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SUNYAC Newsletter: Nov. 29, 2000

Potsdam, Plattsburgh Defeat Norwich; Oswego Wins Manchester PAL Cup; Geneseo Sweeps

The two SUNYAC schools in the Primelink Shootout both beat defending national champion Norwich. Potsdam State won 4-3, and Plattsburgh State 6-1. However, both lost to host and tournament champion Middlebury by identical 3-0 scores.

Oswego State won the Manchester PAL Cup, defeating Southern Maine, 6-4, and St. Anselm, 9-3. Geneseo State didn’t compete in a tournament, but did play two games, both wins, 4-2 over Manhattanville and 7-2 over Skidmore. Other highlights included Cortland State defeating Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, 3-2 in overtime, and Brockport State tying Bowdoin, 3-3.

Team-by-Team Report

PLATTSBURGH — The Cardinals went into the Primelink Shootout ranked No. 1 in the country with a chance to solidify that slot as they faced some of the top teams in the polls.

Unfortunately for Plattsburgh State, they stumbled the first night, losing to Middlebury, 3-0, only getting 11 shots on net. Niklas Sundberg made 31 saves, and held Middlebury off the scoreboard for the first 35 minutes. Plattsburgh bounced back in the consolation game defeating defending national champions, Norwich, 6-1. Bryan Murray got a pair of goals. Guy Come, Jason Kilcan, Brendon Hodge, and Mark Coletta also scored. Sundberg again made 31 saves, this time for the win. Murray made the All-Tournament team. Plattsburgh gets back to league play hosting Cortland and Oswego.

OSWEGO — The Great Lakers won the Manchester PAL Cup by defeating Southern Maine, 6-4, and St. Anselm, 9-3. In the first game, Oswego State had to fend off a 2-0 first period deficit. Oswego took a 3-2 lead on goals by Mike Lukajic, Derek Kern, and Lukajic again. After Southern Maine tied the game, Oswego scored three times again by John Sullivan, Joe Pecoraro, and Kern. Joe Lofberg only needed to make 13 saves for the win. The second night, it was Oswego that took the 2-0 lead en route to the victory. Lukajic, Sullivan, Steve Cavallaro scored a pair of goals. Craig Bland, Joe Carrabs, and Jonathon Hoose got a goal apiece. Tyson Gajda made 22 saves. Oswego travels to Potsdam and Plattsburgh for two key conference games.

POTSDAM — The Bears made a big jump in the polls to number 8 after beating Norwich, 4-3, in the first round of the Primelink Shootout. Potsdam State tied the game in the first period on a goal by Brian Rice. They tied it again in the second period on a shorthanded breakaway by Jeff Milroy with just 19 seconds left. The Bears took the lead on a Mike McCabe powerplay goal. After Norwich tied the game, Potsdam scored the game winner on Rice’s second goal of the night, with a one handed shot. Ryan Venturelli made 23 saves. The Bears than ran into the Middlebury juggernaut losing the championship game, 3-0, only getting 10 shots on goal. Despite that, Venturelli’s 26 saves combined with the previous night’s effort was good enough to be named to the All-Tournament team along with Rice. Potsdam hosts Oswego and Cortland this weekend.

FREDONIA — The Blue Devils had the week off. They return to action hosting Geneseo and Brockport.

CORTLAND — The Red Dragons played two superb games in the Babson Invitational, nearly coming away with the title against the host team. First, they had to squeeze by Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, 3-2, in overtime. Greg Menchen gave Cortland State a first period lead, and Mike Schall gave them a second period lead. MCLA tied the game early in the third period. Overtime lasted for 9:23 before Jeff Olsen won it for the Red Dragons. Mark Paine made 29 saves including five in overtime. Against Babson in the championship game, Cortland tied it in the second period on a goal by Tim Kneer. After Babson took a 4-1 lead, Cortland staged a comeback with Scott Louis and Olsen scoring, but could not get the equalizer, losing 4-3. John Larnerd made 30 saves. Earlier in the week, Cortland lost to Skidmore, 6-5. Cortland has another opportunity to prove themselves as they travel to Plattsburgh and Potsdam.

GENESEO — The Ice Knights played a pair of games on the road, and swept them beating Manhattanville, 4-2, and Skidmore, 7-2. Geneseo State found themselves down early in the game until Tony Scorsone tied it. After Manhattanville took an early second period lead, a pair of goals by Peter Boudette, the game winner with 1:39 left, and an empty netter by Scorsone gave the Ice Knights the win. Kevin Koury made 29 saves. Geneseo had an easier time against Skidmore. Seven different players scored — Jack Staley, Brian Avery, Matt Lester, Derek Powell, Scott Gifis, Aaron Coleman, Pat McKendry, and Jason Gurnett. Koury made 34 saves. Geneseo plays three games on the road this week at Hobart, Fredonia, and Buffalo State.

BROCKPORT — The Golden Eagles competed in the Colby/Bowdoin Faceoff Classic which had a preset format. The first night, Brockport State lost to Colby, 4-1, but the score did not indicate how close the game was. Brockport’s lone goal was scored by Christian Christensen on a power play that tied the game. With Colby holding a 2-1 lead, Brockport pulled their goalie only to let up two empty-netters, the first on a power play, the second shorthanded. Tom Payment made 39 saves. The second night, Brockport played to a 3-3 tie against Bowdoin. Brockport jumped out to a 2-0 lead on goals by Darren Kennedy and Drew Morley. Brandon Marineau gave Brockport a 3-1 lead 7:41 into the third period. The Golden Eagles could not hold on for the upset, allowing Bowdoin to score twice in the final 6-1/2 minutes. Payment made 32 saves. Brockport travels to Buffalo State and Fredonia.

BUFFALO STATE — The Bengals got to eat turkey with their families. Buffalo State gets back into action with home games against Brockport and Geneseo.

Game of the Week

Oswego at Potsdam. Whenever these two teams get together, you can be guaranteed to have a thriller. They seem to always hold the most exciting playoff series, including last year’s amazing semifinal round that saw Potsdam score three times with their goalie pulled to eke out a miracle. That game overshadowed a regular season contest that didn’t see anyone score a goal till the waning minutes despite end to end action. This is the first time they play each other since that playoff game, and to add fuel to the fire, it will be for second place.

This Week In Division III: Nov. 29, 2000

Close, But No Recount Necessary

The first USCHO.com regular season Division III men’s poll is out, and, much like the preseason version, one team doesn’t stand out. A total of 19 squads were mentioned, with four different teams getting at least two first-place votes.

Middlebury claimed the top spot, on the basis of opening its season with four consecutive shutout wins, and claiming the championship of the Primelink tournament. That’s a worthy Number One in my book.

Turkey and Tournaments

No less than seven tournaments took place last weekend, including the two best of the season, the Primelink Great Northern Shootout and the Elmira Invitational. All eight teams involved were either ranked in the top ten in the USCHO.com preseason poll, or are ranked in the top ten now.

Two of the tournaments, the Bowdoin/Colby Faceoff Classic and the Elmira Invitational, were using the dreaded “fixed” format, where the pairings are predetermined. But in both cases, all’s well that ended well.

The two teams which won on the first day wound up meeting on the second day anyway. In Maine, RIT defeated Colby 8-2 after each team had won the previous day. In Elmira, Wisconsin-Stevens Point met Williams on Sunday after they had both triumphed on Saturday. Point won that one, 5-1.

The Primelink was dominated by the host Middlebury Panthers, who held Plattsburgh and Potsdam to a total of 11 and 10 shots, respectively, winning each game 3-0. The young Panthers held Potsdam to a total of two shots throughout the first two periods of the championship game. Wow.

The upset of the week also happened in the Primelink. Defending national champion Norwich, coming off a pair of opening-weekend blowout wins, was beaten by Potsdam, 4-3, in the opening round. That game dropped the Cadets out of the top ten for the first time in over a year, and vaulted the Bears into the eighth spot.

While the host of the Primelink has now won all three titles, the homestanding Elmira Soaring Eagles came in last in their own tournament, losing to Wisconsin-Stevens Point and St. Thomas by identical 6-4 scores. Elmira has played an absolutely killer schedule, already taking on five ranked teams in its first 10 games. They’re the best 4-6 team in the nation right now.

“We played the No. 2 team in the nation (Stevens Point) evenly most of the way. It was anyone’s game, ” Elmira head coach Glenn Thomaris told the press after the loss on Sunday. “And we did well against No. 10 (St. Thomas).”

At the other end of the spectrum is Elmira’s ECAC West rival, RIT. The third-ranked Tigers (8-0) really haven’t been tested yet, having only played one ranked team so far, a 6-3 win over number ten Oswego in the season opener for both teams. That three goal margin of victory is the closest any team has come to RIT all season (Bowdoin also lost to the Tigers 6-3).

RIT’s strength so far has been its power play, which is clicking at a whopping 50% through eight games (27/54). That average has remained consistent since their first game of the season. How long can they keep it up?

The Tigers will face their toughest challenge to date this weekend when they host the U.S. Under-18 National Developmental Team for a pair of games. The NDT features the best young American-born players, most of whom will go on to Division I schools and pro careers. The team has already beaten Michigan State this season, so RIT should get a much better gauge on where it stands.

The only bad news for RIT is that both games, while exhibitions, must count towards RIT’s 25-game limit.

“We were hoping to get an exemption from the limit for at least one of the games,” said RIT head coach Wayne Wilson. “That’s the way it works in Division I and with women’s teams, but there was no provision for Division III.”

Sources indicate that the rule will be amended next season to include Division III. Good news for the Tigers, who will play the NTD again next season, this time in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Another East-West Showdown Ahead

There’s another East-West matchup this weekend, and for the first time this season, it doesn’t involve Elmira. The Soaring Eagles have hosted Wisconsin-Superior for a pair, as well as St. Thomas and Wisconsin-Stevens Point.

This time the West will play host, as Point and St. Norbert entertain Norwich and Middlebury in one of the most highly anticipated series of the season. On Friday, St. Norbert will host the Cadets, and the Pointers will have Middlebury in what has turned into a great, albeit infrequent, rivalry. The teams switch the following evening.

