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Coaching Milestones for Gilligan, Peters

It took, perhaps, a month longer than expected, but Vermont’s Mike Gilligan finally became the 17th coach to reach 400 career wins on Friday, when the Catamounts defeated Brown, 2-0, at Gutterson Fieldhouse.

The same could be said for Bemidji State coach Bob Peters, whose team won for just the second time this season. The 6-2 win over Niagara gives Peters, the team’s coach of 34 years, 700 wins at the school.

Gilligan

Gilligan

Gilligan earned win No. 398 on Dec. 30, against Dartmouth, only to see his team go 1-7-2 over the next 10 games. The win moved Vermont back to .500 on the season, both overall (11-11-2) and in the ECAC (7-7-2). For his career, Gilligan is 260-234-41 (.524) at Vermont, and 400-295-44 (.571) overall.

Gilligan, in his 17th year at Vermont, currently stands as the winningest active ECAC coach. Only three coaches in league history have recorded more wins — Len Ceglarski, Jerry York and Jack Riley.

Gilligan began his coaching career at his alma mater, Salem State, in 1975 where he compiled a .727 winning percentage (128-48-2, 6 years), the second-best Division II winning percentage in ECAC history. Gilligan left Salem State to serve as assistant coach to Tim Taylor at Yale for two seasons, plus one season (1983-84) as interim head coach, when he compiled a 12-13-1 record. Gilligan became Vermont’s third coach in the spring of 1984.

Vermont has reached the NCAA tournament three times under Gilligan, in 1988, 1996 and 1997. The 1996 appearance included a trip to the Frozen Four.

Peters’ BSU teams have been powers at the Division II and III levels, and now play in the Division I conference, College Hockey America. The Beavers have suffered through a tumultuous season, and are only 2-23-2.

Peters

Peters

Peters, 63, coached two seasons at North Dakota, his alma mater, before moving to Bemidji State in 1966, where he went on to win 13 National Championships at various levels. In NCAA history, only Michigan State’s Ron Mason has more than Peters’ 742 overall wins.

Peters also holds college hockey records for most wins in an undefeated season (31-0, 1984), and the longest unbeaten streak — 43 straight games (Nov. 8, 1983 to Jan. 1, 1985).

This Week In The ECAC: Feb. 8, 2001

We have a new leader in the ECAC. The Big Red of Cornell have assumed the top of the charts and they don’t plan on looking back. Can they hold the lead? With four weeks to go, no one knows what’s going to happen in the ECAC. It’s unpredictable, it’s crazy, it’s unbelievable.

Yes, it’s just the end of the ECAC season, as usual.

Seeing Red

The Big Red of Cornell have ascended to the throne after a weekend sweep of Brown and Harvard, both by 2-1 scores. It took the Big Red overtime to defeat Brown on Friday; on Saturday, they did it in regulation over the Crimson.

“It was a good win for us,” Cornell coach Mike Shafer said after Saturday’s win. “I thought the first period was kind of even, and we were fortunate to have the two-goal lead. After they scored in the third, Harvard had the momentum for about three or four minutes, but we weathered the storm and didn’t give them much after that.”

The Cornell style of play keeps the game interesting, but it seems to be working for the Big Red and Schafer. With four weeks left to go, the coach knows it’s far from over.

“First place is tough to get into,” he said. “It’s tougher to keep it.”

Colgate is trying to move into the playoffs and a split on the weekend helped, but still saw the Red Raiders fall behind as Union, the team above them, swept on the weekend. A loss to Harvard and a win over Brown helped the Red Raiders.

At the same time, the Red Raiders seem to be going to freshman David Cann between the pipes. He has started the last three games for the Red Raiders and despite going 1-2-0, he has posted a 2.35 GAA and a .923 save percentage. That, along with what seems to be more offense for the Red Raiders has them poised for the stretch run.

“We have to go in this weekend and play our game,” said head coach Don Vaughan. “Every game is a big game for us now and we have to just continue to work hard as we challenge for a playoff spot.”

Heading into this weekend, the Princeton Tigers were looking for something anything positive to happen. Over the course of a two-month period in which the team was allowing its opponents an average of 5.6 goals per game, the frustration was certainly beginning to show. The preseason pundits who brushed off the Tigers as a team with no real weapons were poised to sound the “I told you so” bell.

But then came the North Country trip, where it took a Jekyll and Hyde performance for Princeton to break its eight-game losing streak. In the midst of a season which has been anything but typical, the Tigers put a halting stop to their eight-game losing streak with a dominating 6-4 victory over the second-place St. Lawrence Saints. On the strength of two goals by Shane Campbell, three assists by Josh Roberts and a 35-save performance by Dave Stathos, the Tigers took a game on the road and restored some of the confidence that had been drained away since the slide began back on Dec. 8.

The team took one on the chin the next night, however, with a 6-1 loss to Clarkson. As has been the case for the Tigers all season long, the beginning stretch of the game dictated the outcome.

Against the Saints, the Tigers took a 1-0 lead just 1:23 into the contest and essentially never looked back. The Clarkson game was another story as Princeton spotted the Golden Knights a four-goal lead after just one period. Memories of the eight-game losing streak started drifting back, but the Princeton coaching staff was quick to pounce on the positives.

“We’re not concerned about our playoff chances,” said Princeton head coach Lenny Quesnelle. “The focus is on playing better, and to play like we did Friday night [against St. Lawrence].”

The weekend split, coupled with the early-season 10 points racked up by the team, has allowed Princeton to maintain a two-way tie for eighth place with Yale and currently stand only two points out of a tie for sixth place. Thus far, the team has been able to straddle the middle section of the league standings. This weekend may force the Tigers’ hand. A weekend split or sweep will lift the team amongst the league leaders, while two losses will force the Tigers to enter the final four weekends of play in a fight for the final few cherished playoff spots.

Princeton will open its doors to Cornell and Colgate this weekend, which is good for the Tigers, if series history has anything to do with the outcome. The Tigers have had a recent string of luck against the New York teams: Princeton is unbeaten in the last four meetings with Colgate (3-0-1) and owns a 3-1-1 record over the Big Red in the last five meetings at Baker Rink.

“We’re pretty positive right now,” said Quesnelle. “We played well [against St. Lawrence] and executed within our system. We took some steps forward. The biggest thing is to learn something from [the losing streak]. If we don’t, shame on us.”

It wasn’t as bad as the Michigan State series, but it wasn’t much better. After a period of time in which Yale saw its fortunes turning, the team returned home from the North Country with two losses and zero goals to show for its effort. Not exactly the momentum Tim Taylor & Co. were hoping for after a recent string where the team won four of five games.

The Bulldogs began their weekend at Clarkson, where nothing good seemed to happen for the visiting team. The Golden Knights jumped out to a 3-0 lead over the first 10 minutes and cruised along to a convincing 6-0 victory. Yale couldn’t seem to stop any of the Clarkson players as 13 different Golden Knights figured into the scoring column that night.

“Mark [Morris] said it was their best game of the year, and I hope so, because it was our worst,” said Yale head coach Tim Taylor after Friday’s night contest. “I’m very disappointed with all aspects of our game. We were very vulnerable defensively, [they] beat us in all the one-on-one battles, and on faceoffs they dominated us.”

The following night, Yale responded with a more solid performance but was left with nothing to show for the effort. The team battled evenly through three periods, but fell after only eight seconds had elapsed in overtime. It was one of those plays that happened so quickly and left the Yale players standing there in disbelief. Not only were the two North Country shutouts disappointing, but they also marked the third and fourth shutouts of the season for Yale, tying a school record.

The two losses also kept Taylor one victory shy of becoming Yale’s all-time wins leader. The 23-year head coach is currently tied with legendary coach Murray Murdoch (1938-65) atop the school charts with 278 wins.

Much like Princeton, Yale has been successful against Colgate and Cornell in recent years. Although they dropped a 4-3 heartbreaker in Ithaca earlier this year, the Bulldogs are 4-1-0 in the last five games against Cornell and 4-3 against nationally-ranked teams.

Something Has To Give

In the North Country this weekend, there are four teams which took a total of 13 of 16 points last weekend. Weekend sweeps by Clarkson and Union, coupled with three points from Rensselaer and two from St. Lawrence, made this a set of games in which teams seem to have gotten things going.

Clarkson is on a roll as of late. Despite a loss to St. Lawrence earlier in the week, the Golden Knights rebounded to destroy Yale and Princeton by 6-0 and 6-1 scores. The Knights are now 7-2-0 in ECAC play in 2001 and are looking to wrap up a five-game homestand with four more points.

They will try to do it against Union and Rensselaer, who the Knights swept in their first set of ECAC games back in January.

“Union no doubt will give an improved effort over the last time we faced them a few weeks back,” said head coach Mark Morris. “I am certain they will have time to think about the way the game went down there and to bounce back. Brandon Snee is one of the better goalies in our league. With a strong effort from him they could compete with anybody in the ECAC.

“RPI obviously is always a team to reckon with. They are an explosive team and it is very important to play them in a tight checking, grinding affair to try and diffuse their offense.”

Last season the Knights lost both games at home against Union and Rensselaer.

Union picked up four points at a great time of the year. The Dutchmen have been stumbling for the last two months, but turned it up a notch and picked up their first ECAC wins since November in defeating Vermont and Dartmouth last weekend. The wins helped the Dutchmen maintain the last playoff spot, but also helped them gain ground on the teams ahead of them to try and solidify a playoff spot.

“We found a way to win,” said head coach Kevin Sneddon. “And that’s something that this hockey club hasn’t been doing lately. So it’s nice to get back on track.”

Rensselaer picked up three points last weekend. In coming from behind to defeat Dartmouth and tying Vermont in the annual Big Red Freakout game, the Engineers hang precariously in the fifth position of the standings.

But then again, the ECAC standings are tight no matter where you are.

“It would have been nice to win one in front of the fans from a Freakout perspective. I thought it was a real good crowd in here and I certainly would like to have Freakout every night,” said head coach Dan Fridgen. “It would have been nice for them to go home with a win, but I’ll take three out of four points on the weekend.”

St. Lawrence took two points last weekend and needed overtime in order to do so. After getting outplayed and outgunned in a loss to Princeton, the Saints needed overtime to defeat Yale, 1-0.

The Saints are the end of a four game homestand and are looking to make the best of it after going 1-1 last weekend in the front end of the homestand.

“We’ve done pretty well lately in league play on the road, but we haven’t played as well as we’d like at home,” said head coach Joe Marsh. “We want to be a much better team than .500 on our own ice.

“This league is so tight that every game is going to be and end-to-end battle and you have to be on top of your game to be successful.”

Getting Back On Track

Despite a disappointing 4-1 loss to Boston College in the semifinal round of the Beanpot on Monday night, the Harvard Crimson is still tied for second place in the ECAC standings with 19 points. That lone fact is something that makes this weekend’s upcoming matchup against Dartmouth one of the most critical games of the season. The standings are as congested as ever and every possible point has the potential to change the playoff field dramatically — especially for a team like Harvard, which has a game up on 10 of the 11 other teams.

Although the Crimson players may have wished they had last Saturday night off, the team will have an extra night of rest this weekend in preparation for their consolation game against Northeastern at the FleetCenter on Monday night. The loss to the Eagles came on the heels of a weekend split with Colgate and Cornell. In front of an anxious FleetCenter crowd, the Crimson displayed some of its worst hockey of the year as they were outplayed and outplayed all night long by a very strong and fast Boston College.

“We didn’t have our edge,” said Harvard head coach Mark Mazzoleni. “We needed to play much better defensively than we did. We knew what we had to do to win. We just didn’t have it [against Boston College], and I can’t really sit here and blame that on playing three games in four days.”

To top off the lost, the team will be without the services of sophomore Brett Nowak indefinitely as he was injured midway through Monday’s game. The team had already lost junior Graham Morrell for the year and is now barely able to fill out four full lines.

The one player who has established himself as the Crimson’s most dynamic player has been Dominic Moore. Through 19 games, Moore has amassed 29 points — five more than his total during his freshman year — and is on pace for a 40-point season. The last Crimson player to achieve such a feat was Steve Martins, who collected 60 points during the 1993-94 season.

The most astounding statistic for Moore, however, is the fact that 68 percent of his points have come on special teams. Moore’s stat line is very similar to that of the whole team. Of Harvard’s 60 total goals this season, exactly half have come either on the power play (21) or when the team was shorthanded (nine). In fact, Harvard has scored more shorthanded goals (eight) than it has allowed power-play tallies (seven) in ECAC games.

The Crimson will need to play behind the strength of its special teams come Friday night when they take on the Big Green. Dartmouth‘s power play has experienced a surge of its own, connecting on six of its last 14 attempts. The Big Green will also be foaming at the mouth for a win following its recent road trip to the Capital Region.

Despite a strong performance against both Rensselaer and Union, the Big Green saw its two-game winning streak take a 180-degree turn. Incidentally, the team’s winning streak was spurred on by two victories against the Engineers and Skating Dutchmen the weekend before in Hanover, N.H. The Saturday night loss to Union was especially disappointing considering that the Big Green fought back from two deficits that night to eventually fall, 4-3.

“I thought we worked hard tonight, but we couldn’t find a way to put the next one in,” said Dartmouth head coach Bob Gaudet. “It’s unfortunate. I’ve said it over and over again — Union is a very good team. But we have the ability to dominate every facet of the game. The game’s funny — it can come down to a bounce of the puck here and there.”

Despite the recent scoring drought by leading scorer Mike Maturo, who has managed only three assists in his last six games, Trevor Byrne continues to establish himself as one of the premier defensemen in the league as he snagged his fifth goal of the year. Byrne enters this weekend’s contest against Harvard with 14 points in his last 13 games and he currently leads all Dartmouth defensemen with 20 total points.

With Byrne’s help, the Big Green will look to maintain the home advantage that it has enjoyed over the past few months. The team has won its last five games at Thompson Arena.

“It’s a hard one,” said Gaudet of his team’s zero-point weekend — the first since mid-November. “I’m trying to find a lesson out of it. You have to work your butts off in order to accomplish anything. But because you work, it doesn’t mean you’re going to win.”

The Catamounts emerged last weekend with a loss and a tie. But considering that single point — courtesy of a 2-2 deadlock with Rensselaer on Saturday night — is one of only four points collected by Vermont in its last 10 games, they’ll take it.

“Once we were in overtime, a lot of us were thinking the worst,” said Vermont head coach Mike Gilligan. “I wanted them to go for the win, and not just try to nail down the tie, but we’ll take it. On the road, with the boys we have out, it’s pretty impressive to get one point.”

Vermont has been without the services of Andreas Moborg for the past three games and that certainly has hurt.

The Brown Bears will take center stage this Saturday night when the face off against Dartmouth in the ECAC game of the week. Brown is coming off a 0-for weekend against Cornell and Colgate. The team gave the Big Red all they could handle on Friday night and forced the contest into overtime. Unfortunately for the Bears, a turnover on the Brown blueline opened the door Cornell’s Krzystof Wieckowski’s goal at the 1:17 mark of the extra session.

The loss snowballed into an uninspired 4-1 defeat the next night in a very winnable game against Colgate.

“I thought we were flat tonight,” said Grillo following the loss — his team’s fifth straight. “We had chances to go up a goal or more, but didn’t get it done. We just lost that jump in our skates we had for a while.”

The enduring problem for the Bears — as was evidenced by last weekend’s play — has been their inability to finish off the well-played games when they have a chance. The team has had numerous chances to steal close games this year. Here’s a quick snapshot of the games Brown could have easily won: the 4-3 overtime loss versus Dartmouth, the 2-0 loss at Cornell in which the teams skated into the third period scoreless and the two consecutive ties against Clarkson and St. Lawrence. If those four games had gone the other way, the Bears would be battling for improved playoff position and not just hoping to still be playing hockey in four weeks.

Unfortunately for the Bears, there is no turning back at this point. The two most recent losses sink Brown to sole possession of last place in the ECAC standings, three points behind 11th-place Colgate.

If It’s So Easy, You Try It

Can you believe it? Another week of the challenge, and yes, your Iron Columnists are still undefeated. Steve Lombardo fell last week; this week, who will try to unseat us?

The contest thus far:

Becky and Jayson d. Vic Brzozowski – (10-2-2) – (8-5-1)
Becky and Jayson d. Tayt Brooks – (7-7-1) – (5-9-1)
Becky and Jayson d. Michele Kelley – (5-4-3) – (2-7-3)
Becky and Jayson d. C.J. Poux – (9-4-2) – (6-7-2)
Becky and Jayson d. Shawn Natole – (5-8-0) – (3-10-0)
Becky and Jayson t. Julian Saltman – (7-4-2) – (7-4-2)
Becky and Jayson d. Julian Saltman – (9-2-0) – (6-5-0)
Becky and Jayson d. Steve Lombardo – (8-4-1) – (6-6-1)

If memory serves us right, a school in New Haven has great fans that pack the “Whale” for every game. Our challenger this week is one of those fans at Yale. What will Normand Chouinard bring into USCHO Stadium to try and defeat the Iron Columnists? Can he go where no one has gone before? Whose picks will reign supreme?

The Picks

Friday, February 9

Cornell at Princeton
Normand’s PickPrinceton 4, Cornell 3
Becky and JaysonCornell 3, Princeton 1

Colgate at Yale
Normand’s PickYale 4, Colgate 2
Becky and JaysonYale 5, Colgate 2

Rensselaer at St. Lawrence
Normand’s PickSt. Lawrence 4, Rensselaer 1
Becky and JaysonSt. Lawrence 2, Rensselaer 1

Union at Clarkson
Normand’s PickClarkson 6, Union 1
Becky and JaysonClarkson 4, Union 1

Harvard at Dartmouth
Normand’s PickDartmouth 4, Harvard 2
Becky and JaysonHarvard 4, Dartmouth 3

Brown at Vermont
Normand’s PickBrown 3, Vermont 2
Becky and JaysonVermont 5, Brown 3

Saturday, February 10

Cornell at Yale
Normand’s PickYale 3, Cornell 2
Becky and JaysonCornell 2, Yale 0

Colgate at Princeton
Normand’s PickPrinceton 4, Colgate 1
Becky and JaysonPrinceton 3, Colgate 1

Rensselaer at Clarkson
Normand’s PickClarkson 5, Rensselaer 3
Becky and JaysonClarkson 3, Rensselaer 2

Union at St. Lawrence
Normand’s PickSt. Lawrence 4, Union 2
Becky and JaysonUnion 3, St. Lawrence 2

Brown at Dartmouth
Normand’s PickDartmouth 4, Brown 1
Becky and JaysonDartmouth 7, Brown 2

Monday, February 5

Harvard vs. Northeastern
Normand’s PickNortheastern 3, Harvard 1
Becky and JaysonHarvard 4, Northeastern 2

And remember that if you are interested in putting your money where your mouth is, drop us an email to be eligible to be chosen when Normand bites the dust.


Thanks to Mike Volonnino, Shiva Nagaraj, Sean Peden and David Sherzer for their contributions this week


Catching Up With … Ricky DiPietro

Normally, you don’t need to catch up with someone until they’ve been away for a while. But with Ricky DiPietro, out of college hockey less than a year, you better keep up, or you’ll fall too far behind.

DiPietro, whose college career consisted of one stellar season at Boston University last year, made history last summer when the New York Islanders made him the first goalie taken No. 1 overall in the NHL draft. At the same time, he became just the second college player to be so chosen, and one of just a handful of Americans.

Some called Islanders general manager Mike Milbury crazy, among other things, for taking DiPietro so high. And, for all we know, the naysayers may turn out to be right — Milbury’s history with goalies is not exactly rosy. But, just three games into his NHL career, DiPietro is making Milbury look good.

Ricky DiPietro reaches to make a save in a game against Philadelphia last week. (photo by Pedro Cancel)

Ricky DiPietro reaches to make a save in a game against Philadelphia last week. (photo by Pedro Cancel)

After starting the season in the minors, with the Chicago Wolves of the IHL, the 19-year old phenom was called up to the struggling Islanders just before the NHL All-Star break. In two games, DiPietro allowed a fluke goal and a 5-on-3 goal during a 2-1 loss to Buffalo, then a 75-footer at the hands of Flyers All-Star Eric Desjardins in a 2-0 loss (including an empty netter) last Thursday. He added another 2-1 loss, in overtime, meaning his team has scored two goals for him in three games. So far, he has more career assists (1) than wins.

The Philadelphia game was his first on the road, and came in a nearly-full 20,000-seat hostile arena. He had played in front of a few crowds with 18,000-plus in Chicago, but none on the opponent’s turf.

“It’s a madhouse at Boston University, but this is a great crowd, a great hockey atmosphere [in Philadelphia],” DiPietro says. “We played well, well enough to win, and it made the crowd not much of a factor at times. If you’re on your game, it’s something that doesn’t play a factor. Fortunately for me, I was pretty focused on the game.”

One of the major reasons Milbury said he decided to go for broke and select DiPietro was that focus, and the teenager’s unprecedented ability to play the puck. Unfortunately, that mindset got DiPietro into trouble against the Flyers, when he failed to glove down that long shot.

“It was a pretty hard shot. It kept rising,” says DiPietro. “It’s a save you gotta make, a rookie mistake I guess. Hopefully one that is never gonna happen again. I was a little upset with that because guys worked so hard the whole game.

“You just have to be aware of everything. You have to play it like a scoring chance. I was thinking about handling it and moving it up the ice.”

Nonetheless, DiPietro was pretty happy with his first week in the “show.” He also saw what could be a sign of things to come, as the Islanders, with the worst record in the NHL, didn’t give him much support.

“I was pretty happy with the way I played,” DiPietro says about his road debut. “The team did a great job of shutting down the [Mark] Recchi line. We played with them stride for stride.”

Part of the learning curve for DiPietro involves interaction with his teammates. His ability to play the puck is so advanced, that most defensemen aren’t used to it, especially a young defense like the Islanders have.

DiPietro is 0-3 in three career NHL starts, but has allowed only five goals in those games. (photo by Pedro Cancel)

DiPietro is 0-3 in three career NHL starts, but has allowed only five goals in those games. (photo by Pedro Cancel)

“We communicated a lot more [against the Flyers],” DiPietro says. “With time, it will get better and better, with learning the defensemen and them getting to know me, to know each other’s game.

“This is the NHL. It’s the greatest league on Earth. You’ve got the best players in the world here. I’m still getting to know all the players.”

DiPietro is the type of kid you figure to be undaunted by whatever challenges the NHL might bring. It’s part of what makes him special. Team struggling? He believes he should stop every shot. Tough loss? He shakes it off with an boundless confidence many call cockiness.

Former Maine assistant coach Greg Cronin, now an assistant with the Islanders, remembers DiPietro from the time they were both part of the U.S. Developmental Program in Ann Arbor, Mich.

“I knew him as a kid,” Cronin says. “He was always lively, colorful, animated and confident. Not in an abrasive way, but in a humorous way. He was only 5-foot-8 at the time. His confidence in the net and ability to come out were special.”

DiPietro was with the younger group, while Cronin helped coach the 17- and 18-year olds. That group had Adam Hauser, now at Minnesota, as it entered the playoffs of the NAHL, the junior league in which the developmental team participates.

“Ricky came up and played with us in the playoffs,” Cronin says. “We were playing Sault Ste. Marie, who I think was second in the league. He said, ‘Just play me, I’ll get the win.’ We lost the first one, and won the next two.

“Then we went to Springfield, which had the best record, and the same thing: ‘Hey, coach, play me, we’ll win.’ And he stood on his head and we won the games.

“What you really start to appreciate about the guy is his focus. Some people are very serious and quiet, other guys are loud and animated. And I always worry about the loud, animated guys because they get themselves too jacked up, and when the puck’s dropped, he’s got no energy. [But DiPietro is] fairly loud and animated, and when the puck’s dropped, he’s ready to go.

“It’s a shame he didn’t catch that puck [against Philadelphia], but he played a brilliant game.”

DiPietro had one last taste of college hockey, sorta, when he played with a collection of college and soon-to-be college stars at this year’s World Junior Championships, where he turned in a stellar performance for the second straight year.

"Those guys are like my brothers. It’s one of the closest knit teams I played for. It’s unfortunate I didn’t have the ability to stay. Four days … it was unfortunate."

— Ricky DiPietro, on opting into the NHL draft and losing his college eligibility by being four days too young.

For as far as DiPietro has advanced already, he says he probably would have remained at Boston University were it not for an archaic NCAA regulation. The NHL draft age is 19, unless players “opt-in” at age 18. Most junior players opt-in, without penalty. However, the NCAA says, if you opt-in, you renounce your remaining collegiate eligibility.

DiPietro was a true freshman, and a young one at that, with a September birthday that fell four days after the age cutoff. Had he been considered 19, he could’ve been drafted and stayed in school, like Wisconsin’s Dany Heatley, the No. 2 pick in last year’s draft, did.

DiPietro’s decision to opt-in came right down to the final minutes before the deadline. He certainly cannot be blamed for testing the waters considering he was taken No. 1 in the draft. An opportunity like that may not come again.

