second period with letting Phantoms players have room along the boards.

    “We didn’t get good pins, and that happens,” Armstrong said. “We didn’t weather the storm very well.

    “You can’t go out and give up three in the second period, and expect to score four in the third. That’s not gonna happen against that club.”

    Mike Watt added a goal in the third. There was little intrigue from there.

    With under a minute remaining, Ivan Huml got involved in a scrap with Phantoms tough guy Francis Lessard. Tony Tuzzolino then jumped Lessard before getting decked himself. The skirmish ended relatively harmlessly, with four minutes in penalties to each team.

    “That’s just part of hockey,” said Armstrong. “I’m not worried ‘[about what Lessard did] because my guy was right behind him, jumping him. That’s our team, we stick together.”

    The Phantoms, who lead the league in winning percentage, outshot the Bruins 30-21, including 17-6 in the second period. Goalie Maxime Ouellet turned the tables on Raycroft, earning his first career shutout as a pro. Raycroft shut out the Phantoms and Ouellet, 2-0, in Providence earlier this season.

    “It’s an 80-game season,” said Armstrong, ready to put this game behind him. “A lot of ups, a lot of downs. Worry about the next one.”

    The next one is tonight at the Civic Center against Worcester.

    NOTES: Providence is 1-5-1 all-time in Philadelphia during the regular season. … Phantoms captain Mark Greig, an all-star selection, is out another two weeks with a shoulder injury. … Former Providence forward Peter Vandermeer did not dress for the Phantoms.

    This Week in Division III: Jan. 10, 2002

    The Good News — It’s Not Like BCS

    The latest Bowl Championship Series has given “Computer Rankings” a bad name, but USCHO.com’s Pairwise Rankings and the Ratings Percentage Index are actually very useful.

    Recently released and constantly updated for the 2001-2002 season, they’re handy tools to compare and contrast teams. The Pairwise mimics the criteria used by the Division I selection committee. The D-III committee uses similar criteria, but they’re not the same. I’ll explain the differences in a future column, as we get close to selection time. Still, it’s fun to look at.

    The RPI is my favorite comparison tool. It’s a component of the Pairwise, but stands alone nicely as well. It rates teams based not just on their record, but on the strength of their schedule.

    Who’s played the toughest schedules so far?

     1. Skidmore      .698 (Opponent's Winning Percentage)
    2. Salem State .647
    3. Wis.-Eau Claire .634
    4. Plattsburgh .623
    5. St. John's .620
    6. Tufts .617
    7. Conn College .607
    8. Johnson & Wales .597
    9. Worcester State .589
    10. Wis.-Stevens Point .586

    Only one Top 10 team (Plattsburgh) is on the list. Where do the rest wind up?

     1. Norwich      .574 (12th hardest schedule)
    2. RIT .521 (30th)
    3. Middlebury .512 (33rd)
    4. St. Norbert .521 (31st)
    5. Wis.-River Falls .554 (17th)
    6. Wis.-Superior .555 (15th)
    7. Plattsburgh .623 (4th)
    8. St. Thomas .554 (18th)
    9. Colby .392 (59th)
    10. Bowdoin .421 (53rd)

    Colby and Bowdoin are both undefeated, but they haven’t played as hard a schedule yet. Things change beginning this weekend (see below).

    California, Here They Come

    Lake Forest, Curry, Salve Regina and Stonehill will play in Lakewood, Calif. this weekend in the inaugural California Amateur Hockey Association Tournament. The last time college hockey was played in Southern California, or anywhere in the Golden State, was at the 1999 Frozen Four in Anaheim.

    “We’re pretty excited,” said Lake Forest head coach Tony Fritz. “It’s a thrill for our kids to bring college hockey to that area.

    “People there want to expose their kids to this level of hockey, to see what options exist.”

    How did Lake Forest and the other teams get invited?

    “Believe it or not, we got contacted because we have some players from California,” Fritz said. “They went out and looked at rosters of the various schools and contacted those with Californians on the roster.”

    The tournament will be held at Lakewood Glacial Gardens this Friday and Saturday. Organizers from the CAHA, the governing body for youth hockey in California, are picking up hotel tab for the teams, as well as providing tickets for family members that want to attend.

    If it’s a success, expect another four teams to head west in 2003.

    Showdowns

    "Two undefeated teams playing against one of the top-ranked teams in the country, as well as against a traditional NESCAC powerhouse. I expect the intensity level to be high."

    — Colby head coach Jim Tortorella

    A pair of big series occurs this weekend, one in the East, where unbeaten Bowdoin (8-0-2) and Colby (7-0-2) travel to Williams (6-3-1) and third-ranked Middlebury (9-1), respectively. The Polar Bears and White Mules are tied for first with the Panthers, who have a game in hand on the other two.

    These games will go a long way in determining the regular season champion in the NESCAC, as well as establishing a front-runner for one of the Pool “C” slots in the NCAA tournament.

    “Two undefeated teams playing against one of the top-ranked teams in the country, as well as against a traditional NESCAC powerhouse. I expect the intensity level to be high,” said Colby head coach Jim Tortorella.

    The White Mules are led in scoring by freshman Nick Bayley (17 points) and another rookie, Patrick Walsh, is fifth (10 points).

    “Our freshmen are playing well,” said Tortorella. “They’ve really stepped up and complemented our veterans.”

    Bowdoin’s main weapon is senior Mike Carosi, who leads his team and conference in scoring with 23 points (eight goals, 15 assists). Carosi was named USCHO Offensive Player of the Week for his 10-point performance in four games for the Polar Bears.

    Middlebury will counter this weekend with netminder Christian Carlsson. The junior from Linkoping, Sweden, leads the nation in goals against average (1.41).

    The Panthers will be favored on home ice, but it will be a tall order to knock off two undefeated teams in a single weekend.

    Meanwhile, the big Western showdown is a two-game set between Wisconsin-Superior and St. Norbert. The Green Knights host the Yellowjackets for a pair of games, with the one on Friday night counted as an NCHA league game. The teams have already played one non-conference game back on Nov. 2 (6-2 St. Norbert win) and will play their second and final conference game on Jan. 26.

    Like the NESCAC games, this series will help determine the NCHA frontunner, as well as the leading contender for an at-large bid. That’s important, because there are several teams that have the capability of winning the NCHA title.

    “Things are wide open,” said Lake Forest head coach Tony Fritz. “Obviously you have to look at St. Norbert and UWS as the front runners, and River Falls is up there too.

    “But I think anyone in the league is capable of beating anyone else”, he said. “The way things are going this season, anything can happen.”

    Pretty Special

    RIT leads Division III (and all of college hockey for that matter) in power play percentage (45.9%) as well as penalty kill (8.5%). Special teams are a major reason the Tigers have lost just two NCAA games since the start of the 2000-2001 season.

    Best of Both Worlds

    Top-ranked and undefeated Norwich leads the nation in both team defense (1.5 goals allowed per game) and team offense (7.17 goals scored per game). Coming off a big 5-3 win over Plattsburgh on Tuesday, the Cadets have a realistic shot of running the table. Ahead by a huge eight point margin in the ECAC East standings, Norwich’s largest challenges will come from the NESCAC, where they still have to play Bowdoin, Colby and Middlebury, all on the road.

    Maybe Foot Locker is Hiring

    This week’s rant is picking on an easy target — officiating. I don’t mean to come off like Mark Cuban, but I witnessed a truly dismal job by the men in stripes while broadcasting the RIT at Cortland game on Tuesday.

    Besides the usual things that make up a poorly officiated game — inconsistency in calls, “make-up” calls, “message” calls, etc…, there were three blown goal calls in a span of less than a minute late in the third period.

    With RIT leading 6-3, Cortland head coach Tom Cranfield elected to gamble and pull his goaltender with more than four minutes to play. Shortly after, a Red Dragon player threw his stick at a puck headed toward the empty net. That’s an automatic goal with the goaltender pulled.

    Nope. Play continued.

    A few seconds later, a Cortland player dislodged his team’s net just as a puck was about to cross the goal line. That’s an automatic goal.

    Nope. Whistle and face-off.

    With goaltender John Larnerd back in goal, the Tigers scored; at least they put the puck in the net a good six inches past the goal line. With the referee out of position, Larnerd alertly swiped the puck out of the net.

    Play on. Are you kidding me?

    Don’t get me wrong. Officials often get an unfair rap. After all, nobody’s perfect, yet we expect refs to be. More often than not, hockey officials at this level do an outstanding job.

    Just not this time.

    This Week in the ECAC Northeast: Jan. 10, 2002

    Happy New Year

    Hey folks. Back from the proverbial dead.

    It’s been almost a month between columns, but unfortunately, other than the fourth digit in the year, not much has changed here in the second year of the millennium, especially in the ECAC Northeast.

    There were a few noteworthy changes over the past couple of weeks, though, almost all involving out-of-conference games. Fitchburg won the Codfish Bowl. Lebanon Valley beat a top team in the form of Elmira. Wentworth rebounded from its 2-1 loss to an excellent Salem State team with back-to-back victories. Curry continued to impress, earning a respectable tie against Manhattanville. Those are the positives.

    The negatives? Well, let’s just say that a few teams are glad the past is in the past. Double-digit losses don’t do anyone any good.

    Without much to really write about, I figured I’d take a shot at the old report-card trick: the classic crutch of sports columnists everywhere. We’re halfway done with the season, so it makes sense to take a look back at the goings-on of the first half.

    Before I begin, I want to make sure to communicate to you, the reader, that this type of column is supposed to be fun. If you don’t like what you read, don’t put a lot of stock into it. Much like the predictions, these grades are not meant to be taken over-seriously.

    This week, the top eight Division III teams in the league. Next week we’ll take a look at the teams currently occupying the bottom of the D-III standings in addition to the three Division II teams.

    Johnson and Wales

    Well, the Wildcats are in first place in the conference, so they are not doing too badly. Unfortunately, they have zero nonconference wins at 7-8-0. Strange but true.

    JWU came into the season with one daunting question; namely, who would fill the shoes of the departed Scott Jacob, who handled virtually all of the goaltending duties last year? Apparently that question has been answered by a pair of freshmen, Bobby Doran (3-5-0, 4.49 GAA, .878%) and Nick Lacroix (4-3, 3.34, .884). The two have been a solid duo, splitting time between the pipes.

    The offense has been prolific and Manu Mau’u has been nothing short of sensational. The Californian gets an A+ just for his sweet name alone, but his 11-13–24 line speaks for itself.

    Overall, the Wildcats have been excellent in the conference but less than par outside league play. The nonleague final outcomes haven’t been good for JWU, but the Wildcats have been in most every game, so don’t read too much into those eight nonconference losses. Fortunately, in the conference is all that counts in the long run, which is precisely why Izzi scheduled those games. However, for the betterment of the league and for grading purposes, I’d like to see the Wildcats fare a little better outside of the league.

    JWU gets a B.

    Lebanon Valley

    A+. It’s that simple. LVC hasn’t lost since November 2. The Dutchmen are 11-2 overall and undefeated in the conference. And, oh yeah, did I mention they beat Elmira? What else is there to say?

    Wentworth

    Another A+. The Leopards are only in third place because they do not have enough conference wins. Their only blemish came against a very strong and underrated Salem State team and they have posted wins over the likes of New England College and RIT.

    Eight Leopard players are in double figures in points, Raj Bhangoo (7-1, 1.69 GAA, .950%) is nasty and Jamie Vanek (4-0, 2.76, .919) isn’t bad either. Add that to an impressive core of young defensemen and an exceptional group of crafty, gifted forwards and you’ve got a formula for success that Wentworth has ridden to a phenomenal 11-1 record.

    The A+ is worth repeating.

    UMass-Dartmouth

    The development of the Corsairs has been one of my favorite running plots of the season. Anyone with any knowledge of the UMD program had to know that the early season 6-1 spanking they took from LVC was not indicative of the team’s capabilities. The Corsairs have built some serious momentum and they are now a team to be reckoned with.

    Late-season matchups with Wentworth (Feb. 7) and JWU (Feb. 16) should be marked on everyone’s calendar as the teams will be jockeying for playoff positioning without a doubt.

    UMD gets an A/B. (I always hated those A/B, C/D, etc. grades in school. Who came up with that? I’m ashamed of myself for giving that as a grade, but it’s appropriate. Look for UMD to be riding the A-Train late in the season.)

    Curry

    Another A+. I’m such an easy grader, but how can you not marvel at what these guys are doing this year? At 7-3-1 the Colonels are having a season completely contrary to the past. The Colonels are the New England Patriots of the ECAC Northeast — from worst to first.

    Okay, not quite, but I’m telling you, don’t count these guys out come playoff time. Their freshmen, namely guys like Sean Pero, Mike O’Sullivan and Brian Doherty, are their driving force right now and they are getting some pretty good seasoning. Look for them to make some noise in the playoffs.

    Salve Regina

    For a young team with a new coach and a freshly-painted target on their backs thanks to last year’s playoff run, the Seahawks haven’t done that badly.

    In fact, 2-6-1 is not indicative of this team’s ability. They have a good goalie in Chris Burns (2-2, 3.15, .887) and they play their systems pretty well. That should eventually translate to some success on the ice, hopefully soon. Hopefully, it will also translate to some notches in the win column. Overall, a C.

    Fitchburg State

    Fitchburg has won its last three, its only games of the second half so far. The Falcons won the Codfish Bowl with a solid ‘W’ over Skidmore and a convincing win over Brockport. Pretty good.

    Not good though, has been the enigmatic performance of the first half. Fitchburg has not shown up against some of the top teams in the league, notably JWU, a 7-2 loss, LVC, a 7-1 loss, and Curry, a 5-2 loss. But then again, they beat a very difficult opponent in UMD. Then they tie a struggling Suffolk team. I don’t know, you figure it out.

    As expected the Falcons have been paced by Jeff Brodeur. Brodeur is the man for the Falcons as his name seems to help decorate the score sheet every night now. He leads the Falcons in scoring with a 9-16–25 line. He’s got two game winners for good measure.

    Fitchburg is always tough, and only getting better. Look for the Falcons to mount a serious playoff run and carry some momentum into the playoffs.

    Fitchburg gets a C+, with a note from the teacher noting a poor attendance record. Time to start showing up for all the games, boys.

    Plymouth State

    Plymouth State is in a similar boat as Salve. They had a new coach at the beginning of the season and they are a young squad backboned by one of the better goalies in the league in Larry Forgue. And what do you know, the Seahawks and Panthers are in similar positions in the standings. Plymouth is 2-8.

