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2001 West Regional Preview

History will be made at the West Regional this weekend, in the form of a game between third seed Michigan and sixth seed Mercyhurst.

Just after 5:30 p.m. Eastern time Saturday, the Lakers will become the first MAAC team ever to face off in the NCAA tournament, thanks to the addition of an autobid for the fledgling league. And fans around the nation are up in arms, on one side or the other.

Some see Mercyhurst’s addition as an abomination, a sure-fire loser in the first round, a team taking up space which could have been better used on Clarkson or New Hampshire or Nebraska-Omaha, depending on your point of view. Others envision a big-tent policy like the one that drives the NCAA basketball tournament, with underdogs making headlines and drawing new fans to the sport.

Such is the clamor surrounding the Lakers’ selection that people have almost forgotten about top-seeded — and nationally top-ranked — Michigan State.

Almost.

In the end, though, it’s hard to forget about the team that has topped the USCHO.com poll for virtually the entire year; which has lost just four games (four fewer than the next-best mark in the West, St. Cloud’s eight losses); and which has the nation’s top defense by a significant numerical margin.

Expect no cakewalk for the Spartans, however. Fourth-seeded Wisconsin and fifth-seeded Providence are both capable of pulling the upset, whichever of them opposes MSU in the quarterfinals. And in the other half of the draw, WCHA champion St. Cloud — awaiting the winner of the aforementioned Michigan-Mercyhurst collision — may just be the hottest team in the regional.

No. 1 Michigan State

You’d think that the Michigan State Spartans could afford to crow a little bit. After all, this team has just four losses in 40 games this campaign, has been ranked No. 1 for most of the season, won its second consecutive Great Lakes Invitational tournament and second CCHA postseason championship in a row.

But there’s hardly a peep from East Lansing.

In fact, when the Spartans beat the Wolverines 2-0 in last week’s league title game, they seemed to celebrate for exactly 15.65 minutes. At the post-game press conference, the players were clearly happy, but also a bit reserved. When asked how long the team would relish the win, MSU head coach Ron Mason said, “Oh, until practice Monday.”

Miller

Miller

This Spartan squad is all business, at both ends of the ice. Lacking the superstar playmaker on the scoring side of the blue line, the team is led in some ways by the calm, collected presence of a superstar between the pipes: sophomore goaltender Ryan Miller.

“We don’t have the big scorers, and last year and the year before look who we had,” says Mason. “Ryan leads in the manner that a goaltender can lead.”

Last year and the year before, as Mason points out, the Spartans were led by Shawn Horcoff and Mike York, both incredible players but both incredibly low-key. From such quiet superstars as Horcoff, York, and others cut from the same cloth — Sean Berens, Tyler Harlton, Mike Weaver — this current Spartan team has inherited an intense, determined, but decidedly non-crowing demeanor. That, says Mason, has been the secret to Michigan State’s success this season.

“We’re confident, but not overconfident. We’ve got some seniors who have been to the final four before. They’ve been in tough situations, they’ve seen the up side, they’ve seen the down side.”

He adds, “We do everything by committee, and we don’t underestimate our opponents. We know how hard we have to work to win.”

The Spartan Scoring Committee this season includes senior Rustyn Dolyny (12-25–37), sophomore Brian Maloney (15-20–35), junior Adam Hall (18-12–30), and senior John Nail (19-8–27).

Of course, the strength of the Spartans emanates from the net outward. What more can anyone say about Ryan Miller (1.31 GAA, .950 SV%) that hasn’t been said already? The 6-2 East Lansing native fills a net like no one else, sees the puck like no one else, stops the puck like no one else, smothers the puck like no one else, moves like no one else, and handles his hockey pedigree and fame like a gracious old pro, rather than a 20-year-old sophomore. He is, simply, amazing.

That kind of performance certainly makes for a more comfortable defense in front of the net, and because of that comfort zone, the Spartan blueliners have improved significantly this season, limiting shots and clearing the puck so that Miller less and less often sees a second shot.

The Blueline Committee, led by sophomores Brad Fast (4-23–27) and John-Michael Liles (7-18–25), and junior Andrew Hutchinson (5-19–24), has contributed to Michigan State’s lopsided scoring this season, as the Spartans have more than doubled up on opponents 129-54.

Everyone knows that Michigan State’s game is the kind of patient hockey that capitalizes on opponents’ mistakes for offensive opportunities. Mason brushes aside the accusation that Spartan hockey is boring.

“I guess you’d have to ask our fans. We usually outshoot our opponent. We outshot Michigan last weekend, and they’re seen as a pretty exciting hockey club. I don’t know what people are saying. I think we’re good defensively … and we’re getting more and more offensive opportunities.”

As for being a bye this weekend in Grand Rapids, Mason says it can be both an advantage and disadvantage. “It can be beneficial. If something happens in the first game like an injury that could be a factor in the second game. But if you have a win [in the first round], you could be coming off the momentum.”

Mason says that the extra day will give his team time to recover from assorted “bumps and bruises.”

The Spartans, who will face the winner of the Wisconsin-Providence game, aren’t overly concerned with who they’ll play. “There’s positives in [playing] both. Obviously we’ve played Wisconsin, and they’ve played us. And we’ve never played Providence, so they’ve never seen us either.

“You don’t get to this level if you’re not a good team. We’ve got to play our game, and we can’t be doing concerned about what the other team is doing.”

This is the Spartans’ eighth consecutive trip to the NCAA tournament.

No. 2 St. Cloud

It would be hard to dispute a claim that St. Cloud State is the most dangerous team in the NCAA tournament.

After all, this is a team with 31 wins, a solid goaltender, an unflappable defense and a powerful scoring punch.

This is also a team resilient enough to see a three-goal lead evaporate in minutes in the WCHA title game, and still have enough character to rebound and get the winner in overtime.

Suddenly, Ritchie Larson’s prediction at the end of last year doesn’t seem too far-fetched.

After Boston University knocked the Huskies out of the NCAA tournament in the first round last year, Larson, then a junior, made a bold prediction. Not only would St. Cloud return to the tournament next year, it was going to win it all.

That was quite a statement considering the school had never put up more than 23 wins in a season and had no WCHA titles to its credit.

But this season has been a magical one for the Huskies.

“We feel like we have … the best team the school’s ever had,” junior forward Tyler Arnason said. “Maybe not in terms of raw talent, but the way we get along together and the way we have heart.”

There was a clear turning point for this year’s St. Cloud State team. The Huskies lost a pair of 4-3 games at North Dakota on Jan. 26 and 27. The next weekend, they lost 5-3 to Colorado College at home on Friday night.

Their season was just about to start spinning out of control, and things got worse when they fell behind 4-1 after one period on Saturday.

“I asked them, ‘What kind of a legacy do you want to leave? Do you want to be known as a team that could’ve and should’ve, or do you want to be known as a team that could’ve and did?'” SCSU coach Craig Dahl said. “And I said, ‘The way we’re playing is not the way you’re going to get the job done.’ I challenged them, I said I thought they were winners and I thought they had great character but we weren’t showing it.

Meyer

Meyer

“I said, ‘No matter what happens the rest of this game, I want to see the team I know and I started the year with.’ And we responded with a come-from-behind 7-5 victory after being down three. And they haven’t looked back since.”

Scott Meyer hasn’t had to look back much, either. But the five goals the senior goaltender gave up to North Dakota in the WCHA title game last Saturday came as a surprise to everyone.

He blanked Minnesota a night earlier, but it would actually be safer to say his defense blanked the Gophers.

Of the 70 shots Minnesota attempted, Meyer made a save on 23 and 21 were off target. But the Huskies’ defense went down to block 26 of them, a sign of the commitment to defense exhibited throughout the lineup.

“We just emphasize getting in the shooting lane and doing whatever it takes to win the game,” Dahl said. “That means blocking shots, that means chipping the puck out at the appropriate time, that means getting it in deep, that means backchecking hard. Just doing whatever it takes to win. Blocking shots is all mental. It’s just a matter of being willing to get in the shot lane. More often than not then, the puck will hit you.”

Even when things got through to Meyer, he lived up to his billing as the WCHA’s first-team goaltender.

“When we screw up as defense, he bails us out just about every time,” said Derek Eastman, the SCSU defenseman who scored the game-winning goal in overtime in the title game. “If he keeps on playing this way, it’s going to be tough to beat us.”

Said Dahl: “There’ll be a couple teams that have something to say about that.”

At midweek, Dahl hadn’t seen any tape of either of his potential second-round opponents in Grand Rapids, Mich., Michigan and Mercyhurst. He hasn’t even seen Mercyhurst play.

But Dahl’s philosophy has little to do with opponents and more to do with emphasizing a full effort every time out.

“The idea is, if you try to be the best you can be … more often than not you’re successful,” Dahl said. “That doesn’t always mean you’re the No. 1 team, but it means you’re successful. The fact that they were able to win the championship means that we were the best team that weekend. It’s something you put in the back of your mind and think about in the spring and summer.

“Our guys have been focused on the NCAAs for the last two months, ever since we got beat by North Dakota Jan. 26 and 27, it’s been a total focus on the NCAAs and trying to win that national championship.”

It’s not so far-fetched now.

No. 3 Michigan

This is not the way in which Red Berenson would like to be entering the NCAA tournament.

His Wolverines had a strong showing in the CCHA playoffs, polishing off the Ferris State Bulldogs in two games at home before advancing to the tournament championship game by beating Nebraska-Omaha 3-2 — and there was no shame in losing the title match 2-0 to Michigan State and Mr. Shutout, Ryan Miller.

But Michigan had a rough February and March, in more ways than one. In their last nine games of the regular season, the Wolverines went 3-5-1, hardly a strong finish. On top of that, the team garnered some unwelcome press because of an incident at an off-campus party.

All that’s known publicly about what happened on the night of March 10 is that there was an incident — an altercation, perhaps — between one or more Michigan hockey players and one or more members of a University of Michigan fraternity.

Really, that’s all that’s known. While Josh Langfeld’s name has been (perhaps unfairly) bandied about, no charges have been filed, and an investigation is just now underway.

Berenson admits that the whole thing “had a little bit of an unsettling affect, particularly because it’s kind of an ongoing thing.”

The coach says he doesn’t quite know what action to take, because nothing concrete has come to light. “I haven’t made a formal decision of how I’m going to treat this because they’ve just assigned a detective to it.”

He adds, though, in the aftermath of the publicity and whatever it was that happened, “I think our team is handling it pretty well. It’s not like it was a terrible incident. It’s the kind of thing that happens all the time on college campuses, but because athletes were involved people are paying more attention to it.”

But don’t get the impression that Berenson is pleased or intends to sweep anything under the rug. He is not happy with what happened. He is not happy with the unwanted attention. Although we don’t quite know what transpired, whatever it was “was a bad decision at a bad time,” says Berenson.

Like any coach, he’d rather focus on hockey, especially now. Berenson says that even though his team tied for second in the CCHA regular-season final standings, he considers this year’s performance by the Wolverines to be sub-par.

He says that the current senior class — which includes Langfeld, Mark Kosick, Scott Matzka, Bob Gassoff, Dave Huntzicker, Geoff Koch, and L.J. Scarpace — has struggled through the season.

“Most seniors who play at Michigan have had their best seasons their senior year. That’s not necessarily been the case with this class,” says Berenson. “Don’t get me wrong — they’re good kids.”

This is the same class that helped win Michigan its last national title. In his rookie season, Langfeld scored overtime goal that earned the Wolverines the 1998 NCAA championship in Boston. Kosick lit the lamp twice in that same game.

“It may have been too much too soon for that class,” says Berenson. “They’ve all been decent players at times.”

He adds that the senior class would share his summary of their careers. “You ask yourself, ‘Has this kid played his best hockey? Has he become the best player he could be?’ and most of these guys would tell you themselves they’re not.”

Still, the senior class is not chopped liver (and Berenson is certainly not saying that they are). Kosick (12-16–28), Langfeld (15-11–26), and Koch (9-15–24) have a total of 36 of Michigan’s 157 overall goals.

But it’s not like the Wolverines aren’t loaded for bear. The most consistent player for Michigan this season has been Josh Blackburn (2.24 GAA, .907 SV%).

Other standouts include Mike Cammalleri (26-31–57), Mike Komisarek (4-10– 14, +16), the underrated Mike Roemensky (2-7–9, +23), and the ever-present Jeff Jillson (10-19–29, +13).

Berenson says that facing Mercyhurst in the opening game is a daunting task — and he’s dead serious. “It’s a team you’d probably rather not play because they’re more of an unknown team than any other team in the tournament. They’ll be one of the scarier teams in the tournament. Remember Niagara last season.”

How does Berenson keep his players focused on the task at hand? “If we don’t have our best game on Saturday night, that’ll be our last game. That will be a tough game to coach and prepare for. They’ll be looking to over-achieve and we’ll be looking to not underachieve.”

This is the Wolverines’ 11th consecutive appearance in the NCAA tournament.

No. 4 Wisconsin

In his mind, Jeff Sauer has been forced to reconcile with himself that he did something he didn’t really want to do.

He lied to his players.

It was a well-intentioned lie, but it was a lie nonetheless.

Before Wisconsin’s appearance in the WCHA Final Five play-in game against Colorado College last Thursday, Sauer told his players they needed a win against the Tigers to get into the NCAA tournament.

He knew better. He knew a win would all but guarantee the Badgers a spot in the 12-team field, but he also knew a loss wouldn’t necessarily leave them on the outside.

After his team lost the game in the final minute, Sauer had to walk into the locker room and address his players.

“After the game, then I said, ‘Guys you have to keep your heads up, there’s a good chance we’re going to get in. We just have to hope for some things to happen for us,’ ” Sauer said.

“Then I’m sitting back and saying to myself, I lied to my team, now I have to tell them it was just a small lie and pump them up again.”

It didn’t take much. Just seeing Wisconsin pop up on the television during the selection show was enough to give the Badgers’ seniors a second life. UW plays Providence in Grand Rapids, Mich., on Saturday, with the winner playing Michigan State on Sunday.

The seniors said it wasn’t hard to be optimistic about their chances after the Thursday-night loss, but doubt could have very easily crept in.

Instead, it’s all about business now.

“The spirit is great and we’re anxious to get going,” Sauer said.

This Badgers team is well prepared in regard to the nationals. For the seniors, this will be their third trip to the NCAAs.

“[Senior] Graham Melanson has been the goaltender on three teams that have gone to the NCAA tournament, he’s won a WCHA playoff championship and a WCHA championship,” Sauer said. “I think that’s a pretty good credit to this group of seniors.”

But the national success hasn’t been there. The Badgers lost to New Hampshire in the first round in 1998 and, despite being the top seed, lost to Boston College last season.

“That’s the next thing,” Sauer said. “That’s the next thing I’m going to use in terms of motivation.”

It’s a mature team in that, last weekend, the Badgers dressed only two players that weren’t on last year’s WCHA regular-season championship team.

Even something as minute as the travel arrangements being a little awkward doesn’t faze them.

“We’re going to have to go by bus,” Sauer said. “But the guys [say], ‘Hey, fine, we’ll survive.’ There has not been any negative talk about, ‘Aw, we have to bus over there.’ I think those type of things are where the maturity shows with some of the guys we have.”

The Badgers had been on a bit of a roll before losing to CC in the Final Five. Still, they have won five of their last six games and have Hobey Baker finalist Dany Heatley playing up to his potential.

In postgame news conferences last weekend, WCHA coaches made light of the fact that Wisconsin, the last of the league’s teams to get in, is going to be the most rested team in the tournament.

They pointed out Sauer sitting in the back of the room and talked about his players sleeping in their own beds in Madison, Wis., while all the other teams were beating each other up.

If it only were so easy for Sauer. For most of Friday night, he paced back and forth through the Xcel Energy Center press box, waiting for updates from other games that impacted his team’s tourney chances.

Once he knew his team was going to be in the field, he realized the loss on Thursday did no harm to his team’s chances for a berth.

And he wasn’t at all upset to be watching the other teams be the ones get dinged up on the ice.

“The fact that we won five of our last six there, we had good momentum going into Thursday,” Sauer said. “I thought we played well. It’s just CC scored the goal and that was the difference. We might still be playing if they hadn’t scored that goal.

“CC, they got a broken nose [to Mark Cullen], [Minnesota’s Aaron] Miskovich has a concussion. You never know what can happen.”

That’s the same approach the Badgers are taking this weekend. Patience is the name of the game.

“Against both teams we have to be patient offensively,” Sauer said. “Against Providence, they’ll be very strong in the defensive zone. And certainly if we get to Michigan State with the goaltender [Ryan Miller], you have to be patient against their style of play.

“If we get a good opportunity, we have to bury it and take advantage of it.”

No. 5 Providence

Providence ranks as one of the biggest surprises in this year’s NCAA tournament. Not because the Friars didn’t deserve a bid, because they most certainly did. When the season opened, however, they were picked to finish sixth in Hockey East after some serious losses up front and devastating ones on the blue line. Their last appearance in the national tourney was in 1996.

As it has turned out, though, PC has played consistently strong hockey all season, leading up to its appearance in the Hockey East tournament’s title game. The defense has been anchored by senior co-captains Jay Leach and Matt Libby, but four rookie defensemen, led by Regan Kelly, have made consistent contributions.