But it says a lot about college hockey, DiPietro, or both that the top pick in the NHL draft probably would have stayed in school, if given the option.

“Most likely, I would’ve stayed. I don’t think I would’ve [left] if I would’ve had that option,” DiPietro says. “I miss BU a lot. Those guys … I got to see them play BC [recently], and those guys are like my brothers. It’s one of the closest knit teams I played for. It’s unfortunate I didn’t have the ability to stay …

“Four days … it was unfortunate.”

On the other hand, Cronin says there was no use in staying.

“He’s ready to play [in the NHL],” he says. “You’ve seen the last two games.”

With the Islanders, DiPietro plays for Islander legend Butch Goring, considered a player’s coach and a member of four Stanley Cup champions. He should also benefit from having another mentor with the Islanders, 37-year old veteran goalie John Vanbiesbrouck, who has decided to stay and tutor DiPietro rather than request a trade. But, he still misses BU coach Jack Parker, and speaks about him with the tone of an old pal.

“We were real good friends,” DiPietro says. “Always jabbing each other and having a good time. He was a great influence on my career and one of the best coaches I’ve gotten to play for.”

The highlight of DiPietro’s college career may have been a loss, a 77-save effort in a four-overtime defeat at the hands of St. Lawrence in last year’s NCAA Regionals. He went mano-a-mano in that game with another freshman goaltender that left school early, Derek Gustafson, who has put up solid numbers in the IHL this year.

He may have a while to wait, but DiPietro hopes for a somewhat more positive highlight to his NHL career.

“The highlight would be winning the Stanley Cup, obviously,” he said. “We have a good young team here, and we can grow.”

With so much still to look forward to, DiPietro wastes little time looking back and taking pride in his accomplishments: being the first goalie drafted No. 1, and representing college hockey so prominently.

“I think I was more worried about spilling food at my breakfast [on draft day] than that stuff,” DiPietro says. “After the draft and after I had time to think about it, you go down the list of Americans drafted first, there aren’t too many of them.”

Now there’s one more.

This Week In The WCHA: Feb. 8, 2001

Achieving Balance

It’s probably terribly too early to brand this season’s Minnesota State-Mankato team a success, with series against Minnesota, St. Cloud State and Colorado College still on tap.

And for the foreseeable future, all Mankato teams will be judged against last year’s, which set a WCHA record for victories by a first-year team and made a trip to the Final Five in Minneapolis.

But if, in the end, this season’s Mavericks are called a success, chalk that up to balance — on one line in particular.

Jesse Rooney, Tim Jackman and Jerry Cunningham have provided 36 goals this season, nearly two per game. Don’t forget about the strong supporting cast, which helps the Mavericks average 3.86 goals per game, but the Rooney-Jackman-Cunningham trio is what’s making this team run.

And, in large part, it’s because of the variety. Rooney is the sniper. He has 20 goals, third in the WCHA behind Bryan Lundbohm and Jeff Panzer, both of North Dakota.

Jackman is the grinder, the guy who’s going to free the puck up for Cunningham, the puck-mover.

“Those kids are good hockey players and they come to play,” Mankato coach Troy Jutting said. “I think it’s a good line because they complement each other well. I think they fit together very well.”

It’s tough to compare Rooney to the Mavericks’ most recent scoring sensation, Aaron Fox, who graduated last year after putting up 50 points. Jutting knows Rooney’s probably not going to get 50 points this year — he has 20 goals and 11 assists for 31 points thus far — but then again, he’s not the same kind of player.

“He doesn’t have maybe the huge point numbers, but he scores the goals. He always has,” Jutting said. “He has stepped up to take the leadership role within our team. He was always kind of a quiet kid and he’s really stepped forward this year and become a team leader and I’m extremely happy for him.”

Rooney scored two goals in a 3-1 victory at Denver last Friday, and the Mavericks completed the sweep on Saturday with a 6-3 win. It was a tremendously important sweep because the Mavericks moved into fifth place, one point ahead of Wisconsin and three ahead of the Pioneers, who have played one more game.

“Obviously we were in a position where we were behind Denver and really needed to win if we were going to make some kind of a move,” Jutting said. “We’re very pleased in that respect.”

But how much more of a move can they make? They have a way to go to catch the teams ahead, but with the exception of first-place North Dakota, they play each of those teams.

Put it this way: If the Mavericks finish fifth or better, you know they’ll have earned it.

“We have a very tough schedule left — four weekends where we’re going to have to come out and play our best hockey,” Jutting said. “Am I pleased that we’re back with home ice as of right now with a 1-5 start? Yes. But do I feel comfortable sitting there? No. We have to keep getting better and we have to keep playing our best hockey if we’re going to stay there or hope to move up.”

The first step is an important one, not just for this season but for the Mankato program, the school and the community.

This weekend, for the first time, Minnesota comes to town. The Mavericks have one win and two ties in seven games against the Gophers, but all of those came in Minneapolis — either at Mariucci Arena or the Target Center, site of last year’s Final Five.

“It’s very big for our community,” Jutting said. “We’ve been playing for a while in Division I, and it hasn’t worked out where we’ve had Minnesota [here], and our community is very excited.

“For our team, we’re excited because it’s another opponent who’s ahead of us in the league and it’s an opportunity for us to make up some difference.”

As usual, they’ll have to earn it.

The Sacrifice

Dean Weasler decided before the season he was going to try to help his St. Cloud State team in future years by redshirting this one.

And Weasler decided recently that he would forgo that if needed, give up a whole year for one game if it was what was best for the team.

So was it a good thing or a bad thing when the goaltender got called into service last weekend, ending his chance for a redshirt?

Either way, it was a sacrifice that ended up paying off, at least for the time being. Weasler wasn’t stellar, but he helped the Huskies down Colorado College last Saturday.

And with Scott Meyer out again this weekend because of a concussion, he’ll see more time in net against Alaska-Anchorage.

“It’s a huge sacrifice by him doing that,” St. Cloud State assistant coach Brad Willner said. “But he had approached us a couple weeks ago and said, ‘If something happens to Scotty, I’ll be willing to do anything to help this team. If that means coming off my redshirt, I’ll do it.’ And that’s just the type of kid Dean is. He wants to do whatever it takes to win.”

You probably remember Weasler as the Huskies’ goaltender two seasons ago. He played in 30 of 39 games in 1998-99, going 13-11-4.

But he hurt his knee last year and played in only seven games. Meyer emerged from a cloudy goaltender position and ran away with the starting job.

“He was going to use this year just to recover from the knee injury he had and come in next year, and Scotty would have graduated, and he would have been here for another two years,” Willner said. “He came to us at the beginning of the year with that. He was looking at the big picture. He was looking at not only how can he help the team this year, but how can he help next year and the year after.”

Meyer was injured last Friday when he had his mask knocked off and hit his head on the ice. He won’t make the trip to Alaska this weekend.

He’s expected to start facing shots late this week.

Thanks for the Memories

Jeff Sauer won his first national championship in 1983 at what is now called Ralph Engelstad Arena in Grand Forks, N.D. He’s seen the inside of that building countless times over the years as coach at Colorado College and Wisconsin.

This weekend, he’ll take his Badgers into Engelstad for what is scheduled to be the last time. The Sioux are set to debut in their new arena next season.

“My most memorable game in Grand Forks was the first one I coached at the University of Wisconsin,” Sauer said at his weekly news conference. “I coached at Colorado College for 13 years, went to Grand Forks, played them, split with them, beat them, never had any real major problems. Just went in and played the games.

“My coaching staff [at Wisconsin], Bill Howard especially, said you won’t believe what will happen in Grand Forks. It was right after we had the fight. Probably the best fight in college hockey ever happened at the Dane County Coliseum and it involved North Dakota.

“The first time I took a team to North Dakota, I couldn’t believe it. There was a dead badger on the ice on one side, there were guys swinging sticks over the glass, fans swinging sticks over the glass at us. They stole our pucks during the warmups. All of a sudden we’ve got one puck and there’s 150 pucks at the other end.

“It’s kind of old-time hockey, but that’s fun. It’s a memorable place, it’s a fun place to play.”

Character Boost

Down three goals on three separate occasions, no one would have looked twice if St. Cloud State packed it in against Colorado College on Saturday.

Except maybe for the Huskies themselves.

Last season at the Final Five, Huskies coach Craig Dahl lit into his team after playing uninspired late in a semifinal loss to North Dakota. There wasn’t room on his team, he said, for players who didn’t give their all.

Maybe that played into SCSU’s 7-5, come-from-behind-and-behind-and-behind victory.

“It was a huge win for us by doing that and coming back,” Willner said. “We went in after the first period trailing 4-1. Basically we just told our guys just keep on working hard and keep on playing your game and good things will happen. The game could have been 4-3 after the first period. We told the guys, don’t play the score. [CC goaltender Jeff] Sanger came up with some big saves in that first period and the goals we were giving them were mistakes that we were making.

“Richie Larson was great in the locker room between periods of just staying positive. ‘Go out and play the second period like it’s 0-0 and just play our game.’ And he says, ‘If we keep on working and work a full 60-minute game, good things are going to happen and we’ll win this game.'”

If it was only that easy every time.

Almost Certain

You hate to say it with so much hockey left to be played, but the WCHA race is North Dakota’s for the losing. And when the Fighting Sioux are in that kind of scenario, they don’t do a whole lot of losing.

With four weeks left in the regular season, North Dakota holds a four-point lead on second-place Colorado College. The Sioux have six games remaining; CC has seven.

With two games in hand on the Sioux, Minnesota is six points back and St. Cloud State is eight back.

The Sioux’s last three series are against sixth-place Wisconsin, seventh-place Denver and eighth-place Michigan Tech. It’s nowhere near a sure deal, but odds are the Sioux will be holding the MacNaughton Cup for the fourth time in five years.

Who Let the Dogs Out?

You know anyone in a student section at a WCHA arena is looking for this kind of feedback.

After Saturday’s win, St. Cloud State’s Brandon Sampair saw a few members of the “Dog Pound,” the SCSU student section at the National Hockey Center.

Said Willner: “I talked to one of the guys today, and he said, ‘Sampair came up to me on Saturday and said on behalf of the team, we want to thank you for getting us going.’ Sometimes, I don’t know if they know how much the players appreciate that. But when your captain goes up to some of the leaders in the group there and thanks them on behalf of the team, it gets those guys even more fired up for the next game.”

Byte for Byte

The dream of any college hockey/Internet enthusiast is one where every game on a given day is available for viewing on the Web.

Michigan Tech takes the first step this weekend.

The school will broadcast its Winter Carnival games against Minnesota-Duluth online. But don’t expect crystal-clear reception. After all, this is still the Web.

“We know certainly that depending upon the type of connection each user has, there will be different results in terms of quality,” said Michigan Tech Director of Athletic Communications and Marketing Dave Fischer, who is also the school’s sports information director.

“While the technology isn’t perfect, we figured Winter Carnival was a good time to give this new venture a try.”

The feed, which will be available by following a link from www.athletics.mtu.edu, will begin about 10 minutes before each game.

Trivia Question

What was Ralph Engelstad Arena known as before it was renamed for the former Sioux goaltender? Answer below.

He Said It

“We are at a point in our season where I don’t want to say we are desperate, but we are one notch below that. With seven games left in the regular season, we still have a great opportunity to get points in the standings and it has to start this weekend against Colorado College. It couldn’t come at a better time against a better opponent.”

Denver coach George Gwozdecky, on last weekend’s sweep at the hands of Mankato and Saturday’s single game against CC.

Trivia Answer

North Dakota’s home rink was known as the Winter Sports Center before being renamed Ralph Engelstad Arena by the North Dakota Board of Education on Feb. 18, 1988.

News and Views

  • Yes, this is Mike Sertich’s first Winter Carnival as Michigan Tech’s coach, but it’s not his first experience at the festival. He took Minnesota-Duluth teams to Houghton, Mich., for Winter Carnivals in 1988 and 1997. He was 0-3-1 in those four games.
  • It was a case of 20/20/20/20 last weekend as four WCHA teams reached the 20-win mark. North Dakota, Colorado College, Minnesota and St. Cloud State all have 20 wins entering this weekend. Three more teams have legitimate chances at hitting 20 later this season. Mankato has 17 wins, Wisconsin 15 and Denver 14.
  • Wisconsin goaltender Graham Melanson is expected to become the Badgers’ all-time leader in career minutes played. He has played 7,396 minutes over four years, 48 less than leader Duane Derksen’s 7,444. Holding a record in the Wisconsin goaltending books is always an accomplishment.
  • As if the stats weren’t bad enough for Minnesota-Duluth, last Saturday’s 4-3 loss to North Dakota was the fifth time in the last 11 games that the Bulldogs have lost a third-period lead. Consequently, they’re 0-4-1 in those games.
  • Alaska-Anchorage junior forward Steve Cygan broke an 18-game goal-less streak with two first-period goals against Wisconsin last Friday.

    On the Docket

    As the WCHA regular season winds to a close, the stakes rise. The biggest series of next weekend’s slate looks like the Colorado College-Minnesota pairing at Mariucci Arena. Minnesota could tie or pass CC for second place this weekend.

    St. Cloud and Wisconsin meet in Madison, Wis., in a battle of teams either on big road trips or just off them. Wisconsin goes to North Dakota this weekend after returning from Anchorage. The Huskies are in Anchorage this week, and will turn around quickly and go to Madison next week.

    And while it’s not for a top spot, the battle between Minnesota-Duluth and Alaska-Anchorage next weekend in Alaska could go a long way in determining playoff positioning. Oh yeah, and in determining who finishes 10th.

  • This Week In Hockey East: Feb. 8, 2001

    Beanpot: The Dream Matchup

    It’s not the Beanpot title game that Harvard and Northeastern were looking for, but Boston College vs. Boston University hits the spot as far as most fans are concerned.

    “That’s that matchup that most people would like to see,” said BC coach Jerry York after his Eagles dispatched Harvard, 4-1, but before BU topped Northeastern, 5-4. “It’s got the most history to it and it’s got archrivals involved.

    “I have no rooting interest, but I think most people would like to see a jam-packed BU-BC game.”

    Boston University players, however, showed no reticence in stating their preference after they advanced.

    “We always want to play BC,” said Terrier forward Brian Collins. “Coach [Jack Parker] always says, ‘Let’s root for the Eagles. We don’t want to play anyone else.'”

    Parker was quick to clarify before Crimson or Husky supporters took offense.

    “A BC-BU final is a little more exciting for everybody involved,” he said. “That’s nothing against Northeastern or Harvard. We have a bigger rivalry with BC than we do with the other two schools and they have a bigger rivalry with us.”

    Based on recent Beanpot history, the clear favorite is Boston University. As the six-time defending champion, the Terriers can boast a 14-game ‘Pot winning streak that began on Feb. 14, 1994. They have not lost since the tournament moved from Boston Garden to the FleetCenter in 1996. Their current senior class will be looking to become the fourth straight group to graduate without ever having lost a game in the tournament.

    “I don’t know what it is,” said Dan Cavanaugh. “You come in as a freshman and you hear so much about this tradition about BU and how we’re supposed to win these games. When we prepare for these games, we come in thinking that there’s no way we’re going to lose.

    “I think that helps us out a lot. Coach believes in us and he tells us we’re supposed to win this tournament. With that, we just go out and do what it takes to win. Luckily, we’ve been pretty fortunate.”

    In terms of sheer talent, however, Boston College is a near-prohibitive favorite. The Eagles sport a 21-6-1 record and are ranked second in the nation. They are also likely to get back super soph Krys Kolanos, who missed last week’s action with a worrisome shoulder injury. Kolanos will be a game-time coaches’ decision on Friday night at Providence. Most likely, he’ll be held out of the lineup that evening with the hope that he’ll play on Monday.

    By comparison, the unranked Terriers have posted an uncharacteristically mediocre 12-12-2 mark after a dreadful 2-8-1 start.

    All of which has both sides trying to portray themselves as the underdog. According to BU, BC is the favorite as the consensus best team in the East. According to BC, the Terriers are the champs so they’re the favorite.

    “The public wants to see a new winner,” said Cavanaugh. “We take that and feed off that. BC is playing well and they’re hot, but the same thing happened last year. Maybe it’s a mental thing. … We believe we’re going to win every [Beanpot] game.”

    In all likelihood, however, the Terriers will have to perform better against BC than they did against Northeastern on Monday if they are going to emerge as the victors.

    “I don’t think we got Northeastern’s best game tonight and I don’t think they got our best game tonight,” said Parker after the semifinal win. “I would hope that we’ll give BC our best game next week and I’m pretty sure BC is going to give us their best game.

    “If you look at the stats, BC has 20 or 30 more goals than anyone else in our league. We’re going to have to play great defensively. …

    “If it’s a high-scoring game, we’re going to be on the wrong end of it. We’re going to have to work like hell to make sure it’s not a 7-4 game because they’re going to win it. They’re capable of doing that to anybody, not just us.

    “We’re the six-time defending champs, but that doesn’t mean anything. You don’t win ballgames on last year’s sweat.”

    Beanpot Humor

    (Although the Beanpot Luncheon was scheduled too late for these quips to make last week’s column, it’s never too late for a laugh.)

    When Harvard coach Mark Mazzoleni reminded the audience that Athletic Director and all-around legend Billy Cleary would be retiring on June 31, he set himself up for a considerable amount of ribbing. Of course, June has only 30 days.

    Northeastern coach Bruce Crowder pounced first, asking Cleary, “Does that mean you’re retiring or is the day never going to come?”

    Parker defended Mazzoleni. Sort of.

    “Mazz is not a Harvard guy,” said Parker, “so it’s okay for him to say June 31st.”

    Parker’s then took aim at Beanpot Director Steve Nazro’s praise of the luncheon’s upgrade from beans in the old days to steak.

    “Was that steak?” asked Parker. “I thought it was liver.”

    His best barbs, though, referred to Harvard’s never-ending, albeit legitimate, complaints that it is at a disadvantage for two reasons. First, the team is just coming out of exams. Second, the ECAC’s travel-partners approach to scheduling makes it so that the Crimson still must play two league games on the weekend before the Beanpot semifinal.

    “Fortunately for us, we only have to play on Friday,” said Parker. “Hockey East really takes care of the Hockey East teams. They don’t schedule [two games on the weekend]. Obviously, Harvard doesn’t have any pull in the ECAC.

    “And all our schools have changed our exam schedule so we don’t have to take exams. Ever. It’s nice not to have to worry about any of that. Most of our guys are here for the season and not the reason anyway.

    “Harvard has to vie with Boston College, but they also have to beat the Harvard system as well. They can’t even get support from their own league.”

    Parker also fired away at a member of his own BU contingent, who was wearing a sweater of a very un-Terrier-like color.

    “We’ve got our number-one fan here, Elliot Driben,” said Parker, “but he’s got his Dartmouth green on now that Dartmouth is going pretty well.”

    He even noted that while assistant coach Brian Durocher was away recruiting, “our goaltender coach Mike Geragosian could be anywhere.”

    BU captain Carl Corazzini didn’t let the laughter stop when Parker sat down. The senior thanked Sports Information Director Ed Carpenter “for telling me that I didn’t have to talk today” and then sent a zinger Parker’s way.

    “I’m not surprised that he was the longest speaker for the coaches,” said Corazzini to a burst of laughter. “I’ll just let him keep talking because the longer he talks, the closer I am to missing practice.”

    Two Personal Beanpot Reflections

  • It did this father proud that my son, Ryan, and his hockey buddies made the right choice last Monday. Leave the game early and make the 10:40 train or be stuck waiting for the midnight run? They stayed to the last buzzer.

    All of which led to an amusing moment back in the train station. Waiting for the train, the four boys found themselves among the BU players who were similarly waiting for the team bus. Unable to avoid the temptation, they casually strolled next to BU forward Jack Baker to compare heights. The conclusion: Baker (5-7, 161 pounds) was no taller, but a good deal wider.

  • As for yours truly, Monday night’s Beanpot made for a shrill alarm clock on Tuesday morning. It wasn’t just that I didn’t finish writing my Flashback to ’78 story until 1:20 in the morning. Or that about 15 miles north of Boston the roads became very slow going.

    No, the killer was that at 2:50 in the ayem, I had to shovel my way into the driveway. And before I was finished, a plow came along and gave me a little more snow to work with.

    That, my friends, was adding insult to injury.

    The Second Best Team?

    Who has been the second-best team in Hockey East since Dec. 1? The answer will probably surprise you. It’s the UMass-Lowell River Hawks.

    In that time span, they have compiled a 5-2-3 league record. Both losses came at the hands of Boston College and were only by a single goal. And lest you suspect a weak schedule during that stretch, five of the 10 games were against opponents in the nation’s Top 10.

    As a result, Lowell has gone a long way to make up for its brutal 1-6 start in Hockey East play. The River Hawks now have a legitimate shot at playoff home ice.

    “We don’t want to get ahead of ourselves,” said UML coach Tim Whitehead after temporarily moving into fifth place on Saturday night. One day later, Maine leapfrogged the Hawks into fifth. “Next weekend anything could happen.

    “We just have to worry about ourselves, just keep playing hard and playing smart. Just take one game at a time. If we do that and stay healthy, we’re going to be in a good situation.”

    One of the key ingredients in Lowell’s success has been the play of goaltender Jimi St. John.

    “We’re going into every game knowing we’re going to win it and if we don’t win it, it’s our fault,” said St. John. “Every one of the games coming up are games that we should win.”

    St. John was named Hockey East’s ITECH Goaltender of the Month for January.

    “I’m just in a good rhythm,” he said. “The guys are playing good in front of me. It helps when not a lot is getting through to me and I’m seeing everything.”

    St. John, who had not seen a lot of action prior to the holiday break, had plenty of competition throughout the league for the monthly honor, but proved his worth with a 1.82 GAA, a .918 save percentage and a 4-1-1 record.

    “He really deserved it,” said Whitehead. “He’s stabilized our team defense and the guys are doing a good job in front of him. That goes both ways. It’s been a great combo, the way the team is playing defensively and the way Jimi is playing.”

    Two of the key members of that defense have been freshmen Jerramie Domish and Darryl Green. While Ron Hainsey gets most of Lowell’s blueline accolades — and deservedly so — and Laurent Meunier has been the impact freshman with 26 points, Domish and Green have also been major contributors.

    “They’re doing a great job,” said Whitehead. “It’s very important for those guys to step in and contribute right away and they’ve done that.

    “They’re different players and they both contribute in their own way. That’s what you need, everybody filling their role and doing what they do best. Both of those guys are doing that.”

    At 5-8 and 196 pounds, Domish is yet another River Hawk defenseman who is the antithesis of a redwood, both in stature and mobility. Chris Gustafson and Josh Allison are both 5-10.

    “We’re getting a pretty good stable of short, stocky defensemen,” said Whitehead. “As long as they’re tough and they can move, why not?”

    Amazin’ Aquino

    Last Friday night might have been a coming of age for Merrimack forward Anthony Aquino. In a 5-5 tie with New Hampshire, the unsung star netted a hat trick, assisted on the other two Warrior goals and finished plus five for the evening. The comeback from a 5-2 third-period deficit could eventually spell the difference between a playoff berth and getting out the golf clubs on Mar. 3.

    The 18-year-old sophomore — 18-year-old sophomore! — is now tied for first place with BC’s Brian Gionta and Krys Kolanos in Hockey East overall scoring with 37 points. He’s tops in the league with 22 assists, a remarkable feat considering that the power play is where many of a player’s easiest helpers occur and that is a Merrimack weakness (11.9 percent).

    Is there any reason to believe he isn’t one of Hockey East’s top forwards?

    “I think he’s as good as any forward in Hockey East right now with maybe the exception of Gionta,” says Merrimack coach Chris Serino. “He’s one of the premier players in this league. He’s been a consistent performer. He’s gotten points almost every game for us.

    “You’re going to see nights like [the UNH game] when all of a sudden everything clicks in for him because he’s still so young. He hasn’t even scratched where he’s going. That game at UNH shows you a little bit of what you can expect to see over the next couple of years from him.”

    There are both obvious strengths to Aquino’s game and subtleties as well.

    “In order to be a pro, you have to be good at everything and you have to be exceptional at one thing,” says Serino. “Anthony is very good at everything and he has exceptional speed. He can separate himself from someone in a heartbeat.

    “He’s not only fast straightaway, but he gets up to top speed in something like three steps. It’s quickness and speed, not just speed.

    “If you just have speed with nothing else, you may not be good. But he’s also got great hands. He passes the puck very well, which I don’t think a lot of people really know. He finds open guys and he creates space.”

    Serino has to think a bit when asked what other players he’s coached Aquino reminds him of.

    “He’s a lot like Tommy Nolan [UNH, 93-94, 95-98] in that quickness that he has,” says Serino. “But where Nolan was at when he left UNH, Aquino’s probably already there. And he’s got two more years left.”