    The goals are going to have to start coming a little easier for the Panthers to make a run. They’re going to need a few guys to step up their play and muck out some goals. The Panthers highest scoring forward, Freshman Kyle Poirier, has six goals and after that, nobody has more than three. That is not going to get it done. If the Panthers have hopes of making the playoffs they will have to start scoring some more goals. Here’s hoping they do.

    PSC gets a C.

    And finally…

    If I Were Sports God For a Day

  • USCHO would pay for me to go out to Lakewood, Calif., for the California AHA Tournament. Stop laughing.
  • Jeremy Jacobs would get a visit from the ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Future so I can actually enjoy watching the Bruins, instead of feeling like they’re sucking me in a la the Red Sox.
  • The New England Prep School hockey championship would be moved back to the Tully Forum in North Chelmsford, Mass., and it would stay there for good.
  • While we’re on the topic, I’d realign the prep divisions back to the way they were. You can’t have all the good teams calling themselves D1. If everyone is D1, what’s the point?
  • P.J. Stock would run for president.
  • The BCS would be eliminated, plain and simple, replaced with a playoff. The first year it would be eight games with the Orange, Fiesta, Rose, Sugar, etc. — all the top bowls — staking their claim on the games. For example, the one vs. eight game would be the Orange Bowl and the championship game would be the Rose Bowl, played during the day. You rotate which bowl gets the championship game every year, and you’re talking cash cow here. All the teams with winning records who didn’t make the top eight could still participate in the Humanitarian Bowl, or what have you. Problem solved. End of story.
  • I would take over Randy Moss’ body for one game and have 15 catches for 300 yards and five touchdowns.
  • The Chuck A Puck promotion would become an organized sport.
  • Gonzaga basketball player Dan Dickau and Russian figure skater Irina Slutskaya would meet face to face. (Speaking of Slutskaya, read this headline from iskate.com that I stumbled on via sportspages.com: Slutskaya Best Of Bad Bunch. Hey, iskate people, are you kidding me?)
  • Dick Schaap would give one last parting shot.

    Till next time…

  • This Week In The WCHA: Jan. 10, 2002

    There are few times when a man of Jeff Sauer’s importance to college hockey decides to hang up the whistle. This week was one of those times. While you’ll find some information on the rest of the WCHA in this column, most of it will talk about Sauer, a coaching icon. Here goes…

    Replacing Bob Again?

    When he was hired as Wisconsin’s head coach in 1982, Sauer said he couldn’t be Bob Johnson. He was Jeff Sauer.

    Nearly 20 years later, Sauer thinks the next Badgers coach should be compared again to Johnson, not himself.

    “The first day I sat before a bunch of people like yourselves [reporters] as the new head coach at the University of Wisconsin, one of the first questions that was asked to me was, how do you replace Bob Johnson?” Sauer said. “I told [Wisconsin athletics directors] Otto Breitenbach and Elroy Hirsch when they came out to Denver to interview me for this job that I was not Bob Johnson and I’m not Bob Johnson today.

    “Every person in this position over the course of time will and should be compared to Bob and what he did for this program.”

    Thing is, that’s just Sauer being modest. Johnson may always be the sentimental favorite among longtime Badgers hockey fans, but Sauer no doubt deserves his place among the greats.

    Sauer also addressed the challenge of taking over Johnson’s team in the 1982-83 season, which ended with a national championship.

    “From my standpoint, I played against Bob, I coached with Bob, I coached against Bob, the transition for me to come in and try to replace a person of his stature was a really easy transition because I knew him, I knew his personality, I knew how things worked and how he handled people,” Sauer said. “It made the transition very easy. The person that takes my place is going to be compared to Bob, as he should be. Because he’s the person that started this program. But I think it’s ironic that this program has had the success that it’s had over the course of time and really only had two full-time coaches.”

    A New Generation

    Matt Murray and I don’t really have too much in common. He can play hockey; I can’t. Heck, he can skate; I can’t.

    But we’re about the same age and we both grew up in Wisconsin. If you grew up in Wisconsin 20 to 25 years ago and were interested in hockey, you grew up watching Wisconsin hockey.

    At 10:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday nights, you sat down in front of the TV to watch Paul Braun open every broadcast with his trademark, “From the Dane County Memorial Coliseum in Madison…” You listened as PB and Bill Howard got into argument after argument and flipped 20-dollar bills onto the table to will goals from the Badgers.

    But then, you’ve also probably only known one Wisconsin hockey coach. Murray and I were both alive when “Badger” Bob Johnson was in charge, but we don’t remember anything about that.

    When we remember the Wisconsin Public Television broadcasts, we remember Jeff Sauer standing behind the bench, arms folded, maybe standing in the doorway of the bench, waiting for the referee to explain something to him.

    “It’s going to be real strange for me, especially,” Murray said. “As long as I’ve been alive, he’s been the coach. Every game I’ve ever watched for this university, he was behind the bench. You hear stories about Badger Bob and all that, but, for me, I never saw that, I never experienced that being my age. So as far as I’ve ever seen, Jeff Sauer’s been Wisconsin hockey.”

    What’s Next?

    Sauer’s retirement from coaching will take him away from the back of the bench, but there’s no way it’s going to keep him out of a hockey rink.

    “I went to watch a major junior hockey game up in Calgary right before Christmas,” Sauer said. “I sat upstairs and I kind of enjoyed sitting there watching the game, not having to be involved, all by myself on a winter night in December in Canada with all the tradition and so forth. I kind of enjoyed that. When I say I enjoy watching, that’s something that I’m looking forward to.”

    A Rough First Day

    Sauer said the transition to his new job at Wisconsin in 1982 was an easy one. That didn’t make the first day on the job go smoothly.

    “The first day on the job, I walked into the office over at the football stadium, I’ve got this nice, big desk,” Sauer said. “Everything’s all fired up, [hockey secretary] Nancy [Olson]’s all fired up, she’s sitting out there. Nancy and I don’t know each other at all. We talked on the phone, we exchanged letters and stuff back and forth. I’m not there 20 minutes — and Nancy will be embarrassed by this story — but I committed my first NCAA violation that day.

    “Nancy comes in and there’s a fairly heavy-set student, lady, gal sitting out in the lobby. Nancy comes in and says this gal wants to talk to you. I’m sitting there saying, geez, I feel pretty good. I’m a new coach, I’ve got this big desk, she’s coming in to offer help or whatever.

    “She sits down, she says, ‘Can I shut the door?’ I said sure. She shuts the door and looks me right straight in the eye and she says, ‘Three of your hockey players lit my hair on fire in the Big Ten Pub last night. What are you going to do about it?’ Bob had been telling me all summer long that these were good kids and all that kind of stuff.”

    That first day, though, Sauer did lock up Howard as goaltending coach. Who knows if the Badgers goaltending tradition would have otherwise included Curtis Joseph, Mike Richter, Jim Carey and others.

    The Moments He’ll Remember

    Sauer was asked if there were moments from his career that often pop into his mind.

    Got a while?

  • The first game he coached, he said, his CC team lost to Denver 11-1.

    “Murray Armstrong was the [Denver] coach,” Sauer said. “I walked off the ice after the game, I said, ‘We’ll be back.’

    “The next time we went up, we won 7-6 in overtime.”

  • “I remember the night in Michigan State where I was in overtime, I was on the ice, I had the puck, I could show you the spot on the ice,” Sauer said. “I went to score the winning goal in overtime and I put it in the second deck.”
  • “Black Sunday,” when his CC team beat the Badgers in a total-goals series 13-12, winning the second game in Madison 11-4.

    The crowd groaned.

    “And there’s people in this room that have a film of that game that would not give it to me,” Sauer said.

  • Even the 7-6 overtime victory over North Dakota this season, one in which the Badgers rallied from a 6-2 deficit in the third period.

    “I think this building needed that,” Sauer said. “We needed — Madison, Wis., hockey fans needed a weekend like that. It doesn’t happen every night, to come back and do that.”

  • He was asked if he remembered his first victory.

    “Do I remember my first win? Yeah, the first win was, uh …,” said Sauer, who then looked to find his son Chip for help. “Where’s Chip? He wasn’t alive either. I have no references to go to.”

    It was then told to Sauer that his first victory was against Minnesota, the team the Badgers play this weekend at the Kohl Center.

    “Was it Minnesota? Geez, it was great. Just great,” he said.

    A Strong Following

    Reaction to the news from around the world of college hockey was quick to pour into the Wisconsin sports information department, which posted some quotes from Sauer’s fellow coaches and former players.

    They included:

  • Michigan Tech coach Mike Sertich, one of Sauer’s closest friends: “I’m very disappointed to hear the news. College hockey has lost a voice and a leader and that hurts. Our league and college hockey certainly won’t be the same without him.”
  • Boston College coach Jerry York: “Jeff is one of the greats of coaching in college hockey. He’s been an inspiration to so many young coaches coming up in the ranks and he’s done so many great things to advance the game of college hockey.”
  • North Dakota coach Dean Blais: “It is always sad when we lose a member of our coaching fraternity. I’m happy that Jeff can still continue to work with Wisconsin athletics while he pursues his passion — golf.”
  • Former player Tony Granato: “Jeff Sauer was one of the most influential factors in my playing career and a springboard for my professional career. He is a model of character and dignity and the perfect coach who carried on the legacy of Badger Hockey.”
  • Former player Dany Heatley: “Coach Sauer is a great person on and off the ice. He’s a coach who really cares about his players and someone who has been a great representative for college hockey. I’m proud to say I played for him.”

    A Man For The League

    Sauer is the kind of person at WCHA meeting that when he speaks, everyone else listens and knows he’s speaking with the best intent of the WCHA in mind.

    That’s the opinion of Denver coach George Gwozdecky, who also praised Sauer for helping to make the league the power it is today.

    “He has really been one of the league fathers,” Gwozdecky said. “Maybe not a founding father, but one of the guys that has really helped take this league from the stages in the ’60s and ’70s and really helped it move on, with his influence in the meetings and using his experience to make sure that this league continue to move forward.”

    Gwozdecky was an assistant for Ron Mason at Michigan State in the mid-to-late 1980s. He compared Sauer with Mason in terms of league-building.

    “There’s only one other guy that I know of who has helped a league flourish like that and put the league at the top of the pedestal and that’s Ron Mason,” Gwozdecky said. “Ron Mason’s impact on the CCHA is, there wouldn’t be a CCHA if it wasn’t for Ron Mason. It wouldn’t have the same credibility if it wasn’t for Ron Mason. And I feel that Jeff Sauer is perceived the same and looked upon the same way in the WCHA. He leaves a great legacy and he’s been one of the great drivers for our league for many, many years.”

    But one of Sauer’s greatest legacies, Gwozdecky noted, is something the college hockey public doesn’t see. Behind the scenes, Sauer puts the league, not his team first.

    “In the eight years that I have been associated with the WCHA as a coach, there is not one time that I can remember that there was ever a hidden agenda as to, geez, Jeff is trying to do this because it’s going to improve Wisconsin’s position,” Gwozdecky said. “And I can’t say that for anybody else, including myself.”

    Goodbyes

    Don Granato, one of Sauer’s former players at Wisconsin and now the coach of the Worcester IceCats of the AHL, made a good point about the upcoming weeks.

    “He didn’t want a farewell tour,” Granato said, “but now I’m glad everybody knows so they can give him one.”

    So here’s how it goes down for the Badgers down the stretch. After this weekend’s home series against Minnesota, the Badgers play a pair at Minnesota State-Mankato before returning home for a series against top-ranked St. Cloud State.

    Wisconsin hosts Alaska-Anchorage on Feb. 1 and 2; plays at Colorado College on Feb. 8 and 9; hosts Denver on Feb. 15 and 16; plays at Minnesota on Feb. 22 and 23; and hosts Minnesota-Duluth on March 1 and 2 to close the regular season.

    Short, Shorter and Shortest

    So what was more rare: Alaska-Anchorage’s sweep of Michigan Tech last weekend, or what the Seawolves had to do to complete it?

    It was Anchorage’s first WCHA sweep at Sullivan Arena in two years, but the triplet of shorthanded goals the Seawolves scored in the second period of Game 2 was the clincher.

    Yes, three shorthanded goals in one period.

    In 4 minutes, 45 seconds, Eric Lawson, Jace Digel and Dallas Steward scored the first career shorthanded goal for each.

    “I looked at [Joe] Garvin on the bench and said, Holy smokes, I’ve never seen three short-handers in my career, 15 years of hockey,” Steward told the Anchorage Daily News.

    Finish It Off

    Connor James was on the left side of a 2-on-1 break, with the puck, and looked like he was running out of room.

    He had come too close to the goaltender and now needed to pull something out of nowhere.

    So he did. He got the puck on his backhand and flipped it into the top right corner of the net. No problem.

    That’s the ease, on the outside, with which things are coming for Denver this season.

    It also makes it look like the Pioneers are gifted at being opportunistic. Gwozdecky doesn’t see it that way.

    We do have some players who have got some great finishing ability,” Gwozdecky said. “Connor is one of them Jon Foster is one of them. Chris Paradise, Kevin Doell, they have great hands and great finishing ability.

    “Like any team, I think we’re the type of team that we need to work hard to create chances. The more chances you create, the more opportunities you’re going to be able to put the puck in the net. Sometimes, especially forwards, they start looking to score instead of working to score. I think there’s a huge difference in those two things.

    “We’ve got some of our players that have gone through that this year. But you will always see that the guys on our team that have the most scoring chances are the guys that are leading our team in scoring. I guess that makes sense, it’s probably logical. But I think that probably refutes a little bit the idea of being opportunistic. I don’t know of anybody on our team who has one or two or three scoring chances a game and usually bangs home every one or two. That shooting percentage just is not realistic, especially on our team.”

  • Catching Up With … Jason Krog

    Brian Holzinger … Brendan Morrison … Chris Drury. These are names of recent Hobey Baker Award winners to make a major impact in the NHL. Drury went so far as to win the 1998-99 Calder Trophy and NHL Rookie of the Year.

    Jason Krog has spent parts of three seasons with the New York Islanders, and is trying to win a more permanent home in the NHL.

    Jason Krog has spent parts of three seasons with the New York Islanders, and is trying to win a more permanent home in the NHL.

    So, when Jason Krog won the award in 1999, he had every reason to believe he was next. Signing a lucrative free-agent contract with the New York Islanders did nothing to squash the notion. Things were finally coming easier. The days of getting cut from his junior teams, of having his abilities questioned, were a distant memory. He was ready for the pros. Do a little work in the AHL, and get to the NHL.

    But things have never come easy for Krog, especially not now. Beset by injuries the last two seasons, Krog has not been able to get over the hump. This season, he has again battled injuries, while going up and down between Bridgeport (AHL) and Long Island.

    The 26-year-old knows the clock is ticking, but he believes there’s still time to make an impact in the NHL.

