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This Week In The CCHA: March 14, 2001

And The Meek Shall Inherit The Earth

So there’s really nothing meek about hockey, especially Bowling Green hockey. By beating Northern Michigan in the Tuesday play-in game, however, the nine-seed Falcons become the lowest seed ever to advance to the CCHA Semifinals.

Congratulations, Bowling Green.

And congratulations Tyler Masters, the goaltender who has been the backbone of this Falcons squad all season. Masters made 107 saves in three playoff games, as Bowling Green swept Miami (4-3, 4-3 OT) and downed Northern Michigan 2-1. In that game against the Wildcats, Masters (2.48 GAA, .921 SV%) stopped 37 of 38 shots.

Masters’ performance in the opening round of the playoffs is metaphorical for the entire Falcon season; this is a hard-working, never-say-die team that easily could have found itself at home this weekend.

On March 2, Bowling Green and Ferris State were knotted 0-0 at the end of regulation. With 19 points, the Falcons were in 10th place, one point behind Notre Dame, two behind Alaska Fairbanks. “In the overtime game with Ferris, we were two minutes from not making playoffs,” says Buddy Powers, BGSU head coach. “That was a huge win for our confidence.”

The Falcons haven’t lost since, sweeping Ferris State, Miami, and then winning that all-important play-in game. Says Powers, “We’ve backed that up now with consecutive close games. [Tuesday] was our second straight overtime win.”

Bowling Green hasn’t made a trip to the CCHA Championship Tournament since the 1996-97 season, when the No. 5 Falcons lost to the No. 1 Wolverines 7-2 in the first Semifinal match. You have to go all the way back to the 1987-88 Tournament for the last time the Falcons won a CCHA Semifinal game, when No. 2 Bowling Green beat No. 3 Michigan State 6-4.

“This will be the first for our seniors to be at the Joe,” says Powers. “Bowling Green is an excited team.”

By Whatever Means Necessary

Last year, the Nebraska-Omaha Mavericks surprised nearly everyone by beating Northern Michigan in Marquette in the first round of the CCHA playoffs, then defeating Bowling Green at home in the Tuesday play-in game.

This year, the road to the Joe went through Omaha, but it wasn’t easy.

The Mavericks hosted the Buckeyes in a thrilling, hard-fought first-round series that saw OSU win the first game 5-4 in overtime, UNO picking up the second game 2-1, and the Mavericks winning the third contest 4-3 in double OT to advance to the Joe.

“It was our goal at the beginning of the season to get to the conference final,” says Nebraska-Omaha head coach Mike Kemp. “Realizing that goal was a real challenge. It has been a nail biter in very sense of the word. I can’t say enough about the Ohio State program and how hard they played those three games.”

It was a series decided by inches. The Buckeyes hit pipe after pipe in the three matches, including several shots that should have given Ohio State a victory Sunday night. But as Danny Ellis (2.48 GAA, .911 SV%) said after the Mavericks finally put the series to bed, “There was definitely someone watching over me this weekend.”

The deciding game was the longest game in UNO history, lasting 3 hours and 56 minutes. During that contest, the Mavericks had to come from behind twice and were outshot 47-40.

The Mavericks are a charmed team. In addition to the pipe angels watching over Ellis, a greater mojo is at work here; UNO has broken a seeding curse, becoming the first No. 4 to advance to the CCHA Semifinals since the 1991-92 season.

A big part of Nebraska-Omaha’s recent cosmic goodness has been the play of senior forward Billy Pugliese, who scored the game-winner in the double-OT contest. Pugliese has seven goals and two assists in his last six games, including three goals scored in the first-round series against OSU.

This is the second trip to the Joe in as many years for the Mavericks, a fact made more extraordinary because this is UNO’s second year in the league. If the Mavs weren’t awestruck last year in their inaugural run at a CCHA title — and they proved they weren’t by beating Michigan 7-4 in UNO’s first-ever Semifinal game — they’re even less dewy-eyed this time around.

“It [last year’s tourney] was a very exciting time for our whole program as we were striving to reach goals, and being at the Joe was one,” says Kemp. “Accomplishing those goals are just pleasant memories, part of our history. We are much more concerned about the present.”

There’s No Place Like Home

For Michigan, the CCHA Championship Tournament has become just another part of any given season. This Friday’s Semifinal game against Nebraska-Omaha marks the Wolverines’ 12th consecutive trip to the Joe, the longest such streak in the CCHA.

This specific Michigan squad, however, looks different from those who’ve gone to Detroit in recent years. “We’ve been very inconsistent this year,” says Michigan head coach Red Berenson. “It has not been an easy row to hoe.”

In the second half of regular-season play, the Wolverines went 9-6-2, hardly the record of a team on fire. Included in that stretch is a split in Omaha in early February, when UNO beat Michigan 4- 1 before the Wolverines rebounded for a 4-1 win of their own.

So the Wolverines weren’t a sure loss for any team they faced this season, but let’s face it — they’re still the Wolverines, and they have an arsenal nearly any Division-I program would covet.

Playing most consistently for Michigan in this season of inconsistency has been Mike Cammalleri, who registered a point in 30 of 37 games this season, and 18 goals in those 37 games. Cammalleri also has 17 multi-point games this season, and as goes Cammalleri, so go the Wolverines; Michigan is 14-1-3 when the sophomore scores a goal, the only loss being to Michigan State March 1.

Another workhorse for the Wolverines and one of the league’s unsung heroes is sophomore defender Mike Roemensky, who led the league in plus/minus with a rating of +24.

And then there’s Mark Mink, another non-household name. Mink has played in 81 consecutive games for Michigan, and hasn’t missed a contest this season.

Perhaps one of the most significant reasons why the Wolverines notched over 20 wins for the 14th consecutive season this year is between the pipes. In this season of Ryan Miller, it’s been easy to overlook the excellent year that junior goaltender Josh Blackburn is having. Overall, Blackburn’s goals-against average is 2.25, and his save percentage .906, but in league play his GAA drops to 1.94 and his save percentage jumps to .914.

Several key Wolverines have missed games due to injury and illness, including Josh Langfeld (sprained MCL), Jeff Jillson (groin), Geoff Kock (ankle), Dave Huntzicker (torn MCL, shoulder), and Jed Ortmeyer, whose season ended in February with knee surgery.

Berenson says that the team is “a little healthier” than it was a few weeks ago, and adds, “We are playing a little better. The sense of urgency in the playoffs will bring the best out of our team.”

They Don’t Call It The Mason Cup For Nothing

This year, the winner of the CCHA Championship Tournament will hoist the Mason Cup, named after the current Michigan State head coach, Ron Mason.

“I am proud to have it named in my honor,” Mason says. “It is going to be around for a long time and many good teams are going to win it.”

The good team most likely to win the cup this season is Mason’s own Spartans. With just four losses in 38 games, Michigan State looks tough to beat.

In past seasons, the Spartans have relied on a game-breaking, go-to guy out front and an excellent supporting cast. Think Mike York. Think Shawn Horcoff.

This season, however, the scoring is by committee and the go-to man is between the pipes. Ryan Miller has put up record-breaking numbers this season, with a 1.36 goals-against average overall and an overall save percentage of .948. He’s even better against league opponents: 1.24 GAA, .950 SV%.

Miller’s supporting cast includes if not prolific scorers, frontmen who can get the job done. There’s Rustyn Dolyny (12-25–37), Brian Maloney (15-20–35), Adam Hall (17-11–28), and John Nail (19-7–26), who had the game-winner in MSU’s overtime match last weekend against Alaska Fairbanks.

Add defenders Andrew Hutchinson and John-Michael Liles to the mix, and you have a hard-working, consistent, patient hockey team.

One thing this crew is not is cocky. “This has been the beauty of our team all season,” says Mason. “They have no delusions of grandeur of where they are going or what they are doing.”

What hasn’t been written about the Spartans that needs repeating now? They’re a shoe-in for the NCAA tournament, but don’t think there’s nothing at stake for Michigan State this weekend.

“Any time we play at Joe Louis Arena, there’s something at stake,” says Mason. “The Great Lakes banner hangs there all year, and our name’s on it. The CCHA Championship banner hangs there all year, and someone’s name is going to be on it.”

No. 9 Bowling Green (16-18-5) vs. No. 1 Michigan State (30-4-4) Friday, 5:05 p.m., Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, Mich.

The Falcons come to the Joe the long way, clinching a playoff berth in the last regular-season game, and winning three road playoff games against two separate clubs.

“We kept telling the guys to hang in,” says Buddy Powers, Bowling Green head coach. “Every game we battled so close but just couldn’t get the goal that put us over the top to let us win the hockey game. That wasn’t happening for us and in these last games it has. It was tough to get that goal that made the difference in the hockey game and in the last few weeks we have.”

Powers knows that the Falcons have a daunting task ahead of them, facing the top team in the country. “Michigan State has been on a roll all year. We had two good games down there. We had a tie and a 3-1 loss State has the whole package — the goaltender they need to win defense they need to win, balanced scoring, and a great coach.”

The Spartans are currently unbeaten against the Falcons in their last seven meetings (5-0-2). This season, Michigan State took three of four points in Bowling Green, skating to a 3-3 tie with the Falcons the first night before winning 3-1 to close the two-game set.

“We played them in December, and the games we played were really good games,” Mason says. “I thought they had good potential at that point. Right now, they have to be as confident as any team in the league.”

This match will come down to goaltending. While Ryan Miller is off the scale, Tyler Masters is no slouch.

“I know he’s played really well and that is one of the reasons the team has done so well in the postseason,” says Mason of Masters. “He should play well against Ryan [Miller]. I don’t concern myself with that because I think it is an area we have a chance to win.”

The Spartans lead this all-time series 49-22-9, and are 5-1-0 all time against the Falcons in CCHA Tournament play. Additionally, Michigan State owns a 6-1-0 mark against Bowling Green at Joe Louis Arena.

Bowling Green has won five CCHA playoff championships, second only to Michigan State’s nine league postseason titles. Ron Mason was behind the Bowling Green bench for three of the Falcons’ five championships (1977, 1978, 1979).

They really don’t call it the Mason Cup for nothing.

Pick: Michigan State 4-2

No. 4 Nebraska-Omaha (24-14-3) vs. No. 2 Michigan (24-11-5) Friday, 8:30 p.m., Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, Mich.

Last year, the upstart Mavericks upset the Wolverines 7-4 in the CCHA Semifinals. This year’s tournament has these two teams facing off again, but don’t think Michigan is out for revenge.

“It’s not a revenge factor,” says Red Berenson. “There’s a respect factor, but not revenge.

“It’s not the same spot as last year because we had an automatic to the tournament and we had the first-place seed, and Omaha had to make it by winning the play-in game. I remember them outplaying us and beating us on special teams and they were the much better team.

“I don’t mean to say they were over-achieving either — they were playing really good hockey and certainly they have continued that this year. There is no revenge, there is respect.”

A year ago, when the No. 7 Mavs became the lowest seed in tournament history to make it to the CCHA Championship game, Jeff Hoggan and Dave Noel-Bernier led UNO with two goals each in the upset win, while David Brisson recorded a goal and three assists.

Don’t think that the Wolverines will again be so easily upset. “Last year Omaha was the surprise team of the CCHA playoffs and caught everybody off guard,” says Berenson.

Nebraska-Omaha has much more at stake in this tournament than does Michigan. With each league receiving just one auto-bid, and the CCHA’s going to the tournament winner, the league is in danger of sending just two teams to the Big Show, and UNO may find itself on the sidelines if the Mavs don’t take it all.

“It is one of those things that right now our concern is Michigan on Friday night and doing well in the CCHA tournament,” Mike Kemp.. “It is one thing at a time. We haven’t talked beyond that in the locker room. It would be a huge plumb for us to qualify for the tourney. It is still a pretty long stretch for us and we know we have to continue to win to get there. I am more concerned with conference play than anything beyond.”

It’s certain that Michigan State will be invited to the NCAA Tournament regardless of the Spartans’ performance this weekend, and the same is probably true of the Wolverines as well, but Berenson is taking nothing for granted. “”I don’t think anybody can be guaranteed of anything at this time of year. We need to do as well as we can. We are worried about Friday’s game against Omaha, not NCAAs.”

The Wolverines lead this brief, all-time series 3-2-0, having split a pair of 4-1 games in Omaha earlier this season.

Michigan has an advantage in net, although Dan Ellis looked excellent in the first round. Both teams score more by committee, but Michigan has depth that Nebraska-Omaha lacks. And the three-game series UNO played against OSU may have taken something out of the Mavericks; they were looking very tired in that third game.

Still, how this game will play out is anyone’s guess.

Pick: Michigan 4-2

CCHA Championship No. 2 Michigan vs. No. 1 Michigan State Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, Mich.

This would be the league’s dream game, as the archrivals would pack the building and attract widespread media attention.

It would also be a hell of a game.

No hype from me. No hoopla. Just a prediction.

Pick: Michigan State 2-1

This Week In The ECAC: March 14, 2001

We like to call it our happy place — the quaint little town nestled in the Adirondack Mountains known as Lake Placid.

It’s also the happy place right now for the five remaining teams in the ECAC. And by the time five games are over with, one team will walk away with the Whitelaw Trophy.

ECAC Play-In Game

Vermont vs. Dartmouth

It’s never happened before, on a lot of fronts, for these two teams.