    The One That Got Away, Returns

    One can only wonder where Merrimack would be in the standings, not to mention where Aquino would be in the league’s scoring race, if Greg Classen had stayed for his junior year. Instead of 12-15-3 overall and 5-11-2 in Hockey East, the Warriors might have 17 or 18 wins and be close to .500 in the league.

    “It’s only crossed my mind about 85 times,” says Serino. “He makes your power play better. You put [Marco] Rosa with Aquino and Classen and you have one of the best lines in Hockey East. Maybe the best line in Hockey East.

    “You’d have [Nick] Parillo to play with [Ryan] Kiley and [Vince] Clevenger and the senior line — [John Pyliotis, Joe Gray and Ron Mongeau] — that does a pretty good job defensively. It just changes your whole complexion.”

    Classen turned pro last summer when the contract offered proved to be too good to pass up. He made the Nashville Predators out of training camp and he’s stayed with the parent club other than a 14-day stint in the IHL and an stretch on the injured reserve. Last Thursday, he scored a goal and assisted on another in Nashville’s comeback win.

    “I’m happy for Greg,” says Serino. “He made the right choice. The money was there. He’s playing in the NHL. He meant a lot to our team, but you recruit good players and that’s going to happen.”

    Classen showed surprising dedication to Merrimack last weekend by stepping off the Predators’ red-eye Los Angeles-to-Nashville flight that got in at 5 a.m. and then boarding the 7 a.m. flight to Boston so he could spend the NHL All-Star break watching the Warriors.

    “He made a mark here,” says Serino. “In two years, that’s saying a lot for a kid, the mark that he left on people and the way the players responded to him coming back. It was like he never left.”

    Seeing Classen in the stands inspired Aquino to his three-goal, two-assist performance.

    “I saw him in the stands in the second period and said, ‘I have to do some more stuff here,'” said Aquino in a story by the Lawrence Eagle-Tribune‘s Kevin Conway. “I had one goal and one assist at that point and said, ‘That’s not good enough.'”

    Classen’s presence even prompted some fanciful temptation for Serino.

    “To be honest, I had him in a uniform,” says Serino. “But my little guy said, ‘Dad, you can’t do that.’ It was a game-time decision, though.”

    The Odds-On Favorite To Be The Odd Man Out

    UMass-Amherst’s season took a turn for the worse last weekend when the Minutemen lost to BU, 5-1, and UMass-Lowell, 4-1. The two losses dropped them just one point out of last place.

    “It’s tough to take positives after getting swept and losing by four goals one night and three goals the next night,” says coach Don “Toot” Cahoon. “In terms of assessing certain players and making progress in certain areas, yeah. I know a little bit more about everybody and there are some things to take.

    “But it doesn’t sell very well. I might take it back to the office and we’ll put it to use and it might help us down the road. We’ve got some young kids that we’re looking at and I’m pretty happy with their development. And I know a little bit more about who I want to go to war with.”

    Nonetheless, the losses put UMass in serious jeopardy of being Hockey East’s odd man out of the eight-team playoffs. The Minutemen finish the season with two games each against Maine, Boston College and New Hampshire. Although they snared three points in those same games last year to squeak into the playoffs, it remains a tough row to hoe.

    “Unless they allow some trade opportunities in college hockey, we’re going to take our guys and we’re going to go to work every day and stay positive with them, create a good teaching atmosphere and then put our best foot forward,” says Cahoon. “There’s nothing more I can do at this point.

    “I don’t think we’re going to panic. I don’t think we’re going to quit. And I don’t think we’re going to be any place other than in the playoffs when it’s over.”

    Cahoon is in the position of heading a program which has a much better long-term future than short-term.

    “You deal with everything on a day-to-day basis,” he says. “The guys know that we’re trying to build something, but the most important thing is that we’re getting better in each and every area. We’re just focusing on the little things, day in and day out.”

    In such a long-term vs. short-term situation, however, sometimes a coach is faced with the possibility of sacrificing the senior class and going exclusively with the younger players.

    “That’s a case-by-case situation,” says Cahoon. “I wouldn’t make the general statement that I’d sacrifice the whole class, but there certainly are some individual players who have to measure up and make that same effort and commitment day in and day out. So it’s not a class thing; it’s a case-by-case situation.”

    One positive case in point is Martin Miljko. The junior was left home from the season-opening trip to Wisconsin because he wasn’t in the shape Cahoon required.

    “In fairness to him, he’d just gotten off a knee injury and it was his first competition back,” says Cahoon. “I think he was just starting to understand what I was expecting in terms of energy and effort.

    “Since he got back into the lineup, he’s worked pretty hard with few exceptions. He’s been pretty dependable game in and game out.”

    Miljko is now the second-leading scorer on the Minutemen with 11 goals and nine assists.

    “If you were to look at what he brings to the table, he brings an offensive threat,” says Cahoon. “He has a real good shot release so he gets his goals. He’s probably not as hard-working defensively as he is offensively, but we’re working on that.

    “You can’t live without his offense. It’s hard to find guys who can put the puck away. If he works at being diligent on the defensive end, he’ll be a real good two-way player.”

    Others, however, have shown themselves to be, in Cahoon’s estimation, lacking and not likely to be building blocks for the program.

    “There are guys who just don’t deserve to play ahead of the guys who I am playing,” says Cahoon. “We’re going to go with these guys and we’re going to add to the equation and it will have a way of playing itself out. If I thought that they were in a position to help us more than the guys that we’re putting on the ice, then I would be rotating them through there. But I think that right now the kids who are in the lineup, for the most part, are the kids who belong in the lineup.”

    While there may be ups and downs in the season, Cahoon is happy with the team’s work ethic.

    “I think everybody is working really hard,” he says. “Work ethic is the most critical aspect to what we’re doing. That and to be resilient and not get down because you’re losing a game or because it isn’t bouncing the way you want it to.

    “We knew it was going to be a tough challenge to begin with, but hopefully we can maybe get into a little bit of a flow, if you want to call it that, so that we can take a run at a real critical time during the year.

    “If you have the right psyche and you’re getting the right effort out of everyone and they learn to play together and minimize their mistakes and play within themselves then maybe we can do that.

    “Then you add to it by getting players who have a lot of dimensions who can add to the equation.”

    A senior like Jeff Turner now finds himself in the position where, barring some miracle in the next month, he won’t be getting to college hockey’s Promised Land. His sophomore brother Tim might, but it isn’t looking good for Jeff.

    “The number one thing, especially for the seniors right now, is to stay positive and keep teaching,” says the elder Turner. “Every game is a new game. We know that this program is heading in the right direction.

    “It’s important for us to leave our mark with the underclassmen and set an example of hard work and, not only dedication, but not getting too low with the lows and too high with the highs because right now we’re in a low and if it continues it could spiral down.

    “But [each game] is a new night and if we can get it going in the right direction it would put us back in the playoff hunt.”

    Miljko, for one, isn’t about ready to start thinking about next year, especially in light of the leadership shown by seniors like Turner.

    “Coach Cahoon talks about turning the program around and building it into one of the premier teams, so it is in the back of our minds,” says Miljko. “But we’re taking this season one game at a time.

    “It’s not fair to the seniors on this team to just throw it away. We’ve got to work on this season. It’s what we’re playing for right now.”

    TV Update

    It hasn’t been officially announced yet, but the Fox Sports Net “wild card” games have been decided: Feb. 16, UNH at BC; Feb. 24, Northeastern at BU; and Mar. 4 BC at BU.

    Random Notes

  • UNH now has gone five games without a win, a note unhappily offered up by Wildcat fan Rick Stevenson. How long ago did that last happen? Surprisingly, it was just last year at an almost identical point in the season, from Jan. 21 through Feb. 4. What makes this cold spell feel worse is that last year’s record was 0-2-3 while this year it’s 0-4-1.
  • Maine has the opportunity, on paper at least, to make up some ground as the Black Bears next face the sixth-, eighth- and ninth-place teams in the standings: UMass-Amherst, UMass-Lowell and Merrimack. They then finish their regular season with two against Providence.

    That same schedule last year netted Maine a 7-0-1 record. However, these opportunities on paper may not be so easily converted into wins.

    “It’s more difficult this year because the teams we’re playing are better than they were a year ago,” says coach Shawn Walsh. “Lowell is a better Lowell; Merrimack is a better Merrimack; UMass is a better UMass and Providence is a better Providence. So it’s going to be easier said than done.”

  • BC’s top line in the Beanpot could be affectionately called The Smurfs. It consists of Gionta, Ben Eaves and Tony Voce. Gionta is 5-7 while the two freshmen are both listed at 5-8. Take the latter number, however, with a grain of salt.

    “[Brian] is the tallest,” says York with a grin.

    Yours Truly on WJAB

    For those in the radio listening vicinity of Portland, Maine, you may want to tune in to WJAB (1440/95.5) on Friday mornings. I discuss college hockey with “Billy B. and the Shoeman” for about 10 minutes or so.

    The emphasis is on the Black Bears, but general topics get covered as well. Some weeks I’m moderately interesting; other times I’m barely coherent. Unfortunately, I’ve been told that I have a face for radio and a voice for newspapers.

    It’s at different times each week, typically from 7 a.m. on. This week’s time: 8:30.

    Trivia Contest

    Last week’s question looked beyond the boundaries of Hockey East and asked what was unique about Lake Superior State forward Kyle Anderson from New Year’s Day to Jan. 26?

    There were a few humorous replies. One speculated that during that time Anderson actually kept his New Year’s resolutions, only to break them in rather interesting ways on the 26th.

    Another came from a Lake State fan who wondered if Anderson had been on the ice for all 14 goals scored against the Lakers in that stretch. (LSSU lost to Michigan, 5-0 and 2-0. It then lost to Michigan State, 2-0, 2-1 and 3-0.)

    The correct answer was that Anderson was the only player to score on Michigan State’s All-Everything goaltender,Ryan Miller from Jan. 1 through Jan. 26. In six games, Miller tossed an unconscious five shutouts plus the Anderson goal, which actually deflected in off a Spartan skate.

    The ultimate irony is that the lone goal to get past Miller was also Lake Superior State’s only one of the month.

    The first to answer correctly was Jim Love, whose cheer is:

    “Keep the faith, ‘Cat fans – Go Blue !!”

    This week’s question asks what unique achievement do Merrimack’s Anthony Aquino and Dartmouth’s Mike Maturo share?

    Send your answers or wild guesses to Dave Hendrickson.

  • This Week In Women’s Hockey: Feb. 8, 2001

    Badgers, Bulldogs Break Even

    As Minnesota-Duluth discovered last weekend, Madison is not a friendly town for visiting hockey teams. No. 7 Wisconsin (15-5-5) has lost only one game at home this season, and the Badgers used their home-ice advantage against the No. 3 Bulldogs (19-4-3). Wisconsin got a goal late in the third period in both games against UMD, forcing a 3-3 tie on Saturday and a 2-2 tie on Sunday.

    Goaltender Jackie MacMillan did the dirty work for the Badgers, stopping 59 shots and holding the Bulldogs, who average more than five goals per game, to just five goals on the weekend. MacMillan is third in the WCHA in both save percentage (.896) and GAA (2.61).

    Michelle Sikich netted the equalizer for Wisconsin with 2:07 left in regulation, while Meghan Hunter evened the score on Sunday with 1:42 left in the third. Hunter (33g, 26a), who is first in the nation in scoring and is the only rookie on the list of Kazmaier Award nominees, led the Badgers with a goal in each game. Steph Millar and Kelly Kegley also scored for Wisconsin.

    The Bulldogs got two goals from their own Kazmaier nominee, Maria Rooth, with additional scoring coming from Erika Holst, Hanne Sikio and defenseman Pamela Pachal.

    Saints Fall at Home

    No. 6 St. Lawrence suffered a slight setback Saturday when the Saints lost to Niagara at home, 3-1. While the loss knocked St. Lawrence (15-5-3) out of its second-place tie with No. 4 Harvard in the conference standings, the Saints rebounded to beat the Eagles (14-11-3) on Sunday, 4-2, and settle for a series split.

    Brooke Bradburn and Valerie Hall gave Niagara its three goals on Saturday, including one empty-netter from Bradburn, to hold on against St. Lawrence. Freshman netminder Rachel Barrie made 27 stops for the Saints, but she could not maintain her 1.82 GAA in the series opener.

    Senior Caryn Ungewitter got the job done between the pipes the next day, making 21 saves. Hall was the only Eagle able to solve the Saints’ imposing defense (she scored twice on Sunday), but St. Lawrence poured 39 shots on goal at the other end to seal the victory.

    St. Lawrence now trails Harvard (14-6-0) by two points for the second seed in the ECAC Tournament. But the Saints only have three games left against ranked opponents (including two this weekend against No. 8 Northeastern and No. 10 Providence) while six of the Crimson’s nine remaining contests will be against top-10 teams.

    This Week In The MAAC: Feb. 8, 2001

    Tightest Race in MAAC is for Survival

    It’s appropriate that CBS has brought back the popular TV show Survivor recently — especially if you take a look at the bottom of the MAAC standings. As the season has progressed, the playoff picture continues to clear and then become foggy again, as no less that seven teams fight for their playoff lives, in other words, to not get voted off the island.

    Teams like Bentley, currently sitting in last place, and Canisius, a little more comfortable in fifth, looked like their fate was decided. Bentley entered last weekend with just four points, but a weekend sweep of AIC and Army, two clubs themselves in the mix, pushed Bentley within eight points of the final playoff spot, currently held by Army.

    Canisius, playing what coach Brian Cavanaugh called the toughest part of its schedule, has registered just one point in their last four games, after seeing a five-game winning streak come to an end. To defend the Ice Griffs, four games were on the road, and the next six contests are in the friendlier confines of Buffalo.

    Teams that are included in between Canisius and Bentley are Sacred Heart (18 points), AIC (17 points) and Army (16 points) — all of whom control their playoff destinies, sitting above the eighth-place cut line; and two others, Holy Cross (14 points) and Fairfield (13 points) — who join Bentley looking in from outside. Bentley currently has eight points and Canisius 19.

    The translation to all of this? Any one weekend can have major impact on the MAAC playoff picture.

    Now, if you want to look at who has the easiest road ahead and whose course is toughest, here you go. For the fifth- through 11th-place teams in the league, the table below outlines the average winning percentage (MAAC only) of their remaining opponents, along with each club’s league points, total games left in the regular season, and home and road games remaining.

     Rk  Team         Pts   Gm   OppW%  Hm  Rd
    5 Canisius 19 7 .521 5 2
    6 Sacred Heart 18 7 .517 6 1
    7 AIC 17 7 .594 5 2
    8 Army 16 6 .486 2 4
    9 Holy Cross 14 7 .487 4 3
    10 Fairfield 13 9 .504 6 3
    11 Bentley 8 7 .516 2 5

    So what does this tell us? Statistically, that Holy Cross and Army have the easiest schedules, though only two of Army’s six remaining games will be played among the comforts of home.

    AIC certainly has the toughest remaining schedule, with the top five teams (Mercyhurst, Iona, Quinnipiac, Connecticut and Cansius) making up six of AIC’s seven remaining games. The only benefit will be that five of those seven are at home, a place AIC has a 6-3-0 record this season in MAAC play.

    Can these numbers tell us much? Probably not. Any coach will tell you that the game is played on the ice, not on paper. But at least you have something to make you think.

    Weekly Awards

    ITECH MAAC Hockey League Player of the Week
    SHAWN MANSOFF, QUINNIPIAC
    Sr., F, Edmonton, AB

    Mansoff wins the award for his outstanding play in victories over Canisius and Mercyhurst. He recorded six points (3-3-6) in the two wins. He scored one goal and added two assists in the 7-2 win over Canisius and scored two goals, including the game-winner, and tallied an assist in the 4-1 win over first-place Mercyhurst. He is now second on the team with 24 points (12-12-24).

    ITECH MAAC Hockey League Goalie of the Week:
    EDDY FERHI, SACRED HEART
    So., G, Charenton, FR

    Ferhi was stellar in goal in the win over Fairfield and in the tie versus Holy Cross. He made 41 saves, including 17 in the first period, in the 4-1 win over Fairfield. In the 2-2 tie with Holy Cross, he made 29 saves, including five in overtime. He now has a .931 save percentage and a 2.36 goals against average.

    ITECH MAAC Hockey League Rookie of the Week:
    JUSTIN EDDY, QUINNIPIAC
    Fr., G, Apple Valley, MN

    Eddy was brilliant in victories over Canisius and first-place Mercyhurst. He stopped 56 shots in the 7-2 win over Canisius, a season high in a MAAC game this year. In the 4-1 win over Mercyhurst, he was solid in making 31 saves. He stopped 87 of 90 shots in the two wins for a .967 save percentage.

    Playoff Tickets on Sale

    Tickets for the 2001 Easton/MAAC Hockey League Championship, taking place March 15-17 at the UConn Ice Arena in Storrs, Conn., are now on sale through the University of Connecticut ticket office. The semifinals take place Thursday, March 15 at 4:00 and 7:30 p.m., and the championship game is set for Saturday, March 17 at 12:00 p.m.. The winner, for the first time, will receive an automatic bid to the NCAA championship.

    All-session passes are $12 for all three games, while single-day passes are $8.00 for adults and $3.00 for students, seniors (62 and over), and children (12 and under). Fans can call the UConn ticket office at 1-877-AT-UCONN (288-2666) for more information.

    Tickets for the quarterfinals, to be played on Saturday March 10, will be available through the host institutions. The top four finishers in the MAAC will host a quarterfinal game. The tickets will be $8.00 for adults and $3.00 for students, seniors (62 and over), and children (12 and under).

    Team Notes

    AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL

    The Yellow Jackets defeated Holy Cross, 4-3 in overtime, on Friday night but lost to Bentley, 7-4, on Saturday night… American International hosts Mercyhurst at 7:00 Friday night and play at Canisius Sunday afternoon at 2:00. Freshman Trent Ulmer netted the game-winner against Holy Cross with 1.6 seconds left in overtime. This marked the second time this season that Ulmer has defeated the Crusaders in overtime… Senior goaltender Chance Thede kept the Yellow Jackets in the game all night stopping 48 Crusader shots. Thede would record 38 saves the following night in the loss to Bentley, giving him a weekend total of 86 saves. He now leads the MAAC with 747 saves on the year and only needs 64 stops to break his own AIC single-season record of 810… Sophomore forward Andy Luhovy netted his seventh goal of the season Friday night and has tallied nine points in the last five games. The forward now has 16 points on the year.

    ARMY

    The Black Knights were defeated by Bentley, 7-4, on Friday night but beat second place Iona, 6-5, on Saturday night… Army competes against Canadian institution Royal Military College at home at 7:00 Saturday night… Army’s game against Fairfield on Tuesday night was postponed and is rescheduled for Tuesday, February 20 at 7:30 P.M…. Junior forward Tim Fisher had a five-point weekend , extending his point-scoring streak to a career-high eight games… Senior forward Mike Fairman notched his team-leading third game-winning goal of the season, beating Iona with 1:47 to play… Army remained unbeaten at home against Iona and improved to 22-2-1 all-time against the Gaels… For the second straight week, Army broke the MAAC on-campus attendance record with a sellout crowd of 2,911 for Saturday’s game against Iona… Fairman, Fisher and senior Garrett Brougham had goals in both games this weekend.

    BENTLEY

    The Falcons won their first two home games of the season with wins over Army, 7-4, on Friday night and American International, 4-2, on Saturday night… Bentley entertains Iona at 7:30 Saturday night in their only game next week… Sophomore goalie Kevin Williams made his second career start on Friday and made 21 saves, including 13 in the first period, in the victory over Army… Bentley had a shorthanded goal in each game during the weekend, both with the opponent’s goal empty. Junior Steve Tobio tallied against Army while sophomore Marcus Willy scored the final goal against American International… Freshman Mike Mulligan scored his 10th and 11th goals of the year this weekend, tying him with John DiGennaro for the team lead in goals. DiGennaro leads Bentley in scoring with 20 points … Senior goalie Ray DeVincent stopped 29 shots and earned his third win of the year in the victory over American International.

    CANISIUS

    The Ice Griffs lost road games at Quinnipiac, 7-2, on Friday night and at Connecticut, 4-1, on Saturday night… Canisius battles American International at home on Sunday afternoon at 2:00… Senior forward Matt Shewchuk scored two goals from the Ice Griffs this weekend, including the lone Canisius goal against Connecticut… Seniors Todd Bisson and Jason Spence joined Matt Shewchuk as Ice Griffs with more than 100 games played in their career. Spence is only five games away from tying Kelly Leroux for most games played by a defenseman … The Ice Griffs return home for a six-game homestand after dropping three of their last four on the road… Junior goalie Sean Weaver saw his first action in net since December 3 in Friday night’s game against Quinnipiac. Weaver made 17 saves in the final two periods allowing four goals against the Braves… The Ice Griffs will look to defend their Dunn Tire Hockey Classic crown against CHA-member and local rival Niagara University on February 20. Last year, Canisius defeated the Purple Eagles 2-1.

    CONNECTICUT

    The Huskies lost to first place Mercyhurst, 6-3, on Friday night but defeated Canisius, 4-1, on Saturday night… Connecticut has a road game at Fairfield at 8:00 Friday night and a home game against Mercyhurst at 7:30 Saturday night… Freshman goalie Artie Imbriano saw time between the pipes for the first time since Jan. 14 against Army and his second game in over a month due to a series of injuries. He earned the 4-1 win over Canisius on Saturday night, stopping 19 shots on goal in playing the entire game. He currently holds a 3.12 goals against average, in almost 732 minutes played in 14 appearances in net… Junior defenseman Mike Boylan recorded two goals in the two games. His first goal brought the Huskies with in one early in the third period in the loss to Mercyhurst. On Saturday, Boylan’s goal was the game-tying tally with less than two minutes remaining in the first period. Currently, Boylan ranks fifth in defenseman scoring in the MAAC overall stats. He leads Huskie defenseman with eight goals and seven assists for 15 points… Senior Eric Goclowski tallied four assists in the two games.

    FAIRFIELD

    The Stags lost to Sacred Heart, 4-1, on Friday night… Fairfield hosts Connecticut at 8:00 Friday night and plays at Quinnipiac Saturday night at 7:00… Fairfield’s game against Army on Tuesday night was postponed and is rescheduled for Tuesday, February 20 at 7:30 P.M…. Sophomore Jim Lubinski scored Fairfield’s lone goal, with assists to freshmen Hunter Greeley and John Wyson . It marked Lubinski’s fourth and Greeley’s fifth consecutive games with at least one point… The Stags out shot the Pioneers 42-26, but were 0-1 on the power play… Freshman goalie Craig Schnappinger recorded 22 saves in the loss. His record now stands at 6-8-1 overall and 6-7-1 in the MAAC… The Stags have nine games remaining, including two with Army and one with Holy Cross, Canisius, and Bentley each of whom are battling for a playoff spot.

    HOLY CROSS The Crusaders lost a road game at American International, 4-3 in overtime, on Friday night and tied Sacred Heart, 2-2, Saturday night… Holy Cross is home against Iona at 7:00 Friday night… Freshman forward Greg Kealey recorded three goals, two on the power play, in the two games. Kealey is tied for first on the team in points , leads the team in goals , and is fourth in assists . In the MAAC, Kealey ranks first in power-play goals , which also places him in the top-10 in the NCAA, and second among freshman in scoring with 23 points… Junior goaltender Derek Cunha made 37 saves against Sacred Heart, one below his season-high, to help the Crusaders pick up a valuable road point… Holy Cross is back on top of the MAAC in power play percentage at 23.1%… Junior Pat Rissmiller did not tally a point against Sacred Heart, breaking a stretch of three games where Rissmiller registered multiple point games… The Crusaders last five MAAC games have been decided by a total of four goals. Holy Cross plays their next three games at home.

    IONA

    The Gaels lost to Army, 6-5, on Saturday night in their only game last week. Iona plays road games at Holy Cross at 7:00 Friday night and at Bentley at 7:30 Saturday night… The Gaels were denied their first ever victory at Tate Rink and the Black Knights and Gaels split the season series… Iona is 4-5 against the Crusaders since the two teams elevated to D-I, including two 4-3 victories on 11/17 and 1/18 in overtime… Iona is 4-1 against Bentley in three years of MAAC action. The Gaels won 7-5 at John A. Ryan Arena on 11/12 and 5-0 at Sports Plus on 11/18… Iona’s seven game conference unbeaten streak was snapped in the loss to Army… Against the Black Knights, sophomore Ryan Manitowich scored his league leading 19th goal while conference assist leader junior Nathan Lutz added two more and also tallied his first goal of the year… Iona is 4-3 in games decided by one goal.