    “My mindset is better now,” said Krog, who has 21 points in 19 AHL games this season, entering the weekend. “It was more frustrating the first year. You start learning not to get too high, or too low.

    "I got a chance to play in some pretty big games there. That sort of experience is invaluable."

    — Jason Krog of the New York Islanders, on his UNH experience

    “They [the Islanders] want me to come down here and put up numbers, and help this team out. The organization is going in the right direction. They’ve turned a corner, and that’s good to be a part of. Things are more set up. Before, you didn’t know what was going on.”

    In one sense, the Islanders’ new-found success makes things more difficult for Krog. Not possessed with the blazing speed of, say, Jason Blake, it’s hard to find time as a key role player — and he isn’t going to crack the Isles’ vastly-improved top lines at this point.

    On the other hand, it’s simply nice for Krog to be in a stable situation for a change. In his first pro season, he split AHL time between Providence and Lowell. Last season, he was in Lowell until Isles GM Mike Milbury — fed up with that arrangement — pulled all of his prospects out and moved them to Springfield.

    “There were guys spread through three teams,” says Krog. “It was a crazy time. I got a call one afternoon for everyone to meet at the rink, and they told us we were going to Springfield.”

    Now, finally, the Islanders have an affiliate of their own — owned by one-time Islanders owner Roy Boe, no less — and the team is playing well.

    Krog’s biggest “problem” is, he isn’t great in any one area. Without great speed or size, he is competing for spots against other NHL skill guys who may also have size or speed.

    “He’s played well enough when he’s been there,” says his Bridgeport coach, Steve Stirling. “But it’s hard to get in the lineup, especially now with [Alexei] Yashin and [Michael] Peca there.

    “To stay [in the NHL], you have to be able to play stronger. In the NHL, you are always competing hard, every night.”

    It should be noted, there are areas where everyone agrees Krog stands out … his hands, and his ice sense. Former UNH teammate Eric Boguniecki once compared Krog to Adam Oates for his “unbelievable vision.”

    “He just has to keep working,” says Stirling. “He’s very skilled. He’s got tremendous hands, and a great head for the game.

    “Jason is a high-class guy. He has that intangible. He makes up for a lot of his deficiencies.”

    Those intangibles have always served Krog well.

    Not blessed with blazing speed, or “NHL size,” Krog has had to scratch for everything. Even in youth hockey, when he was twice cut by junior teams, Krog was never a player that stood out. When he was recruited by the University of New Hampshire, his coach even doubted him.

    His freshman season, he only scored four goals in 34 games.

    Krog

    Krog

    Through a lot of hard work, he became a collegiate superstar. He scored 85 points his senior year in 41 games, and led his team to the NCAA final.

    It’s hard for Krog not to compare his career path with that of Drury. The two were Hockey East stars together — Drury at Boston University — and played many memorable games against each other.

    “He’s definitely someone I look up to as a player,” says Krog. “I don’t think I’m far off … If I can stay healthy. But we’re different styles.”

    Krog still draws on his collegiate experiences. That is where he had tremendous success, personally and team-wise.

    “I got a chance to play in some pretty big games there,” says Krog. “That sort of experience is invaluable.”

    Krog was awarded the Hobey the day before he played in the NCAA national championship game against Maine, an overachieving team, and a bitter conference rival, to boot. In an epic goaltender’s dual, UNH had a bucket-ful of great chances to win its first national championship, only to lose in overtime.

    It’s a game Krog still laments.

    “Yeah, the odd time it comes up,” he says. “A bounce here, a bounce there, we could’ve won.

    “The Hobey is nice, but I’d trade it in for a national championship.”

    Now, however, he has other priorities. Ask him if he’d rather have that national championship or a 30-goal season in the NHL, and he agonizes over the thought.

    “Ooh, that’s a tough one,” says Krog, before realizing his current predicament. “Right now, I’d have to say the 30 goals.”

    This Week in the CHA: Jan. 10, 2002

    The CHA Beat

    As College Hockey America rolls full speed back into the conference schedule, it’s time to see if two teams will step up their play, or decide to settle for CHA mediocrity. Coming off of a sweep of Air Force last weekend, the Findlay Oilers travel north to play Bemidji State. A sweep by either team would guarantee the broomholders no less than a second-place tie in the CHA standings.


    Bad Boys, Bad Boys

    The story of that Findlay sweep, though, was the shorthandedness of the Falcons. Andy Berg, Spanky Leonard, Brian Reaney, and Tom Starkey were all suspended for the series for an unspecified violation of team rules. Not only were the Falcons missing the four, who totaled a full third of AFA’s offense coming into the weekend, but they were also missing Brian Gornick and Ross Miller due to injury and illness, respectively.

    CHA Beat spoke with Dave Toller at Air Force’s Sports Information Department earlier this week, and all four suspended Falcons will be back this week. Head coach Frank Serratore will be happy to have them back, to be sure, but above all, Air Force Cadets are expected to be disciplined. We imagine a goodly amount of extra skating accompanied the clipped wings.

    Air Force wasn’t the only CHA team to suspend players last weekend. Alabama-Huntsville suspended wingers Jessi Otis and Karlis Zirnis for an unspecified team rules violation. The CHA Beat watched Otis and Zirnis skate plenty after UAH’s Thursday night practice last week; it must have paid off, as both Otis and Zirnis were back in the lineup for Saturday night’s games. While Air Force seemed to miss their suspendees, UAH ripped off a 2-0 victory over the Minnesota State Mavericks on Friday before losing with the lineup restored the next night, 5-1.


    The Conference Tilts

    But enough about the bad, really. What’s good about the CHA? Right now, it would have to be the Findlay-Bemidji tilt. As stated, these two teams are playing for position in the CHA standings. Findlay keepers Jamie VandeSpyker and Kevin Fines each won a 4-2 contest against Air Force last weekend, but they’ll likely face a tougher test against the Beavers. Like the Oilers, Tom Serratore’s Bemidji team relies on two ‘keepers in Grady Hunt and Dannie Morgan. Look for each team to start each goaltender over the weekend, and we’re going to go with a split for this series.

    The other CHA tilt has winless Air Force traveling to conference leader Wayne State. Yes, the Falcons have yet to win in six CHA contests; yes, the Falcons have to feel just a bit of turmoil. But we at CHA Beat can’t ignore the nonconference play of Air Force. It’s really hard to pick anything but a home sweep for the Warriors, who have looked solid this year, but expect Air Force to give its all in both games. The Falcons are better than a winless team, and they’ll try to show it this weekend.


    Backup for Guerrera

    We at CHA Beat were pleasantly surprised with the play of Warriors G Brett Leone against Lake Superior State last weekend. Shoot, we were surprised to see anyone other than Dave Guerrera in net.

    CHA Beat spoke with Jeff Weiss up at Wayne State, and Weiss related that coach Bill Wilkinson wanted to get Leone some ice time. We’d say it went well; a 4-2 win in a weekend where Wayne State got its first ever victories against CHA foes.


    Nonconference Notes

    The CHA did well last weekend against nonconference opponents, with the UAH split against WCHA foe Minnesota State-Mankato and WSU’s sweep of CCHA representative LSSU. All in all, it brings the CHA’s nonconference record to 34-33-2 on the season. Here’s the breakdown:

    v. CCHA: 2-7-1
    v. ECAC: 2-4-1
    v. HEA: 2-4-0
    v. MAAC: 22-6-0
    v. WCHA: 4-12-0

    All in all, CHA teams win about a third of their nonconference games … except for the MAAC. As always, the CHA owns the MAAC.

    This weekend, CHA teams have three nonconference tilts on the schedule. Niagara hosts MAAC foe Canisius for one game Friday night. Need I say more? We’ll go with a Niagara win, Rob Bonk or no Rob Bonk.

    The other two games are played by UAH, as the Chargers travel to play the Nebraska-Omaha. True, UNO was highly ranked at the beginning of the season, but they’re no doubt looking for a team to rebound against. With the way UAH has looked this season — consistently inconsistent — it’s hard to imagine that the Chargers will pull off a split at UNO. Stranger things have happened, though, but we’ll pick the UNO sweep and stay with the statistical record.

    After all, statistics lie, and liars use statistics, right?

    This Week in the CCHA: Jan. 10, 2001

    Born to Be Mild?

    As the new year and the “second season” begin, it’s only natural to look back at the first half of the 2001-02 campaign to see what each team can learn from its performance.

    Okay. So we did that last week.

    There remains, however, plenty to analyze in the first three months of CCHA hockey — but why would we want to?

    This has been, so far, a season of relative mediocrity, three months of “parity” that’s as enticing as last year’s Farmer’s Almanac.

    The league has managed to put together a winning nonconference record so far for the 2001-02 season, going 39-22-6 against non-CCHA foes. But look at the competition. Western Michigan swept Canisius and Sacred Heart in two-game sets, and 10 of those 39 CCHA nonconference wins are against the CHA and the MAAC. Factor in another dozen wins over ECAC teams (and this isn’t bashing, folks — that league is struggling this season), and you have a full 22 non-league wins over opponents whose PWR are nothing to write home about.

    (Yes, there are exceptions to that — few — so don’t flood my inbox with complaints.)

    Then there’s Wayne State, the thirteenth member of the CCHA. The Warriors have played CCHA teams eight times this season, and the league has bested Wayne State by a record of 5-2-1. That’s eight games against a single opponent in the CHA.

    Now let’s examine the league’s parity. I’ve been a big critic of that word for years and years, since coaches like to throw it around to prove the CCHA’s relative strength of conference compared to that of other conferences. Finally, the coaches are right — on one point, anyway.

    Parity exists! Alert the media! The top two teams in the conference each have 21 points. The bottom team has six. In between, however, is this gridlock of squads separated by just seven points.

    UAF and OSU are tied for third place with 17 points each, and Bowling Green holds onto eleventh with 10. Cheerleaders for the league will point to this as “proof” that the CCHA is a tough place to garner conference points, and they are correct. While the league may be tough in-house, this parity in no way proves the relative strength of the conference versus that of other leagues.

    Cheerleaders for the CCHA will also use the seven-point difference between second and eleventh as “proof” of how exciting the league’s playoff race will be. “Any given team can beat any other given team on any night,” is the common refrain. And? At midseason, while nothing is a sure thing, odds are that Bowling Green won’t be hosting a first-round CCHA playoff series and Northern Michigan will — despite a mere six points separating the two teams now.

    So the “race” for the playoffs this season primarily consists of two things: 1) who is going to avoid the privilege of losing to Michigan State in the first round, and 2) which middle-of-the-pack teams will win home ice.

    All right. The second scenario is worth watching. With six teams hosting first-round series, folks we don’t usually see earning home ice may do so.

    But the rest? I guess I’m having a difficult time getting worked up about the play of the league this season. In an effort to find something positive about the CCHA in a strange time during which Minnesota-Duluth won the Ice Breaker and neither Michigan nor Michigan State won the GLI, here are six things from first half of the 2001-02 season that are worth crowing about — or at least mentioning.

    1. The Cold War

    On Oct. 6, 2001, Michigan State hosted Michigan in Spartan Stadium in an outdoor game that drew more hockey fans to one event than any other hockey game in history. When 74,554 people watched the Spartans and Wolverines skate to a 3-3 tie, they not only made history, but they made a statement: college hockey is a great game that can draw an audience.

    The contest reached a potential 38,000,000 homes by cablecast, and created enough buzz to be mentioned by nearly every major sporting news outlet.

    And, for the record, it was a great game, too.

    2. The Nanooks

    Love an underdog? Then you have to be thrilled with the 12-7-1 Alaska-Fairbanks Nanooks, a team that travels further than any other D-I team just to play its nearest league opponent.

    The nationally-ranked Nanooks are doing everything right in this current CCHA climate. Tied for third with Ohio State, all UAF has to do to secure home ice for the first round of the CCHA playoffs is keep on keeping on. Not a single Nanook has reached the 10-goal mark, but the team is scoring by committee, led by Ryan Campbell (5-13–18), Cam Keith (6-11–17), Blaine Bablitz (5-11–17) — and the list goes on. Check out defenseman Aaron Grosul at +14.

    With Preston McKay (.918) and Lance Mayes (.896) splitting time in net, this is a hard-working, hard-to-beat team.

    Now, if only my boyfriend, ex-Nanook Chad Hamilton, would drop me a line, or call. Sigh.

    3. Rob Collins, Jeff Hoggan, Mike Cammalleri, and Greg Day

    In a league where goals seem to be as elusive as a Dick Cheney spotting, these four have done more than their share.

    Collins (10-23–33) not only leads the conference in overall points, but has nearly single-handedly heightened the profile of the Ferris State Bulldogs this season. And, as with the Nanooks, when an underdog digs his way out from under, the whole league benefits from greater exposure, more fan interest, and a raised awareness of college hockey itself.

    Hoggan (12-14–26), the work-a-day senior from Nebraska-Omaha, proves this season that he’s the real deal, even though his Mavericks are struggling a bit.

    What can you say about Cammalleri (14-10–24)? He is, quite simply, the best forward currently in the league. Cammalleri raises the level of play of every player on the ice around him, and with the rest of the young Wolverines catching their collective stride, he’s poised to help Michigan make some serious noise.

    Day (13-11–24) is the most consistent Bowling Green player. On a team where he doesn’t get much support, he does shine.

    4. The Buckeyes Remain Intact

    The Buckeyes skated through midseason without losing a single man. What does this portend? Will milk sour all over Cowlumbus? Will crops fail? Is this the end of civilization as we know it?

    No. What this means is that the long adjustment to a new coach — in this case, it took longer than usual — is finally over. Fans of the Buckeyes have been griping for years about the early departures and midseason flights, but if they take a good, hard look at every circumstance, they’ll see that OSU was the victim of both its own success and lack of success in recruiting.

    What does this mean for the league? Well, if the Buckeyes avoid drama this season and continue to “play for the crest on their sweaters,” as Coach Markell likes to put it, they’ll be able to take advantage of this hockey climate (like the Nanooks) and make a run for the top. And since OSU is a high-profile school, this may mean good things for the league.

    (If they put people in the seats at the Schott, that is.)

    5. Ryan Miller

    Fans, please remember that every time this young man shuts out an opponent, he’s setting a record. Please remember that it’s not only the defense in front of him — on one of the most offensive-minded teams in the league, by the way — that’s doing the work.

    Please remember that when you watch Ryan Miller, you’re watching perhaps the greatest collegiate goaltender, ever.

    How sad it is that we are no longer moved by extraordinariness in the everyday world.

    6. Horcoff Scored, and Comrie Was in the Box

    It was a great day for college hockey in Columbus. Shawn Horcoff scored the first goal, and in the third period, Mike Comrie took a familiar seat in the sin bin. And the two were on the same squad.