The talk of the ECAC this past weekend was the first 10th seed to down a number-one seed in a three-game series in the ECAC playoffs. The Vermont Catamounts did that to the Clarkson Golden Knights this past weekend and advanced to a Thursday date in the ECAC playoffs games, much to the delight of the Cat fans and the Cat team.

“It’s great to see them enjoy themselves with what they’ve gone through over the last year and a half,” said head coach Mike Gilligan.

The Cats have gone through a lot this season, starting out with the cloud of last season’s hazing incident hanging over their heads, and putting that all aside with a hot start.

Then a stretch midseason where the Cats didn’t seem to find their groove, squeezing into the playoffs and then an upset of the number-one seed.

“We feel real happy that we’re still alive,” said Gilligan. “We started off with some great bounces and ended up with some great games.”

Now the Cats are in Placid for the second time, the first since the Martin St. Louis and Eric Perrin days. The teams are different and Gilligan is quick to recognize what has got them here.

“It’s showing a lot of character for this year’s team,” he said. “A lot of the guys could have bailed out of here with last year’s mess going on and the kids stuck together and did a great job and they came in ready to go.

“We had some bumpy stuff in the long part of the middle. They’ve hung in there and it seems to be turning again. I look at the team, we don’t have a Perrin or St. Louis, but we have a nice balanced team and we’ve made a change in our goaltending and this team ranks right up there third or fourth.”

What hasn’t happened before for Dartmouth is playing in Lake Placid. The Big Green become the 11th team to make it Lake Placid (Union is the only team that has not made it there) and the process has been long but definitely worth the wait.

“It’s huge for our team,” said coach Bob Gaudet. “It’s been a long time and what I really want is for our kids to have the experience of being successful. I like the way that our team has played this year and they’ve come to play game in and game out.

“It’s exciting for our team to be involved. We’ve got a great group of kids and we’re excited at home. We worked hard all year to accomplish that.”

The last time the Big Green advanced this far in the ECAC playoffs, the man now behind the bench was the backstop. That was back in 1980.

“I’m not that young, and the last time we won a playoff was when I had the leggings on,” said Gaudet.

This team has taken step after step and Placid is the next one.

“That’s what we were pushing for and I really want to get after them up there,” said Gaudet. “I like our team and they’ve worked so hard. It’s nice for our program to get to that level and that’s what we were shooting for and it’s another step and we’re going to try to win it. We’re in the mix.”

A Vermont-Dartmouth matchup has also never happened in the ECAC playoffs, marking another first for this travel-partner rivalry.

“It’s great with the rivalry that we’ve established,” said Gilligan about the matchup. “The games are all toss-ups and if the kids play hard it will be a great weekend.”

“They’ve got a great skill team as far as speed and it’s a big ice surface, so who knows,” said Gaudet.

“We’ve always had the tournament stuff going back and forth,” said Gilligan. “It may be at a different level right now and they are playing a lot better together, they’ve got scoring, good goaltending. I just know that I’ve never taken Dartmouth lightly in the past 17 years and now the talent level is right there with the other teams in the league. They can have an off-night and clip you. It’s great for hockey around here.”

The two teams played three games in a row against each other, the first at Christmastime and then a home-and-home the following weekend. Vermont won the first game, Dartmouth the second and the two teams tied the third night.

“We’re a bit better team now,” said Gaudet We’ve matured quite a bit and sometimes its just a shake of a puck, but I like the way the team has developed over the second half of the season.

“It’s tough to have a one-way rivalry and we have a much better team now. We don’t take anything for granted, but I think it’s a nice rivalry. Two good hockey teams, both teams skate well. I’m pleased that we’ve got a team now that is capable of playing the way we should play.

“They have a kid in goal that is playing well and we have to play well, that’s all that we can control.”

The loss and tie to Dartmouth started a midseason that bumped the Cats from 5-0 in the ECAC to 10th place.

“I don’t think there was a slide,” said Gilligan. “We got some bounces and calls early on and a lot of things were going right, and then a lot of one goal losses and overtime losses. It’s not rocket science and sometimes it happens.

“We had help from RPI in the last weekend or else we would be sitting right now. We’re playing the same type hockey, but the biggest difference is that we’ve hit upon a real hot goaltender [Shawn Conschafter] right now and he bailed us out in the North Country.”

The winner of this game will have to win three in order to claim the championship and the right to go to the NCAA tournament.

“I just feel that any one of these five teams can advance,” said Gilligan. “We just had three fabulous and exciting games and the fans around Burlington are real pumped up.”

“We’re the type of team that will take it one at a time,” said Gaudet. “I’ve never had a stronger or highly conditioned team. It looks daunting, but we’ll take it one at a time.”

And The Winner Gets …

St. Lawrence

The Saints are back in the Lake Placid for the third year in a row, and once again downed the Union Skating Dutchmen to advance.

“It was a tough series, they played hard and it was great to get Erik Anderson back,” said coach Joe Marsh. “It was a big lift for us as a team psychologically. It would be nice to be there for the third [championship game] in a row, and it took us a while to get back there, so we don’t take this for granted.”

The Saints did get Anderson back and the ECAC Player of the Year made an immediate impact. In game one he tallied two goals and in game two he added two assists.

“Having Erik back gave us a big boost,” said Marsh. “He’s one of the best in the country, and while we were able to get by with some pretty good performances from other guys without him, his talent and his leadership really make a big difference. You could see it from his first shift on the ice.”

Once again, the Saints can point to experience, as the only team to have reached the semifinals in the last two seasons has been Cornell, the team that they defeated in last year’s semifinals. It certainly helped this past weekend.

“Our older guys have been there and I think the playoff experience showed this weekend,” said Marsh. “We weren’t as disciplined as we would have liked on Friday and took some penalties we shouldn’t have taken, but we corrected that and did a great job in that area on Saturday. Union gave us a tough test, and they play a physical game, but we focused pretty well on what we had to do and the power play came through in a big way.”

Right now the Saints have the Whitelaw Trophy in sight, because they know what it means.

“Our NCAA tournament started with the first game of the playoffs,” said Marsh. “We are treating every game like a championship game — and now we are six periods away from the league championship and a chance to keep on playing.”

The Rivalry Renewed … Again

Cornell vs. Harvard

If Harvard Coach Mark Mazzoleni is trying to rebuild what once was a hockey dynasty, he is taking a huge step this weekend. The Crimson — a team whose very core is comprised of freshmen and sophomores — will be making its first trip to the ECAC semifinals in three long years.

In that span of time, this program has undergone a facelift. Heading into this weekend’s championship, there is a new set of coaches behind the bench, a new group of players suiting up in the Crimson jerseys and most importantly, a fresh attitude about the program’s future.

“In my two years here it was the first time it was fun,” Mazzoleni said. “We set the goals before the season began getting home ice and making it to Lake Placid. Now we’ve achieved those and it’s time for us to go forward.

“We know that we have our work cut out for us. We’re not going to go in with the attitude that we’re just happy to be there because the field is wide-open, and any of our five teams can go in there and advance.”

The matchup with Cornell will be particularly interesting for many reasons, not least for the intense rivalry which exists between the two Ivy League schools.

“It’s always a bonus when you get to play your arch-rival again,” said Cornell coach Mike Schafer. “It’s just going to be a great college game.”

Adding to the excitement will be the contrasting strengths of the two teams. Harvard has had no problems putting points on the board — the team scored 12 goals in two games against Yale — while Cornell has been stifling on defense.

In fact, Cornell is allowing its opponents only 2.2 goals a game. When you flip-flop those strengths, however, you find the weak points for each team. The Crimson have been continually plagued by an unseasoned defense which has resulted in costly defensive lapses. Take a look at the Yale series. Harvard allowed eight goals, but that figure could have been much more had the Bulldogs been able to convert more frequently.

Hundreds of miles away, Cornell was having issues of its own in its home barn as it barely made it past Princeton in the quarterfinals. It took what Schafer sarcastically called “an offensive explosion” of two goals in the second period of the first game and two goals total in the second game to advance.

“We had a tremendous series against Princeton and we were fortunate to come back,” said Schafer. “We were fortunate to win it in overtime and on Saturday it was a great college hockey game.”

The key to this contest will be special teams. If Harvard can stay out of the penalty box and force Cornell to play 5-on-5 hockey, the Crimson players should be able to spread out the offense and use team speed to force the Big Red defenders back on their heels. The Big Red can tap into Harvard’s weaknesses by shutting them down early and utilizing quick transition play to promote odd-man rushes.

“It’s always been a great game against Harvard and that’s why it’s a great rivalry because there are always good players and good teams,” said Schafer. “You don’t build a rivalry if there weren’t great teams.”

Til’ Next Year

Folks, we will see you next year, it’s been fun. See you around the rinks or at a Bon Jovi concert.

USCHO.com Visitors’ Guide: Rochester, N.Y.

Okay, I’ll admit it right up front — March is not the best time to visit Rochester, New York.

But considering that those travelling to the Flower City this weekend for the Division III Frozen Four are fans of teams from Wisconsin or the North Country of New York State, or for that matter moms and dads and aunts and uncles from north of the border, the weather shouldn’t bother you too much.

Even though you’ll be busy watching some fantastic hockey, you’ll still have some time on your hands before and after the games. There are a few sights you might want to see, and if you don’t get your fill of hockey, some other games in town, too.

And, of course, you’ll get hungry or thirsty.

Food

Rochester Institute of Technology is located in Henrietta, a suburb a few miles from downtown.

Like most suburbs around the country, you’ll find a stretch of familiar chain restaurants. You’ll see one of nearly every fast food chain and four or five steakhouses along Jefferson Road (New York Route 252) east of RIT.

RIT fans have made Buffalo Wild Wings at 382 Jefferson Road one of their favorite places to stop after a game. Besides its proximity to campus, a definite plus, the national-chain restuarant features 12 different wing sauces and multiple large-screen televisions. Buffalo wing purists (we just call them wings here) may turn up their nose at some of the sauces, but the wings are meaty and tasty.

If you’re looking for a little more, ahem, culture, or you’re a Plattsburgh fan looking for a little touch of home, Rochester also has a Hooters at 945 Jefferson Road.

Oh, and Rochester now has a Krispy Kreme. Satisfy that sweet tooth, or find out whether the airy delights are all hype at their new location at 1150 Jefferson Road.

As long as you’re in town, though, you might want to sample some of the distinctive local cuisine.

Bill Gray’s is a local family-oriented fast food chain that boasts that it serves the “World’s Greatest Cheeseburger.” (They are pretty good, especially with bacon.) At the location nearest RIT, 1225 Jefferson Road, you can also try a Rochester tradition, the white hot, which is a pale, spicy, pork hot dog.

Bill Gray’s also serves an amazing fish fry, which you might want to check out Friday.

Speaking of fish frys, a real Rochester tradition, one of the best in town is served Fridays at the Rohrbach Brewing Company, 315 Gregory Street, about 10 to 15 minutes from RIT. Local beer connoiseurs will tell you it’s also the best brew pub in town — try their signature Scotch Ale, the Sam Patch Porter, or, if you’re lucky and it’s on tap, the Blueberry Ale. Rohrbach’s also features a menu of sandwiches and American and German entrees, and on Saturdays serves sauerbraten.

The other microbrewery and restaurant in town is Empire Brewing Company, located at 300 State Street in the High Falls district, just kitty-corner from Eastman Kodak headquarters. While many may not rate the brew quite as highly as its competitor, Empire has a menu featuring Cajun food and other spicy delights.

Overlooking the Genesee River, which flows north past RIT and through downtown, is the Dinosaur Bar-B-Que. The Dinosaur, at the corner of Court Street and South Avenue downtown, serves some of the best slow-cooked barbecue you’ll ever eat. Don’t let the dozens of motorcycles parked in front scare you off; it isn’t a rough place. The Dinosaur also has live blues music almost every night.

Only about ten minutes from campus, a place that some Rochesterians consider to be the best to get authentic Buffalo-style wings is The Distillery, at 1142 Mount Hope Avenue.

There is also a distinctive Rochester-style chicken wing, like those served at Country Sweet Chicken and Ribs, in the Mount Hope Plaza at 1691 Mount Hope Avenue. The sauce is sticky and sweet, but hot. Wing dinners are served on a slice of bread, with macaroni salad.

No discussion of indigenous vittles would be complete without mentioning Nick Tahou’s. Nick’s is famous for its “Garbage Plate” — two hot dogs or two hamburger patties served with your choice of two of the following: home fries, macaroni salad, or cold baked beans, with the whole mess smothered in a ground-beef-based hot sauce. Oh, and a pile of white bread on the side.

(Cold baked beans? Once, the late Nick Tahou was asked in a feature in the local paper why the beans were served cold. “Because we don’t heat them,” was his succinct, and perfectly resonable, explanation.)

The original Nick Tahou’s, just west of downtown at 320 West Main Street, is closed after 8 p.m., but the 2260 Lyell Avenue location, just off Interstate 390, is open 24 hours. There’ll be a line there at 2 a.m. — closing time.

Things to do and see before the game

Rochester is home to the International Museum of Photography at the George Eastman House, 900 East Avenue. In addition to exhibits of journalistic and artistic photography and film preservation, the magnificent and recently restored home of the founder of Eastman Kodak is open for tours.

Not to be missed at the Eastman house is the music conservatory where Eastman took his breakfast while serenaded by his organist — a fiberglass cast of an elephant head shot by George himself overlooks the room.