Rask

Rask

“We have come together real well,” says Libby. “The expectations at the beginning of the season were real low. I think people looked at Providence at the start of the season and they thought we lost some quality guys. I’ve been impressed with the way the freshman have played.”

Sophomore goaltender Nolan Schaefer has emerged as Hockey East’s second-best goaltender — behind only New Hampshire’s Ty Conklin — despite displaying less consistency over the second half than the first.

The line of Devin Rask, Peter Fregoe and Cody Loughlean has similarly risen to the fore. While there is depth to PC’s offense, Rask and Fregoe are the proverbial straws that stir the drink.

The danger for a team like Providence that hasn’t been to the dance in quite a while is that it may be satisfied just being there.

“I addressed that Saturday night when we got home [after losing in the Hockey East championship game] and I addressed that on Monday,” says PC coach Paul Pooley. “I was a little businesslike because I think we have a chance to beat Wisconsin.

“I think people might underestimate us. Providence? What’s Providence? Geez. Which is okay.

“That’s one thing I’ve told our guys. [The coaches] will take care of the strategy. We’ll take care of getting prepared. We’ll take care of everything we need to do. You guys have to believe that we’ll do it.

“That’s the only thing we’re asking of you, to follow the game plan and execute what we’re doing and be hungry. We’re not in the NCAA tournament just to be there. We have too good a hockey team to do that. We worked too hard all year.

“There was a little bit of that on Saturday night [against BC], quite honestly. We needed to get more of a mental edge. We didn’t have the same mental edge on Saturday that we did on Friday. Whether BC took us out of that when they scored that shorthanded goal [to tie it], I don’t know.

“But I said, ‘Hey, we’re in the NCAA tournament next weekend. If we get into a game where we’re getting outshot, but we still have a chance to win it, we’ve got to find a way to win it. So learn from tonight and let’s move forward and be ready.'”

As for facing Wisconsin, Pooley quips, “Where’s my Wisconsin file?” Turning serious, he says, “They’re a good hockey club, but I think we match up well with them.

“Obviously, they have one of the best players in college hockey with Dany Heatley, but we’ve faced Brian Gionta and [Krys] Kolanos who are very good players, too. Heatley is somebody that we have to pay attention to.

“Their goaltender [Graham Melanson] is very good; he’s good numbers. I know a little bit about him from seeing him play in juniors and also at Wisconsin. I think we’ve got a pretty good handle on what they’re doing.”

Having a handle on what Heatley is doing, however, doesn’t necessarily translate into stopping him.

“I’m going to watch some more tape,” says Pooley. “I want to get a feel for how to take him away, whether to shadow him or put a certain defenseman on him, or use a certain forecheck just to take him out of the picture. We’ll do what we need to do to pay special attention to him.

“They have the last change so if we’re going to match lines, it might be a little more difficult.”

Forget any thought that Wisconsin, which plays on an Olympic sheet (200×97), as does all but three of its WCHA brethren, will have a hard time adjusting to the NHL-sized (200×85) confines of the Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids.

“They’re 9-1-2 on the small sheet,” says Pooley. “They’re a big team that likes to play a little physical, but likes to cycle the puck. Not a typical wide-open style team. They play more of a pro-style game.”

If the Friars get past Wisconsin, they’ll then have to face the number-one team in the country, Michigan State.

“Obviously they’re very good and they have probably the best goalie in the country [Ryan Miller], I would think,” says Pooley. “They’re big and they’re pretty skilled. But they play a very defensive-oriented game. We’ll play that same game. It’ll come down to chances and goaltending.

“Honestly, I think Nolan [Schaefer] would be very excited about that matchup if we could get there, because they’re both the same class [sophomores].”

Schaefer will play both games after rotating with senior Boyd Ballard for the second half up to the Hockey East semifinals.

“I would think so at this point,” says Pooley. “I’m not above changing, by any means, but I just want who can win. I thought Nolan played very well against Boston College. There were a couple of goals that I think he’d want back, but overall he played pretty well.”

Keys for Providence:

1) Winning or at least tying the goaltending matchup.
2) Controlling Heatley.
3) Getting big performances from the smallish Rask line despite Wisconsin’s size.

No. 6 Mercyhurst

Thirteen years of coaching at Mercyhurst College couldn’t have prepared head coach Rick Gotkin for what he faced last Monday morning.

“I had 116 voice mails and 78 emails yesterday,” said Gotkin. “I couldn’t answer the phone. And it never stopped ringing. It’s unbelievable. It’s overwhelming.”

And to think, all Gotkin and his team did was win the MAAC championship. Okay, maybe you have to mention the fact that the Lakers became the first team in MAAC history to receive a bid to the NCAAs.

When the clock struck zero in the Lakers’ 6-5 victory over Quinnipiac on Saturday afternoon, the jubilation that followed for Gotkin, his staff and players resembled that of national champions of the past. But much of that emotion was put in check by Sunday.

As the team sat in the Student Union on the Mercyhurst campus, Michigan, one of the most storied hockey traditions in the country, appeared on the television screen as the Lakers’ first-round NCAA opponent.

“From what I hear, Michigan skates great,” said Gotkin. “They’re going to be a fast team to play.”

Truly, that’s all the X’s and O’s Gotkin needs to discuss. When you come down to it, his hockey club isn’t going to win the game worrying about forechecks or faceoff plays. If they were to pull off this upset, one that makes David and Goliath look minimal, it going to take a few more things.

“We feel we’ve played as good as we can play [to this point],” said Gotkin, “and if we can do that [against Michigan on Saturday], we’ll be fine.

“But we don’t want the scoreboard to be the barometer [for our success]. We want the team on the ice and the coaches on the bench to be the barometer. There have been nights we’ve played poorly and won, but we don’t feel good about it. And there are nights when we play great and lose tough games. That’s the barometer that we use. We just want to know we went out and played our game and played as best as we could.”

Maybe sounds a little like Gotkin feels that his odds of winning are slim? Not a chance.

“We’re going out there to win a hockey game. The bottom line is, upsets happen all the time in athletics. We want to go out and play well, but we realize it’s a daunting task. There aren’t a lot of people who give us the chance to pull this off. But if it was a done deal, [the NCAA] wouldn’t send us out there to play.

“I’m sure Michigan will give us everything we can handle, but I won’t discount our chances. Whether we’re [Hickory High School from] Hoosiers or a Monmouth, or a Penn State [in this year’s NCAA hoops tournament] — if we’re in this thing in the third period, I like our chances.”

The fact that the game is being played in the state of Michigan makes the chance of Mercyhurst even being a crowd favorite pretty slim. Gotkin, though, noted that, regardless of size, the Lakers will have their own cheering section.

“Right now we have two buses full and we’re working on others,” said Gotkin, who, in Erie, Penn., is about six hours away from Grand Rapids, Mich., by bus. “We have a lot of alumni coming in from all around — Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan. We should have a pretty vocal crowd.”

Michigan fans, though, may not be the only ones rooting against the Lakers this weekend. There are plenty of fans around the country who feel the MAAC, and thus the Lakers, weren’t deserving of an autobid to the tournament. The MAAC did fulfill all of the NCAA’s requirements to land the berth, but that still doesn’t sit easy in many hearts.

"Our assistant coach, Greg Klym, was on all the message boards and telling me that we’re getting hammered on there [for taking an at-large bid] away from the rest of the schools. I told him that so long as they’re mentioning our name, that’s all that matters."

— Mercyhurst head coach Rick Gotkin, on the fracas surrounding the MAAC autobid

Add that the conference itself has been a bit of a public-relations nightmare this season, and the list of those who won’t support the Lakers grows. Even though it had nothing to do with Mercyhurst, the MAAC forced schools to eliminate Findlay, an emerging Division I program, from their schedules because they were not yet of full Division I status.

Nay-sayers, though, don’t really bother Gotkin.

“Our assistant coach, Greg Klym, was on all the message boards and telling me that we’re getting hammered on there [for taking an at-large bid] away from the rest of the schools. I told him that so long as they’re mentioning our name, that’s all that matters.”

At the same time, Gotkin says that he doesn’t really feel any pressure for his team to perform to any standards this weekend.

“We definitely have a great responsibility to our conference. In the years to come, we’ll be the school that others are measured against because we’re the first.

“But I don’t think it’s really pressure. I think everything in our conference [regular season and playoffs] was the pressure. Beating Fairfield and then beating Canisius, and then winning the championship against Quinnipiac, there we felt a lot of pressure. Here, we’re obviously the underdog, so that alone has removed a lot of the pressure.

“It’s great to be the underdog. A week ago we had the reverse. We had all the pressure. So being the underdog is a neat little thing. A lot of people want to see us get killed on Saturday. But with that said, I think a lot of people want to see us do well on Saturday.”

As far as the style of game that Gotkin will play against Michigan, he’s still not sure. The Lakers are one of the top defensive teams in the country, led by MAAC Goalie of the Year Peter Aubry. That, though, won’t dictate their style of play.

“We think we can [play the trap]. But we’re not really a trapping team,” Gotkin said. “We can play [the trap] so that if a guy can cut across and get in, he’ll go.

“But Michigan skates great. So we’ll have to get in front of people and try to slow them down. That will be the key for us — to slow down their game. We probably won’t be able to sit back and let them come to us, because [by that point] they’ll have too much speed.”

Summing up the strategy a little further, Gotkin said, “We’re not going to change what we do, we’re just going to have to do what we do a lot better. We talked to our kids yesterday, and they’re pretty focused. That’s a good sign.”

So how is Rick Gotkin holding up through all of this excitement?

“I’m fine. I’m just overwhelmed about what needs to be done. I’m just not used to it. I love to talk to people, so that’s not a problem. But just being able to call people back has been though.

“I just got done doing an interview with the New York Times. Stuff like that doesn’t happen to Rick Gotkin.

“You know how they say everyone gets 15 minutes of fame? Well, I’ve just had my 15 minutes and realize now, it’s pretty cool.”

One of Gotkin’s concerns, of course, it that with all of the excitement that accompanies playing for a national championship, it’s easy to get caught watching.

“We’ve talked to the guys about being too wide-eyed this week,” said Gotkin. “We realize the most important thing is to be focused.

“These guys realize this is a great opportunity that we don’t know if we’ll ever get again. We’d like to be back here, but there’s no guarantee.”

The only guarantee is that the Lakers and the Wolverines will make history this weekend. It may be for a little longer than Gotkin’s 15 minutes allows, but it will be something that the Mercyhurst players, coaches, and fans will never forget.

Bulldogs, Crimson Knotted in Low-Scoring ‘Shootout’

Though the score doesn’t show it, the second semifinal of the inaugural women’s hockey Frozen Four is a shootout. No. 2 seed Minnesota-Duluth and No. 3 seed Harvard have combined for 47 shots through two periods, and they head into the final 20 minutes knotted at 1-1.

The score is so low because of the gritty defenses at both ends of the ice. UMD (26-5-4) has played an aggressive forecheck and turned Harvard’s quality scoring chances into soft shots. For the Crimson, rookie goaltender Jessica Ruddock is playing the best game of her young career, using the glove and the pads and coming out of the crease to play the puck when necessary.

In particular, Ruddock has taken away multiple opportunities for UMD winger Maria Rooth, both on the breakaway and on the rebound.

Both goals have come on the power play (though there have only been two penalties called in the game). The Bulldogs opened the scoring 2:38 into the second period when a lead pass from defenseman Brittny Ralph created a partial breakaway for winger Sanna Peura, who beat Ruddock with a slapper from the left circle.

Harvard got the equalizer with 2:02 left in the second on its first man-advantage of the game. Defenseman Tara Dunn fired a wrist shot from the high slot and winger Tammy Shewchuk deflected the puck past UMD netminder Tuula Puputti.

This game may be headed for overtime, unless one team gets another power play. Harvard leads in shots on goal, 26-21, but UMD has had more quality chances. The winner takes on No. 4 seed St. Lawrence in the title game on Sunday.

FSNE to Broadcast BC Quarterfinal

Fox Sports Net New England will offer a live telecast of Saturday’s second-round NCAA East Regional playoff between No. 1 East seed Boston College and the winner of Friday’s Maine-Minnesota match. Faceoff for Saturday’s contest is 8:30 p.m.

If Maine advances past Minnesota to play against BC, Fox will blackout its telecast in Maine to accommodate the rights of WABI-TV, which will deliver the game live to most of the blacked out areas.

If Minnesota advances past Maine to play against BC, Fox will air the game to all of its New England customers, including those in Maine.

(Complete NCAA tournament TV schedule)

Bartlett Sends SLU, CC to OT

A goal by St. Lawrence’s Russ Bartlett scored at 7:26 of the third period to knot the Saints with Colorado College 2-2, and the two teams played a nailbiter down the stretch before heading into overtime.

For hardcore fans in attendance at the opening game of the East Regionals at the Worcester Centrum, the game brought back memories of the Saints’ last game in this phase of the tournament, when St. Lawrence needed four overtimes to beat BU and advance to the Frozen Four in 2000.

It remained to be seen how long this one would go.

The teams began play in front of a sparse crowd, no doubt due to the early start and the fact both teams were playing a long way from home. After some initial shakiness, St. Lawrence proceeded to get the better of the scoring chances early on. Of course, getting the only two power plays of the first period didn’t hurt.

The first goal of the game was a rather sudden development. Tiger Sophomore Joe Cullen may not get the media attention of his brother, All-American candidate Mark Cullen, he made the first big play of the game for the Tigers. On the forecheck, Joe Cullen stole the puck from a Saint defenseman low in the left-wing faceoff circle and slipped the puck to freshman scoring sensation Peter Sejna.

The Slovakian winger — who led all freshmen nationwide in points per game and was third among all players nationwide in goals per game — got the puck on his backhand and beat Saint netminder Jeremy Symington with a quick, high shot.

The goal was Sejna’s 29th of the season, giving him the all-time Tiger record for goals by a freshman. For Symington, who gave up just one goal in two games last weekend at the ECAC Championships, it certainly was a rude introduction to Colorado College.

Another Tiger penalty late in the period gave the Saints a few more quality chances. At 17:55, ECAC Player of the Year Erik Anderson had a potential goal negated when a whistle blew for a crease violation moments before his shot went in the net.

Early on in the second, Symington managed to get a forearm on a wicked wrister off the stick of Matt Cullen at 2:50. With the help of power plays, the Tigers seemed to have gained the upper hand in terms of momentum as the period progressed.

However, a Sejna penalty helped St. Lawrence get its offense back in gear. Bartlett carried the puck in on the left wing before pulling up to deftly avoid a defender. Bartlett slipped the puck to Mike Gellard centering the rush, and Gellard dished to Erik Anderson on his right wing for the one-timer to beat CC goalie Jeff Sanger, tying the game 1-1.

The Tigers regained the lead at 10:51 during the waning seconds of another power play. A St. Lawrence defenseman broke up a rush to the net, poking the puck out toward the blue line, only to have Tiger winger Noah Clarke pick it up while trailing the play. Clarke’s soft wrister floated through traffic and beat Symington to make it 2-1 Tigers.

Another Saint penalty kept the Tigers on the attack a few short minutes later. Clarke set up a strong shot by Mark Cullen at the point, and Symington made the initial glove save but dropped the rebound. The goalie managed to cover the puck before Chris Hartsburg could knock it home.

Despite piling up scoring chances, the Tigers had to feel a little stymied to merely retain their one-goal margin after another 20 minutes of hockey.

CC had the first good opportunity of the third period as well, when Justin Morrison managed to knock down a knee-high pass from Mark Cullen and put a good shot on Symington. The goalie thwarted Morrison again seconds later after a weird carom suddenly set up the senior from Los Angeles just outside the crease.

A suspenseful moment for St. Lawrence fans came at 7:26 of the third when a video review was needed to determine whether a Saint goal would count. Russ Bartlett again showed good playmaking skills coming into the Tiger zone, and then found himself on the receiving end of a Kevin Veneruzzo pass off the left-wing boards. In traffic, Bartlett appeared to barely nudge the puck past Sanger on the far side of the crease, though it may have deflected off a defender. The goal counted, and the fans settled in for an exciting finish.

A balanced game ensued, with both squads getting fair but not great scoring chances. The Saints rode the momentum of the equalizer for a while and played with real confidence.

With four minutes left, the Tigers had a good bid when Sejna collected the rebound of a Tom Preissing shot from a nominal distance, but Symington made the save.

With just over a minute left, Tom Preissing skated in from the point before taking a backhander, but to no avail.

The winner squares off against North Dakota tomorrow afternoon.

Meet the Frauds: Part II

It wasn’t a banner week for prognostications, but a fourth-place tie after the total-goals tiebreaker meant that the only casualty of the first round of picks was MAAC correspondent Jim Connelly.

The standings last week:

Paula C. Weston: 5-0
Todd D. Milewski: 3-2
Dave Hendrickson: 2-3
Jayson Moy/Becky Blaeser: 2-3
Natasha J. Parker: 2-3
Jim Connelly: 2-3 (lost tiebreaker)

The remaining five candidates advance to the semifinals, where the object is the same — pick the winners, straight up. The games under consideration this week are the four first-round NCAA matchups: Colorado College-St. Lawrence, Minnesota-Maine, Michigan-Mercyhurst, and Wisconsin-Providence.

Without further ado, the picks…

Dave Hendrickson (Hockey East)

Colorado College 4, St. Lawrence 2: The WCHA gets the first win of the regionals at the expense of the ECAC’s lone representative.