I’m going to miss these kind of marquee games once the conference schedules get back into full swing.

Those D-III Fans Are Smart

As I’ve mentioned here before, NCHA correspondent Tim Somers runs the “H3IP”, or “Hockey Three Internet Poll”, where fans, as opposed to coaches and media, vote for the top 10.

While you’d think this would be a popularity contest dominated by teams with the largest number of internet-savvy fans, it’s not. This week’s H3IP and USCHO.com poll, done independently and released at almost the same time, are very close, indeed. Check it out at http://students.uwsp.edu/tsome517/hockey3/.

Hats off to a very knowledgeable group of fans, who vote with their heads rather than their hearts.

Picks

Last Week: 4-2
On the season: 15-6

This Week: Wow, what a bevy of Top 10 games to pick!

No. 10 Oswego at No. 8 Potsdam (12/1) – It’s been a long time since both of these teams were ranked at the same time. Each is on the rise in the SUNYAC, and this should be a dandy. Home ice makes the difference. Potsdam 4, Oswego 3.

No. 7 Wisconsin-Superior at No. 5 Wisconsin-River Falls (12/1) – Games like this one will go a long way in deciding the NCHA championship. River Falls looks like the class of the league at this point. UWRF 5, UWS 3.

Norwich at No. 6 St. Norbert (12/1)- The Cadets are coming off their first two losses of the calendar year 2000. Will they rebound? Yep. Norwich 5, St. Norbert 4.

No. 1 Middlebury at No. 4 Wisconsin-Stevens Point (12/1)- This should be the game of the weekend. Will the Panthers be able to keep their defensive lockdown working outside the Chip Kenyon Arena? I think the shutout and winning streaks both end. UWSP 4, Middlebury 3.

No. 10 Oswego at No. 2 Plattsburgh (12/2) – The rivalry continues, and so does Plattsburgh’s record of home domination. Plattsburgh 6, Oswego 3.

Norwich at No. 4 Wisconsin-Stevens Point – I like the Pointers to go 2-0 this weekend after a gritty performance in Elmira over Thanksgiving. UWSP 4, Norwich 1.

No.1 Middlebury at No. 6. St. Norbert – I think the Panthers will match up better against the Green Knights, and earn a split. Middlebury 5, St. Norbert 3.

Walsh: Too Early To Tell

Maine coach Shawn Walsh won’t know for another six-to-eight weeks just how effective the immunotherapy treatments that he received at UCLA in early September and October were in attacking his kidney cancer. The early signs, however, are encouraging.

“I had a CAT scan done that showed that it’s too early to tell whether I’m going to be a responder or not to the treatments I went through,” he said. “The results were inconclusive, but they definitely showed no progression.

That’s what you look for when you’ve got an aggressive cancer, which is what I have. In most cases [it’s aggressive], but in my case it doesn’t seem to be progressing at this point.”

Walsh will undergo another CAT scan in six-to-eight weeks. Until then, his fight remains in a holding pattern.

“That’s the way it is with this disease,” he said. “You just keep dealing with it. There was a cover story in last Friday’s Boston Herald about a vaccine that works against kidney cancer. There are a lot of things that can be a next step. There are [new treatments] that in time are becoming available. That’s why time [in the form of no tumor progress] is good.”

This Week In The WCHA: Nov. 23, 2000

Blais Fires Back

Just call it Whistlegate.

WCHA assistant referee Jay Kleven was suspended indefinitely last week by league supervisor of officials Greg Shepherd because of two questionable calls in the Minnesota-North Dakota series in Grand Forks, N.D., two weekends ago.

The penalties — a cross-checking minor on Nov. 10 and a boarding call on Nov. 11, both on Minnesota — were wrong, Shepherd said.

The cross-checking call should have resulted in coincidental penalties and the boarding call was viewed by referee Mike Schmitt, Shepherd told Gregg Wong of the St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press. Assistant referees are not supposed to call minor penalties if the referee has seen the play and chosen not to make a call.

“He used poor judgment,” Shepherd said.

But here’s where this all gets interesting. North Dakota coach Dean Blais is flabbergasted by this situation.

“I was upset that I read it in the newspaper, first of all,” Blais said. “[It] insinuated that we won and tied [against] Minnesota because of home cooking. I reviewed the calls that he made and they were good calls; I was disappointed that there weren’t more calls made by the A.R.s, both ways.

“What does that say as a league when a good young official, whether it be a referee or an A.R., is suspended indefinitely? For what reason? He wasn’t favoring North Dakota. My point was, we don’t seem to get a lot of calls our way anyway. I’m not paranoid. I’ve been watching hockey a long time. Is that because we’re playing the University of Minnesota that that happened?”

The smart move on Blais’ last question is to plead the fifth, but he has a point on his other claims. Assistant referees are a valuable part of the officiating crew because the referee, as any disgruntled fan will tell you, can’t see everything. It’s the A.R.’s job to keep an eye on the rest of the ice.

When an official is reprimanded for making a call he felt was necessary, it opens a can of worms. Say a referee calls for a penalty shot when he observes a defenseman cover the puck with his hand in the crease. If, on video review the next week, it is proved that the defenseman merely pushed the puck out rather than covering it, will the referee be suspended?

"Now when an A.R. [assistant referee] is suspended because he made a call, if I was an A.R. I wouldn’t call anything."

— UND coach Dean Blais

“Is it setting a precedent now?” Blais asked. “I’ve got a call in to [WCHA commissioner] Bruce McLeod. I had one in to Greg Shepherd asking the same thing. What does that say? Are the officials now going to band together and quit or protest? I would.

“[Assistant referee] Randy Schmitt made [a call] against Duluth [last weekend] and the other A.R. made one against us, both the right calls. So was Jay Kleven’s as far as I’m concerned.”

Blais is also concerned assistant referees may be hesitant to make valid calls.

“Especially when you’re playing Minnesota. Maybe you don’t call them when you’re playing Minnesota,” he said.

“The referee is supposed to watch the puck and the A.R.s watch everything behind. Now when an A.R. is suspended because he made a call, if I was an A.R. I wouldn’t call anything.

“[That could be bad for] the integrity of the league.”

He said it.

A Fight Ahead

Colorado College faces quite a struggle in the coming weeks. And not just from the opposing team.

Injuries have yet again decimated the Tigers’ roster, already one of the smallest in the league.

“We’re looking at about a six-to-eight-week window that we just need to persevere,” CC coach Scott Owens said. “We have some tough games — Wisconsin, Providence, BU, North Dakota, Bemidji and Air Force. We’re trying to keep our head above water and pick up as many wins as we can during that period. But also we’re using it as an opportunity for some other people to step forward that we hope, in the long run, will make us a better team come February and March.”

The Tigers fought off the problems last weekend to gain a split at Wisconsin with an overtime goal by Alex Kim on Saturday.

But, as has become almost a trend, it was a costly weekend at the Kohl Center for CC.

Two years ago, the Tigers lost Darren Clark for the rest of the season because of a broken arm suffered against the Badgers. The injury, suffered Feb. 11, 1999, ended the collegiate career for Clark, then a senior.

Last weekend, with Mark Cullen already out because of a compression fracture in his neck and spine, top defenseman and captain Paul Manning was lost to an injured kneecap on Friday.

“It’s gone from a kneecap to maybe a severely sprained knee,” Owens said. “In any event, they do not think it’s going to need surgery. There’s a lot of play there, no pun intended, in terms of when he can come back.”

The Tigers hope to have Cullen back by Jan. 1 and Manning will be out a minimum of two weeks.

And that makes this upcoming stretch interesting for the Tigers. They play Providence and Boston University this weekend and Air Force and Bemidji State next weekend. Those are four non-conference games the Tigers could use to rest some bodies.

But they also need to win the games, especially the ones this weekend, for potential Pairwise points later in the season. They would hate to be No. 13 when the No. 12 team is Providence or BU.

“On the one hand, you look at four non-conference games,” Owens said, “but on the other hand, Providence is about eighth in the country and BU is just lurking, they’re waiting to get on a roll.”

But the Tigers could be poised for another roll, too, especially if Peter Sejna stays hot. The WCHA’s top-scoring rookie, has seven goals and nine assists this season and has assisted on three game-winning goals, including the winner last Saturday.

“He wasn’t picked to be first or second in the rookie balloting, which surprised me a bit because he led the USHL in scoring by 19 points,” Owens said. “I guess it doesn’t surprise me that he’s doing well. Maybe the fact, so well. But he’s an older kid and obviously an excellent player.

“With Mark Cullen out, he’s been forced to carry more of the scoring load.”

Hitting Their Stride

Once North Dakota got through the tough early part of its schedule, it could get down to business.

After starting shakily, the Sioux are 8-2-4, 7-2-1 in the WCHA and in the middle of things as usual.

“We had a tough start with the schedule and everything,” Blais said. “Just the circumstances of having three days of practice and having to fly to Michigan to play New Hampshire and Michigan, and having to go to Maine. That’s a real tough start. We played quite well even though they were good teams. I think we’re playing better now than we were then.”

A lot of that is due to the Sioux’s top line, which many people, Blais included, consider the best in the country right now. Jeff Panzer centers Bryan Lundbohm and Ryan Bayda.

Panzer leads the team with 29 points; Lundbohm has 16 goals, far and away leading the conference in that category; and Bayda has a nine-game point-scoring streak.

“I don’t see them tailing off because they can all skate and sink and grind. They’re all good hockey players,” Blais said. “If the officials are calling the obstruction and clutching and grabbing, they can outskate anyone. If they’re allowed to be hauled down and clutch-and-grabbed, they’re ineffective because they’re not 6-foot-2, 6-foot-3 where they can skate through that.”