Another museum that collectors of dolls or toys might want to visit is the Strong Museum, located downtown at 1 Manhattan Square off of Chestnut Street. There’s a Bill Gray’s restaurant there, too.

The High Falls district is a historic mill area located by the Genesee River’s Upper Falls. For years, the area was surrounded by rotting industrial buildings, but through the efforts of the city government, has been restored as a festival and nightlife area.

During the day, you can view the falls from the old Platt Street bridge, now only open to foot traffic. It isn’t Niagara, but with the above-freezing temperatures predicted for the weekend, it should be flowing fairly impressively.

During the summer, a laser light show is projected on the walls of the canyon below the falls, and on the water itself. The show attracts tens of thousands of spectators each year.

RIT has exhibits of student and faculty art from the College of Imaging Arts and Sciences. In the Bevier Gallery, there is currently an exhibit of works by Masters of Fine Arts candidates.

If you love art, and what hockey fan doesn’t, you might also consider a trip to the University of Rochester’s Memorial Art Gallery at 500 University Avenue, one of the best collections of art in the state outside of New York City.

Rochester is also a great outdoor recreation area, with boating, golf … oh, right. It’s March.

Shopping

Since Henrietta is a suburb, it is blessed (?) with plenty of places to shop, including the sprawling Marketplace Mall at Jefferson Road and West Henrietta Road. There is a ten-screen theater nearby, too.

If you’re looking for something a little more funky, check out Monroe Avenue near downtown, or the tony Park Avenue neighborhood.

After the game

Despite claims from many locals, Rochester does have a decent nightlife.

If you’re looking for a place to kick back after the game, Buffalo Wild Wings, as I mentioned above, has become a favorite place to hang out for RIT fans.

Also, not far from campus at 2758 West Henrietta Road is Woody’s II, a beer, bar food, and sports joint. It’s big — it used to be a Ponderosa — and has plenty of parking.

A couple of districts in downtown Rochester are the focus of the city’s nightlife.

The East End stretches up East Avenue from Chestnut Street and around the corner on Alexander Street to Park Avenue. Anchoring one end is Milestones at 170 East Avenue, a live music club.

Just up the street is the Spot Coffee House. Located in an art deco former Chevrolet showroom, this 24-hour java joint has become immensely popular since opening last fall.

Further up East Avenue is the chic dance club Tonic.

Anchoring the Upper East End are two British-style pubs, The Old Toad at 277 Alexander Street, which also serves traditional pub fare along with cask-conditioned ales, and Monty’s Korner, at the corner of East and Alexander, a tavern known for its unusual microbrews and a selection of port wines.

Between the two pubs are a number of places ranging from a couple of twenty-something meet markets, to the tex-mex restaurant Mex, to a fondue restaurant with dueling piano players.

In the High Falls district, there is a dance club, sports bar, and jazz club, all located in the Centers at High Falls on Brown’s Race. Nearby, at 61 Commercial Street, is Jillian’s. This place, part of a chain, has to be seen to be believed.

The Jillian’s in Rochester, located in an old trolley barn overlooking the Genesee River, has a sports bar/restaurant, a billiards room, a bowling alley, a dance club, and a huge game room. It’s a great place to take a bunch of people who otherwise wouldn’t be happy all going to the same joint.

More Hockey

If you’ll still be in town Sunday, the Rochester Americans — Amerks to locals — take on the Norfolk Admirals at 6:05 at the Rochester War Memorial. (The arena actually has the name of a health insurance company attached to it, but some of us still can’t bring ourselves to use it.)

There’s also a Junior B hockey tournament going on through Sunday at the ESL Sports Centre, a four-rink facility at nearby Monroe Community College.

Still Nothing To Do?

You can check out these web resources:

Greater Rochester Visitors Association

Rochester Goes Out from the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle

Freetime Magazine — has an online events calendar

This Week In Hockey East: March 14, 2001

How BC Could Go West, But Won’t

The one absolute lock for Hockey East in the NCAA tournament is Boston College. No matter what happens this weekend, the Eagles are in. They not only are guaranteed a berth, they’re guaranteed a bye.

That said, the possibility arose recently that it might be in the West Regional, not the East.

What?

It was news to many several weeks ago when this column noted that one of the byes in Worcester would be going to a Western team. In past years, the Eastern byes were guaranteed to Eastern schools with the same principle holding true out West. This year, byes are being assigned to the top four teams irrespective of the region they come from. Other than BC, no Eastern team is even close to the top four spots nationally. Hence, three Western byes.

Most people assumed that meant that BC would get one in Worcester while North Dakota, St. Cloud or Minnesota got the other one. Certainly the selection committee wouldn’t send BC out West and place three of the four bye teams out of their region. It would be an attendance nightmare to have, say, North Dakota and St. Cloud as the Eastern byes while Michigan State and BC got the Western ones. What would be the logic in that?

Plenty, according to the committee. Nobody likes the idea of that many top teams leaving their region, but the number one priority is bracket integrity. That is, if the bye teams all advance to the Frozen Four, the semifinals should match up the number one seed against number four while number two and three face off.

This means that of the four top teams, number one and three will go to one region while number two and four go to the other. The regions then cross over at the Frozen Four to give one vs. four and two vs. three.

“We’re trying to insure that the top four teams are in order [so] the fourth place team would eventually play against the first place team in the Frozen Four [semifinal],” says selection committee chair Bill Wilkinson. “That’s how everything shakes down and we’d like to keep it that way. We don’t want to try to change the format so that a second place team would move down to the fourth place team just to keep it within the region and then have to play against the first place team [in the semifinals].”

As it stands now, the top teams in order are: Michigan State, Boston College, North Dakota and St. Cloud. The odd teams would go in the West Regional; Michigan State would be 1W and North Dakota 2W. The East Regional would get the even teams; BC would be 1E and St. Cloud 2E.

But what if BC falls from second among the top teams to third? Then BC would go West as the 2W team.

That would admittedly be a disaster for attendance, but it would set up the Frozen Four matchups in the fairest way possible.

“If that means that Boston College has to go out West to play, then that’s just the way life is these days,” says Wilkinson. “We can’t just turn them around and have them in their region because that’s where they’re from.

“We’re trying to make it as equitable and fair as possible. Not necessarily regardless of the fan base, but we’re trying to look after the participants and the teams as much as possible.”

So in theory, three of the four bye teams could play out of their region.

Having said all that, it won’t happen this year. Boston College is a lock to stay in the East.

Why?

Even if the Eagles lose on Friday night to UMass-Lowell, they are sufficiently far ahead in the selection criteria to hold off all comers. Michigan State is locked into the number one spot. Boston College is locked into number two. There’s considerable volatility in the number three and four positions because a WCHA team like North Dakota or St. Cloud can lose both its semifinal game and the consolation the following day. North Dakota, for example, can fall all the way from number three out of a bye entirely.

So fear not, BC fans. File this one away for future knowledge, but you will see your Eagles on day two in Worcester.

Or as the late, great Gilda Radner in her Emily Litella persona was wont to say, “Nevermind.”

UNH Back from the Dead? PC on the Bubble? Whither Maine and UMass-Lowell?

The atmosphere at the Whittemore Center was downright funereal last Saturday night after UMass-Lowell bounced New Hampshire out of the Hockey East playoffs. Having entered that game as the odd man out in the NCAA tournament picture, UNH was presumably dead as a doornail after the loss.

“It’s not very likely that we’re going to go on,” said Ty Conklin. “It’s [the end of] a season for everybody and a career for nine guys. What are you going to say?

“Obviously we hope that something happens, but right now it’s not looking too likely.”

Conklin then added, “”We’re not leaving town.”

That last fact is fortunate, because the Wildcats are no longer a longshot to make the national tournament.

Hanging by their fingernails, they clawed back into the picture via two key developments. First, Boston University defeated Providence in the second game of that series, putting the Friars within reach even after a win in the rubber game. Second, Vermont’s stunning triumph over Clarkson removed the possibility that the Golden Knights would stay alive in the ECAC Tournament long enough to remain a wild card in addition to the ECAC tournament winner.

(Admittedly, Clarkson still remains on life-support by the slimmest thread. If Vermont wins the ECAC tournament and various other conditions cooperate out West, most notably Nebraska-Omaha beating Michigan, then Clarkson can get enough of a boost in its Ratings Percentage Index (RPI) to inch past UNH. Knock on wood, Hockey East fans hope this thousand-to-one shot will have expired by Thursday night. The spooky thing, however, is that it also required ninth-seeded Bowling Green to defeat Northern Michigan in Tuesday’s CCHA play-in game and that’s exactly what happened. If Clarkson does crawl out of this particular coffin, it’s time we all start believing in vampires.)

UNH’s hopes now require three probable occurrences and a fourth one that is 50-50. The three probables: the Clarkson mega-longshot fails, either Michigan State or Michigan wins the CCHA and UMass-Lowell fails to win Hockey East. The 50-50 item: Maine beats Providence in the Hockey East semifinals.

If the Black Bears win that semifinal game, UNH’s RPI creeps just past Providence’s and with the other selection criteria between the two canceling each other out, the Friars will be done for the year. UNH will go to the NCAAs, barring the longshots noted above. If Providence defeats Maine, however, that is the final nail in UNH’s coffin.

Still, that’s a lot more for Wildcat fans to hang their hats on than seemed likely last Saturday.

As for Maine and UMass-Lowell, the picture is clear. The River Hawks must win the Hockey East tournament to qualify for the NCAAs. Maine, on the other hand, is in solid shape, barring the improbables listed earlier.

Whitehead Deserves A New Contract

UMass-Lowell athletic director Dana Skinner hasn’t yet committed to offering coach Tim Whitehead a new contract when the River Hawks’ season ends. This is the last year of Whitehead’s deal.

“We’ll sit down and look at everything when the season is over,” said Skinner partway through the quarterfinal series with UNH. “We’ve had a good second half, but there have been some ups and downs.”

Whitehead’s success this year can’t be denied. The team started 1-6 in the league when the River Hawk goaltenders couldn’t stop a beach ball. No coach can be successful when the goalies are struggling. See Jack Parker this year for a case in point. When Lowell’s goaltending got back on track, the team exceeded all expectations.

Arguably, the three finalists for Hockey East Coach of the Year should be BC’s Jerry York, PC’s Paul Pooley and Whitehead. A good case can be made for all three.

How can you not offer a contract extension to one of the league’s top candidates for Coach of the Year?

First-Round NCAA TV Unlikely

Don’t count on TV broadcasts of first-round contests in either the East or West Regional. In recent years, NCAA Productions has made it easier for regional telecasts by the likes of Fox Sports Net New England and Midwest Sports Channel, but financial restrictions have forced cutbacks this year. For the first-round games, cable outlets will have to produce the broadcasts on their own.

“There are a finite number of dollars that the NCAA has to do its own productions,” explains the NCAA’s Tom Jacobs. “This would be outside of the CBS [basketball] or ESPN contracts. The preliminary rounds for ice hockey fell into that category.

“When women’s ice hockey was added to the slate of championships this year, some money had to be reallocated in order to pay for production for their semifinals and finals. As a result, the four quarterfinal games in the men’s bracket will still be televised by NCAA Productions [but not the first round contests].

“That doesn’t necessarily mean that there won’t be television for those first-round games. It just means that NCAA Productions won’t be funding that. Certainly if any of the regional cable outfits wanted to televise those, there’s a process they could go through and those games could still be televised.”

Could We Puh-lease Get A 16-Team Tournament?

There may not be anyone of significance in the Division I men’s hockey community who disagrees with idea of expanding the tournament from 12 to 16 teams. It eliminates every bye problem because there would be no more byes. All 16 teams would be on a much more level playing field. The potential would exist to shift to four regional sites with one winner emerging from each to the Frozen Four instead of the odd current setup in which two winners emerge from each of the regional sites.

The recent attempts to move to 16 teams and the resulting roadblocks have been well chronicled. Here’s an update and detailed look at the process from Jacobs.

“All the governing sports committees, such as Division I Men’s Ice Hockey, report to the Division I Championships and Competition Cabinet,” says Jacobs. “That’s a group that is made up of 49 individuals, primarily athletics directors, commissioners and folks of that sort at the Division I level.

“A sports committee on its own can’t just bring forward a request for bracket expansion. They have to be invited by the cabinet to do so. Men’s ice hockey was invited two or three years ago and it’s kind of been working its way up through the system.

“The thing to keep in mind is that in any given year there are numerous sports committees that are submitting all sorts of recommendations that are going to have a financial impact to the association. Not just bracket expansion proposals, but increases in officiating fees, expansion in squad sizes for the championships, and all sorts of things like that that are going to have a financial impact on the championships.

“In any given year, the cabinet has a finite number of dollars that it has to work with. Oftentimes, it’s the case that the total dollar amount of the requests being submitted far exceeds the finite dollar amounts the cabinet has to work with. That’s one thing to consider.”

Working in hockey’s favor, however, is that the sport’s national tournament is one of the few revenue-producers that the NCAA has. Of course, basketball dwarfs all others in this respect. Reportedly, it generates well over 90 percent of the NCAA’s revenue. While no match for basketball, hockey is still strongly in the black, compared to most sports’ championships which drain the NCAA coffers.