    No, it wasn’t every Spartan’s and Wolverine’s nightmare come true. It was Oct. 25, 2001, and the Edmonton Oilers had come to Nationwide Arena to play the Columbus Blue Jackets.

    So what, you say? Have you taken a look at the Oilers’ roster lately? Edmonton is officially my new favorite NHL team, and here’s why: Anson Carter (MSU), Mike Comrie (Michigan), Mike Grier (BU), Shawn Horcoff (MSU), Todd Marchant (Clarkson), Rem Murray (MSU), Tom Poti (BU), and Marty Reasoner (BC). That’s eight players (or one-third) from the college ranks.

    That night, there were five former CCHA players, including Columbus’ Blake Sloan (Michigan), on the rosters of the two NHL teams.

    And while he’s not currently on their roster, Ty Conklin was in net for Edmonton. He got the win.

    Now, if only we could convince the television and radio announcers of such games to mention these players’ college experience, something you always hear about football players.

    (“Hey, Stu, did you know that So-and-so was a fifth-string walk-on receiver at Nowhere State?”; “Gee, Stan, is that right?”)

    A girl can dream, can’t she?

    Games and Grudges, and Complete Irrelevancies

    The Games of the Week and Grudges of the Week will return next week, O Faithful Readers! I will also be answering reader mail in next week’s column.

    And here’s some new that will delight some, confuse others, and downright annoy many of you. Moxy, fabled cat with approximately 6.5 remaining lives, caught an honest-to-goodness mouse in my bedroom last night, becoming the only cat I’ve ever owned to earn her keep.

    This Week in the MAAC: Jan. 10, 2002

    Rivalries Get Canisius Back on Track

    When the Canisius College hockey team returned to Buffalo in late December after the holiday break, there was no doubt the players were aching to get back on the ice. Little did they know that their return would be delayed and that, in the end, 34 days would pass between their game with Iona on December 8 and their next contest, due up this Friday evening.

    The culprit that kept the Griffs off the ice: 84 inches of snow in what is detailed as the worst snowstorm in Buffalo’s history.

    “You’d just finish shoveling the driveway and you look out and see 18 more inches of snow on the ground,” said Canisius head coach Brian Cavanaugh. “We thought about ways to get over to Buffalo State (Canisius’ practice facility) but the rink manager was snowed in and couldn’t even get over to open the building.”

    In all, Cavanaugh’s club lost three days of practice and one game — a nonleague contest at Colgate.

    Now after 34 days without playing a game, the Griffs will face off five times in the next nine days, beginning Friday evening with crosstown rival Niagara. Ironically, Niagara, situated only about 40 minutes away from Canisius, saw less than a foot of snow from the same storm.

    “Our mental toughness might not be there in the first period [on Friday], but I think as the game goes on, that will return,” said Cavanaugh about the matchup with the Purple Eagles, which is part of the Punch Imlach Classic played at HSBC Arena. “My main concern is that we’re able to recover to play back-to-back nights. We haven’t done that in more than a month.”

    Cavanaugh noted that the conditions at HSBC Arena won’t help his team much, as the climate inside the home of the Buffalo Sabres is generally very warm.

    But the Griffs will need to rebound quickly, as Saturday night they begin a home-and-home series with MAAC top dog and rival Mercyhurst. At stake in the two-game series that concludes at Canisius on Tuesday night will be first place in the league. Currently, Mercyhurst stands two points ahead of Canisius with two games in hand.

    To add a little more to the difficult task facing Canisius is the fact that Mercyhurst is blood-hungry. The Lakers are coming off an 8-1 romping dished out by Clarkson.

    Mercyhurst coach Rick Gotkin didn’t hide the fact that the loss at Clarkson was one bad night.

    “The two greatest moments of my coaching career were making the NCAA Tournament last year, and the moment the final buzzer sounded on Saturday night at Clarkson,” joked Gotkin. The loss was the second in a two-game series against the Golden Knights. “This week’s two games are important to us as, though, are all games.

    “These games, one way or another, won’t end the season. There will still be 14 games left after we play Canisius and we hold two games in hand. So in essence there could be an eight- or 10-point swing.”

    The history between Canisius and Mercyhurst goes far back beyond the formation of the MAAC. The two teams played together in the old ECAC West league before joining the MAAC, where the rivalry was perpetuated.

    Interestingly, though, the rivalry goes back ever further.

    “Brian Cavanaugh recruited me to play college hockey at Brockport State,” said Gotkin, who never played under Cavanaugh, as the elder coach left before the beginning of Gotkin’s freshman season. “We have a great relationship and he’s been a great supporter of me. Brian’s had a great [coaching] career, but on game night, we’re doing anything we can to win.”

    Gotkin said that he doesn’t really consider Canisius a rival, stating that his team doesn’t get up for games against the Griffs more than any other team. Cavanaugh, though, disagrees.

    “We’ve always had a rivalry with Mercyhurst, said Cavanaugh. “These two teams have a longer association of playing against each other than does Canisius and Niagara.”

    It’s certainly true that the two clubs share a lot. Starting with the fact that both coaches graduated from Brockport, Mass., to the geographic location of the two schools. Many of the players on each club were recruited from the same area and played junior hockey together. And the two teams have even shared an assistant coach — Michael Sisti, who is now the head women’s coach at Mercyhurst, having coached under Gotkin and Cavanaugh in years prior.

    So as these two teams face off this weekend, you may want to file this one under déjà vu — or maybe we should wait until March when there will be a good chance they meet again with a championship on the line.

    Weekly Awards

    ITECH MAAC Hockey League Player of the Week: Martin Paquet, Sacred Heart Jr., Forward, St. Catheran de la J.C., PQ

    In last week’s series against Fairfield, Paquet assisted on the Sacred Heart’s only goal Friday night in a 1-1 tie. Back at the Milford Ice Pavilion on Saturday, Paquet had an impressive three-point game, finding Marc-Andre Fournier on the first two Pioneer goals and scoring the game-winner himself early in the third period. Paquet led the Pioneers with four points last weekend, and also leads the Pioneers in scoring this season with 17 points.

    ITECH MAAC Hockey League Goalie of the Week: John Yaros, Army Fr., Goalie, Bayside, NY

    Yaros backstopped both ties against UConn on Friday and Saturday to improve to 2-5-4 on the year. Yaros made a career-high 44 saves on Friday and followed with 43 saves Saturday night. The 87 stops over the weekend was the most by an Army goaltender in one weekend in more than a decade. Yaros is 2-3-4 with a 2.46 goals against average this winter vs. MAAC opponents.

    ITECH MAAC Hockey League Rookie of the Week: Matt Grew, UConn Fr., Forward, Yarmouthport, MA

    Grew recorded his first career hat trick as a Husky in UConn’s 3-3 tie against Army on Friday. Grew scored one goal per period, each time propelling the Huskies in front of Army.

    Davis Uses Opportunity to Validate

    It’s not often enough as a writer that when you single someone or something out, that in the short term can back up what you write. A good example of this happened last season. For the first handful of weeks in the season, whatever team was featured on the USCHO.com frontpage — undoubtedly because of some type of success to that point — would lose the following weekend. It was almost like the curse of Sports Illustrated, noted for putting the preseason hex on most any team by featuring them on their cover.

    AIC goaltender Chad Davis, though, is bucking that trend. After last week’s MAAC column that touted the Yellow Jackets’ rookie netminder — stating that thanks to an injury to Frank Novello, Davis would get his chance to prove himself — Davis did just that. Davis walked into Holy Cross Friday night and backstopped AIC to a 4-3 upset of the now-second place Crusaders. In doing so, Davis stopped 42 Holy Cross shots, balancing them nicely: 14 per period.

    Of course, only fairy tales have completely happy endings. The following night Holy Cross lit up the rookie for six goals on 32 shots. But nonetheless, Davis still has proven that AIC’s goaltending tandem is in fact worth touting. Hats off to Gary Wright for finding two gems in the same season.

    Close But No Cigar for Quinnipiac

    About a year ago, Quinnipiac coach Rand Pecknold saw a nightmare come true. His then-breakthrough Braves walked into Mariucci Arena with high hopes against a nationally-ranked Minnesota for a faceoff that could be seen coast-to-coast on cable television. The nightmare, of course, was watching Minnesota score off the opening draw, put up a four-spot in the first period and go on to an 11-2 thrashing.

    A year later, Quinnipiac has lost a bit of its luster thanks to a big graduating class, but the team still boarded a plane out to East Lansing, Mich., with hopes of surprising another nationally-ranked team, No. 6 Michigan State.

    Similar to their last trip West, wins were not found. But this time, Pecknold returned a bit happier with the results.

    “There’s definitely positives to take out of the weekend,” said Pecknold, whose club dropped respectable 4-1 and 3-1 decisions to the Spartans despite being outshot badly both nights. “We played one of the best programs in the country and we hung in there with them. Certainly we were outshot, but there’s a lot of positives my team took out of it.”

    Pecknold had plenty of reason to praise his opponent.

    “Michigan State is awesome — I was very impressed with their team makeup,” said Pecknold. “Their six defensemen were fantastic. And [goaltender] Ryan Miller reminded me of Martin Brodeur the way he handled the puck.”

    Though admitting that his team was a little nervous on Friday, a game that saw them spot Michigan State a 3-1 lead before the end of 40 minutes, Pecknold said that Saturday’s game could have gone Quinnipiac’s way.

    “Saturday night we were tied in the second and we missed an open net on a 2-on-1,” said Pecknold. “After 39 minutes it was a 1-1 hockey game. We were probably two bounces away on Saturday from tying or winning that hockey game.”

    But, alas, a loss is a loss and the two ‘L’s at Michigan State tally to five in a row for the Maize and Blue. An asterisk, though, might be necessary, as the five losses came to Providence, RPI (in double OT), Niagara and two at Michigan State. With the nonleague schedule complete for the year, Pecknold is happy to return to MAAC play.

    “We’re playing well in these nonconference games, but in the MAAC we’re not putting teams away,” said Pecknold. “I hope our play in the last five games translated into league play.

    More for the Money

    A popular trend in the MAAC lately has been overtime. Quinnipiac played plenty of it in the RPI tournament, losing in the semifinals in double overtime. And the trend followed as many teams returned to league play last weekend. Three of the six MAAC league games, and one nonleague game last weekend needed the extra session. Of that, all but Iona’s OT loss to Colgate ended in a draw.

    UConn and Army gave their fans double the value, battling to 3-3 and 4-4 ties on the weekend. Sacred Heart and Fairfield deadlocked at 1 on Friday night, though Saturday night Fairfield’s comeback fell a goal short and sent the fans home without anything extra.

    In all, 18 games involving MAAC teams have gone to overtime this year. Only five of those have seen a winner.

    This Week in the SUNYAC: Jan. 10, 2002

    Seems Like Old Times

    Loyal writer Ed Trefzger took a longer break than anticipated — and then was sent out of town — so he asked me to fill in this week. I’m pretty sure I have the credentials to do a halfway decent job.

    Let’s pick up right where he left off and finish up the midseason report for the four teams that find themselves battling for the final two playoff spots.

    Right On Track

    “I didn’t really know what to expect coming in here,” Geneseo’s rookie coach Brian Hills said, “in fact, being my first year in Division III.”

    Right now, the Ice Knights are sitting in fifth place, just two points out of home ice for the first round of the playoffs.

    “After the first half, I’m pretty happy over what we have accomplished,” Hills said.

    It didn’t start out that way as a young squad and a new coach struggled to get the hang of it. Geneseo started the season with four losses and dropped eight of its first nine games, including going 1-3 in SUNYAC play. Since then, the team has won five of its last eight games, going 2-1 in league play to move into that fifth spot.

    Hills’ evaluation of the first half? “Our goal was to make the playoffs, and so far we have reached that.”

    In order to stay on track, Geneseo is going to need to continue having its offense score goals like in recent games. In those five wins, they have averaged just over four goals a game, but only scored twice in the three losses.

    Hills explained what needs to be done. “Now it’s time for certain guys to be better with their chances around the net. They need to think about how to get their shots on the net.”

    Overall, Tony Scorsone leads the team with eight goals and 15 assists, while Matt Lester has lit up the lamp six times. Freshman goaltender Brent Walker has stepped in nicely with a .939 save percentage, third best in the conference.

    Looking at the schedule, one would think Geneseo would be at a disadvantage with its next four SUNYAC games on the road. Hills doesn’t think so.

    “People who have been around here a while,” Hills explains, “have told me that in the past Geneseo has been a real good road team.”

    And that first road game happens to be at Buffalo State, the team Geneseo needs to beat out to get that home-ice spot.

    Watch Out For The Slumbering Bears

    There seems to be consensus on the USCHO Message Board — Potsdam may be struggling, but I sure don’t want my team facing the Bears in the playoffs. That’s what happens when you have a young team with talent that everybody is just waiting to gel.

    Six of the Bears’ nine losses were one-goal games, including an overtime loss to Plattsburgh, undefeated number-one Norwich, and ECAC East contender New England College. Meanwhile, Potsdam has shown its stuff in wins over Plattsburgh and Manhattanville.

    “Losing the guys we lost and having 12 new players has led to a lot of inconsistency,” Potsdam coach Ed Seney said.

    Unfortunately for Potsdam, two wins over SUNYAC foes came in nonconference games, so its league record sits at a disappointing 2-5. What’s really hurting the Bears is their inability to score, averaging only 2.57 goals a league game, including scoring just once against Geneseo despite outshooting them 37-17.

    “We lost a lot of top scorers,” Seney said. “It’s hard to win a college hockey game scoring one goal.”

    Overall, Potsdam’s top scorer is a defenseman. All-American candidate Dave Weagle has five goals and seven assists. Anthony Greer also has five goals.

    Potsdam only has two players from its power play back from last year, a power play converting at an anemic 8.7% efficiency in conference play.

    Thus, Potsdam will have to continue to rely on strong goaltending from Ryan Venturelli until its offense begins to get into the groove. In league play, Venturelli has a 2.87 GAA (2.61 overall) and a .901 save percentage (.912 overall).

    Seney said, “We can play with anybody in the country. We’re just looking for the breaks to fall our way.”

    Potsdam will need to start getting those breaks even before they get back into conference play as its next three games are against Hobart, Middlebury, and Elmira.

    Seney is confident. “We’ve always been a second half team,” he said.

    That’s what those opposing fans on the Message Board are concerned about.

    Desperately Seeking Goals

    Nobody is having as much trouble scoring goals as the Fredonia Blue Devils, who have just nine in seven conference games. That is why Fredonia finds themselves at 1-6 and currently out of a playoff spot.