News And Views

  • Here’s a telling statement on why Alaska-Anchorage is doing so well this season. The Seawolves scored three goals in a series last weekend, the lowest for a two-game set this season. Not meaning to criticize, but remember when three goals in a series was good for UAA?
  • Minnesota, at 9-1-2, is off to its best start since the 1984-85 season. That season Brad Buetow, in his last year with the Gophers, led them to a 10-1-1 start and the NCAA tournament with a 31-13-3 record.
  • Minnesota-Duluth is 11-1 against New Hampshire, its opponent on Friday in the Sheraton/Howard Bank Classic in Burlington, Vt. Something tells me the tables are turning on that one.
  • Bulldogs goaltender Adam Coole dislocated his right thumb last Saturday in a 5-2 loss to North Dakota. He’s listed as questionable for this weekend’s tournament.

    On The Docket

    It’s tournament and nonconference time for WCHA teams this weekend. Minnesota and Wisconsin host the SBC College Hockey Showcase with Michigan and Michigan State.

    Duluth and Minnesota State-Mankato play Vermont and New Hampshire in the Sheraton/Howard Bank Classic in Burlington, Vt.

    But the most interesting pair of games may take place in Colorado Springs, Colo., where Colorado College hosts Providence on Friday and Boston University on Saturday. Can CC translate its success in the WCHA into nonconference wins?

    On The Side

    Apologies for the brevity of the column this week. Hey, even USCHO writers get some time off for Thanksgiving, don’t they?

    Thanks for reading, and Happy Thanksgiving.

  • This Week In Hockey East: Nov. 23, 2000

    Friar Fever

    The Hockey East coaches picked them in the preseason to finish sixth in the league. The USCHO Season Preview pegged them one notch lower at seventh. Instead they’re number eight in the country in the latest USCHO.com Poll and arguably deserve to be higher.

    The Providence College Friars have been the biggest positive surprise of the league. Their sweep of a home-and-home series with Northeastern last weekend propelled them to a 7-2-1 record and that number-eight ranking.

    So is coach Paul Pooley surprised at the team’s torrid start?

    “Not really,” he says. “We thought we’d have the type of kids who would work hard and expect to do well. They didn’t care if they were freshmen or sophomores. The seniors were really focused and hungry to be a really good hockey club.

    “That’s what we’ve had since Day One. We came back to camp in the best shape of any team I’ve been associated with.”

    Even so, Pooley wasn’t happy with what he saw in Providence’s 4-2 exhibition win over Acadia.

    “We changed everything we did system-wise after that game,” he says. “We wanted to be aggressive and we still want to be aggressive, but it’s from a smarter perspective. We tried to keep it simpler and haven’t asked things of people that maybe we couldn’t do yet.

    “It was nice to have a two-week break between the Acadia game and our first game against Miami [so we could adjust.] After the Miami and Lake Superior games, I thought we had things in order for the most part. I thought we could be a pretty good hockey club if we continued to work hard and do the things we’re capable of doing.”

    Pooley doesn’t see a likely return to the original systems even though the players are maturing.

    “If we do tinker, it will probably be with more of a defensive strategy than an offensive strategy,” he says. “What we’re doing now is giving us some opportunities to score. We’re scoring enough goals.

    “We’re not scoring as many as I think we can because we’re missing a lot of chances, but at least we’re getting the chances. Hopefully the goals will come as the season goes along.”

    The biggest question facing the Friars going into last weekend concerned their ability to transport their home success to the road. The preponderance of their games had been at Schneider Arena, where they were 5-0-1. They had split their two road contests.

    “Last year we started with seven of the first eight games on the road,” says Pooley. “This year we’ve had a home schedule which has been nice because it’s given us the chance to grow as a hockey club. We’ve played well at home, obviously. That’s been a real positive for us, for us to learn and gain confidence.”

    Providence held serve at home on Friday against Northeastern, running PC’s home record to 6-0-1 with a 3-1 win. Could the Friars complete the sweep with a win at Matthews Arena, where the Huskies had been undefeated? The Friars jumped out to a 2-0 lead, but Northeastern tied it early in the third period.

    Not only was the momentum going in the wrong direction, but several top Friars were out of the lineup. Top scorer Devin Rask had been assessed a game disqualification and automatic one-game suspension in Friday’s contest because of a disputed butt-ending penalty. Headaches had sidelined Regan Kelly for precautionary reasons after he took a big hit on Friday night. Doug Wright had broken a hand. Drew Omicioli was out because of a coach’s decision. Peter Fregoe couldn’t skate in the third period because of a hip pointer.

    “We were playing three lines and they tied it up, 2-2,” says Pooley. “We had four freshmen and a sophomore going, but we found a way to win that game [despite] being so shorthanded.

    “Saturday night we grew. Now we have to take it on the road again. Colorado [College] and Denver will be a tough weekend for us. It’s another opportunity for us to grow as a hockey club.”

    A big reason for Providence’s success so far has been its top line of Rask, Fregoe and Jon DiSalvatore. The trio clicked last February when first assembled and has picked up steam ever since.

    “They like playing together and they all add something different to the line,” says Pooley. “They’re not all the same hockey players, which is good.

    “They feel that they want to be successful. You can’t tell Jon DiSalvatore that he’s just a sophomore because he doesn’t think that way. He wants to be one of our key players. Peter Fregoe has always been good hockey player. And Devin Rask is an older kid who expects to do well.

    “You don’t put labels on those kids. Sophomore? Doesn’t mean anything to them. They’re hockey players.”

    An even bigger surprise is the second line of Adam Lee, J.J. Picinic and Marc Suderman who combined for four goals in all of last year, but had four in the just Saturday night win at Northeastern. Picinic now has seven while his linemates each have another two.

    “One of the things that has helped our team this year is the emergence of [that] line,” says Pooley. “That line is good defensively, but they’ve been scoring as well. That’s taken the pressure off Devin’s line because they’ve been able to chip in goals on a regular basis to help us.”

    The biggest question mark for the club, however, had been on defense. Departures had left only co-captains Jay Leach and Matt Libby along with Shawn Weiman. In the USCHO Providence Season Preview, Pooley talked about his blueliners potentially becoming “one of our stronger suits as the year goes along,” but considering the youth involved that seemed a bit of whistling past the graveyard.

    The freshmen defensemen have been a revelation. Jason Platt has been hurt, but Dominic Torretti has been solid, Stephen Wood even more impressive in both ends and Kelly has quarterbacked the first power-play unit.

    “Those guys are good learners, they’re good hockey players and they’re smart,” says Pooley. “They have a good, solid attitude that they’re here to work. They’re coachable. They want to become good hockey players and they’ve all played a lot of hockey [even though] they’re all freshmen.

    “They have the attitude that they’re going to go out there and follow the system. They’re going to follow Libby and Leach and listen to the coaches. It’s been great.

    “Defensively now, we’re better than we were last year just because of the attitude we’ve had. Those kids keep the game simple. With Leach and Libby playing outstanding for us, they’ve just followed along.”

    In goal, Nolan Schaefer has rebounded from an injury-plagued freshman season to post some of the best numbers in the country: a 5-1-0 record, a 1.67 GAA and a .951 save percentage. Senior Boyd Ballard has been pushed to the background by Schaefer, at least for now, but he also has strong numbers (2-1-1, 2.69, .920) and played well in Saturday’s win.

    “Nolan worked really hard this summer,” says Pooley. “Coming in, he was in good shape. He has the type of attitude that he wants to be a good hockey player and he’s willing to work at it.

    “Both Nolan and Boyd have really, really worked hard in practices and off the ice. They push each other and that’s been a nice thing to have. They’re friends, but they’re competitive and they both want to play.

    “Having Boyd go out on Saturday night and play well after Nolan had played three games in a row is a positive for everybody.”

    Despite the many positive signs, Pooley knows the Friars aren’t a finished product yet.

    “We need to continue to get better at certain things,” he says. “Our power play is not what it needs to be. We’re still fooling around with that a little bit. We’re looking for one or two guys to put in the right situations.

    “Our PK has been good, but I think it can be better. Our PK forecheck can get better.

    “The other thing that we can do is get a third line. I see Mike Robinson and Cody Loughlean both in there, both freshmen who are playing very well for us right now. They’re really getting it. But we need to find somebody who we can put on left wing there and really solidify that. We’ll have a fourth line after we find out who our third line left winger is.”

    Not A Happy Camper

    UMass-Amherst coach Don “Toot” Cahoon was pleased but realistic earlier in the season when the Minutemen defeated UMass-Lowell and New Hampshire to go to 3-3-1 overall and hold a share of first place in Hockey East with a 3-1-0 league mark.

    Losses of 3-2 and 3-1 at Nebraska-Omaha — one very tough barn to play in — might have been considered building blocks to better things.

    But a 2-2 tie with Connecticut prompted Cahoon to say, “I give UConn high marks for coming to compete and give our guys real poor grades on that part. We’re not a good enough team that we can play without emotion.”

    The wheels totally fell off the next game, a 9-2 shellacking at the hands of Rensselaer in which UMass trailed 6-0 at the end of one period. Reporters after the embarrassment found Cahoon in a quietly reflective mood.

    “I’m just sitting back right now,” he said. “Some may look at it and criticize, but right now I am just sitting back and seeing what’s happening. I don’t know what to do right now, but when I do I’ll act with a real aggressive passion about it.

    “Right now I am looking at who wants to play and who doesn’t want to play. There are some guys out here who obviously do and some who obviously don’t.

    “When I do act, I don’t know how I will respond or how they will respond. I came into this situation [just this year] and I don’t know them well right now. I haven’t been through adversity with them yet.

    “Who knows? Their ideas and my ideas may be worlds apart. I’m not looking to create problems, but if I do, then we’ll have to deal with them.”

    Another Unhappy Camper

    There are losses and then there are losses. Merrimack absorbed 6-1 and 7-2 poundings at the hands of Boston College this past week. In the first debacle, the Warriors were outshot, 31-13; in the second it was even worse: 56-22, including 26 BC first-period shots.

    While the Eagles have shown an ability to really put the hammer down unlike any other team in the league, Merrimack coach Chris Serino was still livid after both games.