“Another thing to consider, too, is a directive from the NCAA Executive Committee that all three divisions — Divisions I, II and III — take a look at trying to equalize the number of opportunities for male and female student-athletes in postseason competition,” says Jacobs. “Right now, with some recent expansions that have been made on the women’s side in Division I, Division I is pretty much at a 50-50 split with male-female participation.”

While the addition of a women’s ice hockey championship helps, it does so more in a general sense than in specifically aiding the men’s expansion request.

“[It] helps because it increases the number of female student-athletes,” says Jacobs. “But it’s not really compared on a sport-by-sport basis. It’s the overall participation numbers, so it’s all of the Division I championships that we provide for female student-athletes and all of the Division I championships that we provide for male student-athletes and taking a look in total at those participation numbers and trying to get to a 50-50 ratio.”

While no slam dunk, there’s reason now for cautious optimism that expansion may proceed.

“One thing that probably bodes well for hockey is that all these requests were kind of put into a prioritized list, if you will, and hockey was pretty high up there,” says Jacobs. “But men’s soccer was ahead of men’s hockey on the priority list. It looks like, at this point, that men’s soccer is going to be expanded in the fall. It was just recently approved by the cabinet.

“From the cabinet, it has to go to the Management Council and then ultimately the Board of Directors in Division I. The Management Council and the Board of Directors have both indicated that expanding the men’s soccer bracket is a priority for them as well. Hopefully, with men’s soccer expanded, that will get them out of the way, which will then move men’s ice hockey and lacrosse and some of the others up on the waiting list.

“The Men’s Ice Hockey Committee is still hopeful that an expansion from 12 to 16 could possibly occur here within the next two-to-three years. [It] will continue to be on the agenda for the cabinet to take a look at. Once it’s been submitted and considered by the cabinet, unless it’s out-and-out defeated — which this wasn’t — it will remain on the agenda for further consideration, so it’s not like the hockey committee has to come back with a recommendation every year.

“The cabinet will consider this again when it meets in September. If approved and it goes through the system with the Management Council and Board of Directors, the earliest possible point that it could be implemented would be with the 2003 championship. That’s if it goes through the system in the next academic year.”

Hockey East Tournament Times

A misprint in the Hockey East media guide resulted in many media sources giving incorrect times for this weekend’s games. Friday’s semifinal game between Boston College and UMass-Lowell will be at 5 p.m.. The nightcap between Maine and Providence will begin at 8 p.m.. Saturday’s championship game will face off at 7 p.m..

Boston College vs. UMass-Lowell


Nov. 4 at Lowell: BC won, 6-1
Jan. 12 at Lowell: BC won, 2-1
Feb. 2 at BC: BC won, 4-3

Even though BC swept this series, coach Jerry York is mindful that the last
two were tight games and UMass-Lowell is now a hot club.

“Lowell has been a team that obviously started slow in the win-loss column,
but has picked up tremendous momentum with good play all around,” he says.
“It’s not just Jimi St. John all of a sudden becoming a top-flight
goaltender, but has been a combination of St. John’s improvement, the impact
of the two players from France — [Yorick] Treille and [Laurent] Meunier —
who have been tremendous players, and then the core of defensemen [playing]
really strong, defending and breaking the puck out of the zone.

“Everybody talks about them being physical and they work hard, which are
good attributes, but we don’t want to overlook the skill factor that Lowell
brings to the table. They really have some high-end skill players on their
club.

“Tim Whitehead has done an outstanding job in overcoming that tough start to
becoming a team that can go to New Hampshire and win two games. There
aren’t many teams that can do that. They’re a legitimate top team in our
[league]. They happened to finish in the five [seed] but we feel we’re in
for quite a battle on Friday night.”

On paper, the Eagles hold a substantial playoff experience advantage, having
been to the FleetCenter with regularity, compared to UMass-Lowell, which
hasn’t been since its current seniors were freshmen.

“[Experience] is something that teams have to accumulate,” York says. “It
doesn’t guarantee victories at this stage, but it’s certainly an [advantage
to say], ‘I’ve been here before. I feel used to this type of environment.’

“The environment changes as you get deep into March and April. The venues
change. The importance of the games change. I think that was an important
factor in our win in the quarterfinals. We were tied, 1-1, going into the
third with Merrimack. We kept our poise and played Eagle hockey and
survived. It’s all about surviving and moving on now. Experience is a big
factor.”

York expects his Eagles to be ready whether Lowell plays up-tempo or slows
the game down to take advantage of its size.

“Teams have got to be ready to play whatever game presents itself,” he says.
“There could be a game where there are a lot of penalties so there are a
lot of special teams or there could be a game with very few penalty
minutes. There could be a quick, fast game or a “halfcourt” type of hockey
game.

“You have to prepare [for anything] and see what happens. I don’t think you
can go into the game thinking it’s only going to be one way. To advance at
this stage, you have to be able to play both types of games, the slow-down,
tic-tac-toe game or the quick, up-tempo game. I think we’re prepared for
either.”

Lowell comes into the game knowing that it is the underdog, but feels it has
a shot at knocking off BC.

“Obviously BC is a very good hockey team, but we do feel that we’ve improved
each time that we’ve played them,” says coach Tim Whitehead. “Heading into
this game, we have to make a few adjustments for BC, but most importantly
focus on executing our game plan.”

Whitehead dismisses the idea that the River Hawks will need to keep the game
along the boards and in the corners against the high-flying Eagles.

“We have to respect BC’s explosiveness on offense and we have to make sure
that we transition to defense very well,” he says. “But we like to play
the game at a high tempo also. We want the game to be at a high tempo.
That’s how we want to play it. But we also want to make sure that we’re
very conscientious on defense, that we don’t give up a lot of odd-man
rushes and quality scoring chances.”

Whitehead feels that last weekend’s upset of UNH on enemy ice will help
prepare the River Hawks for the FleetCenter experience.

“The Whittemore has a great atmosphere, a good crowd and a loud building,”
he says. “It gives you a playoff atmosphere to begin with so I think we
got past some of that this past weekend. But obviously going to the
FleetCenter is a little bit different and there will be an additional boost
emotionally.

“I think the positive boost emotionally will outweigh the novelty of being
in the FleetCenter. We have to keep an eye on that, but at the same time
we’re in there for practice on Thursday and Friday morning so that will
help acclimate [the players] to the building.”

Maine vs. Providence


Nov. 3 at PC: PC won, 5-3
Mar. 2 at Maine: Maine won, 4-2
Mar. 3 at Maine: Maine won, 5-2

Maine’s torrid streak moved to 9-1-1 after a sweep of Northeastern in the quarterfinals.

“We’re obviously playing very well,” says coach Shawn Walsh. “What’s exciting to me is that we’re making plays. It’s not individual efforts that are causing us to improve our offense. It’s our overall team game. We have very good chemistry on all four lines. We’ve got at least a nine-goal scorer on each line. Right now, balance is the biggest part of our team.

“We haven’t had to sacrifice team defense to generate more offense, which is exciting. The offense has come from the line chemistry that we found from the addition of Mike Schutte and Donnie Richardson to our lineup.”

The teams met just two weeks ago and the Black Bears came away with the sweep, albeit at Alfond Arena.

“We’re very familiar with them and they’re very familiar with us,” says Walsh. “It’ll certainly come down to who can execute their game plan and whose big players make bigger plays. That’s what it typically comes down to in the playoffs.

“We’re excited about being at the FleetCenter and certainly have our eye on the national picture and like our position right now. but understand it’s not a lock yet.”

Providence is in a must-win situation to keep its season alive. As a result, the Friars will take the same approach they did while fighting fatigue in the double-overtime thriller on Sunday that put them into the Fleet.

“We want to focus on the prize, not the price,” says coach Paul Pooley. “Just focus on where you’re going and don’t worry about the price you have to pay to get there.”

Clearly, PC will have to improve on its recent efforts against Maine.

“We’ve got a lot of respect for them,” says Pooley. “We’ve got to do some things to beat them, that’s for sure. We’ll have to take care of some things that we didn’t up there at Maine.

“Faceoffs are a big thing. We lost the first game up there on a faceoff play. We need to be able to dictate tempo a little bit and play the way we’re capable of playing.”

If the BU series was an indicator, Maine will have its hands full countering the line of Devin Rask, Peter Fregoe and Cody Loughlean. (At times Jon DiSalvatore subbed for Loughlean.) The trio territorially dominated any line that the Terriers matched against them.

Pooley isn’t committing to either Boyd Ballard or Nolan Schaefer in goal. The two have rotated with the semifinal being Ballard’s turn. Schaefer outplayed the senior for a good stretch this year, but Ballard had the better series against BU, allowing only two deflections in a losing effort in the middle game. Pooley will decide on the starter based on practices this week.

Speaking of which, the Friars were taking a couple days off after the draining series that ended on Sunday.

“It’ll be a tough matchup for us after the exhausting series [with BU] to come back on Friday,” says Pooley. “But you know what? We’ll just have to do it. Our kids have a lot of character and heart. They’ll be ready to go.”

This Season’s Pathetic Predictions

Longtime fan and all-around good guy Jim Love sent an email recently with the subject line “Karnac you’re not :-)”

He pointed out the hapless predictions made by yours truly in the USCHO Season Preview and the results, which didn’t exactly match up very well.

1. BU – off by five!
2. UNH – off by two
3. BC – off by two
4. Maine – off by two
5. NU – off by two
6. UMA – off by three
7. PC – off by four
8. MC – exact
9. UML – off by four

I could opt for some explanations.

I had figured that if the BC Eagles didn’t finish first last year, they weren’t going to this year either. I’d picked them first a couple years running and each time they’d fallen short, but made their push in the postseason. A repeat of that performance seemed likely.

I had picked a drop for BU one year earlier because of goaltending concerns, but the Terriers had turned it into a position of strength and finished first. I figured they might do it again. (And perhaps subconsciously I was sick of getting “Hey, moron!” email from seemingly every BU computer on the campus.)

But, you know, all the rationalizations don’t cut it. So here’s the true reason why the picks were so awful.

It was my editor’s fault.

Look at my predictions for 1999-2000 as compared to this year’s results.

1. BC – exact
2. Maine – exact
3. UNH – off by one
4. PC – off by one
5. NU – off by two
6. UMA – off by three
7. UML – off by two
8. BU – off by two
9. MC – off by one

So, you see, I really wasn’t that incompetent this past year. My editor just used the wrong list.

I’m really a lot smarter than I seem.

Really.

Missed Opportunity

My colleague, Adam Wodon, noted that New York Islanders coach Lorne Henning showed no sense of the dramatic when he failed to start Ricky DiPietro recently against the Minnesota Wild. That night, Derek Gustafson started his first NHL game. It would have been a rematch of the epic quadruple-overtime game between BU and St. Lawrence that put the Saints into the Frozen Four.

Henning started John Vanbiesbrouck and got his just desserts, a 4-1 loss.

A Note to all Hockey Players

I rarely read the USCHO message boards, but someone pointed this gem out to me. Many hockey players will see something of their own team’s mother figure in this missive from “Aunt Donna.”

Big B, Little B, CaptainJerry and Kinger:

I know you guys are reading the board right now and this is aunt donna using uncle nick’s handle so…….read this very carefully…remember eat lots of pasta….absolutely no sex i mean not even thinking about it because even that drains energy. no new sticks…..no new blades….no new anything…..do not…..repeat do not wash your uniforms unless of course you always wash them before a game….. lemme see what other advice i have…..Jerry no desserts….you can think about them but no actual eating… Peter…. I’d tell you not to eat but you won’t listen…..Little B no girls at all….none…. nada…..nothing…. and last of all but not least Kinger no girls for you either none…no phone calls nothing no chatting on the computer and I know about the chatting…And for all of you… ……that place had better be clean when i get there but don’t you guys clean it…..let the new guy clean it because he isn’t playing hockey on the weekend hahaha

ok as for the game…..play hard ….play from the heart….play to win….ya know the drill and for Peter …..savour this moment Pete….for these are your last college games and you will treasure these memories for the rest of your life ok i’m gonna go because my eyes are welling up

P.S. who is on washroom duty this week? as I would like to request that there be toilet paper available upon my arrival

thank you………auntdonna love you all! Go Tigers!!!!
GRRRRRRRRRRRRR……….

Trivia Contest

Last week’s question asked what characteristic was identical for all four Hockey East quarterfinal matchups?

Craig Powers was the first with the correct answer that the host team had taken exactly four of the possible six points.

There were a few other interesting responses, some serious and some joking. The best of the latter was from Dave Curtis, noting that the seeds all added up to nine (1+8, 2+7, 3+6, 4+5). The best of the former was from Gary Mucica, who noted that the games were being hosted in four different states. That might be commonplace in other conferences, but not Hockey East.

In any case, Craig’s cheer is:

“All hail Northeastern!”

Since this is the last conventional column of the year — next week we shift to previewing the East and West Regionals — there’s no new trivia question. See you next year.