    “You either have a knack for scoring or you don’t,” coach Jeff Meredith puts it matter-of-factly. “We had a great knack a number of years ago, but we don’t now.”

    It doesn’t help that a lot of guys are having personal slumps all at the same time nor that a lot of freshmen are getting ice time, and it’s taking them a while to get used to the college game.

    Junior Christian Fletcher is the only one lighting up the lamp with nine goals overall and three in league play.

    “We’re getting the opportunities, but just not finishing,” Meredith explains. It’s a matter of continuing the basics. “Keep getting our shots off, keep going to the net.”

    Thus, the burden rests on goalie Will Hamele’s shoulders.

    “Will is playing outstanding, holding opponents down, but has zero to show for it.” Meredith says. “He’s a wonderful kid. We just have to produce for him.”

    Meredith understands the challenge, “It’s an uphill battle with seven games to go. We realize what a big challenge it is, and we’re ready to get into the challenge.”

    Fredonia risks missing the playoffs for the first time in a long while. Its first conference weekend of the second half, they host Brockport and Geneseo. The outcome of that weekend will go a long way in determining whether the Blue Devils are going to see any second season action.

    Right now, that is the only goal Meredith is looking at. “We know it is going to be tough enough to get into the playoffs. If we shoot for that goal, others will fall into place as they come.”

    The real goals Fredonia needs are the ones where the puck goes into the net.

    Adjusting Goals

    What do you do when you are winless in league play and only 2-13-0 overall like Brockport? You adjust your goals.

    “At the beginning, we set a goal to go 6-8 in SUNYAC,” coach Brian Dickinson said. “We’ve adjusted that to play one at a time, win as many games as you can, and see where that places us at the end.”

    On the ice, Dickinson hopes to, “tighten up defensively, and score more than two goals a game.”

    Brockport took a step towards that by picking up a three transfers and putting them all on the same line. Twins Paul and Peter Stasko came over from Geneseo, and Ron Lien transferred in from New England College. By the second game, Lien had a goal in a 5-1 victory over Framingham State, and in their third game together, Lien scored another with both Staskos getting the assists, and then assisted on a Paul Stasko goal in a 4-3 loss to Lebanon Valley.

    Dickinson says of the three, “They play hard, are smart, and picked up the system really well.”

    Brockport has been getting a lot of shots off, but just haven’t been scoring. In just the three games of the new year, they outshot Fitchburg State, 38-26, and lost 6-2, outshot Framingham State, 54-24 in the win, and outshot Lebanon Valley, 33-29, in the loss.

    Leading the scoring is senior Darren Kennedy with seven goals (six of them in conference play) and six assists.

    Brockport is going to have to get used to busses, as its next seven games are on the road (in fact, its first ten games of 2002 are away) including the next three league games. Brockport finally returns home for the final three games of the season.

    However, Brockport is not deterred.

    “The kids are encouraged,” Dickinson says. “We haven’t lost anybody, mentally. They still believe.”

    The Battle of the Ryans

    For the 1999-2000 season, a new goalie came to Potsdam. His name was Ryan Thomson, and he did quite well. However, he decided to transfer to New England College for the following year.

    In came another new goalie for Potsdam for the 2000-2001 season. His name was Ryan Venturelli, and he too did quite well.

    Wouldn’t you know it, the two teams met in the New England College Holiday Classic championship game that year, but Potsdam’s Ryan didn’t play. NEC’s Ryan did, and he beat his old teammates, 3-1.

    By the end of that year, Ryan led New England College to an ECAC East tournament victory and into the NCAA playoffs. Meanwhile, Ryan led Potsdam to within one game of the SUNYAC playoff title and just missed out on an at-large bid, partly due to that loss to Ryan.

    For the 2001-2 season, both Ryans stayed put. Both teams once again met in the New England College Holiday Classic championship game before New Years thanks to New England College beating Southern New Hampshire University, 11-4, and Potsdam downing Southern Maine, 3-2, on a power-play goal by Anthony Greer and two third-period goals by Jeff Milroy, and then holding off the Huskies after they scored two late goals.

    So, the two Ryans finally faced each other. Ryan beat Ryan, 2-1. That is Thomson beat Venturelli. Potsdam’s lone goal was scored by Nik Andrews in the second period after New England College scored twice in the first. The winning Ryan made 35 saves while the losing Ryan made 28.

    Stay tuned next year to see whether there is another Battle of the Ryans.

    Changing of the Guard?

    True, Plattsburgh is having a fine season. However, whenever they have been tested, they have not performed as well as one would expect from the defending national champion. They lost to Middlebury, back in November they had a three game losing streak to Elmira, Norwich, and Potsdam, and even when they have won, they sometimes struggled like against Geneseo and Potsdam in December.

    So, when a rematch came up against Norwich, the Cardinals figured this was a chance to prove they are still the defending national champions, and deserve respect.

    For a while, it appeared that the Cardinals were going to teach the Cadets a lesson on who is still King of the Hill, as Plattsburgh jumped out to a 3-1 lead in the second period after letting up the first goal. Jason Kilcan, Guy Come, and Brendon Hodge scored the goals.

    However, Plattsburgh wasn’t able to hold on, and it was Norwich that taught the final lesson, scoring four unanswered goals en route to a 5-3 victory. To add insult to injury, Plattsburgh was outshot 36-15.

    The Cardinals now have some soul-searching to do as they regroup and try to regain their spot as the most-feared team in the nation.

    Next Time

    Ed will be back. I’ll return to hibernating. And we’ll see how well I did on predicting winners based on whether Ed counts my results in his overall record.

    Meanwhile, on the ice, there will be a slew of nonconference games to keep Ed’s keyboard busy.

    My Rant

    If my good friend Chris Lerch can put unrelated rants in his Division III column, why can’t I?

    Actually, I can’t, because my rant would take up the whole column, and that would be kind of silly.

    So, I’ll just provide the conclusion. If you ever fly Delta, don’t ever check any baggage. Coming or going. It doesn’t matter. Trust me on this one.

    SUNYAC Trivia

    Last Week’s Question

    Who is the only SUNYAC coach ever to win coach of the year in two consecutive seasons?

    I thought Ed was a nice guy. Looks like I was wrong. Ed ends up asking a question that cannot be answered, and then high-tails it out of town.

    You see, there were two coaches who won back-to-back SUNYAC Coach of the Year titles, and that occurred in the first four years of the award. John Horan of Potsdam won the award in 1983 and 1984. The following two years, Paul Duffy from Geneseo took the honor, though he shared it with Horan in the latter year.

    So, let’s get back at Ed. Usually, only longtime Plattsburgh fans know the answer to both parts of this week’s trivia question. Why don’t we keep it to ourselves, and not tell Ed. Then, when he is putting next week’s column together, and I leave town, we can enjoy watching his brow bead up with sweat.

    This Week’s Question

    While we are on the subject of coaches, what NHL Hall of Famer and Stanley Cup champion, as a player and coach, was an assistant coach for Plattsburgh? For a bonus, when?

    Game of the Week

    Despite a great lineup of games on January 15, this is an easy choice. It’s Saturday’s contest between Plattsburgh and Elmira in the Thunderdome.

    One of the great Division III rivalries, these two proud programs square off in a game where both teams are looking to make a statement.

    Plattsburgh just lost to Norwich for the second time in a row, and along with a loss to Middlebury and Elmira earlier in the season, are looking to reestablish themselves. More importantly, looking to show they can win when put to the test. What better way to do that than with a win against Elmira?

    Meanwhile, Elmira was completely embarrassed last Sunday in a 6-3 loss at the hands of Lebanon Valley, but bounced back with an 11-0 wipeout over Geneseo. That left Elmira with just four wins in the past nine games. What better way to make up for that than a win against Plattsburgh?

    Yep, this is a matchup you don’t want to miss.

    This Week in the ECAC: Jan. 10, 2002

    With a full slate of ECAC games on the schedule this weekend, the Iron Columnists are back. Our brief sojourn during the holiday season has really gotten the juices flowing — and why not?

    This time of year is arguably the most exciting for ECAC fans. They have watched their teams get a taste of league action, while fine-tuning (or not) their play against a wide range of nonconference opponents.

    Debate rages on how this league fares against others, but that’s not what we are here to focus on this week. Regardless of what the talk may be about at-large bids and PairWise Rankings, the ECAC has a national tournament bid up for grabs and as always, the race will be tight heading down the stretch. Here’s where they stand now, and what we see as the major factors heading into March.

    Harvard (7-2-2) With seven league wins and 16 total points already, the Crimson is well ahead of the pack. Per usual, the team has as few as one and as many as six games on its opponents. Factors that will surely affect the Crimson’s standing heading into March include: exam break, the Beanpot and a brutal second-half schedule.

    Yale (4-4-2) Another team that has games on the rest of the league, the Bulldogs have looked good thus far. Aside from a disappointing stretch of nonleague games, the team will benefit from the return of Chris Higgins. Endurance and injury-free play are paramount to any success.

    Cornell (4-1-1) One of the most dangerous teams in the league, the Big Red has yet to play its best hockey. With a full complement of ECAC games remaining on its schedule and Matt Underhill beginning to take on a more dominant role, expect Cornell to inch its way to the top of the standings.

    Dartmouth (4-2-1) The revolving door in net will determine the Big Green’s future. With seven points amassed already, Dartmouth is still very much in the hunt.

    Princeton (4-6-0) Some have said that the Tigers have already overachieved this season. With four wins already, the Tigers are unpredictable. A team that can get blown out one night and then win the next will cause some ripples for the top contenders.

    Clarkson (3-0-2) The only ECAC team without a league loss, the Golden Knights are beginning to show signs of strength. Impressive offensive performances against New Hampshire and Mercyhurst lead us to believe that it’s only a matter of time before Clarkson surges to the top.

    Brown (3-5-2) Three early league victories have helped the Bears’ cause, but it may prove to be a long last half of the season. The team will hit the road for its three longest and hardest road trips of the year.

    Rensselaer (2-3-2) Is Matt Murley healthy and ready to lead this team? That may be the determining factor for the Engineers, who are desperately seeking to emerge from the midsection of the league — a place they are not used to being.

    Vermont (2-3-1) The good news is that the team’s only two wins this season have come against league opponents. The Catamounts need to find a spark — someplace, anyplace — or it will be a hard-battle for the final playoff spot.

    Union (2-4-1) This isn’t your father’s Union team. This Dutchman squad is younger, faster and better. Now, gelling for the second half is what is the key. They’ve shown a good promise with wins over Brown and Northeastern and a tough one-goal loss to Harvard this second half already.

    Colgate (2-4-0) The Raiders are trying to put it together, and there really is nowhere to go but up right now. A young team hopes that the first half of the season has put it in a good position for the second half.

    St. Lawrence (1-4-0) This team will not hold last place for very long. A true work in progress, the Saints have worked out some of the kinks and (luckily for them) still have 17 league games to inch their way out of the league cellar.

    As we head into the final half, the stage is set for another down-to-the-wire battle. Jockeying for playoff position will be the name of the game once again for the ECAC. And if the Iron Columnists had to put their money where their pens were … well, we’ll just keep you in suspense for a little longer.

    In the meanwhile, here is what’s on tap for this weekend — the first full weekend of ECAC action since mid-November.

    All In The Name

    Call them cardiac kids. Call them lucky. Call them whatever you want, but the bottom line is that Harvard is well ahead of the pack in the league with 16 points and seven wins. A sweep of Rensselaer and Union last weekend gave the team a much-needed boost heading into this weekend’s series against Princeton and Yale — the final ECAC weekend before exam break.

    Most significant is the fact that Harvard has continually battled back from early deficits. Beginning with two last-second thrillers against St. Lawrence and Clarkson earlier this season, the Crimson has demonstrated the poise of seasoned competitor.

    “We’ve shown a good ability that we can come from behind and get victories,” said Harvard head coach Mark Mazzoleni, whose team rebounded once again from early-game deficits for victories against Union and RPI last weekend. “We’ve playing hard and we’re sticking to our systems.

    “In Denver, we were down; we didn’t press and we didn’t get flustered, which is a sign of maturation. We’re doing a good job getting after the puck and then shutting down their options.”

    How long this team can battle back is the real question. Although situations like that create a sense of confidence through the ranks, there are only so many games that can be won in that fashion. It also becomes more difficult to find that last bit of strength as the season wears on.

    The best news for Harvard is the emergence of its second and third lines. The Tyler Kolarik-Dom Moore-Rob Freid trio is one of the most potent and dangerous lines in the league, but the Crimson is beginning to show depth with strong performances from guys like Brett Nowak and Dennis Packard — two players who have already surpassed their point totals from last year — and freshman Tom Cavanaugh, who notched two goals against RPI on Saturday night.

    “We thought we got a good player when he came,” said Mazzoleni of Cavanaugh. “His game is coming into form and he’s got great skill.”

    “We’re starting to get a chemistry with three lines,” Mazzoleni continued. “We’ve got three lines that are working on the road. That Cavanaugh line [which also features last year’s ECAC Rookie of the Year Tim Pettit] can go out there and neutralize while the first two lines can generate the offense.”

    Although the success of the first half of the season is impressive, it was also desperately necessary for the Crimson. Following the disruption caused by exams and the Beanpot, Harvard will jump into the toughest part of its season with two road trips up north and one to Princeton and Yale — traditionally a tough set of games for the team from Cambridge.

    Speaking of Harvard’s two Ivy League rivals, the most highly-anticipated game of the weekend is surely the Crimson’s battle with Yale set for Saturday night. The Bulldogs are welcoming (with open arms) the return of freshman Chris Higgins who returns to the Yale lineup after flying across seas to compete with the U.S. World Junior team.

    After turning heads in the ECAC during the first half of the season, Higgins did much the same abroad. The leading candidate for ECAC Rookie of the Year netted the game-winning goal in overtime in the fifth-place game against Sweden, led the U.S. team with four goals and six points and was named one of the top three U.S. players in the tournament.

    In addition to Higgins’ return, Yale has a bit of momentum coming into this game, competing in a tough battle with New Hampshire and then Boston College. Following the 5-3 loss to the Wildcats, Yale head coach Tim Taylor was able to take away at least one positive.

    “I thought we played hard. One of the things we’ve really tried to work on is to have a 60-minute effort. We got that,” said Taylor, who was able to put Higgins’ absence in perspective. “It’s a big loss. He’s our [UNH star Darren] Haydar out there, especially on the power play. But I do think it’s a great honor to have him playing for the U.S. team.”

    One interesting note: Harvard owns a 20-1-3 mark against the Elis at the Bright Hockey Center since it opened in the 1979-80 season. The lone Bulldog victory came back in the 1997-98 season, 3-1, the year the Eli won the ECAC regular-season title.