    “We can compete 100 times better than we did tonight,” he said after the first loss on Friday. “Tonight, we didn’t just get outplayed, we were out-competed. I can accept being outplayed, but the day I accept being out-competed is the day I hang ’em up.”

    Serino was every bit as blunt after Tuesday’s loss.

    “We have to start all over,” he said. “We have to start with basic defense and work out. Defense is where it starts. We didn’t learn anything between Friday and tonight.

    “We just didn’t play any defense. We may have well not even been in the defensive zone. We were nothing but obstacles for them to go around. There were a couple of shifts out there that were absolutely embarrassing. I’m almost ashamed to say we worked on defense.”

    A Surprisingly Happy Camper

    You might expect BU coach Jack Parker to make it a hat trick of unhappy campers after two more losses dropped the Terriers to a shocking 2-6-1 record.

    Not so. While obviously unhappy with the end result, Parker has remained confident that his team’s strong territorial play will eventually translate into wins once the puck starts going in the net.

    “It’s too bad you don’t add up the yardage; you just add up the score,” he said after Friday night’s 2-1 loss to UNH. “We got effort; we got opportunities, and I thought we played hard tonight. I just thought we were snake-bitten around their net.”

    After Tuesday night’s 4-3 loss to Harvard, Parker opened his comments with, “Can’t you replay what I said last game?”

    Any BU fan either in attendance or watching on TV had to groan at the glittering opportunities that fell by the wayside.

    “Scotty Perry had an open net and pulled the goalie and shot it wide,” said Parker. “[Mike] Pandolfo had an open net and mishandled it; Freddy Meyer’s alone and shoots it off the inside of the pipe. …

    “Those things will fall the other way for you sooner or later, but they better fall soon or we’ll be taking their ties and belts away from them in the dressing room.”

    So how can Parker remain calm and not be taking away his own ties and belts?

    “Our record is miserable,” he said. “Right now what’s wrong with us is we’re not scoring goals, but I’m happy with the way my team is playing right now, and I’m happy with our frame of mind and our attitude. We’re just not getting Ws because we’re not putting the puck in the net.”

    Gionta Greatness

    There’s no point to tinkering with perfection, so here’s Jim Connelly’s description of the milestones reached by three-time All-American Brian Gionta in BC’s recent win over Merrimack.

    Anyone who knows Boston College hockey knew that it was inevitable that senior captain Brian Gionta would one day leave Boston College with his name attached to at least one or two records. But not many knew that he’d achieve this all in one game.

    Thanks to a three-goal performance as part of a 7-2 victory over Merrimack on Tuesday night, Gionta tied the Boston College record for career hat tricks (eight). He did so by scoring his second and third goals just 10 seconds apart, setting a Hockey East record for the fastest two goals by a single player.

    Not enough? The three goals give Gionta 10 on the season, but more importantly 100 on his career, only the fourth player in Eagle history to do so.

    “I don’t think it will really sink in until after the season is over,” Gionta said about his record-setting evening. Gionta also admitted that he knew nothing about scoring 100 goals until it was announced by the public address announcer, and until he was told by reporters, knew nothing about scoring the fastest consecutive goals.

    “I try not to think about records,” Gionta said. “I don’t want to know where I stand on all-time lists, and won’t know until [the media] tells me.”

    For Eagles coach Jerry York, Gionta’s accomplishment was more than impressive.

    “He joins an elite group of guys with 100 goals,” said York. “He’s been great to watch and really a bonus for college hockey. It’s great that he’s stayed four years here.”

    Gionta joins three other past Eagles in the 100-goal club: David Emma (115), Joe Mullen (110) and Scott Harlow (105). Gionta stands fifth on the all-time point list, behind his three century-club partners and Richie Smith. Only one point separates Gionta (197) from Smith (198).

    A Few More Notes

  • Unless you were a BU fan, you had to love seeing UNH goaltender Matt Carney jumping up and down in his crease at the end of the Wildcats’ 2-1 win over the Terriers. Carney has had a tough time breaking into the lineup past first Sean Matile and now Ty Conklin.

    As a result, for him to win at Walter Brown Arena had to be a very special moment.

    “I was almost in tears out there after the game when everyone was like hugging me and stuff,” said Carney. “It’s been a long time coming, waiting for this. I’ve known I could do it all along, and it’s really been a confidence battle with myself. But it’s a double-edged sword: I’m sitting behind the best goalie in the country.

    “He’s just great, and I’ve got to wait my turn.”

    Conklin showed what a class act he is, too. Check out the tape. There was no one with a bigger smile on his face and ready with a bigger hug for Carney than Conklin.

  • UNH coach Dick Umile could afford to be a bit giddy after going on the road and defeating both BU and BC. The Wildcats have gone through stretches where they couldn’t bury the puck, so there was a sense of deja vu when UNH players hit first the right post and then the left post before Corey-Joe Ficek finally put it in an empty net to guarantee the win over BC.

    “That tells you how hard it is for us to score goals sometimes,” said Umile. “Two posts on an empty net! I tell you, I thought, ‘This can’t be for real.'”

  • What Hockey East goaltender has the best stats of all? Maine’s Mike Morrison has quietly turned the Black Bear netminding into a two-man race. Morrison has posted a .963 save percentage and a 0.78 GAA in four games. Both marks are second in the country.

    You’d expect the junior to be 4-0-0 with those figures or at worst 3-0-1, but instead he’s 1-1-2.

  • Jim Abbott’s knee injury does not involve a torn ACL, as had initially been feared. He will, however, be out four-to-six weeks with what has been termed a knee sprain.

    Quip Of The Week

    This week there are co-winners.

    The first comes from Harvard coach Mark Mazzoleni, who noted that his team’s man advantage had scored only twice all season prior to its Tuesday game against BU. Against the hard-luck Terriers, however, it scored four times.

    “It was 6.7 percent coming in,” said Mazzoleni, “so I don’t know if there’s a Pee Wee power play that’s worse than that.”

    Matching Mazzoleni’s wit was the Boston Herald‘s incomparable John “Jocko” Connolly. When BC coach Jerry York was asked about his team’s unbeaten record on the road, but 2-3 mark at home, Jocko joked, “You’re playing for the West Regional.”

    (Humor is always destroyed by an explanation, but here’s one for any newcomers. York groaned at the quip because a few extra regular season losses have sent BC to the NCAA West Regional the last couple years instead of staying in the East. BC advanced to the Frozen Four anyway.)

    Congratulations

    A big congrats to Hockey East Commish Joe Bertagna on the birth of Grace, his first daughter and third child. It’ll certainly be a Happy Thanksgiving in the Bertagna household this year.

    Trivia Contest

    Last week’s contest asked which Hockey East player would be Yogi Bear’s favorite. Judging by the response, quite a few of you are gazing at Yogi, Boo-boo and Jellystone Park on Saturday mornings.

    The answer was Providence’s J.J. Picinic, who coincidentally is this week’s Hockey East Player of the Week. Yogi’s favorite line, of course, was, “Hey, Boo-boo. I think I smell a pic-a-nic basket!”

    The first to answer correctly was Adam Kulczyk. Adam, now a two-time winner, extends the Northeastern domination of this year’s trivia contests. He has selected the following cheer:

    “All Hail Northeastern!!!”

    This week’s question has two parts. The first asks which Hockey East coach (past or present) once said to his fiancee, “I don’t want to go to [some city or town] by myself. Let’s get married.”

    The name of the city or town has been removed to keep the question itself from being trivial.

    The second part of the question is, what was the first name of his fiancee (and eventual wife)?

    Send your answers to Dave Hendrickson.


    Thanks to Jayson Moy, Scott Weighart, Michael Kobylanski and Jim Connelly.


  • This Week In The MAAC: Nov. 23, 2000

    It’s that time of year again — the time when you sit back, relax, watch football (well, in my case, extra hockey), eat lots of food, and don’t feel guilty for being a pig.

    No, I’m not talking about Super Bowl Sunday: I’m referring to the mouth-stuffing festival known to me and my fellow Americans as Thanksgiving.

    And because it’s Thanksgiving, that means one thing for my faithful readers — a week off from the regular MAAC column, so that we can all reflect on what those associated with the MAAC have to be thankful for!

    What better place to start than beautiful Storrs, Conn., and UConn coach Bruce Marshall? I’m sure Marshall was proud to raise the school’s first MAAC championship banner this fall, even though the team was licking its wounds from three losses to Hockey East teams Merrimack and Lowell. But alas, Bruce, you can find solace in the fact that your mighty Huskies walked into UMass-Amherst last week a earn a well-respected tie with the Minutemen.

    So as Bruce Marshall sits down this Thanksgiving, I think that he’ll give a prayer of thanks to whoever it was who put Artie Imbriano in a UConn sweater. After losing Marc Senerchia, the goalie who carried UConn to the postseason title, last year, Marshall’s heart rate probably was a little unstable until the mighty Imbriano shined rays of hope onto the UConn season. Let’s hope it lasts, coach!

    As we travel west this Thanksgiving holiday, we stop in Erie, Penn., to visit the Thanksgiving table of Rick Gotkin, one of the humblest coaches in the MAAC. Right now, I suspect he is very thankful for the fact that Fairfield University hired coach Jim Hunt, who last weekend led the Stags past Quinnipiac, leaving Gotkin’s Lakers the only undefeated team in MAAC play. With 11 points, the Lakers are two points behind Quinnipiac with two games in hand.

    But Mercyhurst isn’t alone in that second position. As we travel a bit southeast from Erie, and arrive in beautiful New Rochelle, N.Y., to Frank Bretti’s Thanksgiving table, we find a very happy coach celebrating his Thanksgiving dinner. Not only does Bretti have a trip to the MAAC Championship game to be thankful for, but he also can reflect on the balance of power his Gaels have attained.

    That balance is twofold. For one, the Gaels have made a pretty clear statement to the league that this will not be a two-team race by catching Mercyhurst for second place this past weekend. Balance continues as one looks at Bretti’s offense. No fewer than six players are averaging a point per game in MAAC play, with 21 players registering at least one point thus far.