Maine 4, Minnesota 2: The first of the five WCHA teams falls, setting up a Hockey East showdown on Saturday night.

Providence 3, Wisconsin 2: Hockey East’s least-known representative wins to set up a David vs. Goliath matchup against Michigan State.

Michigan 6, Mercyhurst 1: Critics of the MAAC autobid will gain some ammo from this lopsided contest.

Todd D. Milewski (WCHA)

Minnesota 3, Maine 2: Despite a recent slump, the Gophers squeak by.

Michigan 6, Mercyhurst 2: Nice to see you, Mercyhurst, but the Wolverines should make it a short stay.

Colorado College 4, St. Lawrence 1: CC got a favorable draw, and it’ll show against the Saints.

Wisconsin 5, Providence 3: I just can’t pick against these WCHA teams. With new life, the Badgers make the most of it.

Paula C. Weston (CCHA)

Minnesota 4, Maine 3: I’m going against the conventional wisdom that says an Eastern team playing East should win. This could come back to bite me, as Maine is the more playoff-tested team.

Colorado College 5, St. Lawrence 3: The Saints are my sentimental favorite, and it’s clear that they can score some goals, but I can’t pick them.

Michigan 6, Mercyhurst 1:This one is hard for me. I have very strong ties to Erie, and Rick Gotkin is one of the nicest coaches I’ve ever met. Having said that, go CCHA!

Wisconsin 4, Providence 2: The Badgers are 4-1-0 against Hockey East teams this season.

Becky Blaeser/Jayson Moy (ECAC)

St. Lawrence 3, Colorado College 2: You just have to go with the experience factor here. The Saints have been there; the Tigers are back after a hiatus.

Minnesota 4, Maine 2: Yeats will have to stand tall for the Black Bears, while the Gophers have to get their consistency together.

Providence 3, Wisconsin 2: Dany Heatley needs a supporting cast to help him out. The Friars get it done with determination.

Michigan 6, Mercyhurst 2: It seems like a mismatch on paper. The game will be played respectfully, but the bigger talent wins out.

Natasha J. Parker (CHA)

Maine 4, Minnesota 2

Michigan 5, Mercyhurst 1

Colorado College 3, St. Lawrence 2

Wisconsin 3, Providence 1

Minnesota, Maine Deadlocked After Two

After a double-overtime opening game of the 2001 NCAA East Regional, game two between the fifth-seeded Maine Black Bears and the number-four seed Minnesota Golden Gophers could reach the same destiny.

Through two periods, the clubs are deadlocked, 2-2.

After the Gophers controlled the play through the opening period, outshooting Maine, 14-7, the Black Bears evened the flow through the second. Though only outshooting Minnesota 10-9 in the frame, Maine dominated the offensive chances.

Early in the game, though, Minnesota had the best chances, taking the play to Maine in the offensive zone. Fourth liner Erik Wendell had a golden opportunity at 3:09 when he was sent in alone on Yates. Aiming left corner, Wendell’s shot was saved by Yates’ right shoulder.

Just over a minute later, the Gophers had a second opportunity when defensemen Paul Martin set up Jeff Taffe alone at the right post. The sophomore, though, misfired on the empty net and hit the near post, keeping the game scoreless.

Scoreless only until the first power play, as the Gophers’ special teams took only nine seconds after Maine’s Dan Kerluke was sent off for hooking to get on the board. With Yates unable to freeze an Erik Westrum shot, Johnny Pohl continued to bang at the rebound until it finally snuck behind Yates and just over the goal line. The goal at 7:50 gave Minnesota a 1-0 lead.

The chances didn’t stop there for the Gophers. After a botched 2-on-1 by Maine, Minnesota countered, sending Taffe in alone at 12:36. Yates stood his ground as Taffe tried to stuff the puck five-hole, keeping the lead to one.

A late penalty to Minnesota’s Jordan Leopold for holding gave the Black Bears their first chance to control the offense, and led to Maine tying the game. With just 5.6 seconds remaining in the frame, Todd Jackson was sent in alone on a feed from Robert Liscak. Skating from the right post to the left, Jackson fired a shot that squeaked through the pads of Minnesota goaltender Adam Hauser to even the game at one.

In the second, an early penalty to Pohl allowed the Black Bears to finally take over control of play. But even though the Black Bears generated plenty of grade-A chances, few were on net. At 7:44, Maine’s Lucas Lawson had the best bid, but was stopped on the doorstep by Hauser.

As so often happens, a fluke play turned the game around exactly one minute later. After the Black Bears turned the puck over at the defensive blue line, a Westrum one-timer was deflected by a surprised Grant Potulny. The puck changed directions and floated over the shoulder of Yates, giving Minnesota a 2-1 lead.

But 1:56 later, Maine answered. Cutting in on goal two-on-two, Dan Kerluke, at the same time getting leveled by the Minnesota defense, feathered a pass to Lawson. Not to be denied this time, Lawson pulled the puck around Hauser, stuffing home the equalizer at 10:40

Pride in Defeat

They came into the NCAA tournament receiving less respect than all but one team: the MAAC’s ultra-underdog Mercyhurst. Outside of the North Country, there were few, if any, bracket predictions that showed them advancing on to the Frozen Four.

Even after winning the ECAC tournament, the St. Lawrence Saints finished a mere 14th in the Pairwise Rankings. Like Mercyhurst, they received an NCAA berth only because of their league’s automatic bid.

None of which fooled Colorado College coach Scott Owens.

“I was scared to death to play St. Lawrence,” he said after the Tigers won, 3-2, in double overtime. “We were playing a hot team.

“I said all week long to my team, ‘This team is a lot better than you think. This isn’t a 14 [Pairwise] team. This is a team that’s hitting it’s stride at the right time. It’s a team with a lot of veterans that have be en there, much [more] than us. You knew they’d be composed. … That’s a veteran team that knows how to win.”

We’re a smaller school in a rural area, so it’s incumbent upon us to accept the role that, hey, we’re the Milwaukee Brewers compared to a Minnesota or a Maine that is the Yankees.

— SLU head coach Joe Marsh

In some eyes, St. Lawrence also carried the burden of being the only ECAC team in the tournament while facing an opponent from a conference that had placed an unprecedented five members. To many SLU players, however, that was a misguided focus.

“We were more concerned with representing St. Lawrence,” said Russ Bartlett. “We’re proud to be part of the ECAC and to represent them is a great accomplishment for us. But we were really concerned with putting the best team on the ice for St. Lawrence.”

Despite the perceptions of many, the program boasts a proud history. The Saints earned their first NCAA berth back in 1952, just the fifth year of the national tournament. In an era when only two Eastern teams and two Western teams were selected, St. Lawrence earned that distinction another three times in the fifties — taking the eventual national champions to overtime twice — and another three times in the early sixties.

Four appearances in the eighties were highlighted by a 4-3 overtime loss to Lake Superior State in the 1988 national championship game. Two more selections in the nineties led to last year’s epic quadruple-overtime victory over Boston University that put the Saints into another Frozen Four.

Despite all the tradition, however, St. Lawrence has found itself repeatedly on the short end of the respect stick. And not just in seasons when it has only a 14 Pairwise Ranking.

“To be honest, I think we go through that every year,” said SLU coach Joe Marsh. “We’re a smaller school in a rural area, so it’s incumbent upon us to accept the role that, hey, we’re the Milwaukee Brewers compared to a Minnesota or a Maine that is the Yankees.

colorscans/20002001/ncaa_ccslu14.jpg

“That’s alright. There’s nothing wrong with that. You accept what you are and be the best at it that you can be. You get into this tournament and you’re going to play the underdog role.

“We were the underdog last year against BU and we were the only team that won both the conference and championship. It’s alright. It’s an easier focus for the guys to show what they can do. I don’t see it as a negative. We’ve got some pretty good players that I’m proud to have and I don’t see any way we would change it right now. It’s just big vs. small.”

This year’s mediocre Pairwise Ranking and overall lukewarm perception results from a horrendous start that might have buried a less resilient team. By the Christmas break, the Saints held a brutal 3-7-3 record, hardly the stuff of national tournaments.

At that point, the seniors used their experiences from three years ago to strengthen the team’s resolve.

“They remember what it was like when they were freshmen when we made it into 10th place in the ECAC by scoring with one second left in overtime against Cornell,” said Marsh. “That’s how we got into the [ECAC] playoffs. [This year] they made the most of that experience.”

The Saints kept faith despite the presumably lost cause of a 3-7-3 mark.

“You look at our record at Christmastime and a lot of people might think that the team would be down on themselves or ready to give up,” said senior goaltender Jeremy Symington. “But we were really just about the opposite.

“We knew what kind of team we had and what kind of schedule we had for ourselves and we just felt good about progressing toward the end of the season. Everyone just kept working hard and as the season progressed we just came together.”

Came together, indeed. A 17-5-1 second half put them back into the NCAA picture, albeit as a longshot.

“I’m just really proud of the way the team stuck together,” said Marsh. “We had a bit of a rough start, [but] I think you saw the finished product tonight.”

In some ways, this game against Colorado College followed much the same script as the entire season. By the time it was little more than two minutes old, the back-on-their-heels Saints had been forced to ice the puck three times. They rebounded first territorially and then from 1-0 and 2-1 deficits.

Anderson

Anderson

Leading the way with the first goal and his overall play was Erik Anderson, an underappreciated star who mirrors his school’s lack of hype. Anderson may be the ECAC Player of the Year and a Hobey Baker Award finalist, but he is still curiously missing from many discussions of the nation’s top forwards.

“Anderson was hurt, banged up pretty good,” said Marsh. “You saw him crawl off the ice. That’s just tremendous character. That kid has a bad ankle sprain, but I think you saw why he’s the Player of the Year even though you didn’t get a chance to see how good the kid really is. He’s about 75 percent.”

In the end, the Saints came up a little short, their season ending at 3:30 of the second overtime.

“Our big guys stepped up and played hurt and I’m really, really proud of them,” said Marsh. “As this thing wears off, they’re going to feel pretty good about what they accomplished and how they stepped up to the plate.

“I thought we played the type of game that we had to play. I was proud of the guys. We really showed a lot of character. It was one of the more satisfying years for me in terms of the way the team responded, particularly when things weren’t going so well.

“I think the guys feel they represented themselves well. … I’m really proud of what our kids have been able to accomplish. They gave us everything they had.”

News Release

U.S. College Hockey Online, the definitive news, analysis and information resource for American college hockey, has announced plans for an annual Town Meeting, to be held each year on the Friday during Frozen Four weekend. This year’s inaugural event will take place Friday, April 6, at 3:30 p.m. in the Empire Convention Center, immediately following the presentation of the Hockey Humanitarian and Hobey Baker Memorial Award.

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The topic of the inaugural USCHO Town Meeting is “The Frozen Four,” and will include a guest panel made up of the members of the NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey Committee: Tom Jacobs, Bill Wilkinson, Jack McDonald, Ian McCaw and Ron Grahame.

This is not a press conference. This is a chance for fans in attendance at the Frozen Four, to come and ask the committee questions in an open forum. It is a rare and unprecedented opportunity, and part of USCHO’s continuing commitment to break down the barriers and allow fans inside the many NCAA processes.

U.S. College Hockey Online (“www.uscho.com”) is in its fifth year as the leading journal for college hockey news and statistics, whether on the Internet or anywhere else. The top college hockey writers in the nation cover the major and minor conferences with columns, previews, game stories, features and analysis – often delving into topics of national importance that remain untouched by any other media source. It has become relied upon as the source of information for coaches, players and fans alike, all while maintaining the highest standards of excellence and integrity.

For the past four seasons, USCHO has sponsored the nation’s college hockey poll, with 40 coaches, scouts and media members participating. It is widely considered the definitive national poll, and the only one distributed by the Associated Press.

Other site features include the wildly popular message board, and renowned Vote for Hobey Contest, which allows fans to directly participate in the nominating and selection process of the prestigious Hobey Baker Memorial Award.

U.S. College Hockey Online, which revamped its site last summer with the goal of making it easier to use and more comprehensive, continues to set new records for page views, with well over 1 million recorded in the month of December. Recently, USCHO received national recognition in Sports Illustrated and ESPN The Magazine for the quality of its coverage of college hockey.

– # # # –

UAA’s Talafous Becomes 2nd Coaching Casualty

After five seasons on the job, Dean Talafous has been fired from his duties as head coach at Alaska-Anchorage. The announcement was made today by UAA athletic director Dr. Steve Cobb.

Cobb said, “The University of Alaska Anchorage appreciates the significant contributions Dean Talafous has made to hockey at UAA over the last five years.”

Cobb made mention of the academic performance and character of the UAA hockey team under Talafous.

“It is our intention to move forward to select a replacement to ensure the continuity of the program. With that in mind, the search for a new head coach will begin immediately and continue until a new coach is chosen,” said Cobb.

The Seawolves went 7-24-5 this season (4-20-4 WCHA), including a 20-game winless streak in midseason.

2001 NCAA East Regional Preview

This year’s East Regional has a distinctly split personality.

Heading up the field is top-seeded Boston College, the Hockey East and Beanpot champion, one of the nation’s most consistent teams and a perpetual top-three finisher in the USCHO.com poll this season. The Eagles are heavily favored to reach their fourth consecutive Frozen Four this year, and a national championship this time around would move BC into dynasty territory.

However, a good deal of the buzz in the East relates to the teams below the Eagles. Partly thanks to a rule change which permitted teams to receive byes outside of their geographic region this year, the next three seeds are all occupied by Western clubs — specifically WCHA teams: North Dakota, Colorado College and Minnesota.

CC’s positioning as the third seed is especially interesting, since it means that a victory over ECAC champion St. Lawrence would force an intraconference matchup with UND in the quarterfinals. In past seasons, the tournament selection committee has tried to avoid such confrontations, but with the WCHA placing a record five teams in the 2001 tournament, apparently something had to give.

Maine is the second Hockey East team in the regional, and the Black Bears’ presence as the fifth seed is a bit of a head-scratcher, setting up the chance of another in-conference tussle — with top-seeded BC — should Maine beat Minnesota in the first round. And speaking of St. Lawrence, the Saints may be the only ECAC team in the field, but they’re a dangerous one with Frozen Four experience.

Capsule profiles of each team’s key personnel, qualifications, opponent(s) and schedule appear at right.

No. 1 Boston College

Boston College has been ranked among the top two or three teams in the country all season and for good reason. The Eagles have been amazingly consistent, never losing two games straight.

Kobasew

Kobasew

They’ve got a strong defense, led by Bobby Allen and Rob Scuderi. Goaltender Scott Clemmensen has posted strong numbers, but more importantly has displayed the best consistency of his career. He hasn’t allowed many of the real soft goals that punctuated his previous seasons.

But what really catches the eye about this team is its offensive explosiveness. From senior Brian Gionta to freshman Chuck Kobasew, the Eagles can score unlike any other Eastern team. They have been able both to blow teams out in third periods with territorial domination and also win territorially even games with their superior finishing abilities.

BC coach Jerry York, however, looks at that explosiveness beyond the team’s gaudy offensive firepower.

“We’re explosive defensively,” he says. “That really helps us during the 60 minutes of a hockey game. We pressure the puck and use our speed and our strength to regain possession of pucks, whether it’s forechecking or neutral zone pressure or in our defensive zone.

“We’ve really emphasized bringing in quick athletes and strong athletes into our program. Everybody talks about it helping our offense and it certainly does, but from my perspective it really makes us a difficult team to play against because defensively we can take away time and space.

“I’m very excited about leading Hockey East in overall penalty kill percentage and our goals against average is second, so we’ve become a very solid defensive team. I think that work ethic carries over to the offense.”

BC will be facing the winner of the Maine – Minnesota first-round game. While it would certainly be better for Hockey East if Maine had been placed in the other Eastern bracket to at least preserve the potential of three league teams advancing to the Frozen Four, York chooses to emphasize the positive.

“It’s great to have three of us still alive here in the 12-team field,” he says. “Sometimes we overlook how hard it is to be selected to this tournament. It’s quite an honor for all of us.”

York then looks at BC’s bracket and sees one common trait.

“Our bracket certainly has three hockey schools,” he says. “The tradition at Maine, Minnesota and BC is really something that all of us are proud of. It’s a very, very strong bracket.”

York has been impressed with what he’s seen of the Golden Gophers.

“Minnesota historically has been a well-disciplined team, a very quick team and a team steeped in NCAA tradition from Herb Brooks to Doug Woog to now Don Lucia carving out his own niche there,” says York. “We’ve watched them on tape and are very impressed not only with their players, but their overall team concept. They’re very similar to ourselves in the makeup of their club.”

If it’s Maine that BC faces, York isn’t under any illusion that a fourth win will easily follow the 7-2, 4-1 and 7-2 triumphs the Eagles have already posted over the Black Bears.

“Maine is a team that [coach] Shawn [Walsh] has done an incredible job with from the very beginning of the season to where they are now,” says York. “They’ve improved.

“They’re a team that is capable of winning a national title. I don’t think there’s any question of that. We have a good feel for them, a good read on them because they’re in our league, but our league has helped them get better.

“They’ve improved as the year has gone along and they’re going to be difficult to play against if they advance past Minnesota. It’ll be a raucous building if we have Maine and BC there in the final.”