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

  • My daughter, Nicole, about whom I wrote last week, called me with a gleeful tone in her voice on Tuesday. She was on her way to the mall to buy the just-released-that-day DVD of Almost Famous before I could. She was delighted that she’d beaten me to the punch. I’ll say this much. She’s got better taste than the Academy, which somehow failed to nominate that wonderful film for Best Picture, opting for several far inferior titles.
  • My system is still in shock from Nicole’s college financial aid applications. I had my taxes done by Feb. 15. That may not sound remarkable until you release that for years I’ve gotten tax filing extensions until the drop-dead date of Oct. 15. The last time I’d filed by Apr. 15 was during the Ronald Reagan administration.
  • One of these days, I’ll tell you about my son, Ryan. As with my daughter, I’ll have trouble shutting up.
  • I’ve been a fan of audiobooks for a long time. I spend a lot of time in my car and can read far more recorded books than the old-fashioned ones. I’ve always taken the performers a bit for granted. Only the author mattered. Not anymore. Burt Reynolds is so unbelievably awful reading Robert B. Parker’s Hush Money, it is hard to believe.
  • I usually avoid abridged novels like the plague. But based on the movie Absolute Power, adapted by the incomparable William Goldman from David Baldacci’s novel, I tried an abridged version of another Baldacci. The Winner was so bad, however, I think I’ll avoid both the author and all abridgements for the foreseeable future.
  • On the other hand, I can’t remember ever reading a better ending than in Stephen King’s Hearts in Atlantis. I listened to the audiobook several months ago and just re-read it — re-listened to it? — last week. A magical book.
  • King’s Bag of Bones also shows off audiobooks at their best. The addition of music to supplement the story works especially well in this case.
  • Carl Hiaasen’s Lucky You is one of the funniest books I’ve ever read.
  • I regret that it took me so long to discover Richard North Patterson.
  • You know you can’t go wrong with the grandmasters: Elmore Leonard, Ed McBain and John D. MacDonald.
  • If you’ve never read Harlan Ellison’s short stories, go find “Jeffty Is Five” and if you never read another Ellison story, I’ll be stunned.
  • How many of you male readers used the remote control during Fox Sports Net’s Saturday night broadcast of UNH-Lowell to look for the XFL’s halftime special of going into the cheerleaders’ locker room? I mean, how juvenile. How shallow. How pathetic. But if you got it on tape, could you send me a copy?

    Publishers Weekly called it a “witty collection.” Click here for information about Food and Other Enemies, an anthology that includes Dave Hendrickson’s latest short story, “Yeah, But Can She Cook?”

  • This Week In Women’s Hockey: March 14, 2001

    Nothing But Question Marks After WCHA Tournament

    For those of you who were hoping to have a better idea of the NCAA tournament pairings after the WCHA tournament, you’ll have to wait another week. With several big upsets and no guaranteed bids this year, the selection process appears to have only gotten fuzzier.

    That said, No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth (26-5-2) has all but locked up one of the four spots in the inaugural NCAA championship. The Bulldogs ran the table out west, blowing out last-place Mankato State in the first round, 10-1, then squeaking past No. 7 Wisconsin in overtime, 6-5, to reach the championship game. UMD then captured the WCHA crown by shutting out No. 8 Ohio State, 3-0.

    Life was not so good to Minnesota, which fell from No. 3 to No. 6 in the USCHO.com poll after a disappointing weekend. The Gophers, who had a bye in the first round, were shut out by goaltender April Stojak and Ohio State’s stifling defense in the semifinals, 4-0. Even more surprising, Minnesota lost the consolation game to Wisconsin, thanks to a pair of third-period Badger goals by Nicole Uliasz and Steph Millar.

    That puts the Gophers, just 4-5-1 in their last 10 games, in a precarious situation. However, Minnesota is the defending national champion and the WCHA regular-season champ. Plus, the Gophers are hosting the Frozen Four at Mariucci Arena March 23 and 25, and the NCAA would love to draw as many local fans as possible to its inaugural women’s hockey national championship.

    So what will the selection committee do? Can they take Minnesota (23-9-2) — which was in a similar position last year after losing the conference championship game to UMD, yet which won the whole thing in the AWCHA championship? What about Wisconsin (21-9-5) — which has a nearly identical record and just beat the Gophers last week? Or how about taking Ohio State (18-16-3) as a dark horse, especially after the Buckeyes’ impressive showing against both Minnesota and UMD in February and March?

    Or is it possible that the NCAA will invite only one team from the west? That probably depends on what happens at the ECAC tournament this weekend. Dartmouth has held the No. 1 ranking almost the entire season and certainly deserves an invitation to Minneapolis. Should the Big Green lose in Saturday’s semifinal to No. 5 Brown, however, then the Bears could get another bid, with the third invite going to the winner of the other semifinal between No. 3 Harvard and No. 4 St. Lawrence.

    Don’t worry if that sounds complicated. Hopefully, this will at least clear up the situation for the ECAC playoffs in Hanover this weekend:

    No. 1 seed: Dartmouth (24-3-1)

    The Big Green has probably wrapped up its NCAA bid already, but for now it has a great chance to win the conference championship on its home ice this weekend. Dartmouth is on a four-game winning streak since waking up after its stunning loss at Niagara on Feb. 24. But Saturday’s matchup against Brown should be its toughest opponent since playing, well, Brown (a 3-2 Dartmouth victory on Feb. 18).

    The Big Green can attack the Bears with a balanced offense that features seven skaters with at least 10 goals this season. Dartmouth also plays a stifling defense that relies on two tested netminders in Amy Ferguson and Meaghan Cahill (although Dartmouth coach Judy Oberting likes to platoon the two goalies, look for Ferguson to get the nod in both games this weekend).

    Should Dartmouth avoid the upset against Brown, the Big Green would have a chance to avenge itself against either St. Lawrence (which tied the Big Green in Hanover on Thanksgiving weekend) or Harvard (which ended a four-game losing streak against Dartmouth on Feb. 17 at Bright Hockey Center).

    No. 2 seed: Harvard (22-8-0)

    The Crimson is lucky to still be alive, after needing overtime to beat No. 7 seed Providence in the ECAC quarterfinals last weekend. Harvard controlled the puck most of the game, throwing 42 shots at the Friars’ freshman phenom, Amy Quinlan. But Harvard netminder Jessica Ruddock, who has had a quality rookie season herself, made only 11 stops at the other end, and the Crimson needed a hat trick from Tammy Shewchuk and a goal from Kalen Ingram five minutes into the extra period to escape the upset.

    Harvard cannot expect another 42-14 shot margin in the semifinals against St. Lawrence, which is deeper offensively and even more aggressive on defense than Providence. The Saints beat the Crimson in Cambridge in January, 3-2, to tie the season series at 1-1. A loss to St. Lawrence could finish Harvard’s season.

    With senior co-captain Angie Francisco finally back in the lineup, however, Harvard is deeper than it was for most of February, when the Crimson went 8-2. Francisco should create plenty of scoring chances for the deadly duo of Jennifer Botterill and Tammy Shewchuk on the power play, and Harvard coach Katey Stone can also afford to swing the versatile Tara Dunn back to defense. With two solid lines and a more confident blueline, the Crimson could be hard to stop from scoring in the postseason.

    No. 3 seed: St. Lawrence (23-6-3)

    The Saints also had a narrow win in the quarterfinals, holding onto a 1-0 lead against No. 6 seed New Hampshire despite being outshot, 34-19. Freshman Rachel Barrie, who leads all ECAC rookie goaltenders in both GAA (1.77) and save percentage (.935), sealed the victory by shutting out the Wildcats, who poured 14 shots on net in the final period.

    “Rachel had an outstanding game, making several key saves, particularly in the third period,” said St. Lawrence coach Paul Flanagan. “UNH played a solid game in which they outworked and badly outplayed us in the third. Not only did Rachel make several outstanding saves, but she did a great job of controlling and covering rebounds.”

    Barrie will need another big game against high-scoring Harvard on Saturday if St. Lawrence is to advance to the championship game. Barrie should get plenty of help from her frustrating freshmen defensemen, Isabelle Chartrand and Lindsay Charlebois.

    The Saints’ lone goal came from Jessica Wilson, one of five players that has at least 10 goals for St. Lawrence this season. But Flanagan will need more players (including Amanda Sargeant, Caroline Trudeau and Gina Kingsbury) to put the puck in the net in the semifinals because it will be difficult to shut out Harvard on the other end.

    A win on Saturday should lock up a trip to Minnesota for St. Lawrence. But this is the farthest the Saints have made it since Flanagan took the helm in Canton, and it could be the most emotional game of the season.

    “The further you go in the playoffs, the more emotion is involved in each game,” Flanagan said. “We put a lot of pressure on ourselves for the UNH game because we were the higher seed. I’m hopeful, that being young in terms of playoff experience, we learned a lot from Saturday in preparing ourselves emotionally for the Harvard game.”

    No. 4 seed: Brown (19-6-3)

    The Bears had one of their better offensive games of the season last weekend against No. 5 seed Northeastern, beating Husky netminder Erika Silva four times on 36 shots. Three of those goals came from Kathleen Kauth and Kristy Zamora, Brown’s leading goalscorers this year.

    The Bears have played well against Dartmouth both times this season, although they suffered a pair of 3-2 losses. If Brown is to emerge victorious on Saturday, it will need another outstanding performance from sophomore goaltender Pam Dreyer. Dreyer has admirably filled the big skates of Ali Brewer, last year’s Kazmaier Award winner, finishing second in the conference with a 1.57 GAA while leading the ECAC with a .940 save percentage.

    D-III Frozen Four Sold Out

    Tickets for the 2001 NCAA Division III tournament at RIT this weekend have sold out.

    About 70 two-day tickets remained this morning, but those had all been sold by 10:00 a.m. today.

    Tickets went on sale at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday morning at RIT.

    Plattsburgh received 200 tickets for the weekend, while Wisconsin-Superior and Wisconsin-River Falls each were supplied 100 tickets to distribute. RIT does not anticipate that any of those tickets will become available.

    RIT’s Frank Ritter Memorial Arena has a capacity of 2,100.

    Three Kazmaier Finalists Named

    The finalists for the 2001 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award, announced by The USA Hockey Foundation, are Harvard junior forward Jennifer Botterill, Minnesota senior defenseman Courtney Kennedy, and Harvard senior forward Tammy Shewchuk.

    The Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award recognizes the accomplishments of the most outstanding player in women’s intercollegiate varsity ice hockey each season.

    This year’s award dinner will be held the evening of Saturday, March 24 in Minneapolis at the Radisson Hotel Metrodome.

    Individual dinner tickets are priced at $100.00 for adults and $50.00 for children 12 and under. Tickets, in addition to incremental levels of dinner sponsorship, may be purchased by calling The USA Hockey Foundation at (800) 566-3288, ext. 165; or The Missabe Group at (651) 455-9446. Individual tickets and sponsorship packages are tax-deductible.

    Earlier this year, The USA Hockey Foundation asked women’s coaches to nominate up to two players from their team for the award. Those players were placed on an official ballot and sent to the coaches, who then voted for the top 10 finalists.

    The finalists, as well as the recipient of The 2001 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award, are chosen by an 11-member selection committee comprised of women’s coaches, representatives of the print and broadcast media, and a representative of USA Hockey, the National Governing Body for the sport of hockey in the United States.

    Candidates for the award must compete for a women’s team at an NCAA-member institution. Other selection criteria include outstanding individual and team skills, sportsmanship, performance in the clutch, personal character, competitiveness and a love of hockey. Consideration will also be given to academic achievement and civic involvement.

    The Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award was presented to the inaugural recipient, New Hampshire forward Brandy Fisher, in 1998. Harvard forward and 1998 Olympian A.J. Mleczko received the honor in 1999, and Brown goaltender Ali Brewer was the 2000 recipient.

    Now in its fourth year of existence, the award is named in honor of the late Patty Kazmaier, who was a four-year varsity letterwinner and All-Ivy League defenseman for Princeton from 1981-86. An accomplished athlete who helped lead the Tigers to the Ivy League Championship in three consecutive seasons (1981-82 through 1983-84), Kazmaier-Sandt died on Feb. 15, 1990 at the age of 28 following a long struggle with a rare blood disease.

    Hidden Treasure

    Allow me to let you in on a little secret — one that will provide your hockey fandom with additional avenues of joy. One that may even eventually have you wondering where the most emotional, hard-fought brand of hockey is being played.

    Division III women’s hockey.

    Yes, that’s right — the no-check, small school, female version of the intense game.

    First, I must admit, I am a bit biased. I’m a Division III kind of guy.

    I attended a Division III school — Potsdam State. I thoroughly enjoyed my time there from a sports perspective. One of my requirements while selecting a college was that it had to have a hockey team. That it obviously did.

    Little did I realize that Potsdam was also on the dawn of a basketball dynasty that would produce the greatest winning percentage of the 1980s on any level, as well as five trips to the NCAA title game and two national championships, both of which I was lucky enough to attend.

    I was also lucky to have gone there not only when Potsdam had a women’s hockey team, but perhaps the greatest female college hockey player ever — Kathy Lawler, who scored 293 goals and 157 assists for a total of 450 points in her four years playing against teams on all divisional levels. And before you say the competition wasn’t as good, consider the fact that in high school she played on the boys team in Fitchburg, Mass., and they retired her number (as did Potsdam). She was the real deal.

    However, it wasn’t just the sports success that made it fun, but the attitude of Division III competition. It was the way collegiate athletics is supposed to be. The student-athlete in the truest sense of the word, going to school like everybody else without any sort of preferential treatment, whether it be scholarships, athletic dorms, or not having to attend classes.

    Now, I’m not naive. I know that some schools bend the rules as much as possible. It is no coincidence that some Division III hockey schools have the policy of accepting the Canadian dollar on par to pay for tuition. It certainly isn’t to suddenly market to the vast student population of the Great White North. After all, how many schools without a hockey team have this policy?