    Facing Princeton will also be an interesting experience for the Crimson. On Friday night, the Princeton Tigers enter Bright Hockey Center for their first tilt of the season. Princeton is coming off a weekend split with Bowling Green, a contest which saw the Tigers end a frustrating 0-for-14 stint on the power play. Freshman netminder Trevor Clay stopped a game-high 33 shots in the second contest, but it was not enough for the victory.

    “Trevor gave us a great effort and stopped a number of point-blank shots,” said Quesnelle. “We didn’t execute the little things that are necessary to win close games.”

    A key to this contest will no doubt be special teams. While Princeton has struggled on its power play and after giving up three power-play goals to Bowling Green last weekend, the team will have to find a way to contain Harvard’s special team’s unit, especially its shorthanded unit which is the best in the league at this point.

    Another factor this weekend will be the propensity for both Harvard and Brown to play better in their own rinks. After managing just one point last weekend, the Bears are itching to turn things around.

    “The fact that we’re in a decent spot is good,” said Brown head coach Roger Grillo. “These next games for us are critical because we get out of the league before we hit the stretch run. I’m somewhat pleased and I like our team, I like our attitude and I like our character. We just have to tighten things up a little bit.”

    Yann Danis has been the starter for Brown since relieving starter Brian Eklund during the disastrous third period against New Hampshire two weeks ago. Danis looked solid against Union and RPI, collecting 63 saves in the two games.

    “Danis has been playing some good hockey for us and I have no complaints about our goaltending right now,” said Grillo. “We’re playing much better hockey at this early past of the season since I have been at Brown. The hard part is that people don’t realize that because we’re an Ivy school we get the late start and with Harvard and their exams, we play 11 league games right up front. We don’t have a lot of time to screw around and see what’s what. Sometimes it takes us half those games to figure out if we have a freshman that’s pretty good or if we have a goaltender that’s hot, you can’t fool around with that because you’re in league play.”

    Buckle Down In Central N.Y.

    Colgate has had a tough first half, but head into league play for the rest of the season with a stirring comeback overtime win over Iona last Sunday. With the new season, head coach Don Vaughan has tried to take a different tact to bring his team together.

    “We tried to be a little more aggressive,” he said. “Earlier on the season we were playing a little more conservatively. Tonight, we tried to go up-tempo and tried to go aggressive on the forecheck. We’re trying to get some confidence in some guys and I think the only way to do it is to let the reins off at times.”

    It didn’t seem to work at the beginning of games against UMass-Lowell and Iona, as the Raiders fell behind early in each, but came back at the end of each game, making a run at the River Hawks, and defeating the Gaels.

    “We’re a young team. When you get behind, especially like we have this year, there is a tendency for them to let down a little bit,” said Vaughan. “Our older guys took over the locker room in between the second and third periods.”

    Meanwhile, Cornell had a strong first half, but went down to Florida and lost in double overtime to Northern Michigan and then dropped a game to Ohio State.

    “It was our worst performance of the year,” said Schafer of the 2-0 loss to Ohio State. “And it will be our last bad performance of the year.

    “The first game was an excellent college hockey game. And then having to play two overtime games and coming back the next day was just something we weren’t up to.”

    Two weeks have elapsed since the Everblades College Hockey Classic, and that is good, according to Schafer.

    “This break was like a little mini-training camp for us in getting back to the basics, which is something that we did very, very well in the first half of the season,” he said. “We don’t have room for another bad game from here until the end of the season.”

    If it’s any indication, there haven’t been many bad games for the Big Red. In fact, through 13 games this year, the team has allowed only 24 goals.

    “Getting through the nonconference part of our schedule with a lot of the better teams in the country and being where we are, I think we have a chance to better those numbers,” said Schafer. “It’s always been a staple of ours, we have to play great defensively through the rest of the season. Both our goaltenders are playing very well as are our special teams, but all those things need to continue to keep happening for us to keep the goals down, but again we need to fill the net. You only win by scoring goals.

    “We’re fine tuning things right now and we’re physically in good shape, so we look at this weekend as a gauge to see how the second half is going to go.”

    Dartmouth is a hard team to figure out at times. A solid win over Vermont last weekend propels them into the rest of the season, but the rest of the season is not what is on the mind of head coach Bob Gaudet.

    “Each night, we’re just trying to establish dominance that night,” he said. “We can’t look at an 11- or 12-game stretch. We just need to get the job done, shift in and shift out, and the rest will take care of itself.”

    After the win over Vermont, the Big Green lost in Portland to Maine, and there, it was a little bit of a struggle, mainly because of injuries and other factors. Pete Summerfelt has been playing with a bad ankle, Dan Casella is hurting with a shoulder injury and Kent Gillings came down with food poisoning. Add that to Craig Lund and Halsey Coughlin leaving the Big Green, and it was a rough weekend.

    “I like the fact that we’re able to compete with different guys coming into the lineup,” Gaudet said after the Maine game. “It gives the players some valuable experience. Later on when we get healthy, it’s going to be the guys who compete the hardest who get their chance to play.

    “Our kids played a pretty solid game considering who we have out of the lineup. I think it speaks to our depth that different guys can step in and make a real impact.”

    Vermont is another team that is hard to figure out, but in the ECAC, that seems to be the norm. The Cats are happy that league play is all that is left, as the only two Catamount victories this season have come over ECAC opponents. The nonleague schedule was really not kind to the Cats, as they did not win a single game out of conference.

    Vermont was doing well against Dartmouth last weekend, but in the third period, the game slipped away, as Dartmouth broke the tie and went on to handily take down the Cats.

    “It looked like the team of the last couple of months after that goal,” said UVM head coach Mike Gilligan. “That goal is the one that really slowed us down, and I think they started gaining momentum.”

    The Cats need to get momentum of their own going as they have only league games left, and room to catch up. If they are going to do so, it has to start this weekend in Central N.Y.

    North Country Battles

    The only unbeaten team in ECAC league play is Clarkson, which has some catching up to do. The Golden Knights have only played five of 22 league games, and this is the start of an important stretch as they host Rensselaer and Union.

    Many people talk about games in hand, and this is it for the Knights. It’s league play from here on in and it starts at home and a good weekend is important for the Knights to start off the second half of the season.

    “We are playing two very good hockey teams,” said head coach Mark Morris. “RPI is noted for their top end skill players, guys like Murley and Cavosie and strong goaltenders in Marsters and Kurk. Year in and year out it is a great rivalry.

    “Union is playing very well this year. Right from the outset they proved they were going to be contenders by sweeping Notre Dame on the road and they carried through with real solid play throughout the first half. Year in and year out they are one of the grittier teams that we play. Kevin Sneddon and his staff have added a few skill guys to help their specialty teams. I think they are an underrated team. They are definitely a dangerous team. We will have to be playing our ‘A’ game to come out on top this weekend.”

    St. Lawrence is back in action after a 27-day layoff, not having played since getting swept by North Dakota at Appleton. The Saints had a long time to think about seven straight losses and the 3-12-0 mark they hold coming into this game.

    “Time off is the best thing that could happen right now,” said Saint head coach Joe Marsh. “The guys can get some rest and take their minds off hockey for a bit. Some of them are battling bumps and bruises and those will have time to heal.”

    The Saints are also in the position of only playing five ECAC games, and with 17 to go, this is where things start. Last season the Saints were 3-7-3 heading into the second half and went 17-6-1 the rest of the way.

    So a precedent has been set, but it will still be tough.

    “It was a frustrating first half, but we aren’t going to blame anyone and we aren’t going to make any excuses,” said Marsh. “This is a great group of guys and I really like their attitude, chemistry and work ethic. We are in every game, but we have to find a way to take the next step and finish some of them off. I think I lead the league in team meetings so far this year, but talking isn’t the answer … we’ve got to find a way to get it done.

    “There is a fine line between winning and losing and whatever ‘it’ is that gets us going isn’t going to come all at once. We’re seeing some progress in a lot of areas, and I think we will continue to see that. We’ll get back at it in early January, have a little fun and see if we can get on the track we want to be on.”

    The Dutchmen of Union are coming off a split last weekend, dropping a game to Harvard, but defeating Brown to come away with two points.

    “I think that it was a fantastic weekend,” said head coach Kevin Sneddon. “I’m not looking at the points, I’m looking at how the team is developing. The kind of way we played with the discipline is getting us ready for the next month of hockey.

    “We’ve played some pretty good hockey since the break and I really like our team.”

    The Dutchmen will visit the site of their last two playoffs exits this Friday, as they take on the Saints in Canton.

    “We have the utmost respect for St. Lawrence,” said Sneddon. “They’ve handed it to us in recent years in the playoffs and the regular season. We’re certainly focusing on them since we play them first, but then we play a really hot Clarkson team. It’s a great opportunity for our kids to see how we’ll head into the rest of the season.”

    Rensselaer took one point last weekend in a 2-2 tie with Brown, and it was a disappointing weekend, but also good in that Matt Murley returned after a month long absence due to mononucleosis.

    The Engineers head on the road and know that this is an important weekend in the North Country.

    “We just have to realize that these games on the road become more important,” said head coach Dan Fridgen after the loss to Harvard. “We have to take care of the things right now that keep us from winning these games and turnovers are one of them.

    “If we stick to our game plan and keep turnovers down, we’ll be okay.”

    If It’s So Easy, You Try It

    The Iron Columnists are back. And this week, we decided to take on a duo who think they can take down the Iron Columnists. Ha! So, John Beaber and Lisa McGill, bring your skills to the chopping block!

    The competition thus far:

    Vic Brzozowksi t. The Iron Columnists — 7-2-1
    The Iron Columnists d. Vic Brzozowksi8-3-1 to 7-4-1
    Ben Flickinger d. The Iron Columnists — 11-4-2 to 10-5-2
    The Iron Columnists d. Ben Flickinger5-1-4 to 4-2-4

    John and Lisa, bring your finest prognostication skills to USCHO Stadium and let’s see what you have. How will the Iron Columnists defend? Whose picks will reign supreme?

    The Picks

    Friday, Jan. 11

    Yale at Brown
    John and Lisa’s Pick — It’s a better Brown, but it is still Brown… Yale 4, Brown 2
    Becky and JaysonYale 5, Brown 2

    Princeton at Harvard
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Painful to admit, but Harvard takes this one. Harvard 4, Princeton 1
    Becky and JaysonHarvard 4, Princeton 2

    Vermont at Cornell
    John and Lisa’s Pick — The Big Red continue to dominate at home. Cornell 5, Vermont 2
    Becky and JaysonCornell 5, Vermont 1

    Dartmouth at Colgate
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Colgate wants Weder back. Dartmouth 5, Colgate 3
    Becky and JaysonDartmouth 6, Colgate 2

    Rensselaer at Clarkson
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Clarkson handles RPI at home. Clarkson 3, Rensselaer 2
    Becky and JaysonClarkson 4, Rensselaer 3

    Union at St. Lawrence
    John and Lisa’s Pick — The Dutchmen steal two. Union 3, St. Lawrence 1
    Becky and JaysonSt. Lawrence 4, Union 2

    Saturday, Jan. 12

    Yale at Harvard
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Some revenge for The Game. Yale 2, Harvard 2, ot
    Becky and JaysonHarvard 4, Yale 3

    Princeton at Brown
    John and Lisa’s Pick — A rare bone for the Brown fans. Brown 3, Princeton 2
    Becky and JaysonBrown 5, Princeton 3

    Vermont at Colgate
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Vermont and Colgate come away from the weekend with one point. Vermont 3, Colgate 3, ot
    Becky and JaysonVermont 3, Colgate 1

    Dartmouth at Cornell
    John and Lisa’s Pick — A four-point weekend for the Lynah Faithful. Cornell 3, Dartmouth 2
    Becky and JaysonCornell 2, Dartmouth 1

    Rensselaer at St. Lawrence
    John and Lisa’s Pick — RPI gets two points on the road. Rensselaer 3, St. Lawrence 2
    Becky and JaysonRensselaer 3, St. Lawrence 2

    Union at Clarkson
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Clarkson dominates the teams from the Capital District. Clarkson 4, Union 2
    Becky and JaysonUnion 3, Clarkson 1

    Wednesday, Jan. 16

    Rensselaer at Union
    John and Lisa’s Pick — Tough to call; therefore, we won’t. Rensselaer 2, Union 2, ot
    Becky and JaysonUnion 3, Rensselaer 1

    And remember that if you are interested in putting your money where your mouth is, drop us an email to be eligible when John and Lisa bite the dust.


    Anthony Mastantuoni contributed to this column this week.

    This Week in Hockey East: Jan. 10, 2002

    Eagles Rising

    It has slipped in under the radar because of their slow start, but the Boston College Eagles have been one of the hottest teams around of late.

    In their last 13 games, they’ve posted a 10-2-1 record with one loss coming to UNH in a game BC dominated in the third period and overtime. The other blemishes — the remaining loss and tie — both came in a trip to Alfond Arena, a familiar Waterloo for Hockey East teams.

    What’s more, this is a very young team. Its roster is dominated by freshmen and sophomores.

    “We’re just maturing as a team,” says BC coach Jerry York, whose team has risen to number 10 in the polls. “You’ve got to make mistakes and then learn from your mistakes. With our [freshmen], this is their first step up into this level of competition. Plus we have a lot of players who played last year who are almost in different roles this year.

    “So I thought early we had a lot of effort and enthusiasm, but we weren’t nearly the hockey team we are now. We’ve just learned from mistakes and gotten better as the season has progressed.”

    One Eagle weakness typical of young teams is an inconsistently applied killer instinct. On Monday night, they grabbed a 2-0 lead just 1:24 into the game and later in the first period bumped that advantage to 3-0. They couldn’t put UMass away, however, and eventually had to go to overtime to pull off the win.

    A quick lead followed by a letdown had happened one week earlier to the Eagles in the Silverado Shootout Championship against Minnesota-Duluth.

    “Out in Minnesota, the same thing happened to us,” says senior captain Jeff Giuliano. “We ended up winning, 5-1, but we got outshot, [28-6], in the second period. We’re a young team and we just want to learn from our mistakes.”

    It’s a lesson that the Eagles haven’t completely mastered yet, but haven’t had to pay for either since they’ve pulled out the win each time.

    “Hockey East games are never easy,” says York. “The older guys had to bring that up. … They aren’t going to be easy. Teams aren’t going to quit in our league.

    “But that’s the tendency you fight. You score early and [think], ‘Hey, this is going to be point night.’ But we have too much respect for our league members to [think that].

    “Then [UMass] fought back. I wasn’t surprised by it.”