    MERCYHURST

    The Lakers earned a 6-3 win over Connecticut on Friday night and lost 4-1 to Quinnipiac on Saturday night but still remain atop the MAAC standings… Mercyhurst plays at American International at 7:00 Friday night and at Connecticut at 7:30 Saturday night… Junior Tom McMonagle recorded four points in the two games. He scored two goals and added an assist in the win over Connecticut and tallied the only Laker goal in the loss to Quinnipiac. Since returning from injury, he has scored at least one point in seven of eight games and has scored five goals in his last three games… Five different players scored in the victory over Connecticut. Senior Jeff Gould had a six game scoring streak snapped at Quinnipiac… The Lakers defeated and tied American International on November 3 and 4. Mercyhurst leads the all-time series 5-0-1… Mercyhurst snapped a three-game losing streak to the Huskies with Friday’s 6-3 win. All three losses came in succession at Connecticut last year. Connecticut still leads the all-time series 4-3.

    QUINNIPIAC

    The Braves ended a three game losing streak with wins over Canisius, 7-2, on Friday night and Mercyhurst, 4-1, on Saturday night… Quinnipiac goes on the road to play Sacred Heart at 7:00 Friday night and entertains Fairfield at 7:00 Saturday night… Senior forward Shawn Mansoff , the ITECH/MAAC Player of the Week, recorded six points in the two wins. He tallied one goal and two assists in the win over Canisius and scored two goals, including the game-winner, and an assist in the defeat of Mercyhurst… Freshman goalie Justin Eddy , the ITECH/MAAC Rookie of the Week, stopped 87 of 90 shots in the two games. He made 56 saves in the win over Canisius which is a season high in a MAAC game this year and 31 saves against Mercyhurst… In the win over Canisius, the Braves racked up a MAAC and school record six power-play goals… The Braves have killed off 23 consecutive penalty-killing situations, including a school-record 16 against Canisius on Friday night… With two goals against Canisius, senior forward Chris Cerrella moved past Bill Veneris into first place on the Quinnipiac career goals list. In addition, Cerrella needs one assist to become the third Quinnipiac player to record 100 career assists. Cerrella is in third place on the Braves career scoring list with 193 points.

    SACRED HEART

    The Pioneers won a home game against Fairfield, 4-1, on Friday night and tied Holy Cross, 2-2, on Saturday night… Sacred Heart hosts Quinnipiac at 7:00 Friday night in their only game next week… Sophomore goalie Eddy Ferhi , the ITECH/MAAC Goalie of the Week, allowed only three goals in 125 minutes. In the win against Fairfield, he turned away 41 shots, including 17 in the first period. In the tie with Holy Cross, the sophomore netminder made 29 saves, with five in the extra session… Freshman Mike Reagan had two goals and an assist in the 4-1 win over Fairfield. Reagan has 13 points so far in his rookie campaign. He has four power-play goals and one game-winner this season… The Pioneers are 6-1-1 at home this season and have six more games at home this season… Out of the 77 goals the Pioneers have tallied this year, 35 of them have come in the second period… Freshman Marc-Andre Fournier notched his second game tying goal of the season on Saturday, against Holy Cross. He had the game-tying goal at Iona on Nov. 25 in a 5-5 contest.

    This Week In Division III: Feb. 8, 2001

    Down to the Wire in the NCHA and SUNYAC

    The regular season comes to an end this weekend in the NCHA, and the following Tuesday in the SUNYAC. Playoffs for both leagues start on February 16.

    We’ll preview those conferences, and the final stretch for the other leagues, as well as look at a few teams given up for dead that made a resurgence last weekend.

    Around the Leagues

    NCHA

    Wis.-Superior is in the driver’s seat, passing St. Norbert, which could manage just a single point last weekend as opposed to Superior’s four. The main event was Friday night’s contest between the YellowJackets and the Green Knights, and that one went to Superior, which despite giving St. Norbert nine power-play opportunities and being outshot 41-22, defeated the Green Knights 7-3. Nate Ziemski made 38 saves for the ‘Jackets, who also defeated Lake Forest 3-1 on Saturday for their 13th win in a row.

    St. Norbert stumbled the next night as well, needing a third period goal from Shane Dickson to earn a 2-2 tie with last place St. Scholastica. The Saints also won the night before, 6-4 at Lake Forest. That had to be a confidence boost for St. Scholastica heading into the final weekend of the regular season.

    “I’ve been associated with the program since ’89 as a player, then an assistant coach and coach,” said Saints head coach Mark Workman. “And since that time we’ve never taken more than two points on the road in a weekend.”

    First place and home ice throughout the playoffs may come down to Saturday might in Superior, when the YellowJackets take on St. Norbert again. Both teams have crucial games on Friday when Superior hosts Lake Forest and St. Norbert travels to St. Scholastica.

    If both teams win on Friday, it sets up a winner-take all game on Saturday. Superior would get the first seed with a win or tie.

    Tiebreakers, if needed, are applied by the NCHA accordingly: 1. Head-to-head results (use goal differential if the teams split) 2. Goal Differential in all conference games.

    Superior beat St. Norbert by four goals in their first meeting.

    Wis.River-Falls is back from the brink, picking up four points last weekend to remain in the hunt for first place. The Falcons had dropped five of their last six conference games going into last weekend, but are now just two points out of first. River Falls holds the tiebreaker over Superior, but not over St. Norbert.

    Wis.-Stevens Point and Wis.-Stout are tied for the fourth and final home ice position, with the Pointers holding a big advantage in the tiebreaker due to their 9-1 won over the Blue Devils last Friday. The two teams meet again on Saturday, and could also meet in the first round of the playoffs.

    Bringing up the rear are Wis.-Eau Claire, Lake Forest and St. Scholastica, which will all be on the road for the playoffs. But since the three are only separated by a point in the standings, it won’t be until the final game of the regular season until the playoff pairings are decided.

    SUNYAC

    Only six of the eight teams in the SUNYAC will make the playoffs, so there’s usually drama at both the top and bottom of the standings.

    This season, however. Plattsburgh, Potsdam, Oswego, and Cortland are already in, and, barring a miracle, so are Geneseo and Fredonia. Brockport is already mathematically eliminated from the postseason, while Buffalo State needs to win its final three conference games and have either Fredonia lose its final three games, or beat Geneseo by more than two goals and also have the Ice Knights lose their remaining games. As little as a tie by both Geneseo and Fredonia in their final three games eliminates the Bengals.

    The schedule makers did a fine job this season, as most teams are playing their final three games (Friday, Saturday and the following Tuesday) against teams near them in the standings. First-place Plattsburgh will play second-place Potsdam and third-place Oswego, while the Lakers and Bears will also square off against each other. Those three teams are fighting for the two first-round byes and the right to host semifinal playoff series.

    In the middle of the pack are Cortland, Fredonia, and Geneseo. All are tied for fourth, and Fredonia plays Geneseo this weekend.

    MIAC

    There’s still two weekend left in the regular season, and just three points separate the top three teams. St. Thomas took over sole possession of first place last week with its seventh and eighth victories in a row, a pair of 5-2 wins over St. Olaf.

    The real story, however, is the rise of the Bethel Royals, who are just three points out of first with a pair of games in hand. Since joining the MIAC in the late ’70’s, the Royals have never won a regular season title. They’ve never even qualified for the MIAC playoffs, which began in 1986.

    The Royals play the Tommies this weekend in what might be the biggest series in the history of their program. That will finish up the regular season for St. Thomas, while Bethel still has to play Augsburg the following weekend. As close as they are to making the postseason, Bethel could still wind up in fifth place and out of the playoff picture.

    That’s because St. John’s and Augsburg are both lurking in fourth place, just two points behind Bethel. Concordia is currently in second, two points ahead of the Royals, but have just one conference series left, against last-place Hamline.

    Gustavus, St. Olaf and St. Mary’s are mathematically alive, but a single point by either St. John’s or Augsburg in their last four conference games will eliminate them. Hamline knows its season will end in two weeks.

    ECAC East

    With two weeks left in the regular season, Norwich is starting to open some distance. The Cadets are ahead by four points over Salem State and Babson. Salem has gone into free-fall, going 0-4-1 in its last five games. Babson has done the opposite, coming off the critical list to go 4-0-1 in its last five contests.

    Norwich has already clinched home ice for at least the first round of the playoffs, and its remaining four opponents have a combined record of 27-48-4. Expect the road to the ECAC Championship to go through Northfield, Vermont, again this season. The Cadets can clinch the regular-season title with a sweep this weekend of Williams and MCLA.

    NESCAC

    Middlebury leads Colby and Trinity by three points with four league games left, but watch out for Amherst. The Lord Jeffs, currently in fourth place, had been unbeaten in their last eight games before dropping a 6-3 non-league contest to Middlebury on Tuesday. That one was tied 3-3 going into the third period before the Panthers put the game away with two goals in the first seven minutes of the final stanza.

    The NESCAC uses a unique playoff format where only the top seven teams make the playoffs. The regular season champ gets a bye in the first round, and then hosts a “final four” the first weekend in March. Teams two through four host teams five through seven in the first round.

    Currently, Conn. College and Wesleyan find themselves out of the running, tied for last place and six points out of a playoff spot with four games left to play. The fat lady is warming up for the Camels and Cardinals, especially considering that both have to play Norwich and Middlebury the final weekend of the regular season.

    ECAC West

    RIT clinched a tie for the regular-season title with a road sweep of Hobart and Manhattanville last weekend. RIT has won five of the last six regular season titles; the only blemish was Niagara’s last season in the ECAC West (1997-98) when the Purple Eagles were regular season champs.

    Elmira can capture a share of the regular season crown if it wins its final four games, including one at RIT. But the Tigers hold the tiebreakers for home ice in the playoffs, so even if Elmira goes 4-0, expect the ECAC West finals to be at RIT for the third consecutive season.

    Manhattanville has three conference games left, including two against Elmira. As it stands now, Hobart will probably finish fourth, so the Soaring Eagles and Valiants are most likely playing to see who gets to wear the home jerseys in the early game at Ritter Arena on March 2. Round one between the two teams is Friday.

    ECAC Northeast

    Wentworth defeated Mass.-Dartmouth, 12-1, on Wednesday to move into a first-place tie with Johnson & Wales. Junior Tim Yakimowsky netted a amazing seven goals in that game to set new school records for goals and points (also seven). Sevens were indeed wild as Wentworth notched its seventh straight win, also a school record.

    J&W and Wentworth square off the final weekend of the regular season in a game that could determine the regular season champion.

    Just the top eight teams make the playoff in the D-III Division (all the D-II teams plus St. Anselm from the ECAC East will participate in a special ECAC Division II playoff), and time has run out for several squads. Curry, Nichols and WNEC are already eliminated from playoff contention.

    As it stands now, J&W, Wentworth, Tufts, Lebanon Valley and Mass.-Dartmouth have all clinched playoff berths, leaving Worcester State, Fitchburg State, Suffolk, Framingham State, Plymouth State and Salve Regina to battle for the final three slots.

    MCHA

    Minn.-Crookston completed a near-perfect conference season, going 11-0-1 to take 30 of a possible 32 points. Marian has also clinched a playoff berth. The three remaining squads: Northland, MSOE and Lawrence each have four conference games left, and are battling for the final two playoff spots.

    Marian plays MSOE this week in a home-and-away series, while Lawrence hosts Northland for a pair. A point for Northland clinches a playoff spot for the Lumberjacks.

    Picks

    Last week: 7-0
    On the season: 49-21-2 (.694)

    This week:

    Bowdoin (2/9) and Colby (2/10) at No. 7 Amherst – This will be a good test for the Lord Jeffs, as these may be a preview of NESCAC playoff games. Look for Amherst to split. Amherst 4, Bowdoin 2; Colby 5, Amherst 4.

    Salem State at Babson (2/9) – Two teams going in opposite directions. Babson 4, Salem State 2.

    No. 5 Elmira at Manhattanville (2/9) – Manhattanville put a scare into RIT last Saturday (4-3 loss). Can they do it again? Unfortunately, the Valiants are 0-4 against ranked teams this season, and I don’t see that changing. Elmira 6, Manhattanville 2

    St. Thomas vs. Bethel (2/9 and 2/10) – This is a classic series pitting the new kid on the block against the perennial power. Experience wins out. St. Thomas 4, Bethel 1; St. Thomas 3, Bethel 2.

    No. 6 Wis.-River Falls at No. 9 Wis.-Stevens Point (2/9) – The Falcons are hot and the Pointers are not, but look for the Dogs to come out on top on home ice. UWSP 5, UWRF 3.

    No. 8 St. Norbert at No. 2 Wis.-Superior (2/10) – If anyone can stop the ‘Jackets right now, it might be the Green Knights. But I don’t think it will happen. UWS 5, St. Norbert 4.

    Potsdam (2/9) and No. 4 Plattsburgh (2/10) at No. 10 Oswego – SUNYAC hockey at its best with first place on the line. Can Oswego derail a final showdown between Plattsburgh and Potsdam? Or will they end up making it easier for Plattsburgh to claim the crown? Oswego 4, Potsdam 3; Plattsburgh 5, Oswego 3.

    This Week In The CCHA: Feb. 8, 2001

    It’s So Fine. It’s Sunshine.

    Say the word and you’ll be free. Say the word, and be like me.

    On Feb. 14, the Christian and Christian-influenced world celebrates Valentine’s Day, a secular holiday that nearly single-handedly supports the greeting card, floral, and chocolate industries, as well as serving as a reminder that men and women really are two different species.

    Women are, after all, from Venus. Haven’t you heard?

    Those of us not inclined to commercial sentimentality may well wonder at the timing of Valentine’s Day, right in the middle of the month of February, also known as the Home Stretch, the Separator of Boys from Men, and the Month of Endless Post-Season Speculation.

    On the surface, February — tainted by lace doilies, pink and red overkill, and a winged, smirking, naked cherub who slings his arrows anywhere he pleases without fear of a single whistle — seems like a slap in the face to all things manly, especially that most macho of sports, college hockey.

    After all, men are from Mars. Right?

    But let’s not be hasty here, judging a month by its lone holiday of mass consumption (the President’s Day mark-down sales are no competition, and I’m still waiting on the Punxsutawney Phil logowear craze to hit).

    Named after a third-century Roman Catholic priest who was martyred by Claudius II on February 14, the traditions surrounding Valentine’s Day can actually be traced to a holiday honoring the Roman goddess Februata Juno, the oracular goddess of love’s passion.

    On the Ides of February, or Feb. 15, in a holiday called the “Feast of the Wolf” (or Feast of Lupercalius), Februata Juno would call forth the animals from their winter hibernation.

    (Throw a goddess of passion into the mix, and suddenly Valentine’s Day has more in common with hockey than one would originally think, eh?)

    In an act symbolic of awakening animals from their hibernation, and to honor Februata Juno, on Feb. 15 young woman would place their names in an urn, from which young boys would draw a name. The couples would then be sexual partners for the day, and sometimes for the rest of their lives.

    (OK, so this part resembles certain post-game parties about which you may have heard, but at least now you know why some men are called wolves — not to be confused with Wolverines.)

    Pope Julius I and other religious types were said to have substituted the names of saints for the names of girls in the urn (talk about a raw deal), named the holiday after St. Valentine (not to be confused with Bowling Green’s Curtis Valentine — seven goals, seven assists), and moved the holy day up by one to obliterate any reference to Februata Juno, and suddenly Hallmark, FTD, and Hershey’s hit the map.

    (Februata Juno, of course, has the last laugh. Valentine may have received the day, but she has 28, sometimes 29.)

    So what better celebration of hockey can there be than Valentine’s Day? It has passion, it has wolves, it calls the slumbering from their hibernation — and just in time for the playoffs.

    And hasn’t hockey always been synonymous with love?

    It’s so fine. It’s sunshine. Say the word…

    Hockey.

    L Is For The Way You Look At Me

    Even in hockey, looks do count.

    Western Michigan’s Mike Bishai (14-35–49), Michigan’s Andy Hilbert (20-31–51), and Bronco Dave Gove (20-30–50) are among the best lookers in the game. Well, they know where to look, anyway, as the top three assist men in the CCHA.

    O Is For The Only One I See

    Michigan State’s underrated John Nail (14-5–19) leads the nation with six game-winning goals.

    Michigan’s Mike Cammalleri (20-26–46) leads the league in plus/minus (+22).

    Western Michigan’s Jeff Campbell (18-16–34) leads the league in power-play goals (11).

    Gove has three shorthanders, more than anyone else in the league, while teammate Steve Rymsha (19-23–42) has three hat tricks this season.

    V Is Very, Very Extraordinary

    Leading the nation in goals against (1.29) and save percentage (.951) is Spartan Ryan Miller, who deserves a category all to himself. Don’t forget about the shutouts.

    E Is Even More…

    …than anyone else on the planet. More time spent in the box, that is.

    Oh yes. Western Michigan’s Brian Pasko really loves the game, and his opponents, to the tune of 169 penalty minutes this season.

    Now that’s amore.

    Games of the Week

    It bears repeating: at this time of year, what’s happening toward the bottom of the conference is even more exciting than what’s going on near the top.

    Bowling Green (10-14-4, 5-11-4 CCHA) at Notre Dame (6-21-5, 3-14-4 CCHA)
    Friday and Saturday, 7:05 p.m., Joyce Center, South Bend, Ind.

    Falcon head coach Buddy Powers says his team will have its hands full in South Bend, and he’s not taking the last-place Irish lightly. “In watching the game films, and I don’t understand why they’re in the position they’re in.”

    Dave Poulin, Notre Dame head coach, has an answer to the question inherent in Powers’ statement.

    “For whatever reason — I don’t know why — if things don’t go our way early, we have a difficult time getting on track and believing. As a coach, you’re trying to instill belief in a group of individuals who aren’t getting any tangible results, and it’s been very frustrating.”

    The frustration was especially evident in Notre Dame’s 5-3 loss to Ohio State on Saturday, the second drop in the two-game series in Columbus. The Irish outshot, outworked, and nearly outwitted the Buckeyes in the first 15 minutes of the contest, but Ohio State left the first stanza of the second game with a 3-1 lead.

    “We haven’t scored goals all season,” says Poulin. “What happens then is the offense really presses. When you press, you make mistakes. You’re pressing so hard to score a goal because they’re so hard to come by that you make mistakes. But I’d rather make a mistake of commission than make a mistake of omission.”

    In conference play, the Irish are scoring just 2.19 goals per game, second-to-last in the league, while allowing 3.48 goals — also second-to-last in the league. The combination has added up to just three conference wins for Notre Dame, and a team plus/minus of minus-94 in league contests. The only active Irish player on the plus side of anything is Dan Carlson (13-19–32 overall), who had three goals against Ohio State (including a shorthander) and who owns one of Notre Dame’s five game-winning tallies of the season.

    “I’ve said a lot of different things [to the players] this year. I’ve used the vast majority of my extensive English language,” joked Poulin, “a lot of SAT words, even Canadian ones.”

    Buddy Powers can sympathize. “It eats at you worse than anything that I’ve ever felt. He must have borrowed my quote book from a couple years ago.”

    After literally years of injuries and even tragedies, the Falcons are rebuilding steadily and knocking wood. “Like everyone, we’ve got a few people banged up,” says Powers, “but nothing major.”

    In their last ten games, the Falcons are 6-4-0, with losses to two top-tier teams, Nebraska-Omaha and Michigan State. “Since Christmas we’ve played pretty well. We had one clunker game at Miami, but other than that we bring it every night. Tyler Masters is the difference. If he has a bad weekend, we really struggle. If he’s off, we don’t have what it takes to make up for it at this point.”

    Last weekend, Masters was on the money, making 66 saves in a two-game sweep of Lake Superior State, earning him CCHA Defensive Player of the Week honors.

    But like the Irish, the problem for the Falcons isn’t in net. Says Powers, “If we could just consistently score three goals, we’d be 15-7-6 for the year. But we don’t.”

    In conference play, the Falcons are scoring 2.80 goals per game, while allowing 3.15. “We’re close,” says Powers. “Goal scoring…energizes teams. We talk about all the time. When you consistently miss good chances, it wears the guys down. They kind of hang their heads.”

    Not hanging his head is Greg Day (13-11–24 CCHA) one of Bowling Green’s most reliable offensive threats. Powers is happy with the progress of another player, Ryan Murphy. “Since the two games before Christmas, he has just been on a roll. He’s playing with so much confidence that the difference between him now and the start of the season is like night and day.”

    Murphy has scored a point in 13 of his last 14 games, and is 15-5–20 in that span. Murphy followed his season-best three-point effort Friday night with a hat trick on Saturday, and is currently tied with four other players for fourth in CCHA goal scoring.

    This weekend’s series between the Falcons and Irish is even more important because it’s one of those “eight-point weekends,” says Powers. ” If we win, we put some distance between us and them. If we lose four points, we’re tied.”

    Powers is optimistic about at least the possibilities for the Falcon season. In a perfect world, Bowling Green could still capture home ice. “There isn’t that much difference between the top and bottom of the league, and there’s certainly room to move.”

    And Bowling Green should be moving on up.

    Pick: BGSU 4-1, 4-1

    Grudge of the Week

    What better time for a meeting between these two intrastate rivals? After all, they both wear red.

    Miami (15-11-2, 12-7-1 CCHA) vs. Ohio State (14-10-2, 11-7-2 CCHA)
    Friday, 7:35 p.m., Value City Arena, Columbus, Ohio
    Saturday, 7:35 p.m., Goggin Arena, Oxford, Ohio

    The many Buckeye rookies probably know that Miami has dominated Ohio State in Goggin Arena since 1991, but they don’t know it, if you know what I mean.

    Even Ohio State head coach John Markell downplays this rivalry, as he wasn’t really around for most of the 18 consecutive losses the Buckeyes suffered in Oxford, from Jan. 18, 1991-Mar. 4, 2000. As for the losses Markell himself experienced in Goggin, he says, “We’ve played well there, even when they’ve beaten us in overtime.”

    “I think the positions we’re in right now creates the rivalry,” says Markell. “In the past few years, Miami’s had very good hockey clubs.”

    Tied for third with Nebraska-Omaha, Ohio State is just one point behind Miami, setting up what may prove to be two excellent contests.

    The RedHawks ride a four-game win streak into the weekend, in large part because of the line of Gregor Krajnc (14-14–28), Jason Deskins (16-19–35) and Ernie Hartleib (9-12–21). Krajnc is this week’s CCHA Offensive Player of the Week, earning six points last weekend in a two-game sweep of Lake Superior State.

    Six of Pat Leahy’s goals (7-18–25) have come on the power play. The RedHawks net is minded by David Burleigh (2.86 GAA, .891 SV%).

    The Buckeyes are led in scoring by senior Jean-Francois Dufour (12-18–30), followed by a trio of talented freshmen: Dave Steckel (13-15–28), R.J. Umberger (12-16–28), and the little-mentioned Paul Caponigri (10-15–25). Umberger and Caponigri each posted five-point weekends in two wins over Notre Dame, and Umberger was named the CCHA Rookie of the Week.

    Mike Betz (2.73 GAA, .905 SV%) is the goalie of record for Ohio State.

    “I think we match well against Miami,” says Markell. “They have patience, and we’ll have to have the same. I think we have some guys who can finish, and so do they. And we have to pay attention to detail and stay out of the penalty box.”

    In conference play, Miami is second only to Michigan in goal production (3.55 per game), while Ohio State is fourth in the league (3.30). The RedHawks allow 2.65 goals per game to the Buckeyes’ 2.75.

    Miami’s power play converts at 21.5% to Ohio State’s 19.3%. Ohio State’s penalty kill (.836) just edges Miami’s (.826). The Buckeyes are a little touchy about their penalty minutes (22.35 per game), which are in reality inflated because of misconducts. The RedHawks average 18.5 minutes in lockdown per game.

    While each of these teams is capable of producing tremendous offense, unless one or the other lets down from the get-go, these games will be close, patient, and perhaps low-scoring. I can see Miami sweeping, but Ohio State has the advantage of being home Friday night — and the Buckeyes like to win on Fridays.

    Pick: OSU 4-3, Miami 5-3

    Ganga Watch

    Barney and Teresa’s son, our hero Nick Ganga, is perilously close to 50 penalty minutes. Having taken a two-minute minor last weekend against Notre Dame, Ganga now has 44 minutes eight conference contests to go.

    At the start of the season, Ganga — who had 112 penalty minutes last year — pledged on the record that he would have 50 or fewer this season. A ten-minute misconduct in January really hurt his cause, but he still has six minutes to go.

    Nick, you know we believe.

    I’ve Got Your Homerism, Right Here

    Three excellent players were honored by the league this week, and not one of them graces the roster of a team residing in the state of Michigan.

    The spotlight, instead, falls on Ohio, as Miami’s Gregor Krajnc, Bowling Green’s Tyler Masters, and Ohio State’s R.J. Umberger nabbed Player of the Week mentions.

    And here’s another interesting factoid: Only two of the conference’s current top five teams are in Michigan. Michigan State and Michigan may dominate the league standings this season — as they do every year — but these days they’re keeping company with two Ohioans and a Nebraskan.

    Do you feel the love?

    SUNYAC Newsletter: Feb. 7, 2001

    Playoff Teams All But Decided; Positions Up For Grabs

    This past week answered one question — who is going to be in the playoffs. Barring a miracle, Buffalo State is out, and the current top six will be in.