    And sure, there have been some powerhouses that are able to guide their student athletes into the easy classes, or ones with professors willing to give a helping hand to the star player. I know certain things were going on with the Potsdam basketball team.

    Nonetheless, Division III is in a lot better shape than Division I when it comes to corruption and fulfilling the ideal of the student-athlete. Sure, some may call it small-time, but that is exactly the lure.

    Watching Michelle Labbe of Middlebury drive for the net or Molly Wasserman of Williams speed down the ice or Missie Meemken of St. Mary’s make a great kick-save will convince you that talent is not an issue.

    So it should come as no surprise that not only do I advocate Division III hockey, but I have now become a convert to the women’s brand of play.

    What do the women offer that the men don’t? For starters, a cleaner game.

    No, not a wimpier game, a cleaner game. Don’t for a moment think that no checking means no hitting. Quite the contrary, and you can see a exciting physical game when the women play it. Sure, you may miss the good solid bodycheck every now and then, but after watching a weekend of women’s hockey, that never bothered me. And what you won’t see is a game degenerate into thuggery with sticks on ice, especially when one team is getting beat badly.

    There’s plenty of talent in the women’s game. The players skate, pass, and stickhandle at a level that will appease any hockey fan. Goaltending is outstanding. The only thing that is lagging behind is shooting, but that doesn’t mean the women don’t create just as many scoring chances.

    Watching Michelle Labbe of Middlebury drive for the net or Molly Wasserman of Williams speed down the ice or Missie Meemken of St. Mary’s make a great kick-save will convince you that talent is not an issue.

    It’s slower, you say. Well, the Division I men’s game is slower than the NHL variety. Let’s face it, no matter how much talent is in the college game, it can never match the skill and speed of the pro game. There’s just no denying that.

    You watch college hockey for more than that. You watch it for the excitement it offers, a unique level that cannot be found in the NHL. You enjoy it for it’s own style of play. You watch it for the love of school spirit.

    And you watch it because of the spirit and energy the players bring to the game they play because they simply love to play it.

    That spirit can be found in spades at the women’s level.

    As Williams coach Joe Milan put it, “The ladies really wear their emotions on their sleeves. They come to battle.”

    You can see that on the ice. The players never give up working hard — unlike a lot of men’s games I’ve seen — no matter what the score or how lopsided the talent level.

    And that’s not all.

    “The leagues are growing and the competition is growing,” says Labbe.

    Growing by leaps and bounds. There are now full-fledged leagues in the ECAC (19 teams), MIAC (10 teams), and NCHA (five teams) as well as a sprinkling of independents (four teams). And with the addition of teams at Cortland State and next year, Plattsburgh State, there soon could be a SUNYAC women’s league.

    Next season, the Division III national championship, after two years under AWCHA sanction, will be officially recognized by the NCAA, way ahead of schedule.

    “It’s an incredible game,” says Milan.

    Go check it out for yourself. Like I did, you might discover Milan is right.

    Howard Wins MIAC Player of the Year

    Concordia’s Bryan Howard was named the MIAC Player of the Year. The complete list of award recipients is below.

    All-Conference Team

    Name                Year      School          Hometown
    Chad Anderson Jr. Bethel Bloomington
    Brady Burgess Jr. Concordia Moorhead
    Brian Cashman Jr. Bethel Red Wing
    Jaro Cesky So. Augsburg Prague, Czech Republic
    Mike Gast Sr. Concordia Fargo, N.D.
    Jared Gustafson Sr. Bethel Salol
    Jason Haider Sr. St. Olaf Lino Lakes
    Chad Helmer Jr. Saint John's Eden Prairie
    Brad Holzinger So. Augsburg North Oaks
    Bryan Howard Sr. Concordia Gold River, Calif.
    John Konrad Sr. Saint John's Bloomington
    Tony Lawrence Jr. St. Thomas White Bear Lake
    Mike Marshall Fr. Bethel Duluth
    Ryan McIntosh Sr. Augsburg Calgary, Alberta
    Mike McMahon Sr. St. Thomas Bloomington
    Tim Olsen Fr. Augsburg Vadnais Heights
    Jeff Simison Sr. St. Olaf Moorhead
    Ryan Stinson Jr. Saint Mary's Winona
    Luke Volk Sr. St. Thomas Brooklyn Park
    Eric Wenkus Jr. St. Thomas Eden Prairie

    MIAC Player of the Year: Bryan Howard – Concordia
    MIAC Coach of the Year: Peter Aus – Bethel

    Elmira’s Thomaris Resigns

    Elmira College and Glenn Thomaris jointly announced his resignation today as head coach of the Soaring Eagles.

    Thomaris, who gave no reason for his departure, leaves after 14 seasons behind the Elmira bench, where he amassed a 271-122-14 record, including five ECAC West championships and seven appearances in the NCAA tournament.

    Thomaris, a recent member of the NCAA Ice Hockey Rules Committee, was named national Division III coach of the year by the American Hockey Coaches Association in 1988 and 1991.

    Elmira has not yet announced plans for finding a replacement.

    Thomaris began his coaching career in 1978 at SUNY Potsdam, where he served as an assistant coach through the 1981 season. He was then named head coach at his alma mater, the Northwood School, in Lake Placid, N.Y., before becoming an assistant coach at Clarkson. He succeeded Brian McCutcheon, who went on to coach at Cornell and now is an assistant with the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres.

    Elmira has only had three coaches in the 26-year history of the program. In addition to McCutcheon and Thomaris, Barry Smith was the first coach. Smith is now an assistant with the Detroit Red Wings.

    A Sunday (Weekend) to Remember

    College hockey has seen its share of more memorable games; it’s seen its share of more important games, too, in the grand scheme of things.

    But it has never seen anything with quite the scope of Sunday, March 11, 2001, the day that four epic series converged to cap off an unforgettable weekend.

    Of the six series (out of 19) that went to a deciding third game, four finished in overtime, and a fifth — UMass-Lowell’s win Saturday against New Hampshire — was decided with under two minutes remaining in regulation. Only North Dakota’s comeback from a Game 1 loss lacked any real drama.

    That left us with four series for the ages, ones that were already filled with great moments before Sunday ever rolled around.

    With both teams knowing they needed a tournament championship for an NCAA berth, Northern Michigan and Western Michigan joined the party by going to overtime in Game 3. Calling this series “wide-open” would be an understatement, but it was definitely wild.

    In Game 1, the Wildcats rallied to tie in the third period, before winning on Fred Mattersdorfer’s OT goal. But Western Michigan, a team that started out like a house of fire this season, streaking near the top of the polls before falling back hard in the second half, refused to just quietly let its season end.

    Down 1-0 after the first period of Game 2, the Broncos unloaded for five second-period goals to take a 5-4 lead. The lead went to 7-4 early in the third before the Wildcats exploded, tying the game with three straight of their own. But freshman Jeff Campbell extended the season with a late goal, adding an empty-netter for a 9-7 win.

    That set up yet another free-for-all on Sunday.

    The Broncos picked up where they left off, scoring three first-period goals. It looked like WMU had been reborn. But not so fast. Northern Michigan chipped away, and early in the third period, tied the game, 4-4. Ryan Riipi wound up scoring the game-winner for Northern Michigan, needing a mere 11:40 of OT time.

    Down the road, in a place called The Bullpen, a new rivalry was being born, with USCHO calling the series between Nebraska-Omaha and Ohio State a classic after just seeing Game 1. In that game, the teams exchanged rallies, with the Mavericks re-tying it late in regulation, only to see Ohio State win in … you got it … overtime.

    Game 2 was a one-goal win for the home team, setting up Game 3 — a double overtime game that was one for the ages in CCHA history.

    Nebraska-Omaha has come a long way in a short time, as a program starting from scratch three years ago. Last season, it turned in an upset in the first round and made it to the CCHA final before losing. This year, the Mavericks had a solid regular season, and earned the right to host a first-round series. But now, they were the favorites that an underdog was looking to knock off.

    UNO may have been slow to respond to the favorite role, but by the third period of Game 3, it didn’t matter. The Mavericks tied the game early in the third, 2-2, then took a lead with just 1:35 left on a goal by Billy Pugliese. But this wasn’t the kind of series that would just go away, and Ohio State’s Paul Caponigri re-tied the game 30 seconds later.

    Pugliesi ended it 7:31 into the second overtime. It was the sixth and final overtime game of the weekend in the CCHA.

    “This has been a long weekend,” said Nebraska-Omaha head coach Mike Kemp. “Friday night overtime loss, last night tight game all the way down to the nubbins, and tonight was a real emotional roller coaster with us scoring a goal with not too much left on the clock and them coming back 30 seconds later to tie it up.”

    But it was only the second-longest game of the night.

    Head East to Rhode Island, where Providence and Boston University were meeting. The Friars had a strong regular season and were in position for an NCAA berth. BU had a down regular season, and were just looking to play spoiler while holding out hope of a magical run at the FleetCenter.

    Game 1 went handily to Providence, and the series didn’t show any signs of joining the ranks of classic. But, in Game 2, BU showed Terrier pride and survived with a tight 2-1 win.

    Unsure of what to expect in Game 3, the Friars came out firing. In the end, they would outshoot BU, 52-27, for the game. But, for now, they could only trade goals with Jack Parker’s team. Providence never trailed, but never led for long either.

    Somehow, BU kept finding ways to hang in the game. Mike Pandolfo scored shorthanded early in the second period to tie it, 1-1. Providence would get its own shorthanded goal later in the period, but then was called for another penalty, creating a 5-on-3 that BU capitalized on to tie it again. The Friars scored a late second-period goal, only to see the Terriers get yet another shorthanded score early in the third.

    Providence was left wondering how it could put away the Terriers, a team it was much better than during the regular season. The Friars seemed to be battling mystique, and not just this BU team.

    Finally, the Friars were better than BU’s mystique, and Marc Suderman ended the longest game in Hockey East history — and eighth-longest of all-time (see all-time list of longest games) — at 16:26 of the second overtime.

    “It was a real physical weekend for us, but I loved how we competed,” BU coach Jack Parker said. “I loved what we did after we lost the first game, how we came back and played as hard as we did in the next two. I also loved how our goaltender [Sean Fields] played: That’s real bright promise for next year. He played with such poise over the last two nights.”

    But, alas, such figures are nothing to Clarkson and Vermont. BU-Providence might have played the longest game of the night, but they didn’t play the longest game of the weekend.

    Until two years ago, the ECAC played a first-to-three points series. Games 1 and 2 of a series would play a regular 5-minute overtime, and be recorded as a tie if there was no winner. Clarkson’s season would have been over one day earlier if that was still the case.

    In the ECAC, where, top to bottom, things are tighter than in any other conference, Vermont defeating Clarkson in a game wouldn’t necessarily be that stunning. Vermont was 5-0 at one point this season, and, while the Cats did slip dramatically in the second half of the season, they did lose five overtime games.

    Still, Clarkson was on a classic end-of-the-season run, had smoked the Cats in Burlington, Vt., on the last weekend of the regular season, and were in perfect position for an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament, something that didn’t seem possible just a couple of weeks earlier.

    All the Golden Knights had to do was not slip up, in a building where they had never lost a playoff game in 17 tries.

    But, slip up they did, losing Game 1 when Vermont rallied in the third period.

    Saturday, again Clarkson couldn’t hold the lead, but with the Knights on the brink, they pulled out a win with seven seconds left in the second OT. It was a game that would go down as the fifth longest in NCAA history, and the longest in this maelstrom of epic games on the weekend. It also catapulted Clarkson right back into at-large-berth territory.

    Until Sunday, that is.

    No one believed Vermont could do it again, but it did, rallying to tie it late, against the odds. As regulation time ticked away, it seemed inevitable that this game would join the ranks of what had now become Super Sunday in college hockey. Yes, it was on to overtime.

    This time, the Catamounts actually won an overtime game. Sure, it only took a measly nine minutes before Patrick Sharp ended it, but it was remarkable that it happened at all. With everything conceivable stacked against the Cats, they advanced to Lake Placid — something they didn’t even do in 1997, the senior year for the famous Martin St. Louis-Eric Perrin-Tim Thomas troika.

    Vermont became just the second No. 10 seed to defeat a No. 1 seed in a best-of-three in NCAA history, joining the 1994 Michigan Tech Huskies, which knocked off Colorado College in the WCHA.

    In no small bit of irony, CC didn’t make the NCAA tournament that year, prompting the so-called “Colorado College rule,” adding an automatic berth for a conference’s regular-season champion as well as the tournament champion. However, that rule was done away with this year, and thus Clarkson has been all but eliminated from NCAA tournament consideration.

    And so it goes in college hockey.

    Mirror, mirror on the wall, who will win and who will fall?

    I don’t know, but this past weekend was the best of all.

    Bonelli Steps Down from Plymouth St. Post

    After three years, Mike Bonelli has stepped down as head coach of the Plymouth State men’s program.

    Bonelli

    Bonelli

    Bonelli, who also served as assistant coach at Plymouth State for one season before taking over the top position prior to the 1998-99 season, is leaving for financial reasons.

    “I’ve enjoyed my time at Plymouth State,” said Bonelli. “This decision was difficult because of the relationships I’ve built here for four years, but having this position as a part-time coach is not conducive to what I want to do with my career. It has nothing to do with our record or the kids or the school. There are no hard feelings, it’s just time for me to move on.”