    Now Bretti and the Gaels just have to figure out what to do about the second period, in which the team has been outscored 18-9 (13-8 in league games) this season. Iona has been a strong starter (+8 in league games, +7 overall) and finisher (+10 in league games, +9 overall). Maybe Bretti can ask Santa Claus to take away the middle period.

    A week ago, if I was writing this, I would have noted that the aforementioned Jim Hunt would be thankful to never have to play Quinnipiac University again. After an atrocious 10-0 spanking 11 days ago at the hands of the Braves, you’d think that another matchup, no matter when, would be too soon. But not so. As I already mentioned, Fairfield was able to pull off the upset of upsets last weekend, beating Quinnipiac, 1-0, while holding the offense to only 17 shots. For the record, that is 10 goals and 25 shots less, just one week later.

    So I guess if Jim Hunt has something to be thankful for, it’s the old cliche, “On any given night, any team can beat any other team.” To recycle another, I guess that’s why they play the games…

    As thanks a-plenty abound this season, another coach who has more than enough is Sacred Heart’s Shaun Hannah. Though a 5-4-1 record at Thanksgiving probably isn’t what Hannah was looking for, especially seeing that his club was riding a three-game losing streak before Tuesday’s win over AIC, it will be many Thanksgivings from now before Hannah will forget his team’s accomplishments of Saturday, November 4.

    When the buzzer sounded at Cornell’s Lynah Rink that night, Hannah was on the winning side, a scene familiar to him during the four years he played at Cornell. But this time, coaching Sacred Heart, Hannah and his Pioneers pulled off the biggest upset in MAAC history, beating Cornell, 5-3. On that night Hannah’s Pioneers became the first MAAC team to beat a member of the “Big Four” conferences. Surely more than just Hannah will give thanks for that win.

    At Quinnipiac University, you’d think that there would be plenty to be thankful for. The team is currently sitting in first place, but because of the loss of defenseman Dan Ennis for what probably will be the entire season, a climb to the MAAC championship and the NCAA tournament may be a little uphill.

    And though the Braves nicely handled Holy Cross on Tuesday night, it was just two nights after a no-show performance against Fairfield that resulted in Quinnipiac’s first regular-season MAAC loss in more than a year. But worry not, Braves fans, there’s plenty of hockey left, and in the end, you can expect to see the Braves on top.

    The newest member at the MAAC Thanksgiving table, Army coach Rob Riley, is thankful that his Black Knights found the winning track. After starting out the MAAC season with tough losses to Quinnipiac and Iona, Riley’s squad claimed three solid wins that started at Bentley College three weeks ago. That gives Army a .500 record (3-3-0) at this point, maybe a little below prognosticators’ expectations, but nonetheless a solid start to Army’s MAAC history.

    Speaking of Bentley, head coach Jim McAdam surely isn’t the happiest of MAAC coaches. With nothing to show except a tie against Canisius in the first weekend of the season, McAdam’s squad has struggled defensively — allowing 200 more shots than they have taken in the club’s first 10 games — and has been outscored 63-17 thus far.

    The loss of forward Ryan Soderquist to graduation has hurt the Bentley offense, as the only player to pick up the slack has been sophomore defenseman Steve Tobio (seven points). But with that in mind, senior goaltender Ray DeVincent is seeing plenty of rubber. The brightest light for McAdam is the play of freshman Mike Mulligan, who has scored six goals in 10 games.

    The biggest surprise this season has to be Gary Wright’s American International squad. The Yellow Jackets’ coach has plenty to be thankful for, including goaltender Chance Thede. The senior from Littleton, Colo., has been hot and cold over his four years at AIC. But solid performances, including a shutout against Fairfield and a 44-save performance in a 1-1 draw on the road with Mercyhurst, have given Wright plenty to smile about this Thanksgiving. A 3-4-1 league record has AIC atop the four-through-nine pack of teams separated by just two points in the standings.

    Included in those four-through-nine are the first two combatants in the inaugural MAAC championship game, which today seems so long ago. Holy Cross and Canisius may not be the same caliber of teams that fought to a dramatic conclusion to the MAAC season two years ago, but don’t count either of them down for the count.

    Paul Pearl’s Crusaders have shown signs of brilliance this season, especially in the area where they struggled so badly last year: goaltending.

    Junior Derek Cunha and rookie Rick Massey have split time in net, and have suffered some tough-luck losses. Over a five-game stretch from November 3 to 17, all five Holy Cross games were decided by one goal, including a loss to AIC in overtime. There will be plenty more one-goal games for the Crusaders, and their success in those games will be the difference between a ninth-place and a fourth-place finish come March.

    Our Thanksgiving trip ends in the snowcapped mountains of Switzerland, er, Buffalo. I guess with 25 inches of snow on the ground, it’s hard to tell the difference.

    Canisius coach Brian Cavanaugh is thankful for one thing: the fact that games are not played entirely by special teams. The perennial powerhouse Ice Griffs have struggled this season both on the power play (13.2%) and the penalty kill (74.6%). More importantly, the Griffs have had trouble getting the lead, having played nearly half of their minutes this season trying to come from behind. That is mostly due to the fact that Canisius has scored the first goal in just one of its 10 games.

    The brightest note for the Griffs continues to be the play of goaltender Sean Weaver. A rookie standout a year ago, Weaver has posted a 3-3-0 record and looks to be claiming the starting job.

    And so we end our Thanksgiving journey. I guess it’s only fitting to close with a broader thanksgiving for the league this year, one that everyone knew about long before Halloween pumpkins began to rot — the MAAC’s new automatic berth in the NCAA championship.

    For that, the thanks will resound well past Thanksgiving dinner, all the way to late March, when one representative from the MAAC will skate to Grand Rapids, Mich., for the chance to broaden the MAAC legacy, this time in the national championship.

    This Week In The ECAC: Nov. 23, 2000

    We give thanks, that you, the loyal reader, have come back once again to find out more about the world of the ECAC. And that you haven’t sent us nasty mail as of yet.

    Thank you very much and we also wish every a Happy Thanksgiving out there.

    Without further ado…

    Around The League

    Vermont

    The Catamounts continue their dream start, and last week was particularly memorable. Vermont cracked the Top 15, currently sit atop the ECAC standings with a 5-2-0 record and have given head coach Mike Gilligan another first in his career at Vermont: never before in his 17-year stint as head coach of the Catamounts has his team won its first three league contests.

    “Andrew Allen has done just what we have asked him to,” Gilligan said of his goaltender’s significance to the 3-0 ECAC start. “We are playing well defensively as a team, and getting points from all over the place.”

    The Cats followed up the weekend performance with a 5-3 win over UMass-Amherst, breaking a tie in the third period.

    Now the Cats host MSU-Mankato and Minnesota- Duluth — the first games ECAC teams will play against the WCHA this year — and Gilligan is looking cautiously forward to the weekend.

    “If we can continue to do well, these games will be very important to us come tournament time, and may help our national ranking eventually,” he said.

    Yale/Princeton

    The big story for Yale has been the first line. Everyone knew that Jeff Hamilton’s return was going to improve the offense, but who really expected the trio of Hamilton, Ben Stafford and Nick Deschenes to combine for 34 points after only seven games? That figure translates into 47.8% of the team’s scoring output.

    Sophomore Deschenes, who finished with 15 points in 29 games last season, summed it up best after he scored two goals last weekend in a 5-4 win over Dartmouth.

    “It’s kind of been made easy for me,” he said. “Jeff and Ben control the puck a lot and make smart plays. If I’m just positioned right, I’m bound to get some opportunities.”

    The team has exploded to an impressive start and has shown few moments of vulnerability along the way. An overtime loss to St. Lawrence and a tough 5-2 loss against Vermont in the Gut are its only blemishes in its 5-2-0 record. Now Yale will get a chance to finish off a sweep of road partner Princeton, whom it edged out 4-3 on Tuesday night, as it hosts the Tigers this Saturday night in the rematch.

    On Tuesday night, the Bulldogs were never behind, going ahead by one goal only to be tied by the Tigers each time except the last. The fourth time, freshman defenseman Jeff Dwyer scored with 1:56 remaining in the third period to give Yale the win.

    Saturday’s rematch should be no different.

    Harvard

    Other than the score, the most comforting statistic for the Harvard coaches following a 4-3 win over Boston University was the “4-for-8” listed in the power-play column. A sigh of relief or a flat-out “Hallelujah” could be heard from all corners of the locker room as the Crimson finally broke out of a wretched slump which saw its power-play percentage drop to a dismal 6.7 percent.

    “It was 6.7 percent coming in, so I don’t know if there’s a Pee Wee power play that’s worse than that,” said Harvard head coach Mark Mazzoleni. “We just changed some things [on Tuesday night], and all we did was shoot the puck.”

    Harvard can only hope that its power-play unit is as successful on Saturday night. The Eagles enter Bright Hockey Center with top honors in almost all Hockey East offensive categories. It will be one offensive-minded team against another.

    Clarkson/Colgate/Cornell

    This trio of teams, better known as 75 percent of the Syracuse Invitational field, has already had its share of highs, lows and mediums.

    The Clarkson Golden Knights are on a high. They went into Appleton Arena last Saturday and took it right to the St. Lawrence Saints — scoring seven goals, their highest output of the season. And nothing is better for a Knight fan than beating the Saints in Canton.

    “We had a whole year to think about this game,” said head coach Mark Morris. “We prepared really well for it. To see the kids really respond and be that thorough was extremely gratifying.

    “Our freshmen are really starting to contribute. Their confidence is growing immensely. They bring an element of speed and finesse to the game and they are tenacious checkers. A whole lot of youthful exuberance is starting to pay off for us. Tonight our veterans kicked it up a notch as well. I am sure they wanted to put in a strong effort, especially after the episode we had over here last year.”

    Colgate is on sort of a low. After defeating Brown on Friday, the Red Raiders fell to Harvard in the Silver Puck game, and now stand at 2-6-2 and 1-3-0 in the ECAC. The Syracuse Invitational starts on Saturday; the Raiders are hoping to use that extra day to begin defense of their SIT crown.