    However, there is still the question of where those teams will wind up in the standings, who will get the byes, and where the games will be played. Even though Plattsburgh gained a point on second place, they don’t have first locked up, and could fall to third. Potsdam and Oswego are separated by one point for second. Since the top three teams all play each other in the last three games, everybody has their fate in their own hands.

    Meanwhile, the next three playoff teams — Cortland, Fredonia, and Geneseo — are all tied for the last home spot. The schedule makers couldn’t have planned this any better.

    Team-By-Team Report

    PLATTSBURGH (Ranked No. 4) — The Cardinals not only maintained their pace, but gained a point, winning both games. The first victory they had to work for as Plattsburgh State defeated

    Geneseo State, 4-3. Down 1-0 going into the second, Brent Armstrong and Bryan Murray put the Cards up 2-1. After Geneseo tied the game, third period goals by Eric Weidenbach on the power play and Ryan Wilson gave Plattsburgh a two goal lead. Twenty-seven seconds after the fourth goal, Geneseo cut the lead to one. However, Plattsburgh was able to hang on for the win. Niklas Sundberg made 18 saves. The second win was easy as Plattsburgh cruised to a 12-3 stomping of Brockport State. It was 7-0 before they allowed the opposition to score.

    Amazingly, only Brendon Hodge had a multiple goal night with a pair. Ten other players scored goals. Frank Barker got the start and made 23 saves for the win. Plattsburgh finishes up the season by first traveling to Cortland and Oswego, where another sweep will clinch first place. If they don’t get it, they host Potsdam in what could be a game for first.

    POTSDAM — The Bears stumbled just enough to prevent them having an opportunity at first place without some help. Even if they sweep the rest of their games, including beating Plattsburgh, Potsdam State cannot take first place unless somebody steals at least a point from Plattsburgh. Everything looked fine against Brockport State as Potsdam won, 6-3. The Bears took 3-0 and 6-1 leads. Mike Snow scored a pair (as well as being stopped on a penalty shot) as did Dave Weagle. Sean Darke (just 36 seconds into the game) and Anthony Greer (shorthanded) got the other goals. Todd Manley won with 19 saves. However, Potsdam lost a point the next night as they tied Geneseo State, 3-3. After falling behind 1-0, Darke scored twice within 31 seconds. Geneseo tied it before the first period ended.

    Potsdam retook the lead in the second when Darke completed the hat trick. Geneseo tied it early in the third. Despite seven total shots in overtime, Potsdam getting four of them, neither team could win it. Later in the week, Potsdam played at Hobart and won, 5-2. Goal scorers were Joe Wlodarczyk with a pair, Kevin Shaver, Erick Curtis, and Darke. Venturelli got the win with 23 saves. The Geneseo tie may have hurt Potsdam’s chances for first, but it makes no difference for second, for the winner of the game at Oswego Friday will most likely claim second place in any case. Afterwards, Potsdam plays at Cortland and Plattsburgh.

    OSWEGO (Ranked No. 10) — The Lakers did what they had to this past weekend. Barely. Oswego State needed overtime to beat Fredonia State, 3-2. Steve Cavallaro put Oswego up early on the power play, but Fredonia took a 2-1 lead into the second. Matt Vashaw tied it late in the second. Despite getting 16 shots in the third, Oswego was forced to go to overtime. There, Brian St. John was the hero that won the game. Tyson Gajda made 20 saves.

    The next night, Oswego played a tough Buffalo State squad, but came out with a 4-2 win. This time it was Oswego who let in the first goal and then got the next two thanks to John Hirliman and Chris DiCarlo. Buffalo State tied it before Vashaw got the game winner late in the second. The only scoring in the third came on an empty netter by Derek Kern. Gajda made 24 saves.

    Oswego returns home in what will be their two biggest games of the season — Potsdam and Plattsburgh. They will determine whether Oswego gets a bye or has to play in the first round. Oswego finishes up the season at Cortland.

    FREDONIA — The Blue Devils had one last gasp attempt to get third place, but they didn’t get it done, losing to Oswego State, 3-2, in overtime. After falling behind 1-0, Jason Furness and Dave Mugavero scored to give Fredonia State a 2-1 first period lead. However, that would be all the scoring the Blue Devils would muster. Oswego tied it in the second and then won it in overtime. Fredonia got only 11 shots on goal after the first period. Will Hamele made 37 saves.

    After that game, Fredonia was fighting for home ice in the first round, but they stumbled there too, tying Cortland State, 2-2. Dave Barnett gave Fredonia a 1-0 first period lead. Cortland scored twice in the second for a 2-1 lead heading to the third. Furness tied it up with 35 seconds left to go in the game. And that’s how it ended.

    Fredonia now finds itself in a three way tie for fourth place with Cortland and Geneseo. That makes the last three games all must win no matter who they play, which happens to be Geneseo, Brockport, and Buffalo State, all on the road.

    GENESEO — Last week, Geneseo State did Potsdam State a favor by defeating Oswego. This week, Geneseo returned the favor with a tie against Potsdam. However, Geneseo wasn’t out to do anyone a favor. They were looking out for themselves, and this puts Geneseo in a three way tie for fourth place and the last spot for home ice in the first round. First, Geneseo suffered a loss to Plattsburgh State, 4-3, but it wasn’t for lack of trying. Geneseo took a 1-0 lead and then tied the game at two apiece on goals by Jack Staley. After falling behind 4-2, Matt Lester scored. Geneseo was unable to muster the tying goal. Kevin Koury made 25 saves. The tie against Potsdam came when Aaron Coleman scored four minutes into the third. Koury made 12 saves in the final and extra period, 32 total. David Bagley and Lester scored in the first period sandwiched around a pair of Potsdam goals.

    The Ice Knights’ next game will be key to where they finish as they host Fredonia. That is followed by home games against Buffalo State and Brockport.

    CORTLAND — The Red Dragons got the job done, and not just for a playoff spot, but possibly for home ice. But it wasn’t easy. Cortland State needed overtime to dispose of Buffalo State, 5-4, and virtually clinch a playoff spot. Cortland fell behind 2-0 and 3-1 in the first period with the lone goal scored by Shawn Ruddy. Cortland then scored the next three goals thanks to Scott Louis, Jeff Olsen, and Chris Cullen. However, Buffalo State tied the game up, and that required Trevor Bauer to win it in overtime. The goal came with 22 seconds left in the extra period. John Larnerd made 33 saves. After that key game came another key game against Fredonia State. Though a win would have been a lot better, a 2-2 tie placed them in a share of fourth place with Fredonia and Geneseo. Ruddy and Olsen scored in the second period, but first and third period goals by Fredonia ensured the tie.

    Unfortunately for them, Cortland losses every tie-breaking scenario, and they have the toughest schedule of the other teams fighting for fourth as they play the top three teams in the league — Plattsburgh, Potsdam, and Oswego. At least all the games will be on their own ice.

    BUFFALO STATE — It was a heartbreak weekend for the Bengals as they came into the second half of the conference schedule with such high hopes and excellent non-conference play, only to most likely miss out on their first playoff appearance. The dagger in the heart came with a 5-4 overtime loss to Cortland State. Buffalo State came out flying scoring twice in the first 1:42 by Sean Mask and Jason Comardo. After Cortland scored, Todd Nowicki gave the Bengals another two goal lead heading into the second. However, Buffalo State let in the next three goals, and needed Jeff Lacapruccia to tie the game. Overtime was 22 seconds too long as that was how much time was left when Cortland won it. The Bengals didn’t fold the tents, and came out strong the next night against Oswego, but fell short, 4-2. Nowicki gave the Bengals the early lead and then Joe Urbanik tied it in the second.

    After falling behind again, Buffalo State pulled their goalie late despite being shorthanded, and ended up letting in an empty netter. The Bengals need a miracle to get into the playoffs, but that won’t help if they don’t sweep their last three games against Brockport, Geneseo, and Fredonia.

    BROCKPORT — The Golden Eagles remained winless in league play, dropping both of their North Country contests. First, Potsdam State defeated Brockport State, 6-3. Brockport found themselves down early, 3-0, before Scott Winkler scored a second period goal. Steve Tippett did his best to keep his team in the game including stopping a penalty shot and a breakaway shortly afterwards. However, Potsdam scored another three straight goals before Brockport got on the scoreboard again with goals by Ryan Shannon and Darren Kennedy. Brockport got beat bad at Plattsburgh, 12-3. Brockport’s three goals all came in the second with two by Kenny Daleo and one by Brandon Marineau.

    Brockport looks to salvage something out of the season as they host Buffalo State, Fredonia, and then travel to Geneseo.

    Upcoming Game Of The Week

    I’m a wimp. I admit it.

    Think you’re not? Then you go select the Game of the Week. Go ahead. Would you pick Potsdam at Oswego? Despite Oswego’s domination in their first meeting this season, these two teams are more likely to play a contest that leaves the fans with cardiac conditions. Not to mention that second place is on the line.

    Or, depending on the outcome of that game, the Plattsburgh at Oswego contest could have a significant impact on where the top three teams end up in the standings. Or why not Fredonia at Geneseo? They are deadlocked for the last home ice playoff spot, and are bound to play for keeps. Or maybe you’ll save your pick for the last game of the season, and depending on how the dominoes fall, select Potsdam at Plattsburgh, which could be for the league title.

    Go ahead. Pick one. I dare you.

    MIAC Newsletter: Feb. 7, 2001

    Five Survivors on the Island

    For the first time all year the MIAC has a new conference leader. St. Thomas, by virtue of its sweep over St. Olaf, leapfrogged Concordia and sits alone on top. After the dust settled last weekend there were five survivors left on the island, with only four allowed to stay for the playoffs. Three teams have legitimate shots at the crown, and with two weekends left in the season, the playoff possibilities are endless.

    The Tommies are on a serious roll, having won their last seven games. They have one series left, a weekend showdown with third-place Bethel. Concordia has split its last four series, and for the first time all year has to place its title hopes in the hands of another team. Bethel tuned up for this weekend’s main event by pasting Lawrence. All three of these teams could win the MIAC, or not make the playoffs. Augsburg and St. John’s have positioned themselves to make one last assault at the final four. Although they are not mathematically eliminated from winning the title, their chances are about the same as being able to wear shorts and catch a suntan by one of Minnesota’s 10,000 lakes next weekend.

    Another year, another photo finish in the MIAC.

    The Tribal Leaders

    St. Thomas (9-3-2, 12-8-3)

    St. Thomas has won seven straight, and can win its fourth straight title by sweeping Bethel this weekend. Last weekend they pulled off a two-game sweep over St. Olaf by identical scores of 5-2. The Oles shut down the league’s hottest player in Tony Lawrence, limiting him to two assists in the series, but forgot about the rest of the team as eight different players scored for the Tommies. On Friday night St. Olaf took a 2-1 lead after one period, but St. Thomas’ goalie Brad Moore shut the door the rest of the way and the offense scored four straight over the last two periods to clinch the win. Five different players scored goals for a suddenly balanced attack. On Saturday the power play unit took control and scored three goals on nine attempts. Mike McMahon and Jake Searles scored for the Tommies to make them the only multiple goal scorers for the weekend. St. Thomas out shot St. Olaf 60-18 for the game and 107-40 on the weekend. Moore continues to be the steadying influence in the net, he is now second in the league in goals against. Lawrence, although shut down in this series, is fourth in the nation in goals scored with 22.

    Bethel (8-3-1, 10-10-1)

    Bethel is sailing through uncharted waters. They are two series away from winning their first MIAC title and participating in their first-ever MIAC playoffs. So close, yet they could still lose all four and finish fifth. The two series in question are white-knucklers against first place St. Thomas and fourth place Augsburg. If they win all four, they win the title outright and will host a first round playoff series. Any other win-loss combination will take a Constitution-like explanation to detail all the playoff possibilities. The Royals played a non-conference tune up with Lawrence and won going away 8-1. Mike Marshall chalked up two goals and an assist as he continues to pace the Bethel offense. He now has 20 goals and 12 assists on the year, and is second in the MIAC in points and goals behind St. Thomas gunslinger Tony Lawrence. Saturday’s game was over after the first period as the Royals scored three first period goals and eight straight to win their tenth game of the year. Bethel used two goalies in the game, Jeff Hall and Bjorn Hawes, they held Lawrence to one goal on 24 shots. The mainstay in the net for Bethel on their rise to the top has been Steve Witkowski who possesses a 6-0-1 record in the MIAC, and will more than likely get the start in the series with St. Thomas.

    The Survivors

    Concordia (9-4-1, 11-8-2)

    Q: What do the players on the Concordia hockey team and members of the Pro Bowlers Tour have in common?

    A: They both hate splits.

    Concordia has watched a comfortable three-game lead evaporate over the course of January, and are now in second place for the first time all year. This whole turn of events is courtesy of four straight series splits. The split last weekend with Gustavus was the hardest one to swallow. After splitting three series with three top-four teams in the MIAC, the Cobbers figured to be set for a shot at their first title since the 1986-87 season. They had two series left, both at home, with the bottom two teams in the conference. Then Gustavus rolled into town and left Concordia to ponder all the missed opportunities. The stake-through-the heart was jammed in on Friday night. The Cobbers came out and looked as if they were going to make the home-ice advantage hold up. They scored first when Tony Castaneda finished off a tic-tac-toe odd-man rush play and the Gusties were on their heels. Then the roof fell in. Gustavus rallied to score two minutes later and take momentum into the break. Then they came out and scored two seeing-eye goals in the middle period and left Concordia shocked. Concordia could not put the puck in the net in the critical third period and lost 4-2. The third period continues to haunt Concordia. In the crucial four losses in the last four series, Concordia has been behind after two periods three times and lost every single game. In the other loss, the Cobbers were tied after two and lost the game in the third. In Saturday’s game Concordia bolted to a 4-0 lead before Gustavus scored two straight to make the finish a whole lot closer. Concordia has the weekend off and will play two midweek games at home against local rival UM-Crookston.

    Augsburg (7-4-1, 10-8-2)

    Augsburg might be one of the scariest teams in the MIAC right now. They hold the one trump card in their hand that every playoff team needs; a hot goalie. Ryan McIntosh is returning to his first year form when he won All-American honors and led Augsburg to a conference title. Against St. Mary’s this past weekend he stopped 93 of the 96 shots he faced. That included a stretch on Saturday when he had turned back 51 straight shots. For his efforts he was named the USCHO Division III Defensive Player of the Week. He has helped the Auggies win four straight and five of the last six. He is allowing the offense to take more risks and score more goals, one of the aspects that hurt them earlier this year. On Friday night Augsburg used four goals in the second period to put the game out of reach and win 7-2. Mike Jackson was the thriller for the offense, as he recorded his first career hat trick. On Saturday St. Mary’s held the advantage in every statistical category except for the one that counts, goals. The Cardinals had as many shots in the second period as Augsburg did all game. The Auggies played their McIntosh-ace and held St. Mary’s to 1 goal on 55 shots. Augsburg’s offense made the most of their chances and scored 4 goals on 23 shots. Four different players scored for Augsburg. Augsburg has two series remaining; St. Olaf and Bethel. They could finish as high as first or a low as fifth.

    St. John’s (7-4-1, 10-10-1)

    Like the rest of the teams fighting for the title belt, St. John’s is on a hot streak. They have won five of their last six games and, besides Concordia, have the easiest schedule remaining. They finish with series against St. Mary’s and St. Olaf, and this weekend’s affair with the Cardinals is a rare two-game home stand. One of the key factors in the last six games for the Johnnies has been the goaltending of Rick Gregory. After splitting the first three series in the MIAC with teammate Adam Laaksonen, Gregory has been given the starting job and has flourished. He is currently tied for second in the conference in goals against and has come up with several timely saves. Last weekend the Johnnies swept Hamline 6-3 and 3-1. Mike Possin and Kevin Willey were the offensive stars for the weekend. The dynamic duo accounted for six of the nine goals, and added four assists. On Friday night the two teams combined for 82 shots as the teams played their best NHL All-Star game defense. The Johnnies never trailed in the game, and the six goals was the second most they have scored all season. On Saturday the teams slowed down to take only 73 shots but this time St. John’s had to overcome a 1-0 deficit. The Possin/Willey show scored the all three goals for the Johnnies.

    No Longer On The Island

    Gustavus (3-7-2, 6-12-3)

    Gustavus played one of their best series of the year. They gained a split over Concordia, and dropped the Cobbers out of first place. The Gusties showed a renewed spirit to push players into attack, and came away with the most goals they’ve scored in a MIAC series all year. On Friday night they added some luck to their new-look offensive push and came away with a 4-2 victory. Gustavus used a two-goal second period to put the pressure on the Cobbers. After going into the first break tied at one, the Gusties scored two even strength goals on shots from the high slot that were redirected by the pile of players in front of the Concordia net. Defenseman Ben Puder continued his offensive hot streak by scoring his third goal in two games. Aaron Allar followed suit seven minutes later by scoring his eighth goal of the year. The game turned interesting in the third period when Concordia cut the lead to one before Tom Awaijane scored a pure hustle goal when the Gusties were shorthanded. He was able to cut off the passing lane that Concordia goalie Bryan Howard was trying to push the puck into, and corralled the puck behind the net before scoring on a wraparound. First year goaltender Dan Melde made key saves down the stretch to preserve the upset win. Saturday started on the same high note when Jared Klava scored 30 seconds into the game. Unfortunately Concordia scored four straight and Gustavus had to settle for coming within one in a 4-3 loss. The loss ruined the Gusties slim playoff hopes and, by the narrowest of margins, were sent packing from the island. Gustavus has two series remaining, they play Hamline this weekend and finish with St. Mary’s.

    St. Olaf (3-8-1, 7-13-1)

    St. Olaf holds the dubious distinction of wearing the spoiler hat the rest of the way. They will influence the MIAC playoff picture more than any other team that is no longer on the island.
    They play the two teams tied for fourth, Augsburg and St. John’s. The MIAC schedule makers loaded the back end of the Oles schedule with top-flight teams. In addition to the final two tough series, St. Olaf had to face red-hot St. Thomas last weekend. They came away with identical 5-2 losses. The series played to the script of the past several games for St. Olaf. Tough play, unable to score at the right time and conceding multiple power-play goals. On Friday night the Oles took a 2-1 lead into the first intermission on goals by Nick Hanson and Nate Olsen, but then came out in the second period and let the Tommies score two goals in a span of 1:03 to take the lead and regain their confidence. St. Olaf was able to shut down the league’s top player in Tony Lawrence
    but couldn’t fight back in the critical middle period. On Saturday the Oles gave St. Thomas nine power play chances and paid dearly. After St. Olaf tied the score on a power-play goal of their own from Jason Haider, St. Thomas reeled off three straight power-play goals in the next ten minutes and pushed the Oles right off the island.

    St. Mary’s (2-7-3, 7-11-3)

    St. Mary’s is in the process of finding out the difference between winning in November and turning the same trick in February. After finding ways to score goals in the first month and bolting from the gate with five league points in the first four games, the Cardinals have only two points since. They are creating scoring opportunities and getting plenty of shots on net, but they can’t get the goal that puts them over the top. Case in point; last weekends series against Augsburg. They out shot the Auggies in both games and five of the six periods. They allowed only one power-play goal on nine attempts over the weekend. But unfortunately moral victories only help in June, and they lost both games. The main villain for St. Mary’s over the series was Augsburg goalie Ryan McIntosh. St. Mary’s pumped 96 shots on the senior but could only come away with three goals. In Friday’s game the teams skated to a 1-1 tie after one with Jason Phillip scoring the lone goal for St. Mary’s. The second period started and Augsburg scored three goals in the first eight minutes to open the game up and McIntosh shut the door the rest of the way. Phillip added his second power-play goal and the losing skid hit eight. On Saturday St. Mary’s had 51 shots on McIntosh before Phillip scored his third goal of the weekend. Unfortunately it was too late as Augsburg was up 4-0 at the time. St. Mary’s totaled a MIAC season-high 56 shots for the game, the losing streak was at nine and Ryan McIntosh had personally escorted St. Mary’s off the island. St. Mary’s will play out the season with series against St. John’s and Gustavus.

    Hamline (2-9-0, 9-11-0)

    Hamline provides the proof that the MIAC is a league that is on the rise and that there are no more easy four-point weekends. They have nine wins on the season, one of the highest totals in school history, and have a chance to record their first winning season since the 1983-84 season.
    In their last four league games they have not lost by more than three goals and have had a lead in two of the games. The two Achilles heals this season have been allowing goals to come in bunches and the lack of a consistent goaltender. Last weekend was a testament to the former, as St. John’s had multiple goal runs in both games to sweep the series 6-3 and 3-1. On Friday Hamline allowed the Johnnies to score back-to-back goals three times in the game. Aaron Welle scored twice in the 6-3 loss, and Hamline had 39 shots on St. John’s goalie Rick Gregory. In the series finale Hamline scored first when Troy Urdahl finished off a feed from Tim Steffen. The teams battled through the next two periods and although St. John’s won 3-1, with an empty net goal, the game hung in the balance all the way to the end. Hamline ends the season with two-game tilts against Gustavus and Concordia. The Pipers have a chance to go out with a winning record and carry momentum into next year’s survivor series.

    Series of the Week: St. Thomas vs. Bethel

    A no-brainer. Age and experience versus youth and exuberance. The richest, best-looking kid on the block that has the best equipment against the blue collar, rugged kid that has had to scrape for everything he’s got. The Detroit Red Wings against the Minnesota Wild. You get the picture. St. Thomas has eight seniors on their roster while Bethel only has two. This is the last series for the Tommies, and a sweep means they win their 11th MIAC championship in 13 seasons. A split and they have to play the waiting game. If they win and tie, they are assured of at least a tie for the title. If Bethel sweeps this series and their final series against Augsburg, they win their first MIAC title. If they split and lose two to Augsburg, they could miss the playoffs altogether.

    ECAC West Newsletter: Feb. 7, 2001

    RIT Clinches Regular-Season Title

    With a convincing win over Hobart, and a narrow victory over Manhattanville, RIT clinched the regular-season ECAC West title this week. Hobart fell in non-league games and Manhattanville split, while Elmira was idle.

    League Games Overview

    RIT 10 at Hobart 0 (2/2): Hobart came out playing a scrappy forecheck in the game, and kept even with the Tigers for most of the first period. But the steamroller that seems to be the RIT offense this year finally pushed through the Statesmen, and tallied three goals late in the first period to take the lead. RIT added another goal early in the second period. The twist this time in the RIT scoring was that the first four goals were all scored by defensemen. The Tiger offense finally decided to join the fray midway through the second period, as they notched two power-play goals to give RIT the 6-0 lead after two periods. Bang, Bang, Bang, three goals in a 1:48 span early in the third period, put the game into the runaway category as an injury riddled Hobart just didn’t seem to have the horses to keep up with RIT. Jerry Galway had a six point night, with one goal and five assists, to push him over the 100 career points plateau. Derek Hahn also chipped in five point on two goals and three assists. Tyler Euverman was challenged to make several saves by Hobart, but stopped all 21 shots that he faced.

    RIT 3 at Manhattanville 2 (2/3): After the Hobart game, RIT jumped on the bus and headed downstate to take on Manhattanville. Mike Tarantino scored just 2:09 into the game for RIT, and Peter Bournazakis chipped in another at the 16:01 mark, to give RIT a 2-0 lead after one period of play. The Valiants came out in the second period quite physical, and this seemed to stymie the Tigers, keeping the period scoreless. “From the second half of the game on, we got things going,” said Valiant coach Keith Levinthal. “I thought we played them pretty tough.” Manhattanville used the momentum gained, and a tiring RIT team, to get back in the game in the third period. “The game settled down a little bit in the third, and our boys stuck to the game plan,” said Levinthal. Bill Cummings scored at 7:09 and Scott Jensen tallied another at 8:05 of the third period to knot the game 2-2. “Our emotion got the second one for us,” said Levinthal. “But it probably gave up the game winner to RIT also.” Just when it looked like Valiants were going to finish off the scare they were putting on RIT, Tiger Josh Faulkner tallied at the 8:25 mark to give RIT back the lead. Manhattanville outshot RIT 16-8 in the final period, but couldn’t get the goal needed to retie the game, as RIT held on for the narrow 3-2 win.

    Team-By-Team Report

    RIT(ranked No. 1): With the league wins against Hobart and Manhattanville this week, RIT has effectively clinched the ECAC West regular season title. “Hold on a minute” you might say, “If Elmira sweeps Hobart and Manhattanville, and defeats RIT on the 17th, then they would be tied with identical 5-1 league records.” All true, but RIT holds enough of an advantage to win the tiebreakers.

    The tiebreakers within the ECAC West this season are:
    1 – head to head
    2 – conference wins
    3 – record against common opponents
    4 – overall record

    Assume that Elmira and RIT split head to head, and Elmira sweeps Hobart and Manhattanville, then the two teams are still tied after the first two tiebreakers.