    Bonelli led the Panthers to a 23-44-3 record in his three years, including a 4-20-1 mark this past season. Plymouth State qualified for the ECAC postseason tournament in Bonelli’s first year.

    “Things are in place for PSC to be a successful program,” said Bonelli. “That’s the reason I stayed here for four years as a part-time coach. Many of the positive qualities that we talk to kids about coming here — that’s the reason I stayed as long as I did. But I just couldn’t do it financially.”

    A 1993 graduate of New England College, Bonelli indicated he has no definite plans for the future, but he is likely to return to his native New York.

    “I would like to thank Mike for his efforts and his hard work,” said school interim athletic director John P. Clark. “He worked extremely hard in what is a very difficult position. We wish him nothing but the best in his future endeavors.”

    Clark indicated the search for a new coach will begin soon.

    Saving the Best for Last

    It was potentially the final game of his collegiate career. In his four years, he’d never been a marquee name. In fact, he’d scored only four goals at Providence, none in the last two years.

    If you wanted headlines, you’d think of forwards Devin Rask, Peter Fregoe and Drew Omicioli. Or co-captain defensemen Matt Libby and Jay Leach. Or goaltenders Nolan Schaefer and Boyd Ballard.

    Not fourth-liner Cole Gendreau. Headlines were for other guys. Gendreau was one of those unsung heroes who labor in relative anonymity, vital to a team’s success, but rarely recognized for their efforts.

    “He’s a tremendous role player for us,” said PC coach Paul Pooley after the Friars’ double-overtime victory over Boston University to advance to the Hockey East semifinals. “He’s a tremendous team guy who works hard.

    “I never, ever question Cole’s work ethic or his desire. He’s always there and is always positive. He always does his job. He gives us size and strength.”

    Cole Gendreau (right) came up big and extended his college career.

    Cole Gendreau (right) came up big and extended his college career.

    Gendreau gave his team a little more than size and strength on this night. In what would have been the last game of his collegiate career if the Friars lost, he scored on his first shift of the game.

    It wasn’t the game-winner. As an early goal, it would likely be overlooked in this marathon that lasted over 96 minutes, the longest Hockey East game of all time and the eighth longest in NCAA history.

    But to win in overtime, you have to get to overtime. And since BU goaltender Sean Fields had stopped 37 of 38 shots the night before, putting one past him early was a major contribution for a player primarily expected to use his 6-2, 220 pound body to make big hits.

    “It was a tremendous goal for him to score on his first shift,” said Pooley. “I’m very, very happy for him.”

    Gendreau was pretty happy about it, too.

    “For me, goals don’t come too easily,” he said. “I’m usually out there and if I make the big hit, I get our goalscorers to get going and that’s fine. But it was fun being able to pop one in there. It definitely felt good.”

    Gendreau grew up in Bismarck, North Dakota, and like any other kid in hailing distance of Grand Forks wanted to wear the Fighting Sioux jersey.

    “It was definitely my dream ever since I was little to be a member of the Fighting Sioux,” he said. “It was always my goal.”

    "If I didn’t have hockey, I’d probably have more time to do things that I shouldn’t do. Hockey is a great thing for me. It makes me prioritize a lot of things."

    — Cole Gendreau

    Gendreau had even more reason than most. His older brother Brett, 11 years his senior, had been one of North Dakota’s better scorers in his day.

    “My brother was quite the [contrast] to me,” said the junior Gendreau with a laugh. “He was a smaller kid, who had unbelievable hands. He was just a goalscorer who could play the game.

    “He grew up in Canada and actually came to North Dakota as a young high school player. He was just an unreal player.”

    Cole, however, developed in a less advanced arena than his older brother and wasn’t ready for Division I hockey after graduating from St. Mary’s high school.

    “I didn’t really get recruited out of high school at all,” he said. “Our high school hockey [in North Dakota] really isn’t up to par as compared to Minnesota or Massachusetts prep schools. I knew that if I was going to play Division I, I had to go through juniors.”

    The lifelong Fighting Sioux fan went to an appropriate team in the United States Hockey League: the Sioux City Musketeers. He played there for two years, but attracted the most interest from Providence, not North Dakota.

    Gendreau headed East and for four years has been a solid role player for the Friars. He’s also been the classic model citizen, being named an Academic All-Star each year.

    “If I didn’t have hockey, I’d probably have more time to do things that I shouldn’t do,” he said with a laugh. “Hockey is a great thing for me. It makes me prioritize a lot of things.”

    As for being an unsung hero and Academic All-Star for Providence instead of North Dakota, Gendreau has no regrets.

    “I wouldn’t change this for the world,” he said with a big smile. “I love this place and I love everyone associated with it. It’s been a great four years. I couldn’t ask for more.”

    RIT Selected to Host D-III Frozen Four

    The NCAA made it official today, announcing that RIT will host the Division III Men’s Ice Hockey Frozen Four next Friday and Saturday at the Ritter Memorial Arena on the RIT campus.

    RIT, 26-0-1 on the season and the No. 1-ranked team in the nation, earned the right to host after an 8-1, 10-2 sweep of Lebanon Valley in the NCAA Quarterfinals.

    RIT will square off with Wisconsin-River Falls (23-8-2) in one semifinal, while Plattsburgh State (27-5) and Wisconsin-Superior (29-3-1) will match up in the other semifinal.

    RIT has hosted the national championship game twice before, in 1984 and 1989.

    Ticket information will be available late Monday afternoon. Information on how to purchase tickets can be obtained by calling 475-6180, or on the RIT Athletics Website.

    Walsh Investigating Treatment Options

    Maine coach Shawn Walsh is travelling today to the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, Md., for tests designed to identify his next course of cancer treatments. He will stay at the National Cancer Institute until Tuesday, when he will return to Maine to prepare his team for Friday’s Hockey East semifinal game.

    Walsh, who is suffering from kidney cancer that spread to the lymph nodes under his breastplate, underwent two rounds of immunotherapy at UCLA’s Jonsson Cancer Center in August and October. Subsequent tests showed that the tumors had not grown, but still remained.

    A story in the Boston Globe claimed that Walsh will pursue a stem cell procedure. This requires a donor who matches Walsh’s genetic profile on three of four points. Walsh’s younger brother, Kevin, matches on all four points.

    However, that report was premature. Several other options are also being considered and no decision has yet been made as to which one will best treat Walsh’s condition.

    “My family, my players and I are very grateful that, as our team has been in our stretch run, the media has stayed away from my health issue,” said Walsh. “And I would appreciate their continued respect of my desire to strictly talk hockey. Right now, I want to be able to concentrate on our team.

    “Once we identify the actual treatment and procedures I will undertake, I will make that information available and address the media.”

    Prairie Ponderings

    Somehow, I thought Omaha would be more like Columbus. After all, each is an inland, Midwestern city ringed for miles by farmland, each infused with sensible, middle-American values. Granted, Nebraska rides the Great Plains further out while Columbus is near the Plains’ eastern shore, but I somehow expected both cities to have been cut from similar cloth.

    Instead Omaha is reminiscent of my hometown of Syracuse, New York — or the Syracuse I remember. The city of rolling hills a mix of old and new, with a downtown that looks very much like Syracuse, and outskirts that have a little of the look of residential Buffalo, or Erie, Penn.

    At the Crossroads Mall, the parking lot was outlined by huge, decaying banks of snow, deposited when the city was hit by its last storm, now slowly melting and well insulated by a thick layer of city silt. This, too, reminds me of Syracuse, where such piles could take until late April or early May to melt completely, and where in March the sides of the roads are dun-colored, debris-strewn pedestrian obstacle courses, where hazardous patches of ice disguised as mud make walking an adventure.

    This is not Columbus, nor is it Syracuse, a city whose inhabitants seem bent by snow and wind year round, where the summer rains humidity, where eye contact is not especially recommended.

    Gratitude is attitude. So say many billboards in Omaha, where people hardly need to be encouraged to be nice. Nice seems to be a renewable commodity here, and along with it courtesy, respect, and everything embodied within a smile and heartfelt hello.

    Or is that “howdy”? For a Midwestern city, Omaha is infused with a sense of the West. I’ve had men tip their hats at me as they’ve passed. Beef is big business here. My hotel room overlooks Dodge Street.

    Then there are the Mavericks, of course, who play in the Bullpen, the loudest barn I’ve ever visited. The fans ring cowbells and shake milk jugs that contain a few pennies. People wear hats with steer horns, and there are two — not one, but two — bull mascots. One is your standard, oversized stuffed animal type, and the other is inflatable. The inflatable Maverick is a big ol’ head or so taller than his more solid counterpart, but is also occupied by a person. That’s right: a person inside an inflatable suit.

    I met this mascot before the game, and asked him if the more traditional mascot would be present. He replied, “Yes, but inflatable is always better than soft.” He said this with a straight face. I knew at that moment that anything resembling eastern was miles and miles away.

    Two hours before the start of the opening game in this best-of-three, first-round CCHA playoff series between Ohio State and Nebraska-Omaha, I met several faithful, rabid, fanatical Maverick hockey supporters at a nice joint called Old Chicago. Most of these folks post on the USCHO.com Message Board, and they treated me like a queen. Rick, Linc, Wayne and several other people chatted with me for an hour while we had some beer and pizza (for which they insisted on paying, hospitable as they are).

    In the course of that hour, what doesn’t translate through mere words on a screen came through loud and clear; these are nice folks. As hockey fans, they are loyal, intelligent, respectful of the opposition. As people, I imagine they’re the kind of neighbors, friends, and colleagues that anyone would be pleased to know.

    In the rink, they transformed into screaming maniacs, as is their God-given right. The Nebraska- Omaha players took the ice through yet another huge, inflatable steer’s head, and the more solid mascot lay on the ice, utterly disinterested, as the Buckeye starters were introduced.

    Everyone sang the national anthem.

    When Jeff Hoggan scored 55 seconds into the contest, I thought the rafters would collapse. Two periods later, when David Noel-Bernier scored the Mavericks’ go-ahead goal late in the third, I thought my eardrums would implode.

    Moments later, when Eric Skaug tied it up again for Ohio State, the silence was like an absence of a presence, 30 seconds of stunned disbelief before a crowd recovery so thunderously loud — paced by the frantic chant of “U-N-O! U-N-O!” each syllable punctuated by the enthusiastic shake of a milk jug — that I couldn’t hear the person standing literally six inches away from me.

    When Miguel Lafleche won it for Ohio State 38 seconds into overtime, I heard Mavs fans couching their disappointment with praise for the Buckeyes, a genuine respect for a team that displayed the kind of characteristics that Nebraska-Omaha fans love in their own team: tenacity, toughness, heartland values that can help a hockey team come back from behind, or help a city weather the transition from decline to post-recession resurgence.

    So, as I’m about to gussy up and mosey on over to the Bullpen, I realize that Omaha has made a believer out of me. I believe in UNO, OSU, Bowling Green, the CCHA, and the power of the tip of a hat.

    I believe in inflatable mascots, lawyers who paint their faces red and black, the three-on-two breakaway, and the power of college hockey to be a force for positive change in the Universe.

    And, after last night, I also believe that my hemlines may be a little too short for this town.

    But I believe in gratitude as attitude.

    Thank you, Omaha.

    Sudden Death at the Whitt

    Win or get out the golf clubs. The equation was the same for both teams and it was just that simple.

    The similarities ended there.

    UMass-Lowell had entered the postseason knowing that its only chance for an NCAA berth lay in winning the Hockey East tournament. Having their backs to the wall, however, was nothing new for the River Hawks, who had opened the season with six losses in their first seven league contests only to rebound impressively. When they rallied in game two of the quarterfinal series on Friday to force a deciding third game, it should have surprised no one.

    The postseason landscape was much different for the New Hampshire Wildcats. They’d spent virtually all year in the nation’s Top 10. Based on their position in the NCAA tournament selection criteria, they appeared to be a lock for an invitation unless they were upset in the quarterfinals. Despite a few potholes down the stretch, expectations were high.

    The River Hawks’ comeback victory in Friday night’s second game, however, changed all that. Had the season ended before the third contest, UNH would not have made the NCAAs. Presumably, another loss would be fatal.

    “We talked about [needing] a win to get to the FleetCenter,” said UNH coach Dick Umile, “and if we got to the FleetCenter, we’d have an opportunity. But if we didn’t, there was a real good chance that we wouldn’t be playing anymore.”

    New Hampshire had all the playoff experience. Only Lowell’s seniors could include a single postseason win on their collegiate resumes. By contrast, the Wildcats had been to the FleetCenter the last two seasons and in 1999 had advanced to the national championship game.

    In fact, just last year Lowell had finished in the Hockey East cellar, the only team to not make the playoffs. Were the River Hawks really ready to go from the outhouse to the penthouse?

    “Last year I don’t think we had the mindset that we belonged at the Fleet Center,” said star defenseman Ron Hainsey. “This year, even after the poor start, we had the mindset that we were going to the FleetCenter and we were going to make some noise.

    “We knew we could do something. We felt that we belonged out there with the best teams in the league.”

    Even so, Lowell’s playoff inexperience seemed to surface early when goaltender Jimi St. John appeared to be fighting the puck.

    “I was a little nervous,” he admitted afterward. “Every one of these guys was. This was probably the biggest game for most of us. The first few shots, I was full of jitters. But after that, it just took a few before I realized it was just another game.”