    “Resting is the best thing we can do right now,” head coach Don Vaughan said. “Our bench is short and we’re banged up. After a few days off, we’ll come back and try to get back in sync. We’ve been getting some bad breaks, but we can’t use that as an excuse. It’s our job as a team to find a way through it.”

    Cornell is sort of in the medium. The Big Red sandwiched a 2-0 win over Brown with two 1-1 ties against Harvard and Maine. They are also at a medium in their record, at 2-2-2, but head coach Mike Schafer thinks that Cornell may be hitting its stride.

    “Our guys played very well tonight and played the kind of hockey we’re capable of playing,” he said after the tie against Maine. “We learned some good lessons as you do against good teams.

    “We have to prove that we belong in the same category as the University of Maine.”

    Union/Rensselaer

    The travel partners will host Mercyhurst this weekend, and the Dutchmen also travel to take on UMass-Lowell in the first of their two games this year.

    Union has been idle since cracking into the USCHO.com poll in the 15th position last week, and after the past weekend climbed to 13.

    Rensselaer comes off giving UMass- Amherst a 9-2 drubbing on Saturday evening, pushing the Engineers back above .500. The Engineers, who saw Matt Murley score four times in the first period, notched five on the power play after starting out the season with five power-play goals in 43 chances.

    “The one thing about the power play is that it takes time,” said head coach Dan Fridgen. “It’s time, if you keep working at it, it’s going to come. We weren’t pushing the panic button and sooner or later it happens.”

    St. Lawrence

    The Saints are 2-3-2 on the season after a 7-2 loss to Clarkson Saturday evening, and it doesn’t get any easier for the Saints. They head to Grand Forks to take on the defending NCAA champions for a set.

    Last season around this time the Saints were in the midst of a stretch that saw them floundering and went out to Madison to take on Wisconsin for a pair. The Saints lost the first game and tied the second, and head coach Joe Marsh gives that outcome credit for turning around last season. He’s hoping that this series may do the same.

    “We’ve got a lot of hockey to play and it’s important to see how we respond,” he said. “We’ve got some big games coming up to finish the semester and it’s important that we compete as best we can.”

    When the Saints come back they host Harvard and Brown before heading right back out for a pair at Michigan.

    Brown/Dartmouth

    The Brown Bears just can’t seem to get a break this season. They play a tough game in front of a rowdy Cornell crowd and then they see the game winner deflect off a skate in front of the net. The next night, Brown scores four goals and throws 40 shots at Jason LeFevre, but is left with a 6-4 loss.

    The best news for the Big Green is that it won’t have to face off against any more league opponents for at least another week. Head coach Bob Gaudet has been trying to figure out his team for the past several weeks, but to no avail. Except for a hard-fought win over Brown, Dartmouth has not lived up to its preseason billing. In fact, the Big Green has been the most erratic team in the league.

    After pulling out a tough 4-3 overtime win over Brown one night, the team turned around and played a lackluster three periods of hockey en route to a 5-2 loss to Harvard. It was much of the same the next weekend when the Big Green fought tooth-and-nail against Yale and then fell flat on its back the next night with a 6-0 loss to Princeton There is a distinct glimmer of hope under the 1-5-0 record, however, which makes you not want to count out the Big Green just yet. Take last weekend, for instance. Dartmouth lost both games on the road, but outshot its opponents by a 78-49 margin.

    “I liked everything but the score,” said Gaudet following the loss to the Tigers. “But the score is the bottom line. And this is a bottom-line business. I think we’ll find our way.”

    Dartmouth will get a chance to find its way without league repercussions as it faces off against Maine on Saturday night in Hanover after Maine takes on Brown Friday.

    Giving Thanks

    You can call it corny if you want, but we thought we would run down at least one thing that each team can be thankful for at this point in the season. We know that it’s early, but it’s that time of the year.

    Brown – The Providence win. That sole victory for the Bears gave Grillo’s team a taste of success — something that the players desperately needed after winning only six games last year.

    Clarkson – The reemergence of Shawn Grant. After a lackluster sophomore season, the junior has a .915 save percentage and a 2.73 GAA, and is 3-1-0.

    Colgate – The power play. Colgate has 15 out of 34 total goals. Sean Nolan leads with six.

    Cornell – Depth. If it wasn’t for the depth, Cornell wouldn’t be at full strength and definitely not at .500 right now.

    Dartmouth – A Long Season. Few expected the Big Green to struggle as they have through six games, winning only one contest along the way. Gaudet is convinced that his team will find its way — it just needs some time to figure things out. Luckily, time is one thing on Dartmouth’s side at this point.

    Harvard – The power play — at least in the last game against Boston University, in which Harvard scored all four of its goals with an odd man on the ice. This mini-explosion was a welcome surprise after the team entered the game with a league-worst 6.7% success rate.

    Princeton – Kirk Lamb. The senior captain has been an integral part of Princeton’s early-season success with a team-leading 11 points, including a league-high nine assists.

    Rensselaer – Matt Murley and Marc Cavosie. The two have scored 14 of the Engineers’ 27 goals this season.

    St. Lawrence – Senior scoring. The Saints have only had five goals out of 21 from underclassmen.

    Union – Brandon Snee and third-period play. Snee has a .925 save percentage and a 2.29 GAA. The Dutchmen have outscored their opponents 9-2 in their wins this season.

    Vermont – Andrew Allen and J.F. Caudron. Both players have provided stability on either end of the ice. Caudron has been an anchor on the first line with a team-high 10 points, while Allen has held his own with a 2.58 goals against average and a .925 save percentage.

    Yale – Jeff Hamilton. The senior has proven his worth already with 14 points in seven games. More importantly, he has given new life to linemates Ben Stafford and Nick Deschenes, who are posting career-best numbers thus far.

    If It’s So Easy, You Try It

    Well, week one of our competition is over and Vic went down. It wasn’t that easy, was it, Vic? Vic was above .500 with a 8-5-1 record last week, but his downfall was Saturday as we took it to him with a 10-2-2 record.

    Vic gracefully conceded defeat after Saturday’s games and now we welcome challenger number two. Tayt Brooks, a St. Lawrence fan, has been chosen to take us on.

    So without any further hesitation, here we go, complete with Tayt’s comments.

    The Picks

    Fri. – Sat., Nov. 24 – 25

    St. Lawrence at North Dakota
    Tayt – The Skating Saints make their first trip to Grand Forks since ’87. SLU is still trying to find itself while the Sioux know they’re the defending champs. North Dakota 5, St. Lawrence 2 on Friday. SLU was not playing well a year ago when it went to Wisconsin. A big 6-6 tie really got the team fired up from there on in. Plan on the SLU offense coming alive and finishing in a shootout win. St. Lawrence 6, North Dakota 5 on Saturday.
    Becky and JaysonNorth Dakota sweeps. 5-2, 6-3

    Friday, November 24

    Mercyhurst at Union
    Tayt – Union is on a roll and wants to do themselves and the rest of the ECAC proud. It’s at home, so Union wins it. Union 3, Mercyhurst 2
    Becky and JaysonUnion 4, Mercyhurst 2

    Maine at Brown
    Tayt – In the battle of the Bears, look for Maine to win this easily. Maine 6, Brown 0
    Becky and JaysonMaine 7, Brown 4

    Saturday, November 25

    Princeton at Yale
    Tayt – Jeff Hamilton makes his presence felt. Bulldogs nip the Tigers. Yale 4, Princeton 3
    Becky and JaysonYale 3, Princeton 2

    Mercyhurst at Rensselaer
    Tayt – Will anyone be at the Houston Fieldhouse for this one? Oh yeah, Jayson will be there. RPI’s offense is in gear and they take this one. Rensselaer 6, Mercyhurst 0
    Becky and JaysonRensselaer 5, Mercyhurst 3

    Maine at Dartmouth
    Tayt – The Big Green really haven’t gotten going yet. Will Boucher settle down? Not enough for this one. Maine 3, Dartmouth 2
    Becky and JaysonDartmouth 4, Maine 1

    Boston College at Harvard
    Tayt – Can Harvard make Hockey East cry this week? I say yes: Crimson win. Harvard 4, Boston College 3 Becky and JaysonBoston College 5, Harvard 3

    Union at UMass-Lowell
    Tayt – Is it possible that Union will be 7-1 after this weekend? The world must be upside-down, because they will be. Union 2, UMass-Lowell 1
    Becky and JaysonUMass-Lowell 4, Union 3

    Syracuse Invitational
    Colgate vs. Niagara
    Tayt – Colgate needs a win, and they are close to home. Colgate 4, Niagara 2
    Becky and JaysonColgate 4, Niagara 2
    Clarkson vs. Cornell
    Tayt – Hmm, can I actually get over my hate of Clarkson to pick them? No, the Big Red win. Cornell 2, Clarkson 1
    Becky and JaysonClarkson 3, Cornell 2

    Sheraton/Howard Bank Classic
    MSU-Mankato at Vermont
    Tayt – The Elephants are dead and the Catamounts are back. Vermont 5, MSU-Mankato 2
    Becky and JaysonVermont 4, MSU-Mankato 1

    Sunday, November 26

    Syracuse Invitational
    Caveat: If the first-round matchups are predicted wrong, these can’t be right…
    Tayt Consolation – The Golden Knights frighten Niagara off the ice with their new away puke-yellow jerseys. Yes, Clarkson wins this one in a forfeit.Clarkson 1, Niagara 0
    Championship – Cornell starts to gear up. Colgate is not the same team it was last year. Cornell 4, Colgate 2
    Becky and Jayson – Cornell 3, Niagara 1 in the consolation. Clarkson 4, Colgate 3 in the championship.

    Sheraton/Howard Bank Classic
    Minnesota-Duluth at Vermont
    Tayt – The ECAC will be making some dents in the polls. Gilligan and the Skipper are happy this weekend as UVM sweeps. Vermont 3, Minnesota-Duluth 1
    Becky and JaysonMinnesota-Duluth 2, Vermont 1

    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 Tayt bites the dust.