Boston College will be looking to advance to its fourth straight Frozen Four. The last two years, the Eagles did so without the benefit of a bye, advancing through the West Regional. The year before that, however, they faced a similar circumstance to this season, with an Eastern bye in hand.

“Three years ago in Albany, we were the only bye team that advanced to the [Frozen Four at the] Fleet Center,” says York. “So you have to be conscious of the fact that you have the bye, but you’re going to play a team that has come off a real big win the night before. Their emotion is going to be fueled by their victory.

“In our bracket, both teams are very good teams going into it, so we’re going to expect maybe a tired team, but certainly one that is going to fuel off the emotion of the win. The bye should be in our favor, but we have to be conscious of the fact that we’re not at Albany yet. We have to win a hockey game on Saturday night.”

No. 2 North Dakota

This is Jeff Panzer’s last chance, and possibly his best one, to show voters he’s deserving of the Hobey Baker Memorial Award.

Oh, and North Dakota’s playing for another trip to the Frozen Four. Don’t forget about that.

But the leading scorer for the Fighting Sioux, the second seed in the East Regional, has one game left before the votes are cast for college hockey’s most prestigious individual award.

And he’ll do it in front of the voters he needs to win over if he’s going to get the trophy. The Sioux will play the winner of Friday’s St. Lawrence-Colorado College game in Worcester, Mass.

By getting placed in the East, North Dakota will play in front of an audience that doesn’t get to see the team too often. That includes any number of East Coast Hobey voters.

Chances are, though, that Panzer’s not thinking too much about Hobey. When he was named the WCHA’s player of the year, he called the honor secondary to that weekend’s Final Five tournament.

So does North Dakota coach Dean Blais think the national scoring leader (77 points) has his mind on the individual award?

“Not if we don’t talk about it,” Blais joked.

A first-round bye was never really in jeopardy for North Dakota, the WCHA’s regular-season champion. But the Sioux were perilously close to a monumental loss to St. Cloud State in the WCHA championship game last Saturday.

Had the Sioux lost 5-2 — they were down by that count with six minutes left — they might be looking at getting back to basics doing other drastic measures this week.

But UND pulled off a comeback for the ages, scoring three times in the last 5 minutes, 35 seconds to pull even. The tying goal came with 10.7 seconds showing on the clock.

That’s as far as it got, though. The improbable come back was just that: only a comeback. The victory slipped away in overtime.

Still, the Sioux proved their character is as good as — or better than — recent years.

“Obviously, you’d like to win that game, but the biggest thing is we showed a lot of heart and character,” Panzer said late Saturday night. “We came back, and it says a lot about the guys in the locker room. We battled hard, and a lot of people I’m sure counted us out. But the guys in the room knew we could do it. That’s kind of what’s going to stick with us for the rest of the season; we have a bunch of guys who aren’t going to give up.”

Said Blais: “It’s always disappointing to lose a game before you go on to the national tournament, but I think we’ll gain a lot of positives out of there by the way we lost the game. If we would have gotten beat 6 or 7-1, that doesn’t show much character in a very important game.”

The issue of character is part of the reason why Karl Goehring will start in goal on Saturday for the Sioux. He was in goal for the Sioux’s Frozen Four appearance and national title last season, and has been the goalie Blais has turned to in critical situations.

Goehring was in net for the 2-1 WCHA semifinal victory over Colorado College last Friday. Andy Kollar gave up six goals in the title game.

Blais considered switching goaltenders on Saturday, “but right now we don’t need to question our goaltenders,” he said.

Goehring will get the start on Saturday “based on how well he’s played in the last month,” Blais said.

“He’s been there. He knows what it takes.”

The Sioux played St. Lawrence and Colorado College each twice in the regular season. They swept the Saints and split with the Tigers before the win in the playoffs.

Blais and the Sioux have been in the bye situation enough times — this is the fifth year in a row — that they know what’s ahead.

They also know not to overprepare for either team.

“I don’t think at this time of the year you can favor one team over another,” Blais said. “Last year we were all set to play New Hampshire, and then Niagara beat them. Our whole week was spent preparing for New Hampshire.

“Now I think we have to look at it as, either St. Lawrence or Colorado College can win that first game on Friday. Then we’ll hopefully be ready for one of them on Saturday.”

The challenge for the Sioux on Saturday is to be ready. With nearly the entire team having some tournament experience, that is almost a given.

“I think everyone’s mentally and physically ready to advance,” Blais said. “They’ve all been there and they know what it takes. You saw that with the comeback against St. Cloud; the guys just didn’t give up.”

No. 3 Colorado College

When Mark Cullen takes the ice, it’s hard not to notice him.

Maybe that’s because the public address announcer is always saying his name.

For 26 straight games, the Colorado College junior forward has scored at least a point. But he alone can’t take the Tigers where they’re looking to go this weekend: to the Frozen Four.

For Cullen, it hasn’t hurt having guys by the name of Peter Sejna and Justin Morrison on either side.

Cullen, a prime candidate for all-American status this season, has helped his line become one of the dominant trios in the WCHA down stretch.

In the WCHA Final Five last weekend, Cullen registered five points, while Sejna and Morrison each had four. What’s more, Morrison scored the game-winning goal in both of the Tigers’ victories, and Sejna had the go-ahead goal late in Thursday’s play-in game win over Wisconsin.

But Cullen was the one getting all the praise at the end of the weekend, and with just cause. His point-scoring streak is a school record. He has failed to score in just one of his 29 games this season (he missed eight weeks because of injury), and has become one of the constants for a Tigers team that had its ups and downs in the second half.

“He can create opportunities out of nothing, and that’s what makes him a special player,” said Minnesota coach Don Lucia, who coached Cullen in his freshman season at CC.

But the bright lights of the playoffs have put the streak in the shadows for the assistant captain from Moorhead, Minn.

“It’s definitely on the back burner right now. It’s nice but a lot of things go into that,” Cullen said. “I’ve been getting kind of lucky in some games. It’s really not that important to me. It is nice to have, but I try not to think about it now, especially playoff time.”

Cullen has been on a tear for the Tigers. But that statement requires a little more detail.

Mark has the incredible streak, but younger brother Joe made some noise at the Final Five. With the Tigers down 3-1 to Minnesota in the third-place game, he scored a pair of goals on a five-minute power play. That power play resulted from Mark being checked from behind.

It was really no surprise to CC coach Scott Owens that one Cullen stood up for the other.

“They’re just unbelievable competitors in everything they do — in the weight room, in dry-land [training] and on the ice,” Owens said. “It’s just a joy to have kids in this day and age that have that approach. They stand up for each other. It’s kind of an amazing family, to be honest with you.”

The Tigers were the only team in the nation to play three games in three days last weekend. After winning the play-in game against Wisconsin on Thursday night, they turned around the next afternoon and played top-seeded North Dakota tough. Although the loss sent CC into the consolation game, the fact it was extremely competitive against the Sioux on tired legs could be a lesson the team carries over to this weekend.

CC plays St. Lawrence in the first round Friday in Worcester, Mass. The winner plays none other than North Dakota for a trip to Albany, N.Y.

“I think it’s good for our club,” Owens said at the Final Five. “We’re learning how to deal with some adversity and some tiredness and juggling some people around. It’ll make us a better team next weekend, and hopefully it’ll make us a better team next season.”

The luck of the draw — or the science of it, depending on your opinion — sent the Tigers out East. That also meant the Tigers flew to Worcester on Wednesday after getting back to Colorado Springs on Sunday.

No rest for the weary, indeed.

If the Tigers had been seeded in the West Regional, they would have had another day to stay home. The West Regional begins on Saturday.

The victory over Minnesota last Saturday gave the Tigers their fifth consecutive third-place finish at the WCHA Final Five and a little bit of a spark going into this weekend.

“Even though it’s the third-place game, it still makes us feel pretty good about ourselves coming out of this weekend,” Owens said. “Two wins and a 2-1 loss to North Dakota … we feel like we have some momentum going into next weekend.”

No. 4 Minnesota

Don Lucia has never been shy about expressing his belief that his Minnesota team can go as far as goaltender Adam Hauser takes it.

Is that a good thing or a bad thing?

Lucia

Lucia

Lucia’s intention is to show that the Gophers, making a return to the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1997, could make a serious run at the national championship. When Hauser has played at his best, the Gophers are tough to beat.

But the skeptic could say the Gophers’ reliance on Hauser points to trouble ahead. And those skeptics have ammunition.

When Minnesota’s goaltenders save 90 percent or more of the shots, the Gophers are a solid 20-1. Otherwise, they’re just 7-11-2.

“He more than anybody else is going to ultimately control if we win or go home,” Lucia said.

Talk about pressure. But it’s nothing Hauser hasn’t had to deal with since he joined the Gophers.

Three years ago, the Bovey, Minn., native was thrown into the WCHA fire. It’s been much of the same ever since. He’s been invaluable to the Gophers, especially considering the results when he’s been gone.

When he was out with mononucleosis late last season, the Gophers slipped out of a home-ice spot for the WCHA playoffs.

But he needs to play at his best against the nation’s best for Minnesota to have a chance.

That’s the life of a goaltender.

“When you choose to become a goaltender, you have to be able to handle that pressure,” Lucia said. I think the experience he got [in the WCHA semifinal against St. Cloud State last Friday], it’s probably the biggest game he’s played since he’s been here.”

And Hauser had an inauspicious start. The Huskies scored on both of their first two shots, and while Hauser settled down after, the damage was done.

Hauser told Lucia he was nervous early in the game. The nerves will undoubtedly be present again on Friday, when he plays Maine in his first NCAA tournament game against Maine in Worcester, Mass.

“He has to have a good start for us, not only for the team but for himself personally,” Lucia said. “We certainly can’t start with the first shot going in.”

The start will be interesting for the entire Gophers team. The seniors on this year’s team came to the program expecting this kind of experience to be the rule, not the exception.

Lucia hopes a trip to the national tournament every year is in the Gophers’ future again. But this will be the Gophers seniors’ only trip.

“Everyone’s excited to play,” senior captain Erik Westrum said. “You go out with the attitude that everyone’s 0-0 going into the tournament. The top seed loses a game and they’re out the door. I think it’s fun, it’s exciting, it’s going to be high energy. We’re looking forward to bringing the Gophers back to the NCAA tournament and making a run.”

The team’s goals this season were to finish in the top three in the WCHA and make the NCAAs. Those goals are both accomplished already, but coaches never have a problem with raising the bar as the season goes on.

It’s been a rough ride of late, though. The Gophers are just 2-4 in their last six games, both wins coming over Michigan Tech in the first round of the WCHA playoffs.

A 3-0 loss to St. Cloud State in the semifinals last Friday night ended the their hopes for a WCHA title. It also put them into the third-place game, a thorn in the side of Lucia, who lobbied against it this spring and again at the Final Five.

The game was more of a battle not to get injured. The Gophers lost to Colorado College and got a scare when forward Aaron Miskovich went out with a concussion.

It was a winless weekend for the Gophers, unless you count the berth into the tournament. Still, that doesn’t concern Lucia, who’s two games away from taking his second team to a Frozen Four.

“What happened last weekend is irrelevant for everybody,” he said. “It doesn’t matter if you lost the previous 10 or won the previous 10, you have to win two games.”

To do so, they’ll have to beat two of the best teams from the East. The Maine-Minnesota winner plays Boston College.

“We’re in a difficult bracket. It’s going to be fun, though,” Lucia said. “We’re in a bracket with two college hockey powers, a very experienced team in Maine. It’s always fun to go up against a team coached by Shawn Walsh because I don’t think there’s a better coach in college hockey.”

No. 5 Maine

Maine fans had to be particularly displeased with the NCAA selection committee’s decision to break with recent precedent and place the Black Bears in the same bracket with fellow Hockey East member Boston College.

"It’s always fun to go up against a team coached by Shawn Walsh because I don’t think there’s a better coach in college hockey."

— Minnesota coach Don Lucia, assessing the Gophers’ first-round opponent

After all, Hockey East put three teams in the Frozen Four two years ago and came within a clanged post of duplicating that feat last year. Why, then, put two of the three Hockey East teams in the same sub-bracket?

No one is saying that the league is as strong this year as the last two or that any special favors are deserved, but a straightforward swapping of teams in the other Eastern bracket would have avoided same-conference matchups in all cases except the unavoidable situation of the WCHA, which put five teams into the tournament. Past selection committees seemed to place a higher emphasis on that goal than this year’s, which apparently was more focused on minimal altering of the seeds.

Of course, what’s particularly bad about a Hockey East team in Maine’s bracket is that it’s BC, a foe that defeated the Black Bears 7-2, 4-1 and 7-2 this year.

Whatever he might be thinking privately about the matter, Maine coach Shawn Walsh just says, “You’ve got to play good teams no matter what.”

Besides, after watching tape of Minnesota, he doesn’t even want to talk about BC.

“I haven’t even thought of that,” he says. “I’m not even getting that far. One of my assistants has BC; one of my assistants and I have Minnesota. I wouldn’t even [consider BC], I’m that respectful of Minnesota.

“They played a very good game against St. Cloud in the semifinals, a game where they outplayed St. Cloud and didn’t deserve to lose. St. Cloud got two quick goals on its first two shots and [goaltender Scott] Meyer stood on his head.

“I’m really very impressed. They remind me of Boston College. They remind me of an extremely skilled, terrific special teams opponent like BC. They’re third in the country on the power play, third in the country on the penalty kill and third in the country on scoring. They’re remarkably similar statistically to Boston College.

“They might be a little faster than Boston College, if that’s possible. They’re fast! I’m really respectful and impressed with them. It’s amazing to me that they’ve lost as many games as they have [12] because they are really a good team.”

Minnesota fans looking for a list of Maine star players may have to do some harder looking than they expected. After all, only two Hockey East teams failed to place single member on either the first or second team all-league squad. One was last-place UMass-Amherst. The other was Maine. The Black Bears are a classic “the whole being greater than the sum of the parts” teams.

They struggled all year with scoring until Michael Schutte emerged as a defenseman-turned-sniper on the first line with Martin Kariya and Matthias Trattnig. Niko Dimitrakos has been banged up all year, but has been Mr. March the last two seasons. And there is impressive depth up front with at least one nine-goal scorer on all four lines.

Defense is the strength of the team, led by Peter Metcalf and Doug Janik. In goal, Matt Yeats hasn’t been as consistent as last year when he backstopped the Black Bears to the Frozen Four, but has risen to the occasion in the past.

“Yeats is going to be tested in this one,” says Walsh of the Minnesota matchup. “He’s going to have to play his best game of the year.”

While the Black Bears don’t have the superstars of past years, they do have two things going for them in this clash.

First, they’ve got all the momentum on their side. Maine is 9-2-1 in their last 12 games. Minnesota, on the other hand, is 2-4 in its last six.

The other factor is Minnesota’s lack of success this year on NHL-sized ice surfaces. All but three WCHA teams play on Olympic sheets, leaving only nine games for the Golden Gophers on smaller ones, which is what they’ll see in Worcester.

They posted a very unimpressive 3-5-1 record on small sheets with the wins coming against weak opponents: Notre Dame (10-22-7), Bemidji State (4-26-4) and Minnesota-Duluth (7-28-4). They also lost a game at Duluth, lost and tied at North Dakota before then losing on St. Paul’s NHL sheet to St. Cloud in the WCHA semifinal and Colorado College in the third-place game.

Minnesota’s 0-4-1 record against winning teams on non-Olympic surfaces looms as a potential Achilles’ heel. Those opponents are the iron of the WCHA, but 0-4-1?

Keys for Maine: 1) Utilize the Black Bears’ own speed to emphasize the small ice surface. 2) Yeats must come up big. 3) If the top line doesn’t produce, then it needs to be Niko Time.

No. 6 St. Lawrence

The ECAC will have only one representative this year in the NCAA Tournament, but that team is no stranger. The St. Lawrence Saints make their third straight appearance in the dance after taking home the ECAC tournament championship with a 3-1 win over Cornell this past weekend.

“It feels pretty good; it’s a great tribute to the senior class, that’s for sure, and they have provided all the leadership and materials to get it done,” said coach Joe Marsh. “They’ve been great, and without question, this one will really stand out in terms of the five championships we’ve won since I have been here. It’s the grittiest, gutsiest performance that I have seen. The celebration was pretty subdued given the fact that we were so exhausted and beat up … There wasn’t much gas left in the tank.”

The Saints won their second straight championship, the fifth in Marsh’s tenure as head coach, putting him at the top of that ECAC list.

Throughout the season, the Saints have battled opinion, particularly in relation to goaltending. After Derek Gustafson left following his freshman year, people wondered if the Saints could make a difference with seniors Jeremy Symington and Sean Coakley in between the pipes. With one goal allowed in two games this past weekend at Lake Placid, Symington silenced the critics as he was named tourney Most Outstanding Player.

“It would have been great for Symie to get the two shutouts, and that’s what we were shooting for,” said Marsh.

All season long, it’s been Symington and Coakley splitting time, and for them to come through with the championship is a shot in the collective arms of the Saints.

“Obviously they had to gain their confidence and work their way up to the level we thought they could be at,” said Marsh. “They’re great kids, there’s no doubt, and they’ve worked real hard and I think people measure success in one’s collegiate careers in minutes played and I don’t know that’s how one should look at it.