    In time, Lowell took the approach that the pressure was all on the seventh-ranked Wildcats.

    “Everybody on our team has played in some kind of intense game situations like this,” said Hainsey. “We came in thinking this was our game to take. All the pressure was on them… but we knew we could get the job done.

    “Honestly, what did we have to lose? Not a whole lot. I think in our minds we thought we had a lot to lose, but in reality they were the seventh-ranked team in the country, it was in their building and they were five minutes away from doing it [the night before]. [UNH goaltender Ty] Conklin can only keep so many pucks out. I think as a team we thought they’d be back on their heels tonight.”

    At 15:55 of the first period, UNH drew first blood on a Matt Swain goal, but just 22 seconds later, Lowell’s Jeff Boulanger answered. The season-ending match remained tied, 1-1, through the second period.

    Boulanger’s second goal of the game at 8:25 of the third period highlighted yet another difference between the two combatants. While UNH’s offensive bread and butter is the transition game, the River Hawks live along the boards, using their superior size to full advantage.

    Boulanger and his linemates Nick Carso and Steve Slonina worked the puck along the end boards, down behind the UNH net, and in short order Boulanger was letting his shot go from the slot. Conklin got a piece of it with his glove, but then it trickled into the net.

    A pall settled over the Whittemore Center crowd. They were stunned. This couldn’t be happening.

    A few minutes later, however, the fans recovered. They were on their feet exhorting their Wildcats, albeit annoyed at the visiting fans in the corner who kept chanting, “UML! UML!”

    Possibly rattled just a little, Lowell turned the puck over in its own slot, creating a great chance that St. John foiled. Another sloppy turnover two minutes later at the blue line forced another strong save.

    “I’m sure Jimi remembers those,” said UML coach Tim Whitehead with a laugh. He then dismissed any connection between the turnovers and playoff inexperience. “These guys have been in big games whether it’s in college or juniors or anywhere. But it gets tight at the end of the game. We’re just fortunate that they didn’t capitalize. But over the full 10 minutes [at the end], we did make the smart plays.”

    When the final buzzer sounded, UNH’s season appeared over. The Wildcats had played their last game.

    They could only look back at game two when they had held a 1-0 lead with six minutes to play. Six minutes away from the FleetCenter and a probable NCAA berth. Unfortunately, those six minutes had been a Red Sox-ian six minutes.

    After the heart-breaking loss, Umile was asked if he looked back at that lost opportunity.

    “Absolutely,” he said and then was silent for 10 seconds. Having a change of heart, he then added, “Last night was over last night …

    “The team played hard. It had a good season. It was disappointing that we didn’t go as far as we would have liked. But they’re a good team and I’m proud of the way they played.”

    A downcast Conklin had all the appearance of a young man who knew he’d played his last collegiate game.

    “It’s not very likely that we’re going to go on,” he said. “It’s [the end of] a season for everybody and a career for nine guys. What are you going to say?

    “Obviously we hope that something happens, but right now it’s not looking too likely.”

    As it turns out, there’s still a glimmer of hope. The game was sudden death, but the phone may still ring with the governor’s pardon.

    Boston University upset Providence to force a deciding game on Sunday, leaving the possibility that UNH might still be alive for the NCAA tournament. The Wildcats no longer hold their fate in their own hands, but if Providence loses on Sunday and Clarkson wins the ECAC tournament and …

    The odds aren’t in UNH’s favor. But there is still a chance.

    “We’re not leaving town,” said Conklin.

    The Season in a Microcosm

    It looked like the final six minutes of UMass-Lowell’s season on Friday night. After dropping the first game of its Hockey East quarterfinal series to New Hampshire one night earlier, the River Hawks trailed 1-0.

    One-goal deficits aren’t usually cause for despair, but they can be when you’re facing UNH goaltender and frequent brick wall, Ty Conklin. The reigning Hockey East Defensive Player of the Week, who last Saturday set a league record with his fourth shutout of the season, appeared to be ready to add No. 5.

    In the first period, Conklin had foiled eventual UML heroes Peter Hay and Ed McGrane on a two-on-one. He stood tall during a five-on-three Lowell man advantage in the second as well as excellent chances by Geoff Schomogyi and Hay. Early in the third, Conklin stoned Chris Gustafson at the doorstep on three successive shots.

    At the other end, Lowell goaltender Jimi St. John had stopped all but the Johnny Rogers rebound of a Corey-Joe Ficek shot. St. John would eventually finish with 33 saves on 34 shots, but late in the third it still looked like that wouldn’t be enough.

    “Everybody knows that Ty Conklin is the guy in the league to play against,” said St. John. “I just tried to match him save-for-save and hopefully pull it out.

    “Going late into the third and knowing that we had to go against Conklin, who is one of the best goalies in the league, is tough. You’re just hoping to get that bounce.”

    Lowell got that bounce when Yorick Treille, one of its most talented forwards, took off on a breakaway.

    Nice deke by Treille.

    Save, Conklin.

    So much for that bounce.

    “When you see an open breakaway and Conklin makes the big save,” said McGrane, “you kind of think to yourself for a second [that it might have been the last chance to tie it]. But we got those chances the whole game and there wasn’t any stopping us from getting another one.

    “You sit back for a second, but you’ve got to keep going. You can’t put your head down for too long or the game is just going to go right by you. You just have to keep your head up and look for the break.”

    That resilient attitude had manifested itself early this season when the River Hawks got off to as disastrous 1-6 start in Hockey East action. Firmly entrenched in the cellar the year after a last-place finish, the Hawks would have had ready-made excuses for rolling over and dying. Instead, they turned their season around and became one of the best teams in the league over the second half.

    “[The game] was just the way our season started,” said St. John, who himself rode the bench for much of the first semester. “We were down and out for a little bit and then we started getting some bounces and picked it up.”

    The bounce that finally paid off came in the form of a power play at 13:22. McGrane redirected a pass from Tom Rouleau into the net and it suddenly was a brand new game.

    It would be left to Hay, a freshman who few knew about in December, to get the game-winner off a great feed from Brad Rooney with 1:27 remaining.

    If the game’s rough-start-good-finish was Lowell’s overall season in a microcosm, it also mirrored Hay’s introduction to collegiate hockey.

    “Unfortunately, he had mono last year,” said UML coach Tim Whitehead. “Then [he] got injured in the preseason [this year] so he got off to a very slow start. … It seemed like every week something happened to him — just freak things. … But he’s worked extremely hard.”

    That hard work didn’t start to pay off until January, when Hay finally began to insert himself into the lineup. Prior to that, it was difficult for the freshman not to look at the season as potentially a lost one.

    “It comes across your mind, but you just take it out of your mind and keep working as hard as you can and hope to get into the lineup,” he said. “Eventually it just worked out and everything has been clicking since then.”

    Clicking indeed. With 1:27 remaining, Hay roofed his shot past Conklin and put Lowell into a third and deciding game against UNH on Saturday.

    The goal was Hay’s sixth of the year in just his 17th game and certainly his most important one.

    Which just goes to show that you can’t count out this year’s River Hawks. Not individually, as Hay and St. John have proved. And not as a team, even after a 1-6 start of the season or a deficit against arguably the best goaltender in the East with just six minutes to play.

    Labbe Named AHCA College Division Player of the Year

    Middlebury’s Michelle Labbe was named the American Hockey Coaches Association (AHCA) Women’s College Division Player of the Year. Labbe, a dual citizen from Pt. Claire, Quebec, scored 24 goals and 32 assists for 56 points in her senior year. All told, she has accumulated 227 points, the most all-time at Middlebury.

    Michelle Labbe speaks after receiving her award as Women's Division III Player of the Year at the Championships banquet in Rochester on Thursday.

    Michelle Labbe speaks after receiving her award as Women’s Division III Player of the Year at the Championships banquet in Rochester on Thursday.

    Labbe, a double major in Environmental Studies and Economics, was selected to the All-America team the past two years, and once again has led the Panthers into the national championship tournament — taking place this weekend in Rochester, N.Y. Middlebury won the title last year in Boston.

    “Michelle is the captain of this year’s team, and she is a true leader,” Middlebury coach Bill Mandigo said. “She is a disciplined, determined and hard-working player who knows only one speed. Perhaps her greatest hockey attribute is that she practices as hard as she plays.”

    Labbe also had kind words to say about her coach during her acceptance speech at the players’ banquet held Thursday at the Airport Holiday Inn. Labbe thanked her coach for convincing her to go to Middlebury, and for all the fun she had.

    “It’s been a pleasure playing for my team and my coach,” she said.

    A Middlebury player also won the inaugural award last season, Sylvia Ryan.

    Team USA women's assistant coach Julie Sasner was a guest speaker at Thursday's banquet.

    Team USA women’s assistant coach Julie Sasner was a guest speaker at Thursday’s banquet.

    Finalists for the honor were Tiffany Hayes, sophomore goaltender for Vermont; Heather Murphy, junior forward from Colgate; Angie Rieger, senior forward from Augsburg; and Molly Wasserman, freshman forward from Williams and the ECAC Rookie of the Year.

    Also announced by the banquet’s guest speaker, Julie Sasner, Team USA women’s assistant coach, were the finalists for the Women’s College Division Coach of the Year, which will be announced at the AHCA Convention in Naples, Fla. on April 28. They are:

  • Mike Carroll (Gustavus Adolphus)
  • Jason Lesteberg (UW-Stevens Point)
  • Bill Mandigo (Middlebury)
  • Joe Milan (Williams)
  • Duncan Ryhorchuk (St. Mary’s)
  • Jeff Smith (St. Catharine)
  • Q&A: D-III Tournament Selection

    We’ve been getting a lot of email since Sunday night, including quite a few questions on the USCHO.com message board about the recent NCAA Division III Men’s Tournament Committee announcement of selections and seeding for this year’s championships.

    So, as a public service, here’s a list the most frequently asked questions.

    Answers, too.

    Q: How are the teams picked?

    A: Six conference champions get automatic bids:

    ECAC East: New England College
    ECAC Northeast: Lebanon Valley
    MIAC: St. John’s
    NESCAC: Middlebury
    NCHA: Wisconsin-Superior
    SUNYAC: Plattsburgh

    There are two at-large berths, one available to teams from conferences not eligible for automatic bids (the “Pool B” bid, claimed by RIT this season) and one “second-chance” bid available to a team from the six conferences with an automatic bid (Pool C, awarded to Wisconsin-River Falls).

    Q: What are the criteria for selecting the at-large teams?

    A: According to the NCAA’s 2001 Men’s and Women’s Ice Hockey Championship Handbook, the selection criteria are:

  • Winning percentage, head-to-head results and results against common opponents
  • Strength of schedule as determined by opponents’ winning percentage
  • Results against teams already in the tournament
  • Q: Getting more specific, why was Wisconsin-River Falls selected over Amherst?

    A: Amherst had a slightly better winning percentage, but River Falls was ahead in the other criteria. “Strength of schedule was the determining factor,” said Plattsburgh head coach Bob Emery, a member of the D-III selection committee.

    Q: Who’s on the committee?

  • Scott Nichols, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, chair
  • Bob Emery, Plattsburgh
  • Dan Harris, MSOE
  • Tony Fritz, Lake Forest
  • They are assisted by members of regional advisory committees:

  • Glenn Thomaris, Elmira
  • Rick Hazelton, Trinity
  • Al MacCormack, Lebanon Valley
  • Brett Peterson, Gustavus Adolphus
  • Jim Strick, Wisconsin-Stevens Point
  • Mark Workman, St. Scholastica
  • Q: How were the host sites for the quarterfinals determined?

    A: The top seeds in each region get to host, assuming that they meet the criteria established by the NCAA, which include, in priority order:

  • Quality and availability of the facility
  • Geographic location, which also includes rotating sites when feasible
  • Seeding
  • Attendance history and revenue potential. Not necessarily the biggest rink, but the NCAA wants to “assure fiscal responsibility”.
  • Since all of the top four seeds have good facilities (each has hosted a D-III Frozen Four in the past), it was a no-brainer to award the quarterfinals to RIT, Middlebury, River Falls, and Superior.

    Q: Why was the fifth Eastern seed, Lebanon Valley, kept in the East and the fourth seed, New England College, sent West this year? Last season, the fifth Eastern seed was sent West.

    A: The standard process is indeed to send the fifth Eastern seed West in the event of a 5-3 East-West split. That would have sent New England College to RIT.

    “Because of the distance (more than 400 miles, as specified in the NCAA manual), New England would have had the option to fly to RIT,” said Emery. “We didn’t want to fly two teams, so we instead flew New England out West.”

    Lebanon Valley is less than 400 miles from RIT, so it can bus there.

    Q: Why isn’t New England College playing the top Western seed, Wisconsin-Superior?

    A: Once New England College was sent West, the West was reseeded to make sure that the top seed, Superior, drew the lowest seed. New England is ahead of St. John’s, the third Western seed, in the criteria, so it was moved ahead of the Johnnies, sending them to Superior. NEC gets River Falls.

    Q: How will they decide who gets to host the final four?

    A: According to the NCAA manual, the “committee may award the site to the higher-ranked team if the above criteria, and any priorities established by the respective division championships committee, are met.”

    That means that RIT is probably the favorite, followed by the winner of the Plattsburgh/Middlebury series. The NCAA typically alternates sites between East and West, and it’s the East’s turn.

    Q: Who will win the national championship?

    A: Good question!

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