    Thanks this week to Steve Marsi, Scott Weighart and Dave Sherzer for their contributions

    WCHA Suspends Assistant Referee

    WCHA assistant referee Jay Kleven has been suspended indefinitely by the league for two calls made during the Minnesota-North Dakota games last weekend in Grand Forks.

    The decision to suspend Kleven was made by WCHA supervisor of officials Greg Shepherd, who was in attendance at the games, then reviewed the tapes.

    The calls in question came in the third period with the game tied, once each night of the Friday-Saturday series. Kleven called a penalty, and North Dakota scored on the ensuing power play each time.

    Assistant referees are instructed to call blatant penalties that the head referee missed. Shepherd was concerned that Kleven made the penalty calls even though the plays were seen and let go by the head referee.

    “The [assistant referees] are supposed to call minor penalties not observed by the referee. This one was,” Shepherd said to the St. Paul Pioneer Press. “The only ones they can call in front of the referee are majors.

    “I thought both calls [by Kleven] were improper. He used poor judgment. What disappoints me is I talked to him after Friday’s game and then it happened again Saturday.”

    Kleven, who lives in Grand Forks, could not be reached for comment.

    Shepherd said that it is common for assistant referees to live in the area where they work games, and shrugged off any possibility of a conflict of interest.

    “We’ve never had to have them travel because of a request by a visiting coach. That’s a pretty good record,” Shepherd said to the Pioneer Press.

    Three years ago, the WCHA suspended an entire crew. Referee Buzz Christensen, and linesmen Jon Campion and Mark Nebel were sat for one weekend when the league said they missed a flagrant checking-from-behind penalty on a Northern Michigan player by a Minnesota player during a Nov. 23, 1997, game in Marquette, Mich.

    NCHA Newsletter: Nov. 22, 2000

    The NCHA went a combined 13-2-1 this past weekend against the MIAC. Wisconsin-Stevens Point, Wisconsin-River Falls, St. Norbert, Wisconsin-Superior, Wisconsin-Eau Claire and Wisconsin-Stout all swept their weekend series. On the weekend, the NCHA outscored the MIAC 91-43, putting an early foot in the door for Pool C decisionmakers.

    Team Capsules

    Wisconsin-River Falls: Friday night, the Falcons had little trouble with last season’s MIAC spoiler team, St. Mary’s, winning 5-2 in River Falls. Goals from Jared Anderson, Evan Stensrud and Jeff Bernard staked the Falcons to a 3-1 first-period lead. The Cardinals cut the lead to one, but that would be answered by the Falcons’ Anderson to finish out the second period. Carl Boben of River Falls added the lone tally in the third to finish off the Cardinals.

    Saturday, the Falcons faced last season’s Division III runners-up, the St. Thomas Tommies, and were able to pull out a 5-4 victory at Hunt Arena. The Falcons led 2-1 after one on power-play goals from Jess Johnson and Rob Novak. In the second, Adam Kragthorpe added a power-play tally for the Falcons, only to see the Tommies tie it at three before the close of the second. The Falcons put themselves out in front for good on goals from Bernard (PP) and Shane Fukushima in the third. Seven of the nine goals in the game were scored on the power play.

    The Falcons take the holiday weekend off before taking to the ice December 1 and 2 vs. Superior and St. Scholastica at home.

    St. Norbert: The Green Knights barely broke a sweat in their sweep of MIAC teams St. Olaf and Gustavus Adolphus, outscoring them by a combined 17-4. Friday night, the Knights scored at least three goals in each period, demolishing the Oles 10-4 in front of the hometown fans. Maris Ziedins, Shane Dickson and Faron Duthie all scored twice for the Knights. Lennie Rampone, Trent Dickson, Patrick Gruber and Cameron Sedgwick also scored.

    Saturday, the Knights faced little resistance from the Gusties, shutting them out 7-0. Shane Dickson and Kyle Peterson each scored two and Felix Angst, Chris Bodnar and Adam Sedgwick added lone tallies for the Knights.

    The Green Knights go on the road this weekend, playing a pair of games at St. John’s.

    Lake Forest: The Foresters were able to take three out of a possible four points on the weekend, tying Gustavus 1-1 Friday and defeating St. Olaf 5-3 on Saturday.

    Friday, the lone Forester goal came in the second period from Frankie DeMasi, and Justin Howard kept the Gusties off the scoreboard the remainder of the game, finishing with 22 saves.

    Saturday, the Foresters got two goals each from DeMasi and Bill Boyes and a solo tally from David Evans to defeat the Oles 5-3. Mason Black finished with 25 saves on 28 shots.

    The Foresters play a home-and-home series with Marian College this Friday and Saturday.

    Wisconsin-Stevens Point: The Pointers helped the NCHA cause by beating Concordia 3-1 on Friday and St. John’s 7-1 on Saturday.

    Friday, the Pointers dominated first-period action, outshooting the Cobbers 12-5, but finished the first only leading 2-1 on power-play goals from Ryan Maxson and Randy Enders. The second period was back-and-forth with both teams’ defenses stepping up. Shots in the second were virtually even at 6-5. The lone goal in the third period belonged to the Pointers’ Bryan Fricke to round out the scoring at 3-1 in favor of Stevens Point.

    Saturday night, the Pointers saw more success against the Johnnies of St. John’s University. Stevens Point outshot St. John’s by a two-to-one margin (30-15) and the score would indicate Stevens Point’s dominance.

    In the first period, St. John’s scored first, but that would be it as Stevens Point rattled off seven unanswered. In the first period, the Pointers outshot the Johnnies 12-5 and led 2-1 on goals from Nick Glander and Ernie Thorp. The second period got off on the right foot for Stevens Point as Maxson picked up his first of three goals on the afternoon just :50 in, and two minutes later, Glander picked up his second goal, followed by Maxson’s second to round out the period’s scoring. Maxson added this third goal, along with the first of the season by Mikhail Salienko, to finish off the Johnnies, 7-1.

    The Pointers head East to take on Elmira on Saturday night and Williams on Sunday afternoon in the Elmira Invitational.

    Wisconsin-Stout: The Blue Devils continued their early-season success on Friday, defeating St. Thomas 4-3, but were unable to keep the string alive, dropping Saturday’s decision 7-5 to St. Mary’s.

    Friday, Dan Winkler picked up the lone tally in the first, staking the Blue Devils to a 1-0 lead through the first two periods, only to see St. Thomas tie up the game in the third. Drew Nichols put the Blue Devils back into the lead only to see the Tommies rattle off two more goals. The hero of the night, Nathan Legler, scored twice in the final two minutes to lead the Devils to a 5-4 win.

    Saturday, the Devils struggled and were defeated by the St. Mary’s Cardinals, 7-5. The Devils only trailed by a goal after one (Legler) and were tied at five after two (Harms, Riffe, Flaherty and Legler), but were unable to sustain the pressure, giving up two goals in the final 20 minutes, dropping the 7-5 decision.

    The Devils take the holiday off and return to action December 1 and 2, hosting St. Scholastica and Wisconsin-Superior.

    Wisconsin-Eau Claire: The Blugolds, like their travel partner Wisconsin-Stevens Point, also did a number on St. John’s and Concordia, defeating them 4-2 and 9-3, respectively.

    Friday night, the Blugolds fell behind 2-0 after one period, but came roaring back in the final two periods to pull out the 4-2 win. Jamie Minor picked up a short-handed and a power-play goal in the second period to tie the game after two. Justin Kaufenberg added a short-handed goal of his own to put the Blugolds out in front and Joe Byrd added an insurance goal later in the period for the Blugolds 4-2 win.

    Saturday night, the Blugolds had little trouble with the Cobbers of Concordia, beating them up 9-3.

    The first period saw Eau Claire come out strong, scoring three first-period goals. Brian Buskowiak, Ian Sgambelluri and Tim Murphy each put up single tallies, staking the Blugolds to a 3-0 lead. The Cobbers answered with three goals in the second to tie it up, but a late second-period goal by Sgambelluri took the momentum back to the Blugolds. Eau Claire finished off the Cobbers with five third-period goals from Minor (2), Sgambelluri, Buskowiak and Mike Lucenti.

    The Blugolds are also taking the holiday weekend off, but return to action December 2 against Lake Forest at the Hobbs Ice Center in Eau Claire.

    St. Scholastica: The Saints took it to current MIAC leader Bethel 4-1 on Friday, but couldn’t hold off the Auggies of Augsburg on Saturday, dropping the 6-2 decision.

    Friday, the Saints trailed 1-0 after the first period, but two goals from Josh Oyler in the first two minutes of the second, put the Saints in front to stay. Scott Forrest and Jason Brabec scored third-period goals to down the Royals 4-1.

    Saturday, the Saints wouldn’t see the same success against Augsburg. Again, the Saints trailed after the first period, but couldn’t stage the comeback as the Auggies pulled out to a 5-1 two-period lead. Kyle Antilla scored the lone Saint goal in the second and Nick Dolentz added one in the third.

    The Saints host MCHA foe Lawrence this Friday and Saturday.

    UW-Superior: After seeing little success in the first couple of weeks of conference play, there was probably no NCHA team happier to see a nonconference opponent than the Yellow Jackets. The Jackets showed little hospitality to the visitors, however, downing Augsburg Friday night 7-5 and blowing out Bethel 13-2 on Saturday.

    Friday, Ivan Prokic scored two goals and Josh Liebenow and Carl Hanson each added single tallies in the first period, putting the Jackets out to a 4-0 lead. In the second, the Auggies scored three goals, but Rob Ziemmer added another Jacket tally. The third period was all even, which was fine with the Jackets. Liebenow picked up his second of the game and Alan Hasbargen added another in the third to finish off the pesky Auggies.

    Saturday, the Jackets came out firing and didn’t finish until they had knocked off Bethel 13-2.