    The third tiebreaker is where RIT holds the deciding edge. Elmira and RIT have faced the following common opponents: Oswego, Brockport, Plattsburgh, Geneseo, Cortland, Fredonia, and Hamilton. RIT is 10-0-1 against those opponents, with a game against Hamilton still on tap. Elmira is 7-2 against those opponents, with the two losses coming against Oswego and Plattsburgh. So, if RIT loses to Hamilton on the 10th, it may provide for some discussion at ECAC headquarters, but the 10-1-1 record should be enough to win the regular season title for RIT. And certainly if it rolls to the fourth tiebreaker, RIT holds a considerable advantage in overall record.

    Next up for RIT this week is a home game against Hamilton.

    ELMIRA(ranked No. 5): Elmira was idle this week, resting up after a hectic couple of weeks of hockey. The Soaring Eagles get back into the swing of things this week with a road game at Manhattanville on Friday. The Soaring Eagles all-time win countdown still hovers at the 499 mark.

    MANHANTTANVILLE: Just when it looked like the Valiants had righted the ship, they dropped a midweek game against a struggling Skidmore team. Skidmore plays on an Olympic size sheet of ice, and it gave the Valiants fits. “We struggled on the big ice,” said Levinthal. “We were emotionally and physically tired. We got behind and it was too little too late from us.” Manhattanville got outshot 31-23 in the contest. Valiant Dave Schmalenberg answered an early Skidmore goal to tie the game 1-1 midway through the first period. But Skidmore retook the lead less than two minutes later. The opening of the third period found the Valiants in an even deeper hole, down 3-1. Leading scorer Tommy Prate put in a goal 5:38 into the period to pull Manhattanville to with a goal. The Valiants poured on the pressure, including pulling netminder Jon Peczka, but Skidmore tallied a late empty-netter to finish off the Valiants 4-2.

    The trip was only 190 miles, and should have taken less than four hours. Instead, an old fashioned Nor’Easter on Monday turned the Valiants’ trip to Curry into an eight hour adventure in snow. But Manhattanville got to Curry just minutes before the warmups were scheduled to begin, and the perseverance paid off as they defeated Curry 8-0.

    Manhattanville hosts Elmira on Friday to continue league play. “Elmira is a big challenge for us to be consistent enough to play Elmira as tough as we played RIT,” said Levinthal.

    HOBART: It looks like Hobart’s rash of season-ending injuries has finally caught up with it. Over the last few weeks, Hobart has lost its three top scorers (at the time of their injury) who were each contributing more than a point per game; Greg Reynholds, Jerry Toomey, and Matt Pane. As if that wasn’t enough, starting goaltender Chris Connolly also went down two weeks ago against Fredonia with a season ending knee injury. That would be enough to cripple any team, and it looks like it has done just that to Hobart. The remaining players are still playing tough hockey with a ton of drive, but heart can only take a team so far. The remaining games will be a struggle for Hobart to stay competitive with a shortened bench.

    Hobart opened the week at Hamilton and took a 1-0 lead on a goal by Tim McCarthy midway through the first period. Hamilton tied it up soon after, but Hobart owned a distinct territorial advantage for most of the period. The Statesmen retook the lead just :26 seconds into the period on another tally by Tim McCarthy. The floodgates opened for Hamilton soon after, and they ripped off five unanswered goals to take a commanding 6-2 lead. Zach Mundy notched a late second period goal to start to chip away at the deficit. Sean Elliott scored another Statesmen goal in the third, but it was sandwiched by two Hamilton goals, and Hobart lost the contest 8-4.

    Hobart hosts a surging Potsdam team midweek for its only contest.

    Game of the Week

    Elmira against the Valiants of Manhattanville is this week’s pick. Manhattanville played RIT tough, and will be looking to show some consistency when the Soaring Eagles come to town. Elmira, on the other hand, is looking to keep pace with the Tigers to challenge for at least a tie for first place at the end.

    Flashback to ’78

    The weather forecasts Monday called for over a foot of snow; a healthy layer was already underfoot an hour before the first semifinal game. Cars heading north on Route 93 stood at a standstill; traffic on Storrow Drive backed up all the way to Boston University.

    Would this be a reprise of the legendary 1978 Beanpot? That year, the semifinal games coincided with the arrival of the Blizzard of ’78, a storm that prompted a state of emergency and shut down Massachusetts for four days.

    As it turned out, there would be no mid-game announcement this time that the mass transit system — known as the MBTA — was curtailing service for the evening and that fans had 15 minutes to board the last train. Nor would there be hundreds of abandoned cars clogging every lane of Route 128.

    Even so, the arrival of a significant storm on the first Monday in February prompted flashbacks to 1978. After 23 years, most of the memories remain vivid.

    Boston Globe sportswriter Bob Ryan — a prospective fan that evening — ran up the white flag before even getting to the Boston Garden.

    “I turned around at the Burger King on Route 3A in Weymouth and said, ‘This is nonsense!'” he recalls.

    "The bus stopped at Marsh Chapel, a chapel on campus. Jack Parker said, ‘We’ll leave it up to you guys if anybody wants to get off here and pray for the snow to end.’ … Well, everybody got off and walked across the street to the Dugout. So much for Marsh Chapel."

    — BU SID Ed Carpenter on his first Beanpot experience

    Jack Grinold, Associate Athletics Director at Northeastern, remembers with all too much clarity that year’s Beanpot, even though he was comfortably at home by the BU-BC nightcap.

    “Ten days before that date, Northeastern went to Watson Rink and pummeled Harvard, 12-5,” he says. “After the score got to about eight, I said to myself, ‘Please, please. No more, no more. We’re really going to make these guys angry.’

    “Sure enough, we did. We came in for one of the few times in the history of the Beanpot the favorite in our semifinal game and lost, 4-3 [in overtime]. I was so angry at having my hopes for a final shattered that I frankly went right out of the building and into a cab.

    “I did not realize until we were probably a mile away from the Garden that the cab was pitching back and forth and back and forth. The cabbie was cursing and saying, ‘This is my final ride.’ I was home in Brighton in no time and turned the radio on for them dropping the puck for BC-BU.

    “So maybe I can say that they did me a favor. But not really.”

    Even more unhappy, but much less comfortable was Globe writer Bob Monahan.

    “I left the Garden with [fellow writer] Willie McDonough, his son Sean and one of Sean’s friends,” says Monahan. “Willie’s car was out back so we shoveled it out. We got on the Expressway and they were pushing the car. I used to smoke back then so I had no wind.

    “A couple times we’d go 20 yards and they’d all hop in, but then we’d get stuck again. They literally pushed the car all the way to the Globe [about five miles away.] It was awful.

    The Boston Globe chronicles the news, before it shut down for days.

    The Boston Globe chronicles the news, before it shut down for days.

    “I left the Globe four days later. We just put some papers on the desks and slept on them. It wasn’t pretty. You didn’t get close to anyone because everyone stunk. When you start smelling yourself and you don’t like yourself, that’s as bad as it gets. You’re brushing your teeth with your finger. Hygiene went out for four days.

    “I ate in the Globe cafeteria for three and a half days. I haven’t had a bite to eat there since.”

    Although an early edition of Tuesday’s paper appeared, that would be the last one for several days. With travel forbidden to all but emergency vehicles, printing a newspaper that couldn’t be delivered to readers made little sense. Monahan and his colleagues at the paper’s offices, however, called for quotes and wrote columns that were never read in case the Globe did get going.

    Unlike Monahan and Grinold, however, most recall the Beanpot ’78 experience with affection.

    “I was going to all the games back then with the family,” says BU radio broadcaster Bernie Corbett, then a high school senior. “We had season tickets. There was a big question because of the weather whether we were going to the game that night.

    “But there was a question and there wasn’t a question. We were going to go anyway. I went with my father and a couple of friends. We went in and stuck around despite the warnings. We just followed a snowplow up [Route] 93 to get home.

    “My two friends from high school spent the week at my house. They never made it home all week. We had a great week. It was great to be a senior in high school because you got two February vacations that year, one scheduled and one unscheduled. It worked out great!”

    More than 500 fans and Garden employees remained in the building, not leaving until a day and a half later.

    “A lot of them were our employees,” says Steve Nazro, FleetCenter Vice President of Events and Director of the Beanpot. “It took us a while, but eventually we figured they could have gotten home if they wanted to. But it was like boys’ night out.

    ‘Honey, I can’t get home. Can’t you see what’s outside?’

    “I heard there were great poker games.”

    Boston Herald writer Jocko Connolly left the Garden on the MBTA trains that kept running long after their threatened shutdown. Although he didn’t get all the way home, he made it home where the train stopped.

    “The train got to Dover Street and the [conductor] said, ‘We can’t go any further, so everybody off,'” says Connolly. “Foley’s Tavern was right at the foot of the stairs [of that stop].

    “So I went down into Foley’s and drank ’till about three in the morning. There were some MBTA guys there who ran the station. So then we got a case of beer and climbed back up the stairs. They opened the booth, where it was warm, and we sat there drinking until the sun came up. It was great!”

    When asked if he recalls the Garden lights dimming late in the second game, Connolly quips, “Back in those days, I remember the lights dimming a lot!”

    First prize in partying, though, may have gone to the BU team, which would have to wait 23 days for its championship game, the only such Beanpot contest to take place in March.

    In the days following the opening round of the 1978 Beanpot, New England roads were unpassable.

    In the days following the opening round of the 1978 Beanpot, New England roads were unpassable.

    “I remember getting on the team bus going back to BU,” says Terrier Sports Information Director Ed Carpenter, then experiencing his first Beanpot. “The bus stopped at Marsh Chapel, a chapel on campus. [BU coach] Jack Parker said, ‘We’ll leave it up to you guys if anybody wants to get off here and pray for the snow to end.’

    “Well, everybody got off and walked across the street to the Dugout [a popular bar]. So much for Marsh Chapel.

    “We continued on to the corner of [Commonwealth] Ave and Babcock Street. The bus driver said, ‘I can’t make it down Babcock Street.’ That was where our offices were.

    “I remember getting off and walking down the street to my office. I was walking and seeing little tips coming up from the snow. It wasn’t until the next day that I found out that they were radio antennas on cars. So I was walking on tops of cars.

    “I was marooned in the office. I never made it home for a week.”

    Back at the Dugout, the feeling was just about the opposite of being marooned. Several years ago, Terrier forward David Silk described it best.

    “By the time we came out,” he said, “the snow was gone and so were the seventies.”

    Beanpot Notebook, Game 2

    The second period has not been the friendliest of frames for the BU Terriers all year. Things were getting so bad that BU probably wished they had remote controls to fast-forward the game from the first to the third.

    In Monday night’s semifinal against Northeastern, the second period outlook seemed to change every time coach Jack Parker took a breath. The Terriers scored the first two goals thanks to Brian Collins finishing off his first career hat trick.

    When NU answered with two power play goals of its own, things began to look like business — or, should we say, bad business — as usual for BU. But a late tally by Nick Gillis gave the Terriers three goals in the period, the first time they’ve accomplished that all year, and most importantly a 5-3 lead through two.

    Crowder, Hockey East Don’t Mix in Pot

    It’s certainly a good thing that Northeastern and coach Bruce Crowder don’t have similar success in Hockey East as they have in the Beanpot against Hockey East schools. After Monday’s loss to BU, Crowder’s Huskies are now 0-6 against Hockey East schools in the Beanpot. The Huskies are 0-3 against both BC and BU, but 2-1 lifetime against Harvard. That one loss came in last year’s consolation game, and ironically is Harvard second-year coach Mark Mazzoleni’s only win in three Beanpot games.

    Plenty of Streaks Continue for Terriers

    Any team that rides a six-year Beanpot-championship winning streak could certainly have some other impressive streaks that accompany that. For BU there are plenty. Start with a 14-game winning streak that dates back to the 1994 consolation game. Add that BU has not lost since the tournament moved from historic Boston Garden to the FleetCenter in 1996. That streak stands at 11.

    Against Northeastern, the streaks are longer. BU has not lost to the Huskies since 1988, when Northeastern won its fourth championship with a 6-3 victory. The last time that Northeastern defeated BU in the opening round of the tournament was 1983.

    All totaled, this will be BU’s 40th trip to the Beanpot final as it searches for its 24th championship next Monday night.

    Snow Doesn’t Keep Crowd Numbers Down

    Despite the major snowstorm that paralyzed the Boston area for this Beanpot Monday, fans still turned out in record number. Well, at least that’s what the box office says.

    The announced crowd on the night was 17,728, 163 more than the old record of 17,565 most recently seen at last year’s semifinals. Though hard to tell, since much of the crowd is split between the faithful for each game, it would seem that the actual attendance was significantly less.

    Up to a foot of snow was predicted to fall on the greater Boston area on Monday. Quite a bit less than the nearly three feet that fell on the first Beanpot Monday in 1978, when one of the most paralyzing blizzards in city history barreled through town.

    BC-BU Matchup: All You Can Ask For

    Certainly the Beanpot organizers know there will be a solid, most-likely record crowd for next week’s championship game. Still, no one cringes when BC and BU are the two combatants, when you can expect a wild and excited group of hockey fans.

    In case you’re wondering about history: BU leads the all-time series in the Beanpot, 22-8, over Boston College. This will be the 15th time the two have met in the championship game and BU has won nine to date. That includes a streak of seven in a row. The last time BC beat BU in a championship game: February 9, 1976.

    They Said It …

    “The public just wants to see a new winner. That’s something that we can feed off of.” — Boston University’s Dan Cavanaugh on what the Terriers will face in next week’s championship game.

    “You don’t win ballgames on last year’s sweat.” — BU Head Coach Jack Parker, noting that BU’s six consecutive Beanpot championships won’t mean much in next week’s game against Boston College.

    Beanpot Notebook, Game 1

    Boston College’s newly-made all-time leading goal scorer, Brian Gionta, is enjoying fast starts lately. And Monday’s Beanpot semifinal victory over Harvard was no exception. For BC’s third straight game, Gionta opened the scoring.

    Anyone that hasn’t been hibernating for the last couple of weeks knows that Gionta opened with five goals on his first five shots against Maine two weeks ago. Friday night in the Eagles’ 4-3 victory over Lowell, Gionta blasted home a goal just 25 seconds into the game. Monday night it took 4:23 before Gionta would light the lamp against Harvard. By adding assists in the second and third period, Gionta is the leading Beanpot scorer among active Eagles with eight points (four goals, four assists) in seven games.

    No Rest For the Weary

    Being the only team to play two games this past weekend, was a big factor weighing against Harvard. All three Hockey East Beanpot teams, BC, BU and Northeastern, all play only single games on the weekends before each Beanpot Monday. Harvard was left to play two grueling league games against Colgate and Cornell. Besides the obvious advantage of playing one less game, each of the Hockey East schools’ coaches were also able to be in attendance for Harvard’s 2-1 loss to Cornell on Saturday.

    Shutout Streak, Of Sorts, Broken

    It looked as if Game One of the 2001 Beanpot was going to hold pattern with last year’s semifinals. In those games, the losing clubs (Harvard and Northeastern) were both shut out. It wasn’t until Harvard rookie Kenny Turano scored with 10:22 remaining that the streak was broken. The Crimson, of course, broke a streak of their own: they had not scored in a semifinal game since the final second of regulation in a 4-3 overtime loss to Northeastern in the 1999 Beanpot.

    Eagles to Back-to-Back Finals; Crimson Need Consoling Again

    With BC’s win, they reach the finals for the second consecutive year and the fourth time since head coach Jerry York’s arrival back in the 1994-95 season. Of course, with BU’s streak of six straight Beanpots, BC has not won any of those championship games. Its last Beanpot came in 1994 under coach Steve Cedorchuk, a 2-1 overtime upset victory over Harvard in the final.

    For the Crimson, it’s the third straight trip to the early game next Monday night. Harvard’s last victory in the semifinal was in 1997 against Boston College. Its 5-4 overtime victory over the Eagles that year earned the Crimson a trip to a championship game matchup with BU, and a second-place finish after a 2-1 overtime loss.

    Special Teams the Turning Point

    Most hockey pundits would tell you that special teams and goaltending win championships. The first half of that equation was certainly true tonight.

    The Eagles recorded nine of their 30 shots on the night while on the power play, scoring twice. Conversely, the Eagles stuffed the Crimson on all five of their attempts with the man advantage, limiting Harvard to just two shots on the PP.

    “That was a key part of the game,” said Eagles coach Jerry York about the early-game special teams play. “We had a good kill [of the 5-on-3] and then we scored on our first two power plays.”

    They Said It …

    “I’ve been coming to the Beanpot since I was a little kid. It’s really special for a local guy like myself, [seeing as] we dont have that many on the BC roster anymore.” – Eagles defenseman Bobby Allen, a native of nearby Hull, Mass.

    “I think Brian Gionta perhaps played one of his best games tonight. Well, there was that five goals-five shots game [against Maine].” – Eagles coach Jerry York on Gionta’s three-point performance on Monday.

    This Week In The CCHA: Feb. 1, 2001

    Have An Extreme Day

    First there were Extreme sports. Then ESPN gave us the X-Games, and the XFL wasn’t long to follow. The Food Network shows Extreme Cuisine (chocolate-covered ants? spinach?), and HGTV has been airing Extreme Homes for about a year. Now HGTV, that cable haven of conspicuous consumption, brings us Extreme Gardens.

    This is progress?

    Never one to let a trend pass me by (there is no photographic evidence of my circa-1980 spiked hair and raccoon eyes), I’m ready to jump on the Extreme Bandwagon, become part of Extreme Nation, and declare myself CCHA Correspondent Extreme.

    As CCHA Correspondent Extreme, I feel it’s my duty to extremulate (yes, I made that up — but, dude, isn’t it cool?) the Central Collegiate Hockey Association.

    The Extreme Team

    This first one is a gimme. The Extreme Team itself has to be the Alaska-Fairbanks Nanooks. By virtue of being in the state of Alaska, the Nanooks make the CCHA a Pacific-coast league. Think about it, dude. If the CCHA were to invite Niagara to join the league, the conference would be, like, coast to coast. Bi-coastal, even.

    The Extreme Team earns its name for another reason. With three points earned against the UNO Mavericks last weekend, the Nanooks broke their single-season record for CCHA points. The new record of 18 broke the prior mark of 17 set in the 1998-99 campaign. The Nanooks have taken points against every league opponent this season, and are 3-3-3 against teams in their cluster.

    And Chad Hamilton, the senior defenseman who knows beauty when he sees it, skated in his 100th collegiate game in UAF’s 3-3 tie with UNO on Jan. 26.

    The Extreme Team not only looks to make the playoffs, but is mathematically in the running for home ice. Talk about extreme!

    Extreme Inconsistency

    Competitive Friday in a 4-2 loss to Miami, then losing 9-3 the next night, the Bowling Green Falcons are an example of Extreme Inconsistency, a condition that’s plagued them for the past few seasons.

    One notable exception to this is senior forward Ryan Murphy, (14-8–22) who is quietly having a career campaign. Murphy has scored at least a point in 11 of his last 12 games, and has 10 goals and four assists in that span.

    Unfortunately for the Falcons, if the inconsistency continues, they’ll lose more than the Ohio Cup. Bowling Green is in extreme danger of sitting out the CCHA playoffs.

    Extreme Forgotten Youth

    The number of rookies in the league this year is old news, and three teams in particular — the Extreme Team, Northern Michigan, and Ohio State — have huge freshmen classes.

    But forgotten in this equation is Ferris State. The Bulldogs skate 17 freshmen and sophomores, making Ferris State one of the youngest teams in a very young league. Assistant coach Drew Famulak says that it took until midseason for the team to gel, and now they’re playing better team defense.

    Phil Osaer, one of the few upperclassmen on the team, has improved steadily this season and is now allowing just 2.38 goals against in conference contests (.900 SV%).

    The Extreme Forgotten Youth had last weekend off, and this weekend face their opponent of two weeks ago, the Extreme Team itself.

    It looks as though the Bulldogs will be traveling for the first round of the CCHA playoffs.

    Extreme Misfortune

    Having lost 97 man-games because of injury this season, the Lake Superior State Lakers are definitely experiencing Extreme Misfortune. Still out are captain Ryan Knox, and assistant captains Jason Nightingale and Jeremy Bachusz. The Lakers have played 21 consecutive games during which at least one of the team’s leaders has not dressed.

    Being so short staffed, the Lakers have scored just one goal in their last five games, and are averaging 2.2 goals per game. Of course three of those five games came against Michigan State.

    Extreme Understatement

    The RedHawks may not be red-hot, but they are quietly making a statement in the CCHA. Miami swept Bowling Green last weekend, rebounding from back-to-back shutouts at the hands of Michigan State.

    Miami suffers the same fate as does Ferris State, in a way. Ferris State is the “little” school in Michigan to whom no one pays much attention, win or lose. Miami is the “little” school in Ohio. Even when Miami was a serious contender for a national title a few years back, no one really paid them much mind.

    Perhaps that’s why they seem like such an Extreme Understatement. The RedHawks are now unbeaten in seven games in Goggin Arena, and they play six of their remaining 10 regular-season games in home sweet home.

    This “little” school may be looking at home ice.

    Extreme Offense

    While another team’s offensive prowess is garnering all the press this season, the Wolverines are now scoring more goals per game (4.26) than any other CCHA team.

    And it was Michigan that broke Ryan Miller’s shutout streak last weekend, with four goals in an overtime game that shows people what college hockey is all about.

    Andy Hilbert (12-23–35) now leads the conference in league scoring, and he’s plus-14. The Wolverines are outscoring conference opponents 81-37, and are an impressive plus-129 in league play.

    That’s Extreme Offense, and a ticket to the Big Skate.

    Extreme Denial

    Five goals in the month of January. Michigan State and Ryan Miller are in Extreme Denial — and that’s a good thing.

    The Spartans suffered only their second loss of the season against fellow top-tenner Michigan on Saturday, and yet several poll voters took the opportunity to vote other teams No. 1. Talk about denial.

    Miller still reigns, in spite of the loss. His 1.23 goals-against average and .953 save percentage still lead the nation, handily. In conference play, the Spartans as a team are allowing 1.11 goals per game, and their penalty kill is a healthy .931.

    With this Extreme Denial, the Spartans are contenders, again.

    Extreme Avoidance of the Sophomore Jinx

    In fourth place with 22 points, the Nebraska-Omaha Mavericks have achieved Extreme Avoidance of the Sophomore Jinx. Last year, the Mavs had to go the long route to The Joe; this season, the road may go through Omaha from the initial drop of the post-season puck.

    UNO is one of five league teams averaging three or more goals per game (3.05). Although the Mavs are officially allowing 3.15 goals per league contest, in the month of January, in which the team was 4-1-1, Nebraska-Omaha held opponents to three or fewer goals per match, even in the loss and tie in Fairbanks last weekend.

    One key to UNO’s success this year is David Brisson (13-14–27, +10), and the duo of Andrew Wong and Aaron Smith, a pair of freshmen who have combined for six goals and three assists in their last six games.

    Extreme Fans

    There is much that is extreme about Northern Michigan. The Wildcats are extremely young, with ten rookies on their squad. They boast one of the most Extreme Sophomore Classes with Bryce Cockburn (17-7–24, +18), Chris Gobert (10-16–26, +10), Jimmy Jackson (4-16–20, 0), and Terry Harrison (13-9–22, +9), goaltenders who combined for a team save percentage of .912, and a conference plus/minus of +61.

    And let’s not forget that, geographically speaking, Maquette is a bit extreme.

    But what’s truly extreme about the Northern Michigan Wildcats is their insane group of fans known as The Puckheads, or for our purposes The Extreme Puckheads. This group of dedicated men and women — you can recognize them by their hard hats adorned with pucks and rotating lights — has been spotted at The Joe and the Frozen Four when the Wildcats themselves were nowhere to be seen, and recently, the trio known as Mojo, Kujo, and The Big Guy drove from Marquette to Omaha for the NMU-UNO series.

    They get bonus points for knowing sexy when they see it, even if they can’t embody the notion themselves.

    Saturday’s game against Michigan State will be the second annual “Wildcat Night Across The Country.” The match, which will be televised live by Charter Communications, will be broadcast via satellite to a number of alumni gatherings across the country. All it takes to view the action is one of the following: access to a KU-band receiver with satellite GE-5, 79 degrees, Transponder T13; or access to a C-band receiver with satellite GE-1, 103 degrees, Transponder 16.

    Extreme Reversal of Fortune

    This year, the Irish took a bigger hit than they anticipated with the loss of four senior defensemen, the glue that apparently held the team together.

    Outscored by league opponents 63-41 (115-73 overall), the Irish are at minus-83 in conference play.

    Notre Dame’s 9-0 loss to Michigan (Jan. 23) was their largest loss since an 11-1 loss the Wolverines on Jan. 20, 1996. Michigan’s 51 shots in the 9-0 were the most given up by Notre Dame this season and the most March 10, 1995 when Bowling Green posted 53 against the Irish.

    The Irish play six of their final regular-season games on the road, including two this weekend against Ohio State. The Buckeyes took three points from the Irish two weeks ago in South Bend.