    A recent BC strength has been the goaltending, a concern going into the season following the graduation of ironman dufflebag Scott Clemmensen. Freshman Matti Kaltiainen stopped all but one of 51 shots against Minnesota-Duluth two weeks ago, earning league honors. Tim Kelleher has rebounded from a slow start to allow only five goals total in his last five games.

    A major concern, however, is the health of Ben Eaves, who has been in and out of the lineup and reinjured himself while participating in the World Junior Championships. On a team of such youth and more limited scoring depth than has been seen in recent years on the Heights, Eaves is a go-to player that the Eagles cannot afford to be without long-term.

    “We’re anxiously waiting for him to get back, but we have to make sure that this thing gets healed,” says York. “We’ve had some top specialists in Boston looking at him.

    “We’d like to get Ben back; we just don’t know when. I don’t know if it’s three or four weeks or [more or less].

    “If we can keep our [heads] above water until he returns, then we become a much different club. Even though we’re playing pretty well [now], he’s a [key] guy.”

    Especially with Eaves out of the lineup, BC’s hot streak will be tested this weekend when it plays a home-and-home series against fifth-ranked UMass-Lowell. The River Hawks invaded Kelley Rink earlier this year and put a 7-2 hurting on the hosts.

    “This is a pretty good matchup,” says York. “Lowell spanked us pretty good that first game. They’ve had a terrific year.

    “Their goaltending has been exceptional right from the get-go. They’re a poised, experienced team. It seems like they’re physically strong, which comes with a bigger, more mature team.

    “It’s a great credit to [coach] Blaise [MacDonald] because they lost [All-American Ron] Hainsey, but they’re legitimately one of the top two or three teams in the country.”

    While the two teams make for a matchup of contrasts between BC’s youth and Lowell’s maturity, they also share some notable factors. Both struggled last weekend against teams at the bottom of the standings, the Eagles needing overtime to defeat UMass-Amherst, 4-3, while the River Hawks had to settle for a tie with Merrimack, 2-2. Additionally, they both are expected to be without a marquee forward, Eaves for BC and Laurent Meunier for Lowell.

    “They have an extremely high skill level,” says UML coach Blaise MacDonald. “They have some terrific, terrific highly-skilled players, almost world-class type of players. So it’s going to be tough. Those are going to be two very challenging games for us.

    “We’ve played good teams in the past, including them, and we’ve had success [but] we’re going to have to contain them offensively. We’re going to create all of our offense off of our defense in this series.

    “We need to do a very good job on our transition defense, making sure we pick people up and make sure we don’t give them any three-on-twos or two-on-ones. Then in our D-zone coverage, we’re going to have to get into people early, mark our guys — find our guys and get into them — and also be very aware on the weak side for defensemen closing and creating offense on the weak side.

    “It’s going to be a huge, huge series for us and create many, many opportunities to challenge ourselves.”

    Worth the Wait

    For three-plus years, Merrimack goaltender Jason Wolfe had seen only occasional mop-up duty as the payoff for his hard work in practices. Mop-up duty such as coming in last Saturday against UNH for the final 20 minutes of a humiliating 10-1 loss.

    In a society dominated by instant gratification, Wolfe showed the patience of the Biblical Job and was finally rewarded with a start on Tuesday night. Rewarded might have been considered a curious choice of words for many, since the Warriors didn’t seem likely to put up much of a fight against the fifth-ranked River Hawks after their team defense had been turned into mincemeat by UNH.

    “Why not?” asked Merrimack interim head coach Mike Doneghey after the game. “What did we have to lose? We played the number four team and we lost, 10-1, with our starting goalie and him — they both played. What did we have to lose?

    “You’ve got to reward guys who work hard. Every day at practice, he’s out early on the ice with me and Joey [Exter]. He works hard and warranted a start.”

    What did they have to lose? As it turned out, nothing. While giving a senior goaltender his first career start doesn’t rank high on the list of conventional solutions for rebounding from a brutal game, Wolfe’s inaugural performance proved to be an eye-opener.

    Facing not only Lowell, but also Cam McCormick — its goaltender who has statistically been head and shoulders above every other netminder in the country — Wolfe and the Warriors battled their highly-regarded counterparts to a 2-2 tie.

    “It was just a real good feeling for me,” said Wolfe. “I waited a long time to actually get a chance to show my stuff. We’ve had a lot of great goalies here and I never had the chance to start a game so it feels good to finally get a chance to get in there and help the team.

    “They played a great game in front of me. I give a lot of credit to them.”

    Although no one likes riding the pine, Wolfe had maintained a positive work ethic while watching first Cris Classen and Tom Welby ahead of him on the depth chart and then more recently Joe Exter.

    “It was actually harder for me my freshman year, I think, than anything,” he said. “I think it’s hard for a lot of young players when they come in here because everyone who plays in this league [was] a star wherever they came from.

    “So you come in and you want to take on the world when you don’t necessarily get that chance right away. That was hard for me then.

    “After a while, I realized what role I was in. I just tried to make the best of it and play as well as I could to show them that I could compete at this level and contribute.”

    Although it wouldn’t be a shock to see Wolfe back in the nets for the back end of Merrimack’s home-and-home series with UMass-Amherst this weekend, Doneghey had made it clear Exter would get the start on Friday.

    “That’s fine with me,” said Wolfe. “[Coach] makes all the decisions. When I’m put in that situation, I just try to make the best of it.

    “Joey, in my mind, is still our number one goalie. He has been the whole year and will probably continue to be. I actually expected that no matter how well or poorly I played.”

    The Agony Of Defeat

    UMass-Amherst has certainly had to swallow some tough pills lately. Although the Minutemen have won some recent nonconference games, they’ve lost their last seven to league foes, all of which are teams in the Top 15.

    Two agonizing losses in the stretch stand out. The final game before the holiday break came at BU where UMass took the game into overtime and even saw Greg Mauldin’s shot carom off the crossbar before going down to defeat.

    Coach Don “Toot” Cahoon was asked if his players were beginning to wonder just what they had to do to win. Cahoon minced no words with his response.

    “If I understood what was going through the minds of my players, I’d be an absolute genius,” he said. “I’m trying to have some effect on what’s going through their minds.

    “To varying degrees, I might be successful; I don’t know. That remains to be seen. But I’m going out of my friggin’ mind right now.”

    It didn’t get any easier to take on Monday night when UMass fell to BC, also in overtime. The Minutemen fell behind in the first period, 3-0, rallied to send the game into overtime, only to lose in the extra session.

    Cahoon had to call his timeout just 1:24 into the game to calm freshman goaltender Tim Warner’s nerves after he’d allowed two quick goals.

    “I told him,” said Cahoon, “by the time he gets back into that faceoff circle — halfway back to the net — he’s got to forget about everything that has happened up to this point in time and just play from here on in and not get caught up with what has happened. Because if he started to panic over that, the floodgates would have opened.

    “I thought, quite frankly, that aside from those first couple shots, he played quite well afterwards. He made some great saves when we still weren’t playing well and gave us enough of a chance so that Timmy [Turner, who scored two goals,] and the rest of the gang could get back into it again and get enough chances to give ourselves a shot at it.”

    Nonetheless, the performance out of the starting blocks resulted in a lost opportunity.

    “You can’t play the way we played in the first period and expect that you have much of a chance to win a game against a team of that caliber,” said Cahoon. “But despite our inabilities in the first period, we managed to dig a little deeper and play a lot harder and get ourselves back into the game. I commend the kids for that.

    “We unfortunately haven’t found a way to finish things off. Tonight, it would have been a good feeling to walk out of there with just a point knowing the way we started off. It would have been a step in the right direction.

    “No moral victory. We have to move on. They kids know how I feel about this. All I want them to do is compete every minute they’re on the ice. They only have so many opportunities to do that.”

    All that said, Cahoon is doing anything but attack his players.

    “I can’t question our guys’ desire to play,” he said. “They come to practice every day and pretty much give us what we ask them to give us. And they come to games and give us what they can a large majority of the time.

    “But what happens, I think, is against some of the top teams we sit around worrying about what’s going to happen and what the outcome is going to be. I refer to it as Fear of Failure and I think that’s a big waste of time.

    “That’s what I’m trying to get across to these guys. Once they put that aside [against BC] and just went out and played as hard as they could play, they found that they could get themselves back into the game.”

    Of course, it wouldn’t hurt if UMass got a propitious bounce here or there. A case in point came in overtime against BC when a nice setup to Tim Turner, who had already scored twice, fizzled out because the puck was on edge. Just 30 seconds later, BC got the game-winner.

    “We can’t get a lucky break,” said Cahoon. “You feel like you’re snakebitten, but you have to play through that stuff. We’ve got a ways to go before we overcome it.

    “We will. We’ll get to that point.”

    Pando On The Prowl

    When Mike Pandolfo scored twice on Friday night to lead the Terriers to a 3-2 win over Northeastern, it marked the 11th game of 17 in which he’d scored. The senior captain is running away with the Terrier goalscoring lead with 14.

    “He’s having a ball playing with the two freshmen [Brian McConnell and Justin Maiser],” said BU coach Jack Parker. “They’re really moving the puck and playing well. The puck is just going in the net for him. It’s not like he’s going rink-length and undressing people. He’s getting opportunities and he can really shoot a puck.

    “The thing that I’ve [noticed] this year about him is that he’s gotten much faster. His speed over the last two years has increased so much that now it’s opened up the rest of his game.

    “He’s a hard guy to handle because he’s so big and he can chase people down. He can get to pucks and he can beat people out wide. [Strength and Conditioning Coach] Mike Boyle has done a fabulous job making him faster.

    “It’s really paid off for him. His game has really blossomed that way.”

    A Loss, But No Panic

    After Friday night’s loss to Boston University, Northeastern coach Bruce Crowder was asked about the tough defeat given how desperate his team was for a win. Disagreeing with the word “desperate,” he remained optimistic.

    “Obviously you want the win,” he said, “but if the guys can give me what they gave me in this game over the next 17 games, I’m going to be pretty happy and we’re going to make some noise. The effort was there and the kids played well.”

    That optimism proved well-founded when the Huskies ventured into Walter Brown Arena two days later and came away with a 3-0 win.

    From The Agony To The (Sort Of) Ecstasy

    Merrimack’s defensive performance in its 10-1 blowout loss to UNH was about as bad as it can get, which makes the Warriors’ rebound performance to tie UMass-Lowell, 2-2, three days later all the more remarkable.

    “We had a little bit of a wounded dog we were facing tonight,” said UML coach Blaise MacDonald after the game. “We want and expect their best and I think we got that. Kudos to Merrimack and their coaching staff. I think they did a great job of creating a bounce-back atmosphere to get their team back on track.”

    The psychology of dealing with a devastating loss comes in two main forms: tell the team to forget about it or come close to rubbing its nose in it to make sure it never happens again. For the Warriors, the latter solution worked.

    “We talked about it quite frequently,” said interim head coach Mike Doneghey. “On the bus ride home, Sunday morning, Monday morning, Monday afternoon [and] today.

    “Guys came out with a little fire in their belly. They were a little embarrassed about what happened on Saturday night and wanted to show the league and the country that that’s not what our program is all about.”

    Quotes of Note

    UMass-Lowell coach Blaise MacDonald on his team’s 2-2 tie with Merrimack: “I liked our will. I liked our energy level. I liked our effort. I just didn’t like our execution. Why was that? I don’t know. We weren’t nervous. We weren’t jumpy. Perhaps it was just one of those games.”

    Merrimack goaltender Jason Wolfe on Lowell netminder Cam McCormick’s mind-blowing statistics this year: “I have a lot of respect for him. I can’t even imagine that kind of success. I’ve never even heard about somebody having a 0.62 goals against average.”

    Not Good News …

    Merrimack may be the most camera-shy team in Hockey East. In the Warriors’ two TV games, they have been outscored, 14-1. Those two losses — 4-0 to BU and 10-1 to UNH — account for almost two-thirds of their negative goal differential in league games.

    When UMass-Amherst faced off against St. Cloud, it had scored 41 goals on the season. St. Cloud had scored 43 power-play goals.

    Trivia Contest

    Last week’s question took one last stab at linguistics, asking for a translation of the cheer offered by Jussi Jalkanen (Samuli’s father):

    “Hakkaa päälle Suomen poika, ettei Ruotsi meitä voita!”

    There were more than a few tongue-in-cheek responses beginning with Greg Williams’guess of “Haydar wins the Hobey, UNH wins National Championship!” Ah, not exactly …

    Lynne Litton teased that the phrase translated to: “We’ve had enough linguistic trivia questions, don’t you think?” and grew nostalgic for a return to “regular questions that I can’t answer!”

    The actual translation is, roughly, “Finland hits hard and Sweden falls …” I should point out that yours truly is half-Swedish — the Hendriksons came over around 1890 — so I’ll dust myself off after that clean hip check from Jussi and remember his number for payback sometime.

    First to successfully translate the phrase was Christopher Mailloux, whose cheer is:

    “BU Hockey … Keeping the US Olympic Team stocked with talent for over 65 years and counting.”

    This week’s question concerns a Hockey East school that gained notoriety a few days ago involving the polls. (Hint: think beyond men’s hockey.) Email Dave Hendrickson with the school and what was so unique about its teams in the polls.


    Thanks to Scott Weighart.

    This Week in the ECAC West: Jan. 10, 2002

    It’s hard to believe that half of the season is already behind us, but the holidays marked the midpoint in the 2001-2002 campaign. This is a good point to reflect on the play of the ECAC West teams so far, and look ahead to how things are shaping up in the run to the playoffs.

    Elmira Soaring Eagles: ‘Soaring’ Only Against Ranked Teams

    Elmira was one of the enigmas of hockey during the first half. The Soaring Eagles started out on a 5-1 run, defeating Plattsburgh, St. Norbert, and Wisconsin-Stevens Point along the way. For those counting, that means Elmira defeated the No. 1, No. 2, and No. 6 teams at the time. Very impressive.

    However, Elmira’s record in the next nine games was a mediocre 4-5, all against unranked teams.

    The root of the Soaring Eagles up and down play seems to be mental. Some nights, the team is riding an emotional high, pumped up and ready to go. Other nights, nobody’s home. And sometimes, you can see those trends all in the same game.

    Take Elmira’s game two weeks ago against Gustavus Adolphus in the Johnson & Wales tournament. Elmira dominated the Gusties in the first period. But the second and third periods were a completely different game. The Soaring Eagles took a string of seven penalties to let the Gusties back in to the game, and then had another breakdown with 17 seconds to go when Gustavus scored the winning goal.

    That game summed up the first half of the season for Elmira pretty well.

    “I don’t know how we can get up for ranked teams, but not get up for non-ranked teams,” said Elmira coach Tim Ceglarski. “If I knew that, I would be working for NASA. Getting 26 players mentally prepared every day isn’t a science.”