“The last three years they’ve done a great job. In their sophomore year they backed up [ECAC Player of the Year and All-American] Eric Heffler and then midway through last season, Derek Gustafson got red-hot. In fairness to them, they’ve been there and they’ve competed hard and they’ve given us pretty good depth.

“It just happens to be their senior year, and they’ve gotten better and better.

Anderson

Anderson

“Team chemistry has to be nurtured and it’s the quality of the kids that provide that. I’m really proud of them and how they handled it. Not only when they were playing but when they weren’t. They were team guys and how they responded in that respect.”

Up front the Saints are led by the explosive first line of ECAC Player of the Year Erik Anderson (16-34–50), Mike Gellard (19-36–55) and Al Fyfe (16-24–40). But Marsh is quick to point out that this line is not all the Saints have to offer.

“It’s a great team effort, there are clearly components there. You’ve got a Gellard and Anderson and their contributions are really extraordinary and the guys love them not only because they’re putting up the points, but they’re leading by example,” he said. “The Marchettis and the Muirs, Daniels, Clarance and Carruthers, that’s a pretty good supporting cast for them. They’re all guys that play hard and are getting better. We really needed our bench staff the other night. As ecstatic as it was the other night, the guys were pretty spent, and that’s a tribute to Cornell. Both teams left it on the ice.”

Lately, while people may be looking at that first line, it has been the other scoring line for the Saints that’s picked it up. In Lake Placid, the line of Russ Bartlett (17-24–41), Blair Clarance (11-8–19) and Robin Carruthers (6-12–18) accounted for four of the five St. Lawrence goals. The fifth SLU goal was an empty-netter.

“They had four of the five goals in Placid, so that pretty well sums it up,” said Marsh. “They’ve played great over the last few weeks. Bartlett is a guy with experience, poise — a goalscorer, a point-getter — and I think he has improved defensively and he’s playing really hard and focused and has been on a mission all year. There’s a lot he has to play for personally.

“Clarance has benefited by his experience and Carruthers is just a perfect complement in that he’s just an old time Canadian hockey player in the best sense of the word. He’s a hard-nosed kid and plays with discipline and with honest toughness and he’s certainly provided us with offense, particularly in big games, which he continues to do for us.”

Carruthers scored the overtime goal against Boston University last season in the epic four-overtime quarterfinal.

With solid depth and experience from two previous seasons of NCAA tournament experience, how will the Saints take on Colorado College Friday?

“We try to get everyone to play to their strengths so that they know their roles and how important their role is. Everyone will play their game, and it’s going to be real important against Colorado,” said Marsh. “They’re a real quick transition team, so it’s a team we don’t want to get into a lot of open-ice transition with. We’ve got to be real controlled and real conscious of having five guys on the defensive side of the puck.

“We’ve got to really be ready, and more importantly with a team with their speed, to be on our toes mentally. I think it’s real important that we have to play a high-tempo defensive game. Get to our one-on-ones immediately, read situations quicker. There’s a lot you have to do with a team of their speed in terms of preventative maintenance. You have to prevent mistakes from happening, and when they do happen you have to react quickly to that.

“Hopefully we can be in a good position to counter now and then and get some offense going. It’s important for us not to think it’s going to be wide open. We have to be real conscious of getting back. Right now I’m not so sure we’re well equipped to play the wide-open style like they are, and I love the way they play. But, right now we have to play the best way we are suited to.

“We want to be as competitive as we can be and early on we want to keep them in check. I also don’t want to give the illusion that we’re going to go out there and tackle them. We want to play hockey. We want to play as high-tempo a game as we can, but we have to play it on the defensive side of the puck. We can’t think it’s all about offense, because that’s the game that favors them.”

This Week In Women’s Hockey: March 21, 2001

Feeling Frozen in Minnesota

Well, the debates have been exhausted and the arguing is done. The four-team field for the inaugural NCAA championship is finally set, and the brackets correspond with USCHO.com’s current poll: No. 1 Dartmouth plays No. 4 St. Lawrence in the first semifinal, while No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth takes on No. 3 Harvard in the nightcap. Both games take place Friday at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, with the title game following on Sunday afternoon.

Here’s how the teams shape up for the Frozen Four:

No. 1 Dartmouth: 26-3-1
Coach: Judy Parish Oberting
Players to Watch: Goaltender Amy Ferguson; Defensemen Correne Bredin and Liz Macri; Forwards Carly Haggard, Kristin King and Kim McCullough

The Big Green proved its mettle in the postseason last weekend by outlasting No. 5 Brown in the conference semifinal before beating Harvard to capture the ECAC championship. Dartmouth is the overwhelming favorite to win the NCAAs this weekend, and deservedly so.

Defense wins championships. Dartmouth almost learned that lesson the hard way last Saturday when Brown netminder Pam Dreyer stopped 56 shots before succumbing to the Big Green in double overtime, 3-2.

But that was more a question of when Dartmouth would score, as the Big Green’s stifling defense held the Bears to just eight shots on the other end over the final 41 minutes. On Sunday the Big Green held high-scoring Harvard to just one goal. Led by imposing defenders like Correne Bredin and Liz Macri, Dartmouth plays an aggressive defense that starts with the forecheck and continues into the defensive zone, assuming the opposition is able to cross both blue lines.

The only question for Dartmouth defensively is which goaltender will start. Senior Meaghan Cahill (1.32 GAA, .934 save percentage) has the more impressive numbers, but sophomore Amy Ferguson (2.13 GAA, .916 save percentage) has more big-game experience this year. Look for Dartmouth coach Judy Parish Oberting to platoon her goalies as usual, with Cahill minding net Friday and Ferguson getting the nod on Sunday — but don’t be surprised if Oberting has a quick hook should St. Lawrence jump out to an early lead in the semifinal.

Dartmouth’s one limitation is that it won’t blow any teams out of the water offensively — especially against teams with solid goaltenders like Rachel Barrie, Tuula Puputti and Jessica Ruddock. But the Big Green has the luxury of depth, with eight players who have scored at least 20 points this season. In fact, Dartmouth has five scorers ranked ahead of its top forward line of seniors Jennifer Wiehn, Lauren Trottier and Kristina Guarino. Bredin can score from the blue line while the Big Green’s three reliable goalscorers — Carly Haggard, Kristin King and Kim McCullough — skate on the second and third lines.

No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth: 26-5-4
Coach: Shannon Miller
Players to Watch: Goaltender Tuula Puputti; Forwards Hanne Sikio, Maria Rooth, Erika Holst and Joanne Eustace

The Bulldogs benefited from the late-season collapse of No. 6 Minnesota, which fell in the WCHA semifinal and never got the chance to challenge UMD for a NCAA bid. That said, the Bulldogs have only lost one game since December, and stopping the Bulldogs’ offensive attack is a tall order for any goaltender.

But six of UMD’s last 11 games have gone to overtime, with three of them resulting in a tie. Of course, the NCAA games will have 20-minute extra periods until a winner is determined, but if it comes down to sudden death against a streaky scoring team like Harvard, the Bulldogs might be in trouble.

But can anyone stop UMD’s offense? UMD’s top forward line of sophomores Hanne Sikio, Maria Rooth and Erika Holst has combined for 93 goals this season. And the Bulldogs have sufficient depth with the likes of defensemen Satu Kiipeli and Brittny Ralph, as well as forwards Joanne Eustace (who had a four-goal game earlier this year) and Sanna Peura.

Goaltender Tuula Puputti (2.08 GAA, .911 save percentage) has proved reliable all season long. Should UMD face Dartmouth in the championship game, however, Puputti will have to be at her best because the Bulldogs might not be as successful as usual at the other end against Amy Ferguson.

No. 3 Harvard: 23-9-0
Coach: Katey Stone
Players to Watch: Forwards Jennifer Botterill, Tammy Shewchuk and Angie Francisco; Goaltender Jessica Ruddock

The roster might be small, but this team has heart.

It also has two of the three Kazmaier finalists for player of the year in forwards Jennifer Botterill and Tammy Shewchuk. These Canadian linemates are deadly from anywhere but the bench. Botterill has 41 goals and counting, with her latest coming shorthanded in the 3-1 loss at Dartmouth last Sunday. Shewchuk has 26 goals this season, surprisingly low by her standards, but she has more than compensated with a team-high 44 assists. She also had a hat trick against Providence in the ECAC semifinal, and is capable of a multi-goal game any day of the week.

While depth has been the Crimson’s weakness for several years, there is optimism from the bench this year. Kalen Ingram rounds out the scary top line, and the return of center Angie Francisco to the second line in the postseason gives Harvard coach Katey Stone more options offensively. Francisco is comfortable dishing to wingers Kiirsten Suurkask and Tracy Catlin, both of whom have at least 10 goals this season.

The addition of Francisco has also allowed senior Tara Dunn to switch back to the blue line, giving Harvard someone who can handle the puck at the point. Dunn and sophomore Jamie Hagerman will have their hands full against UMD’s top forward line in the defensive zone.

So will rookie netminder Jessica Ruddock (2.03 GAA, .917 save percentage). Ruddock has come up big before this season, including a 3-2 victory against Dartmouth, but she did give up six goals to UMD when Harvard played at Duluth in December.

No. 4 St. Lawrence: 23-7-3
Coach: Paul Flanagan
Players to Watch: Goaltender Rachel Barrie; Forwards Amanda Sargeant, Carline Trudeau and Gina Kingsbury

The Saints have come a long way to get this far (and I am not referring to the trip from Canton to Minneapolis, either). Last season St. Lawrence was eliminated in the ECAC quarterfinals, and this year coach Paul Flanagan has his team playing for a spot in the first-ever NCAA title game.

The biggest difference: goaltender Rachel Barrie. Barrie (2.03 GAA, .928 save percentage) captured the ECAC Rookie of the Year award after putting on a plethora of impressive performances this season, including a victory at Harvard and a tie at Dartmouth in which she held both the Crimson and the Big Green to just two goals. For the Saints to pull off an upset this weekend, Barrie will have to be at the top of her game.

The Saints also have a core of young goalscorers, led by sophomores Amanda Sargeant and Shannon Smith and rookie Gina Kingsbury. Senior Caroline Trudeau and junior Trisha Powers provide experience and depth to the forward rotation.

St. Lawrence has had a great season so far, but it might take a miracle to beat the top seed in the semifinal.

Between the Lines

It seems as though a lot of lollipops were in order.

For the first time in memory, no newspaper writers or coaches ignorantly tore into the NCAA tournament selection process. According to the last BTL, that’s deserving of a lollipop.

The NCAA itself doesn’t really do a good job of publicizing or educating the public on the process, but USCHO and its readers have taken the lead in that department. Nonetheless, every year, there’s always lots of fans, many writers and even hockey coaches who disparage the selections without having a clue as to how they came about.

That inevitably leads to an annual diatribe against said purveyors of ignorance, imploring them to wake up and realize that the NCAA’s selection process is a cut-and-dried objective one, and that USCHO’s Pairwise Rankings are based on that process (see the Selection FAQ).

Slowly but surely, it appears we have gotten to the point where at least the hockey people and media get it. Sure, they still may not know the intricacies of PWR, or understand what a “comparison” is and how it’s derived, but they understand now, at the very least, that there is a system in place for choosing the field, and that PWR is essentially it.

A couple of Minnesota newspapers actually run the Pairwise Rankings now, in the weeks leading up to the tournament selection. This is huge progress.

You have also begun to hear people use the term “Pairwise” now in matter-of-fact terms.

For a number of years, there has been a certain contingent of coaches who understood that USCHO’s Pairwise Rankings were more or less identical to the committee’s process. Plugged-in coaches like Shawn Walsh and Don Lucia would pester USCHO staff members for the latest “numbers” each year at the conference tournaments.

But a new era of understanding is upon us.

To wit, this year the WCHA — which at one time disregarded the thought of PWR — actually had three USCHO staffers host a press conference during the WCHA tournament to discuss the up-to-the-minute implications.

My favorite is this story, from the Hockey East tournament about a conversation with HEA media relations guy Noah Smith.

“Hey Noah, I’ll see you in Worcester,” said staff member Jim Connelly.

“Well, actually I’m heading West to Grand Rapids,” said Smith.

A surprised Connelly asked, “How the heck did you get sent out West?”

“I had the lowest Pairwise Ranking of all the SIDs in the tournament,” said Smith.

The closest anyone came to butchering the implications of PWR this year was Omaha World-Herald writer Eric Olson. Following the end of the CCHA tournament, Olson was writing his Nebraska-Omaha post-mortem story. The Mavericks fell just short of making this year’s NCAA tournament.

In his article, he is quick to point out the criteria that make up PWR, so it’s clear he understands it to that extent. At the same time, from conversations we’ve had with UNO coach Mike Kemp, it’s clear he knows the drill, too.

Yet, Olson’s article went about juxtaposing Kemp’s comments in a way that made it seem like he was complaining over not getting into the tournament.

He writes:

Five WCHA teams were awarded bids, and two Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference teams ranked ahead of UNO in the Pairwise.

Such an outcome, Kemp said, indicates a problem with the system, particularly in determining strength of conferences.

“There’s so little inter-conference play that there’s not an opportunity to get a real good reading,” Kemp said. “So you’re going to have disparity in RPI (ratings percentage index) that makes it less of an accurate reflection.”

Mercyhurst received an automatic bid by winning the MAAC, a 3-year-old league with a hockey scholarship limit of 11 — seven under the maximum. This is the first year the lightly-regarded MAAC received an automatic bid, and Kemp grudgingly accepted Mercyhurst’s bid because the rules were in place.

But Kemp said it doesn’t make sense that a team such as MAAC runner-up Quinnipiac, according to the Pairwise, was in line for an at-large bid ahead of UNO. Quinnipiac did not receive one.

Now, we’re pretty sure Kemp realizes the situation here. There’s no way Quinnipiac would have actually received a bid ahead of UNO. The committee would have upheld its right to eliminate a team based on its conference’s RPI.

But the article made it seem like Kemp was complaining, when, in reality, I believe he was just pointing out the flaws in the PairWise system.

Of course, we all know this. It’s no secret. Everyone from fans to committee members knows PWR does not accurately rank MAAC teams.

So, there are still misunderstandings. You see evidence of that if you read message boards on other sites, or when we get letters from new readers.

But, we’ve come a long way.

Get a Grip

Can we please stop this juvenile anti-Mercyhurst behavior? It really is getting ridiculous.

[T]he 1976 Moscow Red Army team got a better reception at The Spectrum than Mercyhurst is likely to get in Grand Rapids. That’s just pathologically silly.

Normally, the team with the automatic bid from the small conference enjoys Cinderella status at the national tournament. That’s the way it works in basketball. Everyone roots for the little guy, except maybe the fans of the team they are playing.

Not so with Mercyhurst. Already facing the daunting task of playing Michigan, the Lakers are saddled with the extra burden of carrying the mantle for the MAAC, a conference everyone loves to hate. The Lakers are getting no chance to just enjoy their appearance.

We knew there might be a backlash against the MAAC champion because it would replace a team in the NCAA tournament that, in previous years, would have made it.

But, gosh, the 1976 Moscow Red Army team got a better reception at The Spectrum than Mercyhurst is likely to get in Grand Rapids. That’s just pathologically silly.

Fans are coming out in droves with their “MAAC doesn’t deserve a bid” mantra. “The conference is too weak,” they say. Even Red Berenson fueled the fire recently during an online chat when he said that, the consensus among coaches was that the MAAC wasn’t ready for a bid.

Of course, we all know that Mercyhurst is likely to get spanked. But that’s irrelevant.

The roots of the animosity run deeper than that, however. The MAAC genuinely upset the hockey world when it voted to stop its teams from playing games against Findlay, an emerging D-I program. This left Findlay hanging, and if not for the last-minute good deeds of other non-MAAC teams, the Oilers would have fallen short of the mandatory 20 games vs. D-I opponents necessary to count this season towards its two-year waiting period for NCAA tournament eligibility.

And there have been other instances where the MAAC has displayed what some call arrogance, or antisocial behavior.

Mike Machnik already discussed many of the reasons why Mercyhurst should not be held accountable for this, and why the MAAC will, in the long run, be good for hockey.

In the big picture, it should also be remembered where the MAAC is coming from. Commissioner Rich Ensor has done some things that have ticked off the rest of the hockey community, but, as a member of the NCAA’s Management Council, he is used to being the little guy in big battles against huge conferences. Perhaps he just didn’t realize how tight-knit the college hockey community was, and how his actions were sure to polarize everyone else against him.

If he didn’t realize it, he surely does now.

Ensor can be an ally to college hockey. As one of the few Management Council members with a tie to hockey, he has the power to influence NCAA actions. And he was an outspoken critic of the NCAA’s stance against expansion of the tournament bracket to 16 teams.

The MAAC definitely has its problems, and we’ve written about them here. For one, the conference needs to raise its scholarship limit from 11 to 18, to get in line with everyone else and ensure its stronger teams don’t jump ship.

But blaming the MAAC for accepting an NCAA autobid, and subsequently holding the MAAC missteps against Mercyhurst, is misguided at best, and juvenile at worst.

Come on now, you remember college, don’t you? You remember all those terrible decisions those suits in the college administration used to perpetrate against the students and faculty. You remember those demonstrations in front of the school president’s office.