    Notre Dame’s Extreme Reversal of Fortune means that a team that traveled to Detroit last year is probably going nowhere when the regular season ends.

    Extreme Rookies

    In an outstanding league-wide rookie crop, two freshmen centermen at Ohio State stand out even further. Dave Steckel (11-10–21, +7 CCHA) and R.J. Umberger (7-12–19, +8 CCHA) are the two players who make this deep, scrappy, talented Buckeye team click. When Steckel and Umberger were in Moscow with the Team USA, the Buckeyes were 0-4-0. Since they’ve returned, OSU is 2-1-1, the lone loss on a weekend home split with Michigan.

    Steckel may have more points, but Umberger has the moves. The league hasn’t seen anything like this kid since the departure of Mike York, and Umberger has the advantage of size; Umberger is surprisingly graceful for his 200 pounds.

    Neither Steckel nor Umberger has ever played like a rookie, yet both are true freshmen. Steckel leads the Buckeyes in goal production.

    With the influx of talent — including fellow rookies Mike Betz, Doug Andress, and Scott May — the Buckeyes are one point away from their total conference point production of last season. Their nine conference wins equal their total from the 1999-2000 campaign.

    Given what’s going on near the top of the standings, the Buckeyes and their Extreme Rookies may find themselves home — and playing — during the first round of the CCHA playoffs.

    Extreme Physicality

    I may earn the Extreme Euphemism award for this one.

    There are other ways of putting it, but the Western Michigan Broncos embody Extreme Physicality this season, especially when things aren’t going their way.

    Averaging nearly 26 full minutes of penalties per conference contest, the Broncos, once famous for their high-flying offense, are in danger of becoming infamous for being downright offensive.

    On a squad that has spent 723 minutes in lockdown, Steve Rymsha’s 81 minutes pale by comparison to the accomplishments of Brian Pasko, who spends probably about a third of his playing time in the box, with 169 minutes in 26 games. That’s over six minutes per game, for those of you keeping count.

    With the lack of discipline and the recent lack of points, the Broncos may have played themselves right out of home ice.

    So that’s it, sports fans. From your CCHA Correspondent Extreme, have an Extreme Weekend, enjoy some Extreme Hockey, and Happy Extreme Ground Hog Day.

    Ganga Watch

    The good news is that our hero, Buckeye Nick Ganga, added no penalties to his total last weekend. Of course, the Buckeyes didn’t play.

    At the start of this season, Ganga promised to more than halve his penalty minutes from last year, pledging 50 or fewer, in sharp contrast to his 112 from the 1999-2000 season.

    While dangerously close to his promised total, Ganga’s 42 minutes in 24 games played represent a solid commitment to improvement for a young man who would rather hit than think last season.

    Ten games left, and I for one believe in Nick Ganga.

    And as Nicky himself knows, a little faith can go a long way.

    Games Of The Week

    These two teams may be meeting while passing each other traveling in opposite directions.

    No. 9 Western Michigan (16-6-5, 9-5-5 CCHA) at Miami (13-11-2, 10-7-1 CCHA)
    Friday and Saturday, 7:35 p.m., Goggin Arena, Oxford, Ohio

    The big news in Oxford this week is that junior defenseman Ken Marsch is academically ineligible for the remainder of the season.

    “It’s unfortunate because something like this has to happen to young men in order for them to figure out what they need to do in their life,” says head coach Enrico Blasi. “Here in Miami there’s a great support system… [but] if the student doesn’t want it, there’s nothing else we can do. I hope Kenny realizes how important school is. He’s stayed in school. At a certain point, the onus is on the student-athlete.”

    In spite of the loss of Marsch, the RedHawks rebounded from consecutive shutout losses against Michigan State to beat intrastate rival Bowling Green 4-2 and 9-3. Even though the losses to MSU were against the No. 1 team in the country and the country’s best goaltender, Blasi says that was no excuse.

    “To tell you the truth, I was really hard on the guys [after MSU]. We as a staff demanded a lot more in practice. Practices in late January shouldn’t be as hard as they were last week. Our guys didn’t complain. It’s easy to be down after playing so well without taking a point, without even scoring a goal. But our guys responded.”

    With the wins this past weekend, Miami and Blasi have already matched their totals for overall (13) and league wins (10) from a season ago. Miami’s newly formed line of Jason Deskins, Ernie Hartlieb and Gregor Krajnc accounted for five goals and seven assists in the two-game series against Bowling Green.

    This weekend, Miami faces Western Michigan, a team that once looked poised to make a run at the league championship. After starting January with a sweep of Ohio State, the Broncos have taken just one point in each of their last three two-game series. Western has established a new pattern: loss, tie, loss, tie, loss, tie.

    In spite of Western’s recent slump and Miami’s seven-game unbeaten streak at home, Blasi is not taking the Broncos lightly.

    “I expect them to come out hard. They are a transition team with three of the top ten scorers in the league. Obviously we’re going to have to pay attention to those guys.”

    Blasi is the kind of coach that focuses first and foremost on his own team, but at this point in the season, says the second-year skipper, “There’s not much you can do system-wise.”

    With the logjam of points near the top of the conference standings, Blasi knows that this series has ramifications league-wide, not just for the Broncos and RedHawks. And he sees the irony of these two squads fighting for home ice after their respective finishes last season.

    “These are two aggressive teams going at it, and we’ll see what happens. We are very similar. When they want to score goals, they can. When they want to play defense, they can. Both teams finished tied last year for ninth and tenth last season. It was a big step for both teams to make the playoffs last year. It would be a bigger step for these teams to host a playoff series.”

    These clustermates last met Dec. 1-2 in Kalamazoo, with Western winning the first game and Miami picking up the nightcap. Western leads this overall series 44-33-6, but Miami has lost just once to Western in their last five meetings.

    The RedHawk seniors are 7-3-3 against the Broncos for the past four years.

    One more one-point weekend for Western could be the final nail in the coffin. The Broncos will make the playoffs, but may be roaming the range to do so.

    Pick: Miami sweeps, 4-2, 4-3

    This Week In Hockey East: Feb. 1, 2001

    And Then There Was One

    Turn out the lights. The party’s over. …

    The race for the Hockey East regular-season crown is all but done. Boston College’s sweep of Providence two weeks ago and Maine last weekend — combined with New Hampshire’s three-game losing streak — has distanced BC from the rest of the pack.

    Second-place UNH is now as close — seven points away — to last-place Merrimack as it is to the first-place Eagles. As a result, the Eagles are now poised to win their first Hockey East regular-season crown since 1990-91.

    “It’s been a goal of ours because we haven’t won a league title in 10 years,” says BC assistant coach Mike Cavanaugh, speaking for under-the-weather head coach Jerry York. “This group has really made it a priority to win that. They’re sensing that the goal is attainable and they’re working hard to achieve it.”

    The biggest reason is painfully obvious to the rest of the league.

    “There’s only one team in Hockey East that is dominating, and that’s because of one reason: they can score goals,” says BU coach Jack Parker of the archrival Eagles. “They can score goals against anyone … anyone except Michigan State, I guess. (BC lost to MSU, 4-1.)

    “They’ve shown they have the ability to put the puck in the net and that separates them from the rest of us. You can look at [BU’s] roster or UNH’s or Northeastern’s and we’re all in the same boat. We all thought we’d generate more offense than we have.”

    BC’s 4.56 goals per game in Hockey East contests dwarfs all comers. Other than Providence at 3.29 per game, no one else is higher than BU’s 2.69. You have to go all the way back to Maine’s 42-1-2 national champion juggernaut in 1992-93 to see that big of a gap. And on a percentage basis, BC’s margin this year tops even that one.

    Combined with a second-best 2.19 goals-against per game mark, it would be a surprise if the Eagles weren’t running away with the league.

    Even so, two weeks ago the title was still up for grabs. Merrimack had just upset BC, 6-3, and both UNH and Providence were breathing down the Eagles’ necks.

    “Before the Providence series we talked as a club,” says Cavanaugh. “We’d gotten off to a great start, but post-Christmas we were 3-3. We had played some tough teams: Michigan State, Michigan, two with BU, our archrival, and then we were at Lowell and at Merrimack.

    “Nonetheless, we were 3-3 and we were not happy with that. We said that we had to bear down more as a club, take care of our own end and compete harder as a club.”

    The Eagles certainly responded at the expense of Providence and Maine.

    “Brian Gionta is the leader of our club and he has nine goals in those four games,” says Cavanaugh. “But the whole club bore down. Scotty Clemmensen has been solid in net and we’ve played pretty well.”

    Gionta, of course, stunned the nation, not to mention the Maine Black Bears, when he erupted for five goals in the first period on Saturday night.

    “I’ve never seen that even in Squirts or Pee Wees,” says Cavanaugh. “Five goals in one period! He actually did it in about 12 minutes. That was something special. I’ve seen him do a lot of things at BC, but that eclipses anything to this point.”

    Gionta

    Gionta

    In the process, Gionta became the nation’s number-one goalscorer with 22. He also tied David Emma for the top spot all-time among BC players with 112 career tallies. He may have even made himself a co-favorite for the Hobey Baker Award, along with Michigan State goaltender Ryan Miller and North Dakota forward Jeff Panzer.

    “He’s averaged 30 goals a season [over his BC career], which is remarkable,” says Cavanaugh. “If you count the second team, he has a chance to be a four-time All-American, which is another amazing feat. When you start looking at what this kid has achieved in college hockey, it’s remarkable.

    “Then you throw in the intangibles. He’s an affable kid. He’s a very humble kid. While he’s driven to succeed on the ice and while he may be a tyrant on the ice, off the ice he’s a gentleman. Our kids look up to him and they respect him. That’s the reason why we’re in the position to win a league title.

    “We’re biased here at BC, but I think he’s the best player in the country. I think if coaches could take any one player in the country, a lot of them would take Brian Gionta.”

    Without question, though, Boston College’s strength extends from its Gionta-led senior class down through its freshmen, who are the envy of every recruiter and head coach in the league.

    “All of us have lost a number of real good players,” says Maine coach Shawn Walsh. “Other than BC’s freshman class, it doesn’t appear that anybody has got freshmen who are really dominating.”

    The Eagles rookies, on the other hand, are very much dominating their freshmen brethren around the league, totaling 34 goals and 54 assists. You could take any two teams’ rookies and still not match those numbers.

    “We’re extremely happy with our freshman class,” says Cavanaugh. “J.D. Forrest is a very talented defenseman. We knew Ben Eaves and Chuck Kobasew were going to be top-notch hockey players. You’re just starting to see Ben Eaves take off. Chuck is having a possible Rookie of the Year-type season.

    “Tony Voce has come along a lot more quickly than we thought he would. Ty Hennes, who is a walk-on, and Justin Dziama are doing a terrific job for us filling a role on our fourth line. Our fourth line is playing more than it ever has in the past. Brett Peterson is a defenseman who has adapted very quickly and is playing a lot of minutes for us and is playing well.

    “As a whole, they’ve fit in very well. But regardless of our freshman class, our team is driven by our upperclassmen. If you talk to any coach in the country, if you don’t have the upperclassmen who can lead you, it’s tough to win.”

    Cavanaugh harkens back to BC teams of a few years ago to prove his point.

    “It’s just like when Marty Reasoner was a sophomore and Mike Mottau, Jeff Farkas and Blake Bellefeuille were freshmen,” he says. “We went through some tough times because the most talented players on our team were still real young and it takes some time for them to come around.

    “I’m not taking anything away from the juniors and seniors in that class because there were some talented kids. But they had never won anything. They had gone four years without winning anything. It’s tough to turn the corner when your upperclassmen haven’t won anything.

    “Marty’s junior year was our first taste of success. After that, our kids expected to be successful and they knew what it took to get to the national tournament. That becomes something your younger kids can feed on. Since Brian came here, he’s known nothing but Final Fours and Hockey East championship games.

    “We’ve got talented kids like Ben Eaves or Chuck Kobasew, but we have a Krys Kolanos and Brian Gionta and Mike Lephart ahead of them. We have some kids who are seniors who are probably just as talented.”

    That results in two big advantages according to Cavanaugh.

    “One, it’s an easier transition [for the freshmen,]” he says. “We’re not asking them to carry our club.

    “Two, they get to learn a lot from the older kids. Not only on the ice, but they learn how to act off ice. Those are the little intangibles that help you when you get to your Hockey East championships and your national tournaments.”

    Auction Time

    Kudos to all the fans out there who bid on the special Shawn Walsh North Dakota jerseys, raising $11,055 for The Coaches Foundation. I’m happy to say that although someone else snagged number seven, I didn’t come away empty-handed.

    In case you missed it in our news briefs, another very interesting item is similarly going up for bids. The Coaches Foundation will auction a line chart autographed by 20 members of the 1992-93 Maine national championship team. The lineup from the Jan. 29, 1993 game played against New Hampshire at Snively Arena was donated by a UNH alumnus.

    Bidding will take place on hockeyeastonline.com from Tuesday, Feb. 6 through 11 a.m. (Eastern) on Friday, Feb. 9. All proceeds will go to The Coaches Foundation, a charitable organization set up to serve as a resource for coaches who might need financial help in the face of devastating illness.

    The line chart is not in perfect condition, but does contain the signatures of Paul Kariya, Jim Montgomery, Cal Ingraham, Mike Latendresse, Eric Fenton, Patrice Tardif, Kent Salfi, Peter Ferraro, Chris Ferraro, Justin Tomberlin, Dave Lacouture, Dave MacIsaac, Dan Murphy, Chris Imes, Matt Martin, Andy Silverman, Jason Weinrich, Lee Saunders, Mike Dunham and Garth Snow.

    Beanpot

    It’s that time again, so here’s a look at the three Hockey East teams involved:

    Boston College enters as the only nationally ranked team of the four. Nonetheless, it’s been seven years since the Eagles last won the ‘Pot. Archrival Boston University has won it six straight times.

    logos/beanpot_actual.jpg

    Last year was an ideal example of how the favorite doesn’t always go home happy on the second Monday in February. BC had entered the championship game having not just beaten its last six opponents, but having annihilated them to the collective tune of 31-4. No matter. BU won anyway, 4-1.

    This year BC is once again on a roll, as noted above, and arguably towers head and shoulders over the rest of the field. Deja vu time?

    “We might be head and shoulders ahead in the RPI and with our record, but BU is the champ,” says Cavanaugh. “They’re the six-time defending champ and that’s how we look at it. You throw the records out the window; BU is the champ [so] they’re the favorite.”

    While the latter point may be debatable, BC’s position in the standings may help the Eagles end BU’s Beanpot stranglehold.

    “Usually this is a very distracting week because everyone is talking Beanpot,” says Cavanaugh. “[But] we’ve got Lowell to play on Friday night. Because our team has the goal of winning a league title and our kids are realizing that we control our own destiny now and it’s become such a focus on our club to win that league title, we really haven’t even thought of the Beanpot yet.

    “Our Lowell game is taking precedence over everything else because we know how important those two points are for us to win the league title. It’s the first time since I’ve been here that the Beanpot has been secondary this week. It really is.

    “In the past, the Beanpot was something we could win. But with the league title being there and with it being 10 years since we’ve won it, that’s been our focus.

    “It’s been nice as a coach. We’re focused on Lowell. Hey, Saturday is going to come and then the hoopla is going to start and we’re going to be excited to be in the Beanpot. It’s an exciting time for the whole city of Boston. We’ll be excited and we’ll be ready to play.

    “But you throw the records out when you get to the Beanpot. BU is the favorite and someone is going to have to go through BU to win that championship.”

    Boston University may be peaking at just the right time. After opening the season 2-8-1 and also going through an early-January 0-3-1 stretch, the Terriers have rebounded, most notably with a sweep last weekend of New Hampshire.

    “I’ll be happy to get the kind of effort we got on Saturday night up at UNH,” says coach Jack Parker. “I thought it was one of our best overall efforts of the year. I thought we controlled the play most of the night, controlled the tempo of the game the way we wanted to, and we got solid goaltending from Jason Tapp.

    “That’s where we [originally] thought we would be. It’s taken us a long way to get there. [But] it doesn’t mean we’re going to show up that way the next game. We’ve shown instances of [strong play and effort] during the year but never really sustained it. This was the first time we’ve put together back-to-back games where we’ve really had that.

    “In general, the thing we’re most pleased with now is what concerned us the most during the losing streak [early in the season] and that’s our goaltending. [Sean] Fields and Tapp are both playing extremely well and with a lot of confidence. They’re giving us a one-two punch that we’re ecstatic about.”

    Tapp, a junior who had to sit while first Michel Larocque and then Ricky DiPietro led their teams to Beanpot titles, will start on Monday night against Northeastern. If BU wins, Tapp will again start in the championship game.

    “We’ve also gotten great games game-in-and-game-out of late from Carl Corazzini and Freddie Meyer,” says Parker. “Jack Baker had a heckuva weekend against UNH. So some of our more important players are playing consistently well right now.”

    All that good karma, however, could change in an instant based on the track record of this year’s Terriers. They opened the season 2-8-1, then won four straight and five of six.

    Were they on the rise for good? Not so fast. They then went 0-3-1, including two lifeless performances, one against Lowell and the other an especially surprising one against their archrival, Boston College.

    Going down the drain? Once again, not so fast. With the sweep of UNH, BU has now won three straight.

    Ask Parker about whether he has a handle yet on his team from a consistency perspective and he responds with characteristic bluntness.

    “None whatsoever,” he says. “I was really flabbergasted with how we played at BC after winning the game at home. To play with so little emotion and so little focus … I couldn’t figure out what type of team I had.

    “We actually played two solid games at Maine, I thought. … Then we came back and played so poorly against Lowell.”

    Parker was so upset at his team’s lack of effort that Friday night that he told the team he didn’t want to see them until Sunday’s game against Niagara.

    Parker

    Parker

    “I told them not to come near,” he says. “I didn’t want to see them until we played the game. We didn’t practice [on Saturday]; we didn’t have a pre-game skate; we didn’t do anything together as a team.”

    The move worked with a win over Niagara and then the sweep over New Hampshire.

    “I don’t know if [sweeping UNH] is who we are or if we are going to be a team that is easily satisfied and continues to show that up-and-down type of [behavior,]” says Parker. “We’ve even done that within periods. We’ve played really well in the first period and turned around and played poorly in the second because it seems that we’re too easily satisfied.

    “This is the first time in a while that we’ve shown consistent effort. So there’s hope that it’s finally seeping in here that we’re running out of opportunities. With all the mess we’ve made of the season thus far, we’re still in pretty good shape as far as getting home ice in the playoffs. … Home ice counts and counts big in this league and that’s still our focus.

    “It’s possible or even plausible that we could finish in second or third place in the league. That would be kind of weird considering what we’ve done.”

    One player who may be entering the Beanpot and the stretch run with an extra jump in his step is Dan Cavanaugh. As the number two returning scorer, the junior was expected to make a bigger contribution this year than he’s provided. Things reached a low when he was benched for two contests following a stretch of only one assist and no goals in the first five games in January.

    No doubt, Cavanaugh in the stands caught the attention of his teammates, if not the player himself, and may have helped spark the recent surge.

    “I don’t think it goes unnoticed that there’s a pretty good player sitting out,” says Parker. “I better not cause the coach to think that I should sit out the next game.

    “The lines have been changed around and some guys who were getting a lot of ice time are not getting that much ice time and some guys are out of the lineup. All of a sudden, the freshmen are getting a lot more ice time.

    “I think it sends the right message that those who play well will be rewarded with further play. We want you to play hard every night.

    “Cavanaugh came back and played well at UNH, but it remains to be seen if he can sustain that. If he can’t, he’ll be back watching games again. That’s always the ultimate convincer for players because most of them want to be in the lineup.

    “I’m sure Danny will play hard and he sees what we’re talking about. Sometimes it’s good to sit out, too, because it makes you less nervous. Hey, the worst thing has already happened. I got benched.

    Northeastern enters the Beanpot with a title drought dating back to 1988, the longest among the four schools. Even so, the Huskies open the tournament playing some good hockey after taking five of six points in their last three league games. Included in that stretch is an impressive 5-3 win over UNH.

    “The area that we’re happy with is that we’re not giving up a lot of goals,” says coach Bruce Crowder. “Our defense is playing well and so is Mike Gilhooly in goal. That’s the real positive side along with our penalty killing.

    “The not so positive side is our five-on-five production and on the power play, which go hand in hand a little bit.”

    The usual remedy for a stagnant offense is to juggle the lines in a search of better combinations. In Northeastern’s case, however, that falls into the category of been there – done that.

    “I didn’t realize it, but somebody made the comment in the Fox [TV] game that we had used 65 line combinations,” says Crowder with an amused laugh. “Who keeps track of that?

    “You’re looking for that mix, but I think that we’re going the other way this time. We’re sticking with some of the line combinations and hoping that they’re going to jell a little.

    “We’re just working on things in practice, trying to do all the little things. Keep your stick on the ice. Hit the net. Go for rebounds. If you can’t score pretty, take the ugly ones.”

    The Huskies recognize that their first-round opponent, Boston University, is coming in with six straight titles. To many, Northeastern will be perceived as a significant underdog.

    “It’s a little bit like a heavyweight champion,” says Crowder. “When you go into the ring with the guy and count on the judge’s decision, it goes to the champion. You’ve got to knock the champion out or at least knock him around.

    “But at the same time, what happened in the past games is all for naught. Hopefully, our team is prepared and we’re ready to play. We’ve got some positives that we’re bringing into the tournament this year that we might not have had in the past. The biggest thing is that we’re healthy. We’re also playing well defensively and defense wins championships.”

    Quip of the Week

    Although this happened after the BC-BU game on Jan. 7, it pertains to the upcoming Beanpot matchups. One member of the press asked Eagle coach Jerry York about the game being a potential preview of the Beanpot championship game.

    One wit added, “Or a preview of the consolation game.”

    Who’s Gonna Rebound?

    Although overshadowed by the Beanpot, the classic Maine-UNH rivalry resumes on Sunday in a contest that could prove vital to both team’s playoff positions. Both perennial powerhouses are coming off very un-powerhouse-like weekends in which they were swept.

    New Hampshire has now lost three straight. Factoring in games-in-hand, the Wildcats could slide from second place to fifth this weekend.

    “I liked the way my team played tonight,” said UNH coach Dick Umile after a Friday night at Walter Brown Arena in which the Wildcats outshot BU, 37-21, but still lost. “They did everything but win the game. They played hard and we had our opportunities to win the game, but we didn’t get it done.”

    It was more of the same one night later back at the Whittemore Center, where UNH had to that point suffered only one loss this season. Again, the Wildcats won the battle of the shots, but lost the war on the scoreboard.

    “Obviously not the weekend we wanted,” said Umile after the loss. “It was very disappointing. We had a lot of hard work, but nothing to show for it. … It was good hockey all weekend. They got four points and we got zero. That’s the bottom line. I’m not too excited.”

    Matt Swain suffered a fractured forearm in the BU series and will likely not play this weekend.

    Maine coach Shawn Walsh, like Umile, is disinclined to press the panic button after getting swept by BC. The Eagles, after all, now seem to be dishing out scoreboard abuse to everybody. In three games with BC, Maine has been outscored a humbling margin of 18-5. On the bright side, though, in games against all other opponents, Maine is well on the plus side, 61-43.

    Come playoff time, that may be equivalent to “other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how did you like the play?” if a matchup with BC looms. Until then, however, the Black Bears can approach the rest of their season with confidence despite last weekend.

    “It was the first time this year [that those kind of defensive breakdowns] happened to us,” says Walsh. “It happened a little bit in the second New Hampshire game, but it’s been rare for us. We went into the weekend the fourth-best defensive team in the country.

    “I think the pressure on our players to produce offense is such that if you’re not careful, you can take too many chances and run to the puck and you just don’t play sound defensively, which is exactly what happened on Saturday.

    “We’ve just got to get back to playing the way we can play, which we’d been doing until Saturday.”

    This is what this weekend’s clash comes down to: two of the league’s best defenses trying to stop two offenses that aren’t burying the puck. A scoreless tie wouldn’t be a shocker. The two teams played to that result on Jan. 5.

    If the Black Bears win — and the game is at Alfond Arena — they will be well-positioned for playoff home ice, if not a serious run at second place. Their next six games will be against the three teams in seventh, eighth and ninth place in the standings: UMass-Amherst, UMass-Lowell and Merrimack.

    This season has shown that those games will be anything but easy, but Maine could follow last year’s script of a dominant finish and a major dollop of momentum going into the playoffs.

    Light My Fire, Inc.

    Attention, Hockey East coaches!

    Two weeks ago, this column asked, “What’s up with Brian Gionta?” Not that there was anything particularly wrong with 25 points in 22 games, but the three-time All-American was behind his accustomed scoring pace.

    After the column appeared, Gionta promptly recorded four goals and two assists in a key weekend series against Providence. He then followed that with five goals in one period — five goals in one period! — as part of another weekend sweep, this time over Maine.