    The game was tied halfway through the first period, and with fans at the Hive were bracing themselves for a tight game, Prokic scored early for the Jackets (2:07) only to see the Royals tie it up at one a little over 10 minutes later. From then on, however, it was all Superior. Ziemmer, Cameron Van Sandt and Bryan Grycan all scored before the close of the first period.

    Grycan, Jay Stewart, Liebenow and Ryan Kalbrenner added solo goals in the second for the Jackets, effectively finishing off Bethel after two. The Jackets weren’t done, though, adding another five goals in the third. Grycan finished off his hat trick and Chris Hackett, Chris Bell, Ziemmer and Van Sandt added goals in the final stanza.

    Superior returns to the ice on December 1 and 2, taking on Wisconsin-River Falls and Wisconsin-Stout at the Wessman Arena in Superior.

    Games to Watch

    For the second time this season, an NCHA team makes the trip to the Thunderdome of Elmira College. This week, it’s the Pointers of UW-Stevens Point who make the bus trip out to Horseheads, N.Y., to take on host Elmira College on Saturday and Williams of the NESCAC on Sunday in the Elmira Invitational.

    These will be the games to watch. Can Stevens Point continue the NCHA’s dominance in non-conference play? Or will it fall prey to the crowd effect of the Domes?

    The last time the Pointers made the trip to The Domes was back in 1991, for the Division III Final Four. In the first game, the Pointers defeated Babson College 5-2 in the semifinals and then defeated the Mavericks of Mankato State 6-2 to win their third straight national championship. The only time that Stevens Point faced Elmira was in the 1993 national semifinals, beating the Eagles 7-2. Stevens Point has never faced Williams.

    This Week In Division III: Nov. 22, 2000

    Getting Down to Business

    I’ve been getting a lot of email forwarded to me by the support staff at USCHO. Most of it has been asking, to paraphrase, “When the #%$@ is the first regular-season Division III poll coming out?”

    We’ve gotten the message. The first regular-season poll appears the evening of Monday, November 27.

    We made the decision in October to wait until each team had played at least two games before doing a regular-season poll. We’ve done this the past two seasons, with some mild grumblings from Division III fans that we were taking too darn long.

    This year, that grumble has turned into a dull roar, getting louder each week.

    We may change things next season. After all, other major polls, including the USCHO.com Division I poll, often start before all the teams are in action.

    But for now, expect a new poll each Monday evening throughout the season

    So who will be number one?

    The top slot is Plattsburgh’s to lose. The Cardinals, ranked first in the preseason poll, are a perfect 5-0 going into the Primelink Tournament, which also includes host Middlebury, Norwich, and Potsdam. If Plattsburgh goes down in the Primelink, the eventual tournament winner has a good shot of being number one.

    Let’s look at the contenders for national recognition in each conference:

    SUNYAC

    The Cardinals will stay atop the poll if they can win the Primelink. Plattsburgh faces off against host Middlebury (ranked fifth in the preseason poll) on Friday, and will play either third-ranked Norwich or Potsdam on Saturday.

    With three of the top five teams in the country, plus a Potsdam team that also collected some votes in the preseason poll, this should be quite a weekend.

    Speaking of Potsdam, what if the Bears upset the apple cart and win the Primelink? Could they vault all the way to the top spot? Probably not, but they could pave the way for Wisconsin-Stevens Point or St. Norbert to grab the prize.

    Potsdam is off to a 4-0-2 start and has a habit of playing the other North Country teams close, so there’s no gimmes in this tournament.

    ECAC West

    The other marquee tournament this weekend is the Elmira Invitational, and the Soaring Eagles have outdone themselves this time around. All four teams in attendance are ranked in the top ten in the USCHO.com preseason poll: Wisconsin-Stevens Point (second), Elmira (seventh), St. Thomas (eighth) and Williams (tied for tenth).

    Only the Pointers (4-2) are above .500 at this point, however. The Tommies are off to a disappointing 1-4-1 start, Williams split its first two games, and Elmira is 3-4 coming off a 5-2 loss in Plattsburgh last weekend. The Soaring Eagles, who play the Pointers in the first round on Saturday, have the unenviable task of playing the number-one and -two teams in the nation back-to-back.

    The Elmira tournament is a fixed-format affair, to ensure four East-West matchups. So is the Bowdoin-Colby tournament hosted by each school on successive days this weekend. RIT and Brockport will make the trip, with the sixth-ranked Tigers getting the tougher job: they’ll be playing both host schools, starting with Colby on Saturday and then Bowdoin Sunday afternoon.

    RIT is 6-0 going into the tournament, and could move as high as the top three nationally based on this weekend’s results.

    NESCAC

    Bowdoin and Colby are off to quick 2-0 starts, and both can make a case for a top-ten ranking with a weekend sweep of RIT and Brockport. The travel partners each knocked off Skidmore and Hamilton last weekend to open the season.

    Middlebury racked up an impressive pair of 8-0 wins over St. Anselm and New England College in its opening weekend, and now hopes to keep alive the tradition of the host school winning the Primelink tournament. The Panthers host Plattsburgh on Friday, and then play either Potsdam or arch-rival Norwich on Saturday.

    Friday’s matchup is especially interesting. It’s a rematch of last year’s awesome NCAA quarterfinal series, won by Plattsburgh in sudden death to end Middlebury’s run of five consecutive national titles. The game pits the more experienced Cardinals against a relatively young Panther team, but will take place on Middlebury’s near Olympic-sized rink, a distinct home advantage.

    ECAC East

    Norwich will most certainly reclaim the number-one ranking it held for most of last season if it wins the Primelink. The young Cadets raised their national championship banner last Friday before getting down to business: a weekend sweep of St. Anselm and New England College by a combined score of 20-1. It looks like the reports of a great freshman class were correct, as Norwich reloads rather than rebuilds.

    The surprise of the weekend was the pair of wins by Babson, 2-1 over Williams and 6-2 over MCLA. The Beavers, once a D-III power (including a 1984 national title) might be able to sneak into the picture if they capture their own tournament this weekend. Babson will face St. Michael’s in the first round, followed by either MCLA or Cortland.

    ECAC Northeast

    Both defending champ Wentworth and Johnson and Wales are off to 4-0 starts in conference play, but neither squad is likely to crack the top ten. Wentworth is 0-1 out of conference, J&W 0-2. Wentworth has a chance to make some noise out of conference this coming week with games against Skidmore and New England College.

    Lebanon Valley (2-1 in conference, 4-3 overall) did pull off a nice nonconference win with a 5-1 home-ice victory over Hobart. Flying Dutchman goaltender Lincoln Matlock was amazing in net, recording 53 saves.

    NCHA/MIAC

    Last year, the NCHA didn’t fare that well against its MIAC rivals, and it may have cost an NCHA team a slot in last year’s NCAA tournament, as the MIAC sent two teams to the dance, while only Wisconsin-Superior made it from the NCHA.

    This season, the MIAC appears to be on the downswing, and the NCHA is out to make a statement. Last week’s interleague play saw the NCHA come away with a 13-2-1 record. It’s probably too early to start talking about Pool “C” slots, but these games may be looked at come March.

    Wisconsin-River Falls, ranked ninth in the preseason poll, is 8-0-1 and should move up several places. The Falcons are 4-0 in conference, and have outscored their opposition 23-7 in those games, and 47-17 overall.

    MCHA

    The Marian Sabres had a nice week, going 3-0, including a conference sweep of Lawrence to solidify their hold on second place. Mark Ewing, a freshman from Langley, B.C., tallied seven points in the three games, including the lone goal in a 1-0 win over Gustavus Adolphus. He was named MCHA Player of the Week.

    This weekend will feature several nonconference games, including Northland hosting Finlandia, a new program playing a mostly club schedule.

    Thanks for…

    This week we’re reminded of things to be thankful for, and besides the obvious blessings, I’m grateful for your continued support of USCHO. The large amount of mail I’ve gotten concerning the poll and other topics means you’re reading, and for that I’m thankful indeed.

    Enjoy the holiday, and get to a game if you can.

    Picks

    Last week: 5-1
    On the season: 11-4

    This Week

    Plattsburgh at Middlebury (11/24) – A rematch of last year’s NCAA quarterfinals, won by the Cardinals. But each team seems to win on home ice, so I’m going with the Panthers. Middlebury 4, Plattsburgh 3

    Norwich vs. Potsdam (11/24) – The Bears usually play the Cadets tough, but I think Norwich will use the big ice surface to its advantage. Norwich 6, Potsdam 2.

    Wisconsin-Stevens Point at Elmira (11/25) – Elmira lost to the number-one ranked team last weekend, and will probably go down to number two this weekend. UWSP 4, Elmira 2

    St. Thomas at Elmira (11/26) – The Soaring Eagles get a split in the all-purple tournament (Elmira, Williams, UWSP and St. Thomas all have purple among their school colors). Elmira 5, St. Thomas 3

    RIT at Colby (11/25) and Bowdoin (11/26) – The teams are a combined 10-0 so far, but something’s got to give. RIT has been playing for over a month, Bowdoin and Colby for a week. Advantage, Tigers. RIT 4, Bowdoin 1; RIT 3, Colby 2.

    SUNYAC Newsletter: Nov. 22, 2000

    Plattsburgh State and Buffalo State salvaged what started out as a dismal week of nonconference play for SUNYAC teams. Geneseo State got walloped by RIT, 13-0, followed by Brockport State taking a beating at the hands of Elmira, 12-3. The tide started to turn when Fredonia State tied Hobart, 1-1, and then it was a Saturday sweep with Plattsburgh State defeating Elmira, 5-2, and Buffalo State taking one at Manhattanville, 4-3. However, Buffalo State lost the next night to Manhattanville, 3-2.

     

    Previous Week's Results


    11/14/00 RIT - 13, Geneseo - 0
    11/15/00 Elmira - 12, Brockport - 3
    11/16/00 Fredonia - 1, Hobart - 1 (OT)
    11/18/00 Buffalo State - 4, Manhattanville - 3
    11/18/00 Plattsburgh - 5, Elmira - 2
    11/19/00 Manhattanville - 3, Buffalo State - 2

    Upcoming