Administrators will always make decisions that the masses have no control over. What, you wanted Mercyhurst to just leave the MAAC two months before the season? Maybe it will leave one day. Heck, for five years, I’ve advocated the ECAC teams do that en masse over their administrators’ bungling.

But, all of this anti-Mercyhurst sentiment seems like nothing more than an excuse for some bored people to get riled up over something.

After winning the MAAC championship game, Gotkin was reminded of all of this anti-MAAC sentiment. At that point, still giddy from victory, he didn’t seem to mind. “We’ll find a way to have fun with it,” he said.

Let go of your hate, people. If you think Mercyhurst will get creamed, fine, it will all be over by Saturday night. Meanwhile, Gotkin and his crew will still be on Cloud Nine.

Net Gain

Maybe I’m the only one, but I think St. Lawrence has a good chance against Colorado College. I tend to avoid predictions like the plague, but if goalie Jeremy Symington just plays decent, there’s no reason the Saints can’t win.

St. Lawrence would’ve been a legitimate contender this year had it not lost goalie Derek Gustafson and forward Brandon Dietrich early to the NHL.

Symington

Symington

Especially in goal, the Saints were left with a huge void. And, while they did bring in a strong recruiting class on defense, the backline was hit with the graduation of Justin Harney and Dale Clarke. Those hits could have been absorbed more easily, and the new defense given more time to fit in, had Gustafson been between the pipes.

As it was, coach Joe Marsh lined up a brutal schedule of top-notch opponents, expecting those guys to be around. Instead, the Saints lost to just about all of those games, and almost lost out on an NCAA bid as a result.

But that is in the past now. Given a whole season to get the younger players in line, St. Lawrence is again a worthy foe. The key remains in goal.

An NHL draft pick, Symington came into St. Lawrence highly-touted, but watched as Eric Heffler came from nowhere to take the job away and become an All-American. Last year, Symington thought he’d have a shot for the regular role, and started the season in a three-goalie rotation until along came Gustafson to win the spot outright.

This season, both he and Sean Coakley were never consistent enough for either to win the full-time job. But, with his career winding down, Symington picked a heckuva time to perk up. He allowed just one goal in two games last weekend, and was named ECAC tournament MVP as the Saints won the title and earned the NCAA bid.

St. Lawrence has the offense, and the defense has steadily improved all season. If the Saints get a solid effort from Symington, there’s no reason they can’t win the game.

That said, here’s a couple of notes for you. Symington’s first ever-college game was a 12-3 loss to CC on Oct. 24, 1997. Ouch. And, the ECAC is 0-12 against the WCHA in the NCAA tournament under its present format (started in 1992). Double ouch. The last of those losses was in Madison, Wis. two years ago … CC vs. St. Lawrence.

If St. Lawrence does lose, expect to hear the usual “EZAC” comments. This year, those outcries are correct, as it turns out. As discussed in the last BTL, there’s no question the ECAC has been less competitive than usual this year, as a whole.

Sadly, even though it’s only one year, there’s plenty of evidence that suggests this is an irreversible trend. And, like this stock market plunge, things are bound to get worse at this rate.

I mentioned last time that this dynamic is not necessarily anyone’s fault. However, the continued missteps of the ECAC hierarchy is definitely not helping, and could be speeding up the process. The MAAC has NCAA clout, the other conferences have strong internal marketing muscle … the ECAC has neither. It’s just there, spinning its wheels while the rest of college hockey goes forward.

Has anyone seen the conference’s web site lately? To a non-techno-geek, this may seem petty, but it’s indicative of everything. (Warning: techno-babble ahead)

Here’s the site: http://www.spfldcol.edu/ecachockey. You can check it out, but it’s not updated. They don’t have their own domain name. Now, try clicking on the link for D-I Men. (I’d give you the URL, but it is such an insanely long piece of hieroglyphics, that it’s impossible to replicate.) OK, that page seems updated, though it’s a mess.

I thought most people realized three years ago that the Web was not just a place to slap some text and images, but that it was a necessary marketing tool. All of the other conferences have certainly realized it.

It’s a shame for the great coaches and schools that make up the conference, that the recruiting disadvantage already in place is magnified by the lack of support from their own conference.

My big fear is the so-called capitulation stage that stock market watchers refer to. In the ECAC’s case, that would mean its best and brightest coaches leaving for “bigger” schools. Or, at the very least, when the current coaches retire, the openings becoming less attractive in general.

It was a good sign when Miami’s Mark Mazzoleni wanted to switch to Harvard, so there doesn’t seem to be imminent danger of this happening. But, it’s forseeable.

You want to defend the ECAC, but it’s increasingly harder to do.

So, I repeat what I wrote four years ago. Message to ECAC teams: Please leave the conference. All of you. Together. Now.

Pay up, Sioux fans

I said I don’t make predictions, but … each time I’ve been to Frozen Four, North Dakota won, and, on the way home, it snowed in the Northeast.

I’ll be in Albany.

Twilight Zone

Does anyone find it more than coincidental, that on St. Patrick’s Day — both St. Lawrence and St. Cloud won championships?

Oh yeah, so did Michigan “St.” and Plattsburgh “St.”

As well as Mercyhurst, which wears green.

Creepy.

Bore-ish Behavior

Esteemed colleague Paula Weston wrote a brilliant article not too long ago about the state of fan cheering in college arenas. While, on the one hand, you have seen a decrease in fan volume at newer arenas that replaced homier relics, you have also seen the rise in boorish behavior.

Now, the good-old-days mentality will never be extolled here. As I passed 30, I was still listening to Rage Against the Machine, and those of its ilk, and proud of it.

You may find that in bad taste, but you can’t say it’s indicative of old-days way of thinking.

But, just because you don’t automatically think everything new is bad, it’s not automatically better either. And cheering at many arenas, and, in some cases, lack thereof, is definitely not better.

The biggest problem is, traditional college chants have been replaced by or amended with vulgarity. But worse than vulgar, it’s dumb.

In response to Paula’s commentary on this subject, in which she called the Michigan fans’ behavior “boring,” she received this response (unedited in all its glory):

[W]here you claim our (the Michigan) student section has become boring, tell that to some opposing teams fans. I have seen at least four fights this year between parents/fans of opposing teams players who leave there seats and confront a Michigan student. The result has been the ejection of the fan from Yost, and that is the goal, make their fans and team lose their cool. Now I think if you ask the opposing team’s fans if we have become boring, I think they would have to say no, I mean if what we say was truelly boring I doubt a 40 year old guy would stand up and start a fight with a 20 year old college student jsut having fun at a hockey game. So just for you we will try to step it up a notch. Maybe we are not vocal or vulger enough, but whatever it is I will make sure it is fixed in the future.

This poor, misguided soul doesn’t quite understand irony. My friend, you are not boring because you are quiet, you are boring because your act has worn thin. Because your chants have the creativity of a six-year old.

Take, by contrast, Cornell’s Lynah Rink. Michigan fans surely remember the Lynah Faithful. They were the rabid group in red and white, that took over your building in the 1991 NCAA tournament. Right, the ones that taught you all those cheers.

Of course, in what has become a trend in arenas, the Yost crowd bastardized those cheers, adding gratuitous vulgarity.

This is not to pick specifically on Michigan. In fact, even the Lynah faithful started getting a bit too vulgar in the mid-’90s, probably out of boredom from their team’s failing play on the ice.

The difference is, Cornell coach Mike Schafer, upon taking over in 1995-96, put the clamp down on the language. He has young kids, and didn’t want his wife to have to cover their ears every time the crowd started a chant. Slowly but surely, the Lynah Faithful re-proved it can be loud and obnoxious, without being vulgar.

This is not about being a prude. Far from it. A movie like Pulp Fiction, despite its foul language and violence, is two hours of cinematic genius. But there’s a time and place for everything.

What the new crop of students have forgotten is, vulgar language in and of itself, is lame. If you’re going to be obnoxious, at least have some intelligence to it. Even in their most vulgar days, the Cornell crowd’s language at least demonstrated wry wit.

Perhaps Red Berenson — who recently called the “C’ya” chant (which these days is normally followed by “You A** Hole”) the Yost crowd’s best — should take a page from Schafer’s book.

Ultimately, the vulgarity at college rinks is not an insult to my morality … it’s an insult to my intelligence.

(This reminds me of the Seinfeld bit: A fellow comedian converts to Judaism so that it’s OK for him to tell Jewish jokes. Jerry is annoyed, and Elaine asks, “This offends you as a Jew?” and Jerry says, “No, it offends me as a comedian.”)

Glory Days

Speaking of Paula Weston, our CCHA reporter had the pleasure of visiting The Bullpen, the nickname for Nebraska-Omaha’s home arena, for the first time during the CCHA playoffs. She was quite enamored with the whole place, and wrote very poignently about it.

As for myself, I was in my own favorite nirvana that weekend, Ithaca, N.Y., a place I revere not only for the shrine that is Cornell’s Lynah Rink, but for the town itself, a place where I spent four years as an undergrad, and never really wanted to leave.

Just one tip: Don’t take a crusty laptop with you.

After it went kaput, I spent the better part of that Saturday morning looking for Internet access, finally finding it in a tiny ice cream shop in Collegetown, just off Cornell’s campus. The guy behind the counter looked eerily familiar, and, to make a long story a little less long, it turns out he used to work in the restaurant that was situated two floors above the dorm room from my first two years of college.

Just another reason to love that quaint place. Like many college towns, it has enough of a city-like mentality to be interesting, yet small enough so that you get to know everyone in town by the time you leave.

Alas, I had to actually order something to use the computer. So, I got a chocolate shake. I took my sweet time finishing the thing, too, just so I could sit and read all of the stories about those Friday games on USCHO.

Before realizing I needed to do some actual work for USCHO, I had finished my shake, and had to leave. So, after galavanting around town, checking out all the old haunts, I went out to again find ‘Net access. Lo and behold, a lot had changed since my last visit, because right around the corner from the hotel was a brand spankin’ new public library, with 30 Web access stations.

I then remembered why I was feeling even more nostalgic than usual.

Ten years ago last week, Cornell was playing at Boston Garden, the then-location of the ECAC tournament final four. That was during spring break at school, and I had no car, but I convinced a friend in Oneonta (1 1/2 hours from Ithaca) to drive the final 4-plus hours to Boston. The trick was, getting to Oneonta.

I then hatched a plan. There was a girl in a class of mine, a year older and very attractive. We knew each other, and that was about the extent of it, because this was not the type of girl who would normally talk to a dork like me. But, I knew that she was headed in that direction for the weekend.

So, Mr. Smooth that I was in those days, I happened to make sure she overheard me lamenting my fate, and how I needed a ride to Oneonta. Apparently, she had a heart, because she offered me a ride.

“Score!” said I (to myself).

Boston wound up being a letdown, especially since Cornell lost in OT in the semifinal, thus capping an incredibly disappointing stretch run. However, the three hours worth of conversation with this wonderful girl made up for it all.

Two weeks later, we had our first date. Less than three years after that, Marcy and I were married. The rest, as they say, is history.

Thank you Ithaca, and thank you Cornell.

As for the friend in Oneonta? It’s the last time I ever saw him. Wonder what he’s up to …

Beanpot Redux

Many fans outside of New England question the reason for paying so much attention to the Beanpot. So, last article, we defended the tournament, and the coverage it receives.

In response came a thoughtful letter from someone at Michigan State, Joe Totherow, giving a counter-argument.

I definitely understand the desire to give due attention to the Beanpot. You’re right that it isn’t simply a “Boston tournament,” though there’s nothing wrong with that, since Boston has such a storied hockey history. I, for one, certainly do not “thumb my nose” at the Beanpot, nor would any true fan of college hockey.

But while I have no objection to your extensive coverage of the event, I can sympathize with those fans who claim that there is a lack of balance in coverage. I am a fan of Michigan State and I look forward each year to the GLI. While I did enjoy your coverage of the Beanpot and found the history column interesting, I was a bit taken aback by the lack of balance between your coverage of the GLI and that of the Beanpot.

The implication, whether intentional or not, is that the Beanpot is the most important, storied and interesting in-season tournament in college hockey. That’s where I, and many other fans, take issue.

The response to this proved satisfactory to Joe. So, if it’s good enough for Joe, why not reprint it here?:

There are number of reasons why the Beanpot is different than something like the GLI.

  1. It’s been happening longer – 49 years
  2. It’s the only major tournament that doesn’t take place during a major holiday — i.e. X-mas or Thanksgiving.
  3. Even to the non-college-hockey fan, it’s known. To wit, it’s the only in-season tournament that draws a mention on ESPN. They even carried the championship game one year.
  4. It has the unique aspect of happening over two weeks.
  5. It has the unique aspect of having four participating schools within five miles of each other.
  6. The GLI takes place amid all of the other tournaments. It’s harder, in that case, to single one out, especially since many of our reporters are spread out at other tournaments.

It Makes Too Much Sense

Another sub-topic of the Beanpot discussion was the issue of Harvard’s schedule. The Crimson were the only Beanpot team that had to play twice the weekend before the first Monday of the tournament. The ECAC has never been able to come up with a solution that was good enough for Harvard, without giving them a break on a league weekend.

So, Rick McAdoo writes:

Have people suggested that the ECAC schedule the Harvard-Brown travel partner games the 2 Fridays before the Beanpot Mondays? The first Friday would be Harvard at Brown, then the Beanpot game, then the next Monday would be Brown at Harvard, then the final Beanpot game. That way no other ECAC teams would complain that they have to play 2 games in a weekend while Harvard only plays one, etc… Harvard would get the benefit of only playing a single game before the Beanpot, like their Hockey East counterparts, and the ECAC scheduling wouldn’t be such a headache.

I know that Brown-Harvard sort of (recently?) traditionally play each other early in the season, but I would think the benefits to the ECAC of having a strong Harvard presence in the Beanpot would make this scheduling change a worthwhile thing.

Yep, you’d think.

Wanted: Club Team in Need of Coach

I’m trying to figure out if I should be laughing at this.

colorscans/20002001/btl-hofstra.jpg

Recently, a rather prominent quarter-page ad ran in The Hockey News, the March 9 issue. The ad made a big splash, proclaiming Hofstra’s move to Division I status was imminent.

When I first heard of this, I was very skeptical. I figured the person who told me must have read the ad wrong. Heck, if this was true, it would have been all over the USCHO message boards.

But there it was. A complete ad, basically trying to recruit players, and rambling on about how Hofstra was going to be a force to reckon with in D-I. The ad extolled the virtues of the college, said the games would be played in Nassau Coliseum, and urged anyone that wanted to be associated with a soon-to-be college hockey power to get on board now.

Still skeptical, I called Hofstra. The first person I talked to in the sports information office hadn’t heard a thing. I asked, then, if he could help me track down the number of the coach of the club team. Club teams are not members of the athletic department at the schools, but I figured their coach must know if this was really true.

So, the assistant SID turned to his colleagues, asking for tips on finding the phone number for the club hockey coach.

You want to hear the punchline?

Apparently, there is no longer a club coach.

He was fired … for putting an unauthorized ad in The Hockey News about upgrading to D-I.

There was an e-mail address associated with the ad, presumably of the club team coach. Attempts to reach him have been unsuccessful, but boy, I really want to know what this guy was thinking.

Was he doing it to prove a point? Was he doing it for spite? Was he trying to force the hand of the Hofstra athletic department? Or was it a gag?

Either way, it had to cost him a pretty penny. At least I found it humorous.

Editorial: Don’t Blame the Lakers

“If you don’t have fun, I think you’ve missed the point.”

That’s what a smiling and eminently likeable Rick Gotkin, head coach of Mercyhurst, said after his Lakers made history by securing the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference’s first ever bid to the NCAA Division I Ice Hockey Tournament.

In doing so, Gotkin becomes the first coach in NCAA hockey history to guide a team to the national tournament in all three divisions. You only had to see the excitement and pure joy on the faces of Gotkin, his assistants and players as they poured off the bench in celebration of a 6-5 MAAC championship win over rival Quinnipiac, to understand how much this means to the coach and his team.

Mercyhurst will take on nine-time NCAA champion Michigan on Saturday afternoon in Grand Rapids in the first game of the West Regional.

David versus Goliath. Rocky versus Apollo. USA versus the Soviet Union. Everyone loves the underdog.

Do they?

The Lakers carry with them the banner of the MAAC, a fledgling league that has quickly gained enemies among the college hockey community. Many would say, with good reason.

Forget that, as the MAAC automatic qualifier, Mercyhurst takes away a precious bid from a team that is, frankly, better, whether it is New Hampshire, Clarkson or Nebraska-Omaha.

The MAAC hasn’t exactly endeared itself to the rest of college hockey over the last year. In August, just weeks before the start of the season, MAAC athletic directors voted 7-3 not to consider a motion to allow non-league games by its members against another fledgling program, Findlay, which is in the process of upgrading to Division I but is officially Division II under NCAA regulations. A MAAC rule prohibits its members from scheduling non-Division I opponents, not just in hockey, but in all sports. But exceptions have been made to that rule, and this appeared to be a situation that deserved just such an exception.

Yet Findlay was suddenly left to find replacement opponents for eight games on its schedule. Ask any coach how hard it is to schedule non-league games, let alone doing it a few weeks before the season starts when everyone else’s schedule is set. And it wasn’t easy for Findlay. The Oilers wound up with games against club teams and Canadian schools. Not what a coach like Craig Barnett, who is trying to take his team to the next level, was hoping for.