    Elmira needs to solve the problem quickly if it hopes to stay in the NCAA playoff race. The Soaring Eagles took a step forward this week with an 11-0 shellacking of Geneseo on Tuesday.

    “We haven’t given up,” said Ceglarski. “We control our own destiny in a certain way. The key is to come mentally prepared to play every single game.”

    Elmira knows exactly what it needs to do to stay in the hunt for the NCAA bid: Beat RIT twice in the regular season and then again in the ECAC West playoffs, all while not losing games against other ECAC West opponents.

    Hobart Statesmen: Chemistry 101

    It has been all about team chemistry in the Hobart locker room this season. It is getting stronger day by day. The players are having fun, the coaches are having fun, and that is being converted in to results on the ice.

    “I’m having a blast,” said coach Mark Taylor. “Each player is getting better and even more important, each is growing as a teammate.”

    Hobart currently has a 6-9 record, several steps better than the 4-8-2 record it had at this same time last year. And even the losses show some hope, as Hobart has only been blown out once this season (a 7-1 loss to RIT early on).

    From a player perspective, one difference this year is freshman goaltender Adam Lavelle. The only time Lavelle hasn’t been in net for Hobart was when they pulled the goaltender at the end of several games. Lavelle has faced an average of over 37 shots per game, and earned a respectable .897 save percentage. Solid netminding gives Taylor a stable base to continue to build up the Statesmen team.

    Hobart added a new goaltender to the team over the break to back up Lavelle. John Czaplinksi played at Kimble Union Academy.

    Hobart is entering the toughest part of its schedule. January finds the Statesmen on the road for the entire month, playing eight games, including contests against the likes of Middlebury, Potsdam, Manhattanville, and RIT. Not an enviable schedule, but if the Statesmen can come out of that run even 4-4 it would set them up nicely for a stretch run.

    “Our team chemistry has to keep getting stronger,” said Taylor. “Playing so many top teams in the second half is going to test that.”

    Manhattanville Valiants: Continuing to Build

    Coach Keith Levinthal and his players continue to build the Manhattanville program. In only their third season, the Valiants went 6-4-2 during the first half.

    Even in the four losses, all but one was a close game that Manhattanville fought down to the end. The lone exception was the game at Potsdam that Manhattanville lost 6-2. The Valiants just didn’t show up to play that game, and it probably cost Manhattanville a spot in the national poll.

    “I am pretty happy about the first half,” said coach Keith Levinthal. “The only game we didn’t show up for was Potsdam. But all the rest I am very pleased with.”

    All signs point to a Manhattanville team that is on the edge of taking the next step in its development path. The Valiants have proven an ability to play with top ranked teams. However, through various mistakes or reasons they just haven’t been able to win those close games against upper echelon teams on a consistent basis.

    Take the two games between Manhattanville and RIT this season. In the first contest, the Valiants had RIT on the ropes leading 4-3 midway through the third period. However, a dumb penalty followed by a mental breakdown let RIT score two goals in the last minute and a half of the game to steal the win.

    The second game was just as close. Manhattanville had clawed back from a 3-2 deficit, with a goal early in the third period to make it 3-2 RIT leading. The Valiants were pouring on the pressure late, but just couldn’t find the back of the net, before RIT scored an almost-empty netter to seal the win.

    The ability to finish in the big games is an attribute that young teams struggle with, and champions have confidence in. That trait is about the only ingredient missing from Manhattanville, and once the Valiants find it they will truly be a dangerous team.

    Manhattanville lost one player over the holiday break, Scott Jensen. However, Shawn Brokop has joined the team.

    The second half of the Manhattanville schedule is significantly easier. The Valiants don’t face any teams that are currently ranked in the USCHO.com poll. The biggest challenge they will face is a pair of league contests against Elmira.

    If Manhattanville stays focused, it could easily win 11 or 12 of its 13 remaining games. And this would give them enormous confidence entering the playoffs.

    Neumann Knights: A Step Behind

    Coach Nick Russo’s comment — “I’m a little disappointed in wins and losses” — is probably an understatement. Neumann’s 2-11 record at the break is not what Russo was hoping for at this stage of its inaugural season in the league.

    Neumann has shown some positive signs in several of the losses, keeping the games close. The Valiants lost to Umass-Dartmouth by only a single goal, and to Fredonia by a 4-2 score.

    “Our biggest problem is that we are a step behind most of these teams,” said Russo. “The other weakness is our penalty kill. When we play shorthanded, we get killed.”

    Like most coaches in the league, Russo was on the road during the holidays recruiting for next year. Rumors abound, of course, but the word on the street is that there are several strong players headed to Neumann next fall who could have an immediate impact on the team.

    Unfortunately for Neumann, there is still half a season to go, and its schedule is tougher in the second half. In addition to the league schedule, Neumann has games scheduled against tough opponents like Lebanon Valley and Cortland.

    Bad news also struck the team over the holidays as first semester grades arrived. Five players got lower than required grades and won’t be dressing for games during the second semester. This list includes three of the top seven scorers from the team. Their loss certainly will not help the Knights put more goals on the scoreboard.

    To help fill some of the holes, Russo pulled in two recruits who will suit up for the Knights. Dave Doorman was originally recruited by Utica, but failed to make the team due to foot surgery. Doorman has now transferred to Utica. Scott Grable, a 6′ 200lb forward will also add some toughness to the Knight lineup.

    “We’re still in the situation where we can play well and maybe win a couple of league games during the second half,” said Russo.

    RIT Tigers: Clawing Along

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    The Tigers of RIT seem to have picked up this season where they left off last year. It is hard to find fault with a 13-1 record and the No. 2 ranking in the nation.

    Even with all that success, the most talked-about event of the first half for RIT was the team shenanigans during a trip to Wisconsin that caused a round of player suspensions. It was during these suspensions that RIT got the only blemish on its record to date, a 4-3 loss to Wentworth.

    For the first time in many years, it is the defense that is the strength of the RIT team. Two of the top five scorers on the team are blueliners, Jerry Galway (10-20-30) and Ryan Fairbarn (3-20-23).

    “I wasn’t quite sure about our team,” said coach Wayne Wilson. “We were trying to figure it out.”

    Whatever Wilson has been doing seems to be working as the Tigers currently hold first place in the league standings.

    Key contests for RIT during the second half revolve around the series with longtime rival Elmira. A home-and-home weekend series with Oswego will also be tough contests for the Tigers.

    “Our goal for the second half is to have a lot more structure,” said Wilson. “We need to forecheck aggressively, but still be in position defensively.”

    Utica Pioneers: Maturing

    Utica has seen a lot of success in the first half of its first season ever. The Pioneers have a 5-6-2 record, with wins over teams such as 2001 NCAA Quarterfinal participant Lebanon Valley and ECAC Northeast up and comer Johnson and Wales. Impressive results for a new team.

    “As a team, we’ve shown that we can play in the league,” said coach Gary Heenan. “But we have shown some immaturity and youth.”

    Utica lost one player over the break, sophomore forward Jeff Tittensor (6-2-8) who was fourth on the scoring chart.

    Heenan also hit the recruiting trail over the holidays. He is staying with the philosophy started this year of recruiting older player from the junior ranks as Utica looks to add maturity to the team.

    The second half will be just as tough as the first. Six league games remain, including a pair at Manhattanville. Plus Utica will face give Lebanon Valley a chance for revenge when the Pioneers travel to Pennsylvania at the end of January.

    “Our goal in the second half is still to make the playoffs,” said Heenan.

    Game of the Week

    Plattsburgh at Elmira is the rivalry of the week. Elmira traveled up to the North Country November 17 and stole a 2-1 victory. That started a 5-6 tailspin for the Cardinals that they have yet to recover from. You can bet that Plattsburgh is looking to return the favor at Elmira on Saturday. But Elmira has been strong this year against nationally ranked opponents, and Plattsburgh just happens to be ranked No. 7 in the latest poll.

    Emotional Sauer Announces His Retirement

    Jeff Sauer, his eyes glistening as much as the two national championship rings on his fingers, faced a group of reporters and his friends, assistants and players, took a deep breath and explained why he thought this was the time to announce his retirement.

    “I did talk to my dad last night, and he said this is a good thing,” the Wisconsin coach said, pausing in the middle to fight back tears, “so I feel very comfortable about it.”

    "Whether the impression is that I’m being shoved away and all that kind of stuff, I don’t look at it that way. I feel very confident in the fact that this is the right decision and it’s time to do that."

    — Jeff Sauer

    It comes as no surprise to anyone who knows Sauer that the legendary college hockey coach would turn to his father for advice. Ted Sauer passed away in the fall of 1998, but he helped his son through what had to be one of the toughest moments of his coaching career.

    Sauer said he is retiring as Wisconsin’s coach at the end of this season, ending a run that made him just as synonymous with the program as the legendary “Badger” Bob Johnson.

    When the end of the season rolls around, it will be a full 31 years as a head coach for Sauer, the last 20 in Madison.

    In those last 20 years, he has won two national championships, five WCHA playoff titles, made 12 NCAA tournament appearances, seen 17 players earn all-America honors and seen 27 of his players play in the NHL.

    “The bottom line is, from my standpoint, it’s time,” said Sauer, the fourth-winningest college hockey coach with 647 victories. “I really feel comfortable with the fact that it’s time. Whether the impression is that I’m being shoved away and all that kind of stuff, I don’t look at it that way. I feel very confident in the fact that this is the right decision and it’s time to do that. You can take that and run with it, whatever you want. From my perspective, I’m comfortable with this.”

    Word of Sauer’s retirement broke in Tuesday’s editions of the Wisconsin State Journal. Sauer was reportedly visibly upset when he arrived to the Kohl Center that morning for practice.

    He said even his family didn’t know he was considering retirement until he told them Monday night. He expressed anger at Wednesday’s news conference at the way things were handled.

    “I don’t think it was fair to me or my family the way this transpired,” said Sauer, who called the members of his coaching staff late Monday night to notify them of the events. “I thought I deserved better. That’s where I’m at with that.”

    He added: “The thing that disturbed me the most was that I was not able to — I was not asked the specific question with enough time to not have this come out. Let’s put it that way.”

    Sauer, 58, said his plan was to announce his retirement after the season, at the team’s banquet.

    Most of the Wisconsin players learned of the coach’s retirement by reading the newspaper.

    “The first thing I did to my team was apologize because my team found out about this in the newspaper, and that is not acceptable,” Sauer said.

    Wisconsin athletics director Pat Richter, with whom Sauer said he had talked about retirement for a year and a half, said it was time to move on after the news leaked.

    “We certainly can understand why Jeff is not happy about it,” said Richter, whose son Barry played for Sauer, “yet we’ve had a discussion since that time and I think once it happened there’s a certain feeling that we got it out and now we can go forward.”

    Sauer is expected to enter an administrative position in the athletics department after the end of the season.

    A 1965 graduate of Colorado College, Sauer started his head coaching career at his alma mater in 1971 after serving as an assistant to Bob Johnson at Wisconsin. He won the WCHA’s coach of the year award twice while at CC.

    In the summer of 1982, he took over for Johnson at Wisconsin. His 647-523-55 overall record includes a 481-297-44 mark with the Badgers.

    Sauer became emotional a handful of times during Wednesday’s news conference, including when talking about his players.

    “As I told my team the other day, the only reason I’ve done this is because of them,” Sauer said. “I try to be a role model of some kind. In some cases, they look at me as kind of up on a pedestal and they’re afraid to come and talk. But I think most of the people know that my door’s always open.”

    He added: “I just thank all the players [for] all the things that they have done for me, not only winning and losing and all that type of stuff, but just having a chance to be a part of their lives. I spent more time with them than I have with my own family in terms of growing up.”

    Sauer did have a list of regrets, also, though he said there weren’t many from his career.

    One was the 1992 NCAA championship game against Lake Superior State in Albany, N.Y. The Badgers lost 5-3, and as a result of some of his players verbally abusing the game officials, Sauer was suspended for one NCAA tournament game.

    “We had the game won, we got ourselves into some penalty trouble,” Sauer said. “I have yet to ever watch the tape of the game. I’ve yet to watch the tape and see what people told me in terms of how the referee handled things. I think that scenario for a couple years there made it tough for us at Wisconsin to be successful. I think we had to really struggle to get ourselves back on track.”

    He also noted a change in the program since it moved into the Kohl Center in 1998. The building seats about 7,000 more than the team’s former home, the venerable Dane County Coliseum, but the team has to share it with the school’s men’s and women’s basketball teams.

    With only occasional practice time at the Kohl Center, the Badgers practice for the most part at the rink adjacent to the Coliseum, about two miles from campus.

    “I think we, right now, are probably in the worst practice facility within the league in relation to some of the other schools,” Sauer said. “I think moving to the Kohl Center has been great from a fan’s standpoint and from an attendance standpoint and all of that, but we’ve lost the home-ice advantage, and it’s difficult.”

    Sauer also lamented that the school, in his eyes, focuses on football and basketball first.

    “Bob Johnson told me walking the mountains the day before I left to come here that you’re going to find that Wisconsin is still a basketball-football school,” Sauer said. “And I haven’t seen that change over the course of time.”

    The school isn’t expecting the search for Sauer’s successor to be a quick one. While names like Denver’s George Gwozdecky, Nebraska-Omaha’s Mike Kemp and Wisconsin assistant coach Mark Johnson — all of whom have ties to the school — have been thrown into the mix as fodder for discussion, Richter said he doesn’t anticipate a hire before the end of the hockey season.

    “We really haven’t even started on that,” Richter said. “Obviously, there are going to be people who are going to contact us, but I guess as a general statement, what I would say is we probably wouldn’t expect to have someone until after the Frozen Four, just because there could be coaches that are going to be involved in the tournament. As a general statement, I would say that there shouldn’t be anything definitive until that time.”

    Richter also noted that having ties to the university may not improve a candidate’s chances.

    Sauer advised Richter that he’ll get a “stack of three, four hundred” resumes to sort through. He said he doesn’t expect to have direct input on the coaching search, but thinks his opinion will be solicited at some point.

    Sauer thanked a number of people, including his current and former staff members, in his 40-minute speech in the Kohl Center’s media room.

    He was asked what he hoped others would remember about his contribution to Wisconsin hockey.

    “Success, we were able to win. Integrity over the course of time,” Sauer said. “Just being a good person. That’s really what it’s all about. My philosophy, coaching-wise, is to recruit good players, give them the ability to express themselves on the ice. Some years it’s bitten me in the tail, but try not to structure too much. Let them be themselves, be creative, let them have success.

    “It’s the fun of the game. It’s the ultimate team game. You can’t do this with one person, and that’s why I’m not the guy that’s responsible, everybody’s responsible.”

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