    That amounts to .59 goals and 1.14 points per game before the column and 2.25 goals and 2.75 points per game after.

    So, coaches, if you have a player you’d like to turn into a scoring machine, a “What’s up with … ?” segment can appear in this column for the right price.

    I can’t be bought. But I can be rented.

    Trivia Contest

    The most recent question asked: what year (in the nineties) did UMass-Amherst resume varsity hockey? Also, what year had it been dropped? And finally, who were the two coaches involved?

    Josh Gibney was first to answer correctly that the school dropped the program after the 1978-79 season under Jack Canniff and resumed in 1993 under Joe Mallen. The Minutemen joined Hockey East one year later.

    (Josh was good enough to allow USCHO’s use a couple weeks ago of his photo of Maine coach Shawn Walsh wearing a UNH jersey. Thanks to him for that eye-catcher.)

    His cheer is:

    “Go Cats – Beat Maine!!!”

    This week’s question looks beyond the boundaries of Hockey East and asks what was unique about Lake Superior State forward Kyle Anderson from New Year’s Day to Jan. 26?

    Send your answers or wild guesses to Dave Hendrickson.

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

    Here are a few quick political observations:

  • I don’t know about you, but I found the Clinton administration’s prank of removing all “W” keys from keyboards to be both hilarious and inspired. On the other hand, I also considered it a knee-slapper to see Clinton’s dog buddy bite him in the … um … hindquarters.
  • Is there a more obnoxious human being on the planet than Sam Donaldson? Cokie Roberts must have been very bad in a past life to warrant being paired with him.
  • Even if you agree with campaign finance reform, Sen. John McCain’s contention that he “has a mandate” for it is befuddling. Did I miss something? McCain lost, didn’t he? Dubya had knocked him out of the race before even half the states held their primaries. If that’s a mandate, then Jennifer Lopez thinks I’m a hottie.
  • But Donaldson, McCain and every other self-important political weasel must bow at the shrine of Massachusetts Speaker for Life Tom Finneran. His recent power play should make all Bay Staters want to vomit.
  • On the more positive side, former Senator Bob Dole’s Super Bowl commercial for that “blue magic” that puts spark into his life lets even the most hardened cynic know that not every politician is a self-important blowhard.
  • I strongly agree with the concept of Congress paying down the debt, but I fear it’s about as likely as yours truly paying down his own debt.

  • Click here for information about Dave Hendrickson’s latest short story, “Yeah, But Can She Cook?”


    Thanks to Scott Weighart, Josh Gibney and Jim Connelly.

    This Week In Women’s Hockey: Feb. 1, 2001

    Dartmouth Back on Top

    Apparently, Dartmouth likes revenge. The No. 1 Big Green (16-1-1) suffered its only tie of the season at home against St. Lawrence back in November. On Saturday Dartmouth traveled to Canton to take on the No. 4 Saints (14-4-3), and the Big Green made a statement with a 5-3 win on the road. That extended the Big Green’s winning streak to five games and snapped the Saints’ unbeaten streak at 10.

    Sure, the difference was only two goals. But Dartmouth became the first team to score more than three goals against Rachel Barrie, the Saints’ standout rookie goaltender.

    As usual, Dartmouth won with its depth. Five different players scored for the Big Green, including representatives from all three forward lines as well as a goal from defenseman Carrie Sekela. Barrie still came up with 33 saves, but the Big Green blasted 38 shots on net and five managed to cross the crease. The key to the game, according to Dartmouth coach Judy Parish Oberting, was that Dartmouth arrived in New York ready to come out flying.

    “What has made this team so much fun to coach is the way they prepare to play,” Oberting said. “They are focused before games, they know that teams are gunning for them and they are ready to play once the puck is dropped. We were excited to play one of the best teams in the country, and we’re happy to have won.”

    Center Amanda Sargeant singlehandedly kept the Saints in the game through two periods, scoring both St. Lawrence goals to keep the score tied heading into the second intermission. Defenseman Caroline Trudeau added another score late in the third period, but that was no match for the firepower from Sekela and Dartmouth forwards Kim McCullough, Kristina Guarino, Carly Haggard and Lauren Trottier.

    St. Lawrence hosts a two-game series against Niagara this weekend while Dartmouth will be at home to take on Princeton and Yale.

    Gophers Enjoy Successful East Coast Swing

    Never give Minnesota a second crack. The last time the No. 3 Gophers (17-4-1) traveled to New Hampshire, they were swept by Dartmouth. Last weekend, Minnesota returned to New Hampshire to take on UNH in Durham. The result was another sweep — only this time, the Gophers came away with a pair of victories over the No. 8 Wildcats (14-11-0).

    Senior netminder Erica Killewald made 48 saves for Minnesota, who have not lost since their trip to Dartmouth. Killewald held UNH to a goal in each game, which is usually good enough for the Gophers to win.

    “Killer had a great weekend,” said Minnesota coach Laura Halldorson. “In addition, our other players, both defense and forwards, made a strong commitment to playing solid defense in front of her. Our defensive play has picked up ever since we had that close game with the U.S. National Team.”

    Like Dartmouth, Minnesota’s goals came from many different faces and all three forward lines. Rookie winger La Toya Clarke scored in each game while Nadine Muzerall, Kris Scholz and Tracy Palinsky also found the back of the net.

    The Wildcats have their work cut out for them with games at No. 5 Harvard and No. 6 Brown this weekend while the Gophers will try not to look ahead to the looming series at No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth next month as they travel to Bemidji State for a pair of games this weekend.

    Predictions

    Wednesday, January 31

    Boston College at #9 Northeastern – The Huskies will have a chance to improve their offense against the Eagles. Northeastern, 4-0

    Friday-Saturday, February 2-3

    Cornell at St. Cloud – The Huskies are young but improving. St. Cloud, 4-3, 3-2

    #3 Minnesota at Bemidji State – The Gophers are gearing up for the home stretch. Minnesota, 5-1, 5-2

    Mankato State at Ohio State – The Buckeyes are still angry after the overtime debacles at Wisconsin. Ohio State, 4-2, 3-1

    Saturday-Sunday, February 3-4

    #2 Minnesota-Duluth at #7 Wisconsin – The Bulldogs did not enjoy losing to the Badgers at home early in the season. UMD, 4-2, 5-2

    Niagara at #4 St. Lawrence – Rachel Barrie should build her usual impenetrable screen around the Saints’ crease. St. Lawrence, 3-1, 4-2

    Saturday, February 3

    Maine at #6 Brown – For these Bears, brown is better than black. Brown, 3-1

    #8 New Hampshire at #5 Harvard – The Crimson is eager to get back from exams. Harvard, 3-2

    Yale at #1 Dartmouth – This will be an excruciating road trip for the Elis. Dartmouth, 8-1

    Princeton at Boston College – Andrea Kilbourne should have a field day in Chestnut Hill. Princeton, 4-1

    Sunday, February 4

    Maine at #5 Harvard – The experience of the Crimson will make life rough on the Bears. Harvard, 5-2

    Princeton at #1 Dartmouth – The Big Green is too deep for the Tigers. Dartmouth, 3-1

    Yale at Boston College – Last place is on the line in this one. Boston College, 3-2

    #5 Harvard at Boston College – The Crimson should advance to the Beanpot final easily, where it will most certainly meet Northeastern. Harvard, 10-1

    This Week In The WCHA: Feb. 1, 2001

    Don’t Forget

    We’ve heard plenty in recent weeks about Brian Gionta and Ryan Miller, and deservedly so. It’s not every day someone scores five goals on five shots or allows no goals on hundreds of shots.

    Panzer

    Panzer

    But when talking Hobey, how can you overlook Jeff Panzer? Maybe it’s because the North Dakota senior isn’t the flashiest, he’s just the most productive.

    There have been only three games this season in which he has not registered a point. Probably not by accident, those games were all North Dakota losses — to Michigan Tech, Colorado College and Minnesota.

    His highest point total this season is four, set in a 4-3 overtime win over CC on Dec. 9. He had a goal and two assists in regulation and scored the OT winner.

    He hasn’t scored five goals in a period. He hasn’t scored five goals in a weekend this year. Yet he leads the nation with 57 points — 21 goals and 36 assists.

    He has the ability to take control of a game (see the Colorado College game) but can be the helper as well.

    It’s what we call balance, ladies and gentlemen. It’s why the Sioux’s top line of Panzer, Ryan Bayda and Bryan Lundbohm is one of the most feared trios in college hockey today.

    Panzer, meanwhile, is quietly — too quietly for some North Dakota fans — making his name as one of the top forwards in the country.

    “Jeff is not very big but has tremendous competitive desire,” said Denver coach George Gwozdecky, who coached Panzer on the WCHA All-Star team that traveled to Norway.

    “Having coached him last August in Norway, I got a chance to see how competitive he is, how skilled he is, how quick he is. He’s usually, if not the smallest, one of the smallest guys in a game [he’s listed at 5-foot-10, 160 pounds]. But he plays with a huge heart and that takes him a long way.”

    Where It Started

    Scott Sandelin did an admirable job of deflecting queries about the personal significance of his Minnesota-Duluth team’s series this weekend against North Dakota.

    Sandelin, in his first year with the Bulldogs, was a Sioux associate head coach before going to Duluth. This is the first time he’ll welcome his former boss, Dean Blais, into his new home rink.

    “I’m just happy we played them in their rink earlier in the year because I think we’re a better team right now than we were when we played them there,” said Sandelin, who showed a hint of concern about putting his best foot forward this weekend.

    “I thought we played them pretty strong in their rink and it was the start of when we started to play better.”

    Unfortunately for the Bulldogs, that momentum hasn’t amounted to much in the win column. A porous defense for most of the season and the lack of a timely goal has saddled them with a 5-19-2 record.

    They’re 2-15-1 in the WCHA, and Sandelin knows what comes with a record like that.

    Down the stretch, they’re getting ready for a road trip in the first round of the playoffs and an unenviable position: the spoiler.

    But if Sandelin is representative of the team, it’s relishing that role.

    “It’s what we’ve talked about — we want to be the spoilers,” Sandelin said. “[North Dakota is] shooting to win the league and their schedule probably favors them to win the league.

    “But I look at CC being two points behind them, and us taking two points from them, that’s preventing them obviously from being tied with them. We’d like to get some points off those teams to prevent them from doing what they want to do, but more importantly, we may end up playing them in the first round.”

    One of the most noticeable victims for the Bulldogs this season has been goaltender Rob Anderson, who has appeared in 15 of their last 19 games. Despite a 2.84 goals against average and a .909 save percentage in his last nine starts — respectable numbers by any stretch of the imagination — he’s just 2-5-2 over that span.

    “He’s been a guy that has given us a lot of chances to win games,” Sandelin said. “It was finally nice against CC for him to get rewarded with a win, where there’s games he’s played the same way and we haven’t gotten the wins for him.

    “I think he’s been as good as a lot of the goalies in this league the last month and a half, it’s just that we haven’t won for him. We need that — every team needs great goaltending — and when goalies give you that opportunity to win, we have to take advantage of that and win more games for him when he plays that way.”

    Fitting the Bill

    When Connor James was tabbed, along with Minnesota’s Troy Riddle, as the WCHA’s preseason rookie of the year, the expectations were raised.

    While Colorado College’s Peter Sejna appears to be running away with the honor of the best rookie, Denver’s James has started to meet some of those expectations.

    “He’s playing like maybe a lot of people expected him to play early in the year,” Gwozdecky said. “I don’t think [he was] physically anywhere near where he needed to be when he first came here because he’s so young, but he’s worked extremely hard and he’s playing with a great deal of confidence.

    “His natural abilities are starting to shine. He’s a very strong playmaker. Nifty shooter. Not an overpowering shot by any stretch of the imagination, but he’s so quick and he’s so smart with the puck that he can fool you very easily.”

    At 5-foot-9 and 156 pounds, he reminds some of a certain Hobey Baker candidate previously mentioned.

    “He reminds me a little of Jeff Panzer,” Gwozdecky said. “He’s probably a little farther ahead than Jeff was. But at the same point in time, Jeff might have been that good as a freshman, but he had some pretty good players surrounding him.”

    Gopher Gathering

    Talk about your get-togethers. During the first intermission of Saturday afternoon’s game against Michigan Tech at Mariucci Arena, Minnesota will honor the 50 greatest Gopher hockey players of all time.

    logos/umn.gif

    Kudos to whoever had to pare that list down to 50. How many are you familiar with? I’m at about half.

    The top 50, in alphabetical order: Michael Antonovich, Lester Auge, Bill Baker, Scott Bjugstad, Brian Bonin, Herb Brooks, Aaron Broten, Neal Broten, Richard Burg, Steve Christoff, Mike Crowley, Richard Dougherty, Bryan Erickson, Craig Falkman, Gary Gambucci, Timothy Harrer, Paul Holmgren, Steve Janaszak, Reed Larson, John Mariucci, Jim Mattson, John Mayasich, Jack McCartan, Rob McClanahan, Murray McLachlan, Richard Meredith, Patrick Micheletti, Corey Millen, Louis Nanne, Wally Olds, Larry Olimb, Harold Paulsen, Mike Pearson, Mike Polich, Frank Pond, Michael Ramsey, Todd Richards, Larry Ross, William “Buzz” Schneider, David Snuggerud, Glen Sonmor, Robb Stauber, Eric Strobel, Steven Ulseth, Tom Vannelli, Phil Verchota, Gordon Watters, Murray Williamson, Doug Woog and Ken Yackel, Sr.

    The members of the all-time team were invited to attend the game and a dinner on Saturday night, where they will mingle with the current players.

    “That’s one of the reasons these kids wanted to come here — the tradition and some of the great players and names that have been associated with this program,” Minnesota coach Don Lucia said. “What we’re trying to do is create some tradition of our own.”

    More Traditions

    Fan support for college hockey in Colorado keeps growing. That became crystal clear last Friday, when over 12,000 people attended games in Denver and Colorado Springs combined.

    The Tigers drew 6,437 to the World Arena for a game against Alaska-Anchorage and the Pioneers’ game against Alabama-Huntsville sold out with 6,091 fans at Magness Arena.

    CC has a strong following in Colorado Springs, but Denver has a much larger market in which to try to get attention.

    “People want to see not only competitive hockey, but they want to see successful hockey,” Gwozdecky said. “They want to see you win. And when you win, people start talking about it, they start getting excited about it, they start passing the word on. There’s an awful lot of interest in college hockey in the state of Colorado right now, with the success of all three teams [including Air Force].”

    He Said It

    Gwozdecky

    Gwozdecky

    “The thing that is so darn challenging is this league is very competitive. All you have to do to prove your case is go to the power rankings right now. If the national tournament was to start today, the WCHA conceivably could have six teams in the tournament.”

    — Gwozdecky, on the strength of the league.

    News and Views

  • The Pioneers’ series this weekend against Minnesota State-Mankato takes on added significance if you consider tiebreaking scenarios. The teams split the series in Mankato earlier this year, so a sweep by either team in Denver this weekend would also bring the tiebreaker. That’s an issue right now because Mankato is one point behind Denver and has played one fewer game. “For both teams this weekend, it’s going to be extremely challenging and competitive. There’s no question I think this race is going to go right down to the wire,” Gwozdecky said.
  • Part of the press box at the MacInnes Student Ice Arena will be named the Bob Olson Broadcast Center during Michigan Tech’s Winter Carnival on Feb. 10. Olson is in his 30th year as the broadcaster for the Huskies.
  • Last week, North Dakota coach Blais said if one team swept the North Dakota-St. Cloud State series last weekend, that would pretty much do it for the race for first place. North Dakota swept. Wonder if we can hold Blais to that statement?
  • Despite the sweep, St. Cloud still needs only five more wins this season for a Division I team record for victories in a season. The Huskies had 23 wins last season and in 1996-97.

    On the Docket

    Next weekend is Winter Carnival in Houghton, Mich., and Mike Sertich and Michigan Tech have an interesting opponent. Minnesota-Duluth, Sertich’s old team comes to town for the always-interesting weekend.

    For the only time in the regular season, North Dakota and Wisconsin, the two teams that faced off in last year’s WCHA Final Five title game, get together next weekend in Grand Forks, N.D.

    Vote Now

    If you know of a player who doesn’t get the recognition he deserves, send an e-mail to [email protected] with the player’s name and why you think he deserves more attention than he gets. The all-underappreciated team will be making a return soon.

  • This Week In Division III: Feb. 1, 2001

    Another Marquee Weekend

    This coming weekend won’t feature as many critical games as we had last week, but there’s still a fair share of exciting games with serious playoff implications on tap.

    In the East, Norwich and Middlebury travel to Bowdoin and Colby in a clash of titans, and out West, it’s round one between Wisconsin-Superior and St. Norbert.

    Around the Leagues

    ECAC West

    The RIT-Elmira game lived up to expectations as RIT pulled out a 4-3 overtime victory in front of a capacity crowd of 3,314 at the Murray Athletic Center.

    The Tigers, getting a boost from the return of goaltender Tyler Euverman, who had missed the previous three games with a shoulder injury, took a 1-0 first-period lead on a Ryan Fairbarn goal. The Soaring Eagles got the crowd going with a pair of quick goals near the end of the second period to go into the locker room with a 2-1 lead. It was the first time the top-ranked Tigers had trailed after two periods all season.

    “The second goal (by Dean Jackson after Eddie Caissie had scored 20 seconds earlier) really frustrated me,” said RIT head coach Wayne Wilson. “In the second period Elmira outmuscled us for those two goals, and that is what we like to do to opponents. But between the second and third period I really challenged the guys and told them that Elmira was trying to take that number-one ranking away from us, and I thought we got a strong, gritty effort by everyone in the third period.”

    RIT responded with a pair of goals to regain the lead, but Elmira struck on a six-on-four with just 30 seconds left. With Mike Bournazakis in the penalty box for RIT and Elmira goaltender Rob Ligas on the bench, Mike Hulbig wristed a rebound past Euverman to tie the game.

    At 2:58 of overtime, Mike Bournazakis redeemed himself by tipping a shot by Jerry Galway past Ligas.

    “When Elmira tied the game, I though oh (darn), here we go,” said Wilson. “But the guys really bounced back well in the overtime.”

    How important was the game? RIT is now squarely in the driver’s seat. The ECAC West tiebreakers are head-to-head results (W-L-T, not goal differential), conference wins, record against common opponents, and overall record. Elmira is idle this weekend, but the Tigers are at Hobart Friday and Manhattanville on Saturday. A sweep should lock up home ice in the ECAC West playoffs, because even if RIT loses its final games to Hamilton and Elmira, the Tigers would still have a better record versus common opponents, and a better winning percentage. But the slightest slip by the Tigers this weekend opens the door again.

    ECAC East

    The Salem State Vikings, ranked eighth in the latest USCHO.com Division III poll, played two tough games at Norwich and Middlebury, but came away oh-for-Vermont, as so many teams have done in recent years.

    First Salem lost 3-2 at Middlebury, but the Panthers need overtime before putting the Vikings away. Shots were 38-13 in favor of Middlebury.

    On Saturday, Norwich defeated Salem 3-1 behind a two-goal performance from freshman Chris Petracco. The win gave the Cadets sole possession of first place with six games to play.

    Petracco had a great weekend, also scoring three goals against Southern Maine on Friday as the Cadets romped, 10-2. In each game, the rookie forward from Weston, Ont., scored more goals than Norwich’s opposition could muster.

    NESCAC

    Third-ranked Middlebury extended its winning streak to five with victories over Salem State and Southern Maine. The first-place Panthers’ lead over Colby is a single point, and the teams will do battle on Saturday. On Friday, Colby hosts Norwich and Middlebury will be at Bowdoin. Sounds like four great hockey games.

    Trinity stumbled again last weekend, losing 2-1 on home ice to Hamilton on Saturday. The Bantams, who led the NESCAC for most of the early season, now are three points out of first with six games to play.

    Watch out for the Lord Jeffs. Amherst pounded Hamilton (9-0) and Skidmore (8-2) last weekend to jump into the USCHO.com poll for the first time this season. USCHO Offensive Player of the Week Bob Miele led the way with six goals, all on the power play. Amherst, currently in fifth place in the standings, travels to Salem State and Southern Maine this weekend.

    SUNYAC

    With just a little over two weeks left in the regular season, fourth-ranked Plattsburgh holds a two-point lead over Potsdam in the standings. Each team has five league games left, including a showdown at Plattsburgh in the regular-season finale for both teams on February 13.

    Oswego began last weekend just two points out as well, but was upset at home by Geneseo, 4-3. The Lakers rebounded to defeat Williams 6-3 in a non-conference game on Tuesday by spotting the Ephmen a 3-0 lead before scoring the final six goals of the contest. Oswego travels to Buffalo State and Fredonia this weekend.

    Cortland took three of a possible four points last weekend to solidify its hold on the final playoff spot. The Red Dragons lead Buffalo State by three points with five to play. The two teams square off on Friday in Buffalo.

    ECAC Northeast

    Johnson & Wales and defending champ Wentworth are tied for first with identical 11-1 conference records. Each team has five games left, including what could be a showdown on February 18.

    Tufts trails by four points, but has two games in hand on the leaders. Lebanon Valley and Mass.-Dartmouth, which scored a big 5-4 over longtime rival Fitchburg State last Saturday, are also in the hunt.

    Only eight of the 14 Division III teams make the ECAC Northeast playoffs, and with just three weeks to go in the regular season, its time to start watching the teams on the bubble. It may turn into a battle of Massachusetts state schools, as Fitchburg, Worcester, Framingham and Plymouth are currently in positions six through 10. Stay tuned.

    NCHA

    The big game out west this weekend will be Friday, when first place St. Norbert hosts second-place Wisconsin-Superior. Both are top-ten teams, with the Yellowjackets holding the number-two spot in the USCHO.com poll, and St. Norbert ranked sixth.

    The teams will clash again on the final day of the NCHA regular season (2/10) at Superior, but if St. Norbert wins round one, and then sweeps last place St. Scholastica (just 1-9 in conference so far) then that last game will be meaningless.

    Third place Wisconsin-River Falls hasn’t fared well since the departure of star forward Shane Fukushima, losing three of its last four games. The Falcons have four games left: two against Wisconsin-Eau Claire and two against Wisconsin-Stevens Point. The Pointers and Falcons are currently tied for third, along with Wisconsin-Stout. Home ice in the playoffs is on the line as one of those teams will be on the road in two weeks.

    MIAC

    It looked for a while like Concordia was going to run away with things, but the Cobbers have been pulled back into the pack in recent weeks. Concordia is just 3-3 in its last six conference games, while Bethel has gone 5-0-1 during that span to gain a first-place tie. St. Thomas has also come on, going 5-1 in its last six games to trail the leaders by a single point.

    St. John’s and Augsburg are tied for the fourth and final playoff spot, with St. Mary’s and St.Olaf’s hopes fading. The Cardinals have series remaining against Augsburg and St. John’s, so they might be able to sneak in if they can reverse a 1-7-2 skid. Ditto for the Olies, who have three series left against teams ahead of them in the standings.

    MCHA

    Northland took control of third place with a sweep of MSOE last weekend. Lumberjacks goaltender Brian Wilmot made 64 saves in 5-4 and 5-2 victories.

    That leaves MSOE and Lawrence to battle for the fourth and final playoff spot. The Raiders lead the Viking by two points in the standings, and have two games in hand. It may come down to the final weekend of the regular season, when the two teams square off in a weekend series.

    Correction

    In a recent column, I asked if anyone could recall a team sweeping Norwich and Middlebury, and I thought we had the answer when a reader from Colby remembered a 1996 sweep by the White Mules. But Timothy Michael Boyd recalls a November 1997 sweep by Connecticut College, which defeated Norwich 5-3 and Middlebury 4-3 on the opening week of the season.

    Picks

    Last week: 9-4
    On the season: 42-21-2 (.662)

    This week:

    Norwich at Colby (3/2) and Bowdoin (3/3) — This the second-toughest road trip in the ECAC East/NESCAC, and I think Norwich will struggle a bit. Colby 3, Norwich 2; Norwich 5, Bowdoin 4

    No. 3 Middlebury at Bowdoin (3/2) and Colby (3/3) — Middlebury is starting to peak and can pull away in the NESCAC with a sweep. Middlebury 2, Bowdoin 1; Middlebury 4, Colby 2.

    Geneseo at No. 4 Plattsburgh (3/2) — The Ice Knights are one of the most talented teams in the SUNYAC but have underachieved all season. They’re coming off a big win at Oswego. Can they do it again? Probably not. Plattsburgh 7, Geneseo 3

    Oswego at Fredonia (3/2) — The loser of this game is probably out of the running for a first-round bye in the playoffs. Can the Fredonia defense stifle one of the most potent offenses in D-III? Yes, but not enough to win the game. Oswego 3, Fredonia 1.

    No. 2 Wisconsin-Superior at No. 6 St. Norbert (2/2) — It doesn’t get much better than this. The teams will do it again the following weekend, but I think round one will go to the ‘Jackets. Wisconsin-Superior 5, St. Norbert 3

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