The MAAC should have allowed the exception. You won’t find too many people who will argue that. Criticism of the decision came from the highest reaches of Division I hockey, including league commissioners Bruce McLeod of the WCHA and Joe Bertagna of Hockey East. That’s rare.

College hockey has been built on teamwork. Over the years, the established programs have helped the sport grow by agreeing to schedule teams that were trying to get to the next level. One of the clearest examples of this came in the early 1990s, when the CCHA and WCHA banded together to give a home to then-Independents Alaska-Anchorage and Alaska-Fairbanks. Neither conference could or would take on both Alaska teams, among the sport’s last remaining Independents, but the two Western leagues agreed that each would accept one.

In so doing, they not only gave the Alaska teams a permanent home, they continued this chain of teamwork. It’s a chain that continues to this day with established Division I programs like Cornell, Minnesota, Providence and Rensselaer scheduling games against Iona, Mercyhurst, Quinnipiac and Sacred Heart.

But the MAAC broke that chain with its Findlay decision. The college hockey community is a close-knit one, and people don’t take too kindly to things like this.

As a result, Mercyhurst doesn’t only face opposition from those who question the legitimacy of the MAAC’s automatic bid. It also will face fans who don’t know the first thing about the Lakers and Rick Gotkin, but who know that they’re from the MAAC and whose battle cry is, “Remember Findlay!”

But wait.

Remember that 7-3 vote? Three MAAC schools voted against the decision not to consider an exemption to allow the Findlay games. One of those schools was Mercyhurst.

No matter what you may think of the MAAC for its handling of the Findlay situation, Mercyhurst did its best to keep the games. In the end, it was bound to accept the MAAC’s decision, like it or not. Maybe it’s fitting that Mercyhurst got that first MAAC bid.

Back on the legitimacy of the automatic bid, also remember that the NCAA tournament has never been about ensuring that the 12 best teams get in. If it was, we wouldn’t have automatic bids at all. All teams would be selected at large. Think about how much that would take away from the excitement of the conference tournaments.

The NCAA tournament is about crowning a champion, but it’s also about opportunities for participation. That’s why automatic bids exist. It’s been this way in basketball and other sports for years, where schools like Hampton get to compete on the national stage with the likes of Duke and North Carolina, even if only for a day.

And the existence of the MAAC will result in more opportunities for players to compete in the NCAA tournament in hockey. Not just for the MAAC team that earns its conference’s annual automatic bid, but also for other teams that most agree should get in.

The 11 schools in the MAAC were counted by NCAA hockey officials in presenting their case for expanding the tournament from 12 to 16 teams which will, among other things, finally get rid of the controversial first-round byes. The all-important ratio of schools to bids has finally risen to where the NCAA agrees that expansion is warranted, and expansion was only denied due to short term budgetary and gender equity concerns across the NCAA as a whole. The tournament will expand, whether it is in 2003 or soon thereafter. It’s just a question of when.

Remember New Hampshire, Clarkson and Nebraska-Omaha? They’d get bids to the expanded tournament. If the MAAC didn’t exist, expansion would still be a long, long ways off. Hang in there. It’s just around the corner. We have the MAAC to thank for that.

So think what you will about the MAAC. You might even be right to some extent. But, when this weekend rolls around, don’t take out your frustrations on Mercyhurst. Remember, this time of year is about excitement. And fun. And teams like Mercyhurst are what this is all about.

Like Rick Gotkin says. If you’re not having fun, you’re missing the point.

Markell Gets Contract Extension

Ohio State coach John Markell has received a two-year contract extension. Markell, who became the Buckeyes’ permanent head coach May 22, 1995, has one year remaining on his current contract.

Markell

Markell

“We are delighted to extend Coach Markell’s contract through the 2004 season,” Andy Geiger, Ohio State Director of Athletics, said upon making the announcement. “John has done an excellent job and we wanted him to know we are excited about the future with him leading the way.”

Markell, who recently completed his sixth full season at the helm for the Buckeyes, recorded his 100th win with an overtime victory at Miami on Feb. 10. He has compiled a career mark of 102-117-19 since taking over as interim head coach late in the 1995 season. Markell, the 1998 CCHA Coach of the Year, has led the Buckeyes to the NCAA Tournament on two occasions, including a Frozen Four appearance in 1998.

“I’m excited about the future of hockey at Ohio State,” Markell said. “We have a good young team at a premier institution. I look forward to working with the administration to continue building toward a championship team.”

This season, the Buckeyes were 17-18-2 overall and finished seventh in the CCHA. The squad, which included 10 freshmen, ended its season with a double-overtime loss to Nebraska-Omaha in the decisive third game of the best-of-three series in the first round of the CCHA Tournament.

The End of the Beginning

It wasn’t supposed to be like this.

When the MAAC was forming, back in 1997, Quinnipiac athletic director Jack McDonald was a spearhead for its creation. He then sought out a key role in the college hockey community, earning a place on the NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey Committee.

Meanwhile, his team was tearing up the MAAC. With an NCAA automatic bid on the horizon, Quinnipiac figured the conference’s first-ever berth was rightfully its, and it was only a matter of time before the Braves were representing their new conference nationally.

Even after losing in the semifinals of the first two MAAC tournaments — both times finishing the regular season in first place — the Braves figured they would rise to the occasion this year with the NCAA bid on the line.

Unfortunately, the best laid plans often go awry; a funny thing happened on the way to the forum; and all those other cliches.

By last Saturday afternoon, it was Mercyhurst that pulled out a 6-5 win in the MAAC tournament championship game, and left Quinnipiac left to wonder where it all went wrong.

“I don’t think the way we played, we deserved to win,” said Quinnipiac head coach Rand Pecknold. “Our focal point the whole season was to play defense. You don’t give up six goals in the championship game and expect to win.”

Indeed, Quinnipiac, a run-and-gun team over the past couple years, clamped down defensively this season. With so much at stake this year, the Braves knew that was a necessity. For most of the season, they did it effectively, and it didn’t hurt to have freshman Justin Eddy — who stopped 58 shots in a 1-1 tie with St. Lawrence early in the season — between the pipes.

Something else that hurt Quinnipiac in past seasons was bad penalties, and that trend continued this year. The Braves took over 90 minutes in penalties in a 6-0 loss to Mercyhurst in January, a game in which Pecknold got ejected, and were second in the conference with over 21 minutes in penalties per game. It cost them in the semifinal game of the league tournament two years in a row.

Coming into Saturday’s championship, Pecknold urged his team to stay away from bad penalties.

This was the best four years of my life, the time I spent on the ice with these players and coaches. … The proudest part is being with all these guys. They make everything special. I wish them the best. I want to read about them in the paper, I want to see them on TV.

— Quinnipiac senior Anthony DiPalma

But, in the end, for all the wonderful senior leadership, and the great success story the program had written, the past came back to haunt them.

“I’m more disappointed with how my guys played than actually losing the game,” Pecknold said. “The sixth goal, we had both ‘D’ go to the corner, and it was just a terrible play. Our entire focus was to not let that happen, and we did.”

Players from many of the so-called “Big Four” conferences do not realistically have a chance at the NCAA tournament. Perhaps a team like Ferris State, Alaska-Anchorage or Vermont is better, all things considered, than any MAAC team. But those teams had no realistic shot.

Quinnipiac’s chance was quite real.

“We were close for a few years, and we thought this year should’ve been our year,” said junior forward Ryan Olson. “It would’ve been the icing on the cake.”

Those seniors, like Chris Cerrella, Shawn Mansoff, Anthony DiPalma, Jed Holtzman and Chad Poliquin, won’t get another chance at it. They know their chance at glory, at recognition, slipped away.

“Playoff hockey is different hockey. It doesn’t matter, you can be the 10th seed, eighth seed, you can beat the No. 1 team,” said Cerrella. “It doesn’t really matter who’s predicted to win. If you play hard in the playoffs and the bounces go your way, you win a game. And it’s only a one-game format. So you have one bad [game], like we had tonight, and we’re out.”

This was to be their tournament. An up-and-down regular season didn’t matter, because the brass ring was there to be had at the end. But Pecknold had a hard time reversing past indiscretions.

“We had an up and down year, so nothing was certain,” Pecknold said. “Even going into the tournament against Army … I was worried about how well we play team defense and I was worried about our penalties.

“Our objectives were the same before Army, before Iona and before Mercyhurst, and we really only executed once out of the three, against Iona, and we really got lucky to win against Army in overtime — we took a couple of bad penalties in that game.

“There’s no doubt we’re a great team, but we’ve been a great regular-season team. And we haven’t been able to get over that hump to become a great playoff team. And great playoff teams play great defense. And we do it sporadically, we don’t do it every night.”

For all the gloom and doom and lost opportunity, however, the seniors can leave with theirs heads high. They came in as borderline Division I players that few others wanted, and helped build a program more or less from scratch. They leave behind a legacy that may be looked back upon one day as the start of something bigger.

“I have no regrets in the last four years,” said Cerrella. “The last four years I had here were unbelievable. I owe it all to coach Pecknold and Jack McDonald. I had nowhere else to go and they took a shot at me. I was a bubble D-I player, and I got a scholarship and it turned out well for me. It’s been a great four years.”

An emotional DiPalma spoke after Saturday’s loss about the impact of his four years.

“This was the best four years of my life, the time I spent on the ice with these players and coaches,” DiPalma said. “The proudest part is being with all these guys. They make everything special. I wish them the best. I want to read about them in the paper, I want to see them on TV.”

He, too, came to the school to help build something, and was excited when the MAAC received the automatic bid.

“That was big. You finally feel like you’re a D-I team,” he said.

Olson gets one more crack at it. Despite the disappointment, he’s excited for the league and the team.

“It’s good to be part of. The MAAC is growing, and it’s going to become a tough Division I hockey league,” he said.

Olson, one of the few Canadians on the Quinnipiac roster, is spreading the gospel back home in Alberta.

“That’s how we got [freshman defenseman Wade] Winkler. I played two years with him in the British Columbia league. I talked to him and said, ‘Come out here and play, we’re starting something new.’ It’s gonna keep happening.

“The whole program’s gonna get better, the whole league’s gonna get better, and it’s going to be nice to see in the future.”

Now that’s how it’s supposed to be.

Field, Seedings Set for 2001 NCAA Tournament

For the fifth straight year, USCHO.com’s Pairwise Rankings correctly predicted the NCAA tournament field, but the selection committee threw a curveball in the seeding.

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As expected, North Dakota earned the second seed in the East, but Colorado College was given a potential date with the Sioux, getting the third seed and a first-round matchup with ECAC champion St. Lawrence, the sixth seed. The East bracket was rounded out with the top seed, Hockey East champion Boston College, which will face the winner of the game between No. 4 Minnesota and No. 5 Maine.

In the West Regional, CCHA champion and No. 1 Michigan State awaits either No. 4 Wisconsin or No. 5 Providence, while second-seeded St. Cloud, the WCHA tourney titlist, gets the victor of the first-round game pairing No. 3 Michigan and No. 6 Mercyhurst, the first-ever MAAC team in the field.

This is the first year that bye teams were place irrespective of region, allowing North Dakota the chance to earn the Eastern bye.

The committee also swayed from its usual diligence in avoiding second-round intra-conference matchups, with Maine staring at a second-round game with Boston College. However, at least one potential second-round intra-conference game was unavoidable this season, with the WCHA receiving an unprecedented five slots in the 12-team field.

Selection of the teams offered no real surprises. Between the objective criteria method and the way last weekend’s conference tournament games shook down, the field was more or less set after Friday evening’s matches.

North Dakota is gunning to become the first repeat champion since the 1972 Boston University Terriers. Boston College, meanwhile, is trying to win its first championship since the tournament’s second year, 1949.

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This is the first time ever that two ECAC teams failed to make the NCAA tournament. It’s also the first time since 1979 that two teams that currently comprise the ECAC failed to make it. In that year, Dartmouth and New Hampshire was in the five-team tournament; New Hampshire, now in Hockey East, was an ECAC member until 1984, the year HEA was formed.

St. Cloud, which won its first title of any kind, winning the WCHA tournament in overtime from North Dakota, received its first-ever bye to the NCAA tournament.

Last year’s tournament participants that did not return are Colgate, BU, New Hampshire and Niagara. They were replaced by Mercyhurst, Minnesota, Providence and Colorado College.

Not Exactly Chopped Liver

He’d be the top rookie on almost every other team in the league. He’s scored 12 goals and assisted on 11 others. In the playoffs he’s been red-hot, scoring both game-winners in the quarterfinals and then another in the title tilt.

Not too shabby, right?

In the case of Boston College’s Tony Voce, however, those achievements have placed him fourth among his own team’s freshmen.

Voce

Voce

Chuck Kobasew was a unanimous pick as Hockey East Rookie of the Year. Ben Eaves joined him as a unanimous selection on the All-Rookie Team. Defenseman J.D. Forrest made it three Eagles on the all-freshman squad.

All of which left Voce as a relative afterthought on what is far and away the top rookie class in the league.

Which is not to imply that the 5-8, 170-pounder is, as they say, chopped liver. Voce has just been a late bloomer compared to his more celebrated freshman teammates. He didn’t tally his first point until the seventh contest of the season. After nine games, his scoring line was a scant 1-0–1.

“Guys on the team said, ‘Hey, don’t worry about it. Just keep working,'” he says. “I really don’t think about it. If points come, they come. As long as the team wins, I don’t care.

“I was a little frustrated, but not to the point where it was hurting me.”

From his schoolboy days at Lawrence Academy through his rocky start, Voce had impressed BC coach Jerry York as a diamond in the rough.

“We recruited him as a great athlete,” says York. “He was the [league] MVP in football and then he switched right to hockey, so he hadn’t played as much hockey [compared to] the September-to-June [schedule] that a lot of players play. We saw a natural goalscorer with great hand-to-eye coordination skills.”

Starting with a road trip to Notre Dame, Voce went on a brief scoring binge in November, totaling four goals and an assist in three games. Unfortunately, the streak was short-lived as he continued to adjust to the collegiate game. Over the next 15 games, he scored one goal; over 23 games, two goals.

“I knew my role was playing the third line and see what happens and work hard,” says the soft-spoken freshman. “I really didn’t get too upset about it.”

At that point, could he have envisioned scoring three game-winning goals in the Hockey East playoffs, earning a berth on the all-tournament team?

“Not really,” he says, laughing. “I honestly couldn’t. I don’t know how it happened.”

Voce, seemingly devoid of any ego at all, really hasn’t come to grips with how effective his play has been of late.

He laughs and says, “I don’t even know what to say.”

York knows exactly what to say. He knows the streak has been no fluke.

“Over the last three or four weeks, he’s been one of our top-end players,” he says. “What a remarkable goal he got tonight; he just snapped it up top.

“He’s in that class [up front] with Eaves and Kobasew. Voce is right there. He’s right in that mix. He’s strong on his skates. He understands the game real well and has all those athletic instincts. I think he’s going to be right with those guys as they go through their career here.”

For his part, Voce isn’t about to put himself on par yet with his three all-rookie squad teammates.

“They’re top players in the country,” he says. “Kobasew is going to go in the first round. Bennie is going to go somewhere in the draft this year. J.D. went last year.

“Those are big-time players. They came in with the big names on them. I just came in as a role player. I just work hard in the corners and get the job done.

“I really don’t feel any pressure on myself to have to do something special to get where they are. They’re the names and whatever happens, happens.”

But with two goals in the Hockey East championship game and five in his last five games, isn’t Voce about to make a name for himself?

“Aw, a little bit,” he says before reverting to his ego-less stance. “But I’m not too worried about it.”

LSSU Fires Borek; Rumors Swirl About Replacement

Scott Borek has been fired as head coach at Lake Superior State, after five seasons at the helm.

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Borek came to Lake Superior from Division III Colby, taking over for Jeff Jackson, who became legendary in the area for winning two national championships. Jackson was reportedly offered a chance to return, but recently declined.

Instead, rumors are swirling that another former Laker national championship coach, Frank Anzalone, will return to the Soo. Anzalone was fired as head coach of the Pee Dee Pride of the East Coast Hockey League last October, and has bounced around pro hockey since leaving Lake Superior.

Borek, 37, was under fire from the get go in Lake Superior, both from fans and the administration, for not being able to continue previous success. The Lakers were 76-94-17 under Borek, including a 13-23-0 record this past season when they failed to make the CCHA playoffs for the first time in 19 years.

Last season, the Lakers finished a promising third in the CCHA and Borek won Coach of the Year. But they lost in the first round of the CCHA tournament to Bowling Green, and never won a playoff game under Borek.

Last spring, Borek signed a two-year contract extension at Lake Superior that made him the ninth-highest paid head coach in the league. Shortly thereafter, the Dartmouth graduate pursued the Princeton job, though he denied it to the bitter end.

“I was given an opportunity to coach here and I’ll always cherish that,” Borek said to the Soo Evening News. “This is the nature of the business and a risk that you take as a coach. My first concern is to make sure my family is not affected by this. I was caught off guard by the decision and I haven’t talked with them about our future plans yet.

“It has been a great experience for me. I feel I am a much better coach and stronger person. I leave with no ill will and will always wish the best for the program.”

This season, the Lakers were decimated with three major injuries and several minor ones.

“This move is a response to the past five years, the lack of success, the direction of the team,” said athletic director Bill Crawford to the Evening News. “Scott deserves great credit for graduating athletes (seven this May), for leading a good group who carried themselves well and brought credit to themselves and their families. We have had less off-ice difficulty and more success in the classroom than at any time in my memory. We just didn’t have success on the ice, and we need that too. This is the business side of hockey, and it isn’t always fun.”

Jackson left Lake Superior in 1996, after losing in the second round of the NCAA tournament to Vermont. He coached seven years, and won national championships in 1992 and 1994. Anzalone led the Lakers to the 1988 title.

Borek had been an assistant at Brown and Providence before coaching at Colby. A neck injury ended his playing career during his sophomore season at Dartmouth, and he served as an assistant there while finishing his degree.

Bright Lights, Big Dance

The first two seasons of Jeff Gould’s career at Mercyhurst could be classified as a nightmare.

Injuries relegated the Lakers’ senior assistant captain to nothing more than a spectator for the majority of each season. In fact, Gould played a combined 21 games in the two campaigns.

Last season, the Sarnia, Ont., product finally emerged at full strength after back-to-back injury-plagued years. As a junior, he played in all 36 games and recorded 24 points for the Lakers during their first year as a Division I program.

With one last chance to make an impact for Mercyhurst, Gould entered his final campaign in western Pennsylvania determined to make his remaining days count. Sure enough, the senior broke through with an outstanding regular season, as he scored 32 points for Mercyhurst.

“When I first came in, I was obviously excited to start playing,” Gould said. “But the second game of my career, I’ll never forget it. I separated my shoulder, and that got the ball rolling the wrong way. [Prior to his sophomore season] I got in great shape, and then I broke my wrist and it started all over again. Then I played six or seven games and I tore up my knee.”

Saturday’s MAAC tournament final represented the most pivotal point in Gould’s career. A win over Quinnipiac would allow the Lakers center to move on to the NCAA tournament. A loss would send the senior out with the bitter memory of coming up just short for a shot to play on the nation’s biggest stage.

Two nights after igniting Mercyhurst into the finals with a two-goal effort against Canisius College, Gould delivered once again in the conference final. With a goal and an assist against the Lakers 6-5 win over the Braves, he earned tournament Most Valuable Player honors.

Finally, after a long four years that was filled with many ups and downs, Gould obtained some sweet redemption both from the team and individual standpoints.

“All year, he’s been our MVP,” Mercyhurst hockey coach Rick Gotkin said. “And by saying that, I don’t want to take anything away from Eric Ellis, Louis Goulet or Peter Aubry. Jeff doesn’t have the flash or dash of some of the other guys, but he’s been Rick Gotkin’s go-to-guy on and off of the ice all year.

“He’s quietly done a tremendous job for us,” added Gotkin. “I’m happy for all of our players, but especially for him because he had some injuries early on. He’s an absolutely tremendous person, and he’s been rewarded rightfully so.”

Said Gould: “I had to battle through, but the last two years I played every game. If I could turn back time and play every game, that would be awesome. But I have no regrets. This feels great right now.”

Everything that transpired over the course of the weekend still seems difficult for Gould and the Lakers to imagine. When he arrived as a freshman, Mercyhurst was a Division II program in jeopardy of dropping down to Division III because of a numbers crunch.

Now, three years later, the Lakers are heading to the pinnacle of college hockey. Sure, they will probably draw a national name in the first round — likely Minnesota or Michigan — and probably will be forced to travel to the West Regional in Grand Rapids, Mich. But right now, the opponent or the location comes second to the fact that the Erie, Penn., school is set to clash with the elite next weekend.

“When we entered at the Division I level, we knew that we were going to have to play big schools,” Gould said. “When we go into these games against established programs, we have to play with a little fear, but we can’t be intimidated at the same time. You have to stick to your game plan and not worry more about what the other team is doing.”

“Whether we face Michigan, Minnesota, St. Cloud or whoever, we can’t get caught up in the awe of the other team,” he added. “We have to respect them because they are a great team, but we have to play Mercyhurst hockey.”

Win or lose next weekend, the Lakers certainly owe their assistant captain a debt of gratitude. After all, Gould spearheaded the potent Mercyhurst offensive attack and displayed the veteran leadership that was to be expected out of the senior.

But in the big picture, Gould’s contribution to the program goes far behind goals and assists. His perseverance and toughness provide the perfect example how hard work and dedication can pay off in the long run. As a pioneer during the Lakers’ jump to the Division I level, Gould will always be able to hang his hat on the fact that he played a major role in that transition.

“Anything that I’ve done to help the program, that’s great,” he said. “If I’ve helped to raise the bar for the incoming freshmen, then I feel that I’ve done the job. Now, with the MAAC and the autobid, the league has gotten extremely tougher and there’s a lot more parity. That’s increased the level at Mercyhurst, and now the incoming freshmen for next year are going to have to match the class that is going to be leaving.”

Added Gotkin: “I was thinking back to the days when we were in Division III, and then the two Division II championship games, and now to be going [to the NCAA tournament in] Division I. Obviously, it’s pretty neat. It’s going to be tough against a Minnesota, Michigan, Michigan State or Boston College, but I wanted to have practice on Monday. We’ve had a great season.”

Changes Affect 2001 NCAA Tournament Selection Process

Last year, we at USCHO.com tried using our own Pairwise Rankings and knowledge of the NCAA selection process to determine in advance the teams and seeds for the NCAA Tournament. We were pretty close, getting all 12 teams correct, and getting 10 of the 12 seeds right.

So with confidence in hand, we try again. This year’s regionals are being held in Worcester, Mass., on March 23-24, and in Grand Rapids, Mich., on March 24-25. This year’s Frozen Four is in Albany, N.Y., on April 5 and 7.

There were some momentous changes last off-season, all of which affect the way the tournament field is selected.

First: the addition of an automatic berth given to the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference.

The MAAC has had quite an impact on the college hockey world, despite being just three years old.

The conference features many programs that have recently elevated their games to the Division I level, like American International, Bentley, or Mercyhurst, all of which were at the Division II level just a few years ago. These programs are now classified Division I.

This is not a new concept in college hockey; many successful Division I programs are located at lower division schools, like Colorado College (Division III) or Lake Superior State (Division II), among others. Division II hockey was drying up, and these programs quickly found themselves with nowhere to go.

In addition, the MAAC has many schools that feature Division I hockey, but, until recently, chose to play in a Division III conference and to compete at the Division III level. Primarily, this was an economic move, since trying to compete fully in Division I ice hockey can be an expensive venture. Schools like Connecticut or Holy Cross were wary of sinking scholarship money into a program that didn’t have a lot of popular support, particularly in these days of Title IX legislation.

Hence, the MAAC was born, jointly as a haven for Division II schools with nowhere else to go, and as a cost-containment venture by distaff Division I programs. The Division II schools elevated their programs, and suddenly there was a new conference full of Division I teams.

According to NCAA regulations, if a conference is made of Division I programs and follows a few rules, that conference earns an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament, regardless of how good or bad those schools may be. This is familiar in basketball, as it is commonplace for a school to win its conference tournament and earn a berth in the NCAA tournament, to serve as cannon fodder for the teams that earn the at-large bids.

The difference is that basketball has 64 slots in the postseason tournament, while hockey only has 12. Many hockey fans believe giving a bid to a clearly inferior team is robbing a deserving team of its rightful slot. But the NCAA doesn’t use terms like “robbing” or “rightful” — at the NCAA level, it’s all about providing the maximum number of playoff opportunities to deserving student-athletes.

The MAAC follwed the necessary rules and regulations to show the NCAA that it was making more opportunities available for student-athletes to play varsity hockey, and so was rewarded with an automatic bid to the postseason tournament. That bid goes into effect this year, and so, for the first time, the MAAC postseason champion, Mercyhurst, will be representing the conference on the national scale. The result is that one fewer at-large berth is available.

Second: the elimination of an automatic bid for the regular-season conference champions.

The repeal of the so-called “Colorado College rule” seemed as though it would make no difference on the college hockey world. This rule is nicknamed for the 1994 Colorado College team that earned the top spot in the WCHA regular season, then lost the opening round WCHA playoff series to blisteringly hot goaltender Jamie Ram and his Michigan Tech Huskies.

When the dust cleared, the Tigers found themselves on the outside of the NCAA tournament looking in, as the remainder of the selection criteria favored other teams. College hockey coaches banded together in the off-season to try and rectify this situation, and the result was two automatic bids for each conference, to be awarded to the regular-season champion and the conference tournament champion.

The principle effect of this rule was to add unnecessary complexity to tournament selection. For the six years following 1994, each regular-season champion would have been selected to the NCAA tournament based on the other selection criteria. In fact, it was never even close. So with the addition of the MAAC autobid, the selection committee agreed to remove the seemingly-useless additional autobid.

So what happened? The rule would have made a difference in 2001, the first year of the repeal. Clarkson entered the ECAC tournament on the bubble for NCAA consideration, and promptly lost two of three games to 10th-seeded Vermont. The two losses all but eliminated the Golden Knights, and it was only a matter of days before events in other conferences made it official. Last year, Clarkson would have received an automatic berth to the NCAA tournament; this year the Golden Knights are playing golf.

Third: byes now awarded irrespective of geographic region.

With 12 teams earning berths to the NCAA tournament, there were necessarily four first-round byes awarded. In past years, the top two teams in the West would get two of the bids, with the other two going to the top two teams in the East.

It was determined that this rule was occasionally forcing early matchups between better teams, and in order to make sure the best four teams made it to the Frozen Four, it was decided that the byes would now be awarded to the best four teams, period, regardless of where the teams might originate. Sure, in any given year, there might be an inequality in the number of teams in, say, the West, but in the long run, it should come out roughly even.

Already, the effect of this rule will be felt in the East. As the Western teams enjoyed a strong year, three of the four byes will be awarded to the West, when it would have been evenly split in years past. So the second-highest rated East team, in this case Maine, would have earned the second Eastern bye, but now will merely claim an at-large berth in the first round.

These three rules changes have altered the landscape of the selection, in both obvious and subtle ways. The obvious ways are outlined above, with Mercyhurst earning a bid and Clarkson being excluded, and Maine not being awarded a first-round bye.

But a more subtle change is also present. With the new method of awarding the byes, the NCAA Ice Hockey Selection Committee has distanced itself from the regionaliztion of college hockey. In years past the teams would have been split up into “Western” and “Eastern” teams, and then awarded byes and berths and otherwise put into brackets.

Now it is possible to rank the teams 1-12, regardless of region, and then be more flexible when trying to acheive other ends, like avoiding first-round conference matchups and maximizing potential box office draw.

When questioned about this, NCAA Director of Championships Tom Jacobs hedged his bets.

“The selection committee is leaving itself some flexibilty in deciding the teams,” he said. “There hasn’t been any decision yet if they will order the teams by region or not. They will have to see how the comparisons turn out before any decision is reached.”

These comparisons are what the selection committee uses to decide on the teams that will be invited to the NCAA tournament. USCHO.com’s Pairwise Rankings mimic the process, and while the PWR numbers are not precisely what the committee uses, they are close enough to have correctly determined the teams for the last five years. (PWR gives a final tally of the number of comparisons won, whereas the committee doesn’t do that — using a slightly different method of making a final determination. See the PWR FAQ and Selection FAQ for more details.)

Everything is falling rather easily into place when determining the teams and the seeds for this year’s NCAA tournament.

The field is pretty much set. Automatic bids have been extended to the winner of the five conference tournaments: Mercyhurst in the MAAC, St. Cloud in the WCHA, Michigan State in the CCHA, Boston College in Hockey East, and St. Lawrence in the ECAC. All but the MAAC and the ECAC winners would have been in by other criteria, so that means the ten top teams in the PWR are included. The top ten, plus the teams that are close enough to also be considered, are:

Rk Team                GP  W- L- T  Win%  Rk     RPI  Rk  PWR
1 Michigan State 40 32- 4- 4 0.8500 1 | 0.6334 1 | 29
2 Boston College 40 30- 8- 2 0.7750 3 | 0.6162 2 | 28
3 St. Cloud 40 31- 8- 1 0.7875 2 | 0.5952 3 | 27
4 North Dakota 43 27- 7- 9 0.7326 4 | 0.5843 5 | 26
5 Michigan 42 25-12- 5 0.6548 8 | 0.5752 6 | 25
6 Colorado College 39 26-12- 1 0.6795 6 | 0.5866 4 | 24
7 Minnesota 41 27-12- 2 0.6829 5 | 0.5713 7 | 23
8 Maine 37 19-11- 7 0.6081 14 | 0.5578 8 | 22
9 Wisconsin 39 21-14- 4 0.5897 16 | 0.5560 9 | 20
10 Providence 39 22-12- 5 0.6282 11 | 0.5532 10 | 20
11 New Hampshire 39 21-12- 6 0.6154 12 | 0.5469 11 | 19
12 Mercyhurst 34 22-10- 2 0.6765 7 | 0.5461 12 | 19

New Hampshire is significantly behind Providence. Although the Wildcats are tied with Mercyhurst, Mercyhurst has an automatic berth due to winning the MAAC tournament.

So New Hampshire is out; Providence is in.

If we award the byes to the top four teams, they go to Michigan State (No. 1 West seed), Boston College (No. 1 East seed), St. Cloud (No. 2W) and North Dakota (No. 2E).

If we continue this process, we get to the following split:

1 Michigan State (No. 1W)
2 Boston College (No. 1E)
3 St. Cloud (No. 2W)
4 North Dakota (No. 2E)
5 Michigan (No. 3W)
6 Colorado College (No. 3E)
7 Minnesota (No. 4W)
8 Maine (No. 4E)
9 Providence (No. 5W)
10 Wisconsin (No. 5E)
12 Mercyhurst (No. 6W)
14 St. Lawrence (No. 6E)

Breaking this up by regions, we have:

West
Michigan State
St. Cloud
Michigan
Minnesota
Providence
Mercyhurst

East
Boston College
North Dakota
Colorado College
Maine
Wisconsin
St. Lawrence

The brackets would look like:

  • Michigan State vs. Minnesota/Providence
  • St. Cloud vs. Michigan/Mercyhurst
  • Boston College vs. Maine/Wisconsin
  • North Dakota vs. Colorado College/St. Lawrence

The first two look pretty reasonable, but the latter two set up some pretty likely second-round matchups between conference foes. The committee has suggested it wants to avoid that, and we can accomplish this by simply flipping two brackets:

  • Michigan State vs. Minnesota/Providence
  • St. Cloud vs. Michigan/Mercyhurst
  • Boston College vs. Colorado College/St. Lawrence
  • North Dakota vs. Maine/Wisconsin

There is still one potential second-round matchup in the last bracket, but with five WCHA teams, it’s not possible to avoid all possible matchups. This at least minimizes the likelihood, since Maine is a higher seed.

However, this is all based on the supposition that the committee will rank strictly on the comparisons and not by regions. If we follow the more traditional thinking, we get the following, after awarding the byes as outlined above:

West
Michigan State
St. Cloud
Michigan
Colorado College
Minnesota
Wisconsin

East
Boston College
North Dakota
Maine
Providence
Mercyhurst
St. Lawrence

The traditional plan would be to switch the bottom two from each region — No. 5 and No. 6 seed in the east to the west, and vice versa. But that would leave three WCHA and three Hockey East teams in the east, which would make it very difficult to avoid first- and second-round matchups.

Instead, we’ll send the lowest-seeded Hockey East team west, which is Providence. Either Mercyhurst or St. Lawrence will take the place of Providence, and of the two, St. Lawrence has the better draw, not to mention the respectability of an established conference.

So then we have, after switching and reseeding:

West
Michigan State
St. Cloud
Michigan
Colorado College
Providence
Mercyhurst

East
Boston College
North Dakota
Minnesota
Maine
Wisconsin
St. Lawrence

Now, avoiding second-round intraconference matchups leads to the brackets:

  • Michigan State vs. Colorado College/Providence
  • St. Cloud vs. Michigan/Mercyhurst
  • Boston College vs. Minnesota/St. Lawrence
  • North Dakota vs. Maine/Wisconsin

The only difference between this scenario and the one outlined above is swapping Minnesota and Colorado College. Neither should have an appreciable difference on the draw in either Worcester or Grand Rapids. I would guess Minnesota deserves the harder bracket after finishing so weakly, which would be the one with Michigan State.

My guess is the seeds will be as follows:

  • No. 1W Michigan State vs. No. 4W Minnesota/No. 5W Providence
  • No. 2W St. Cloud vs. No. 3W Michigan/No. 6W Mercyhurst
  • No. 1E Boston College vs. No. 4E Colorado College/No. 5E St. Lawrence
  • No. 2E North Dakota vs. No. 3E Maine/No. 6E Wisconsin

These arrangements have several advantages:

  • Keeps the two Michigan schools in Grand Rapids
  • Keeps BC, Maine and St. Lawrence in Worcester
  • No first-round matchups among conference foes
  • No second-round matchups unless a No. 6 seed defeats a No. 3 seed

The most likely alteration to this arrangement, I think, is a simple swap of CC and Minnesota, although I would think, for the draw, Grand Rapids and Worcester are equal as far as Colorado College is concerned.

We find out for sure when the selection show airs Sunday at 1:30 p.m. Eastern time on ESPN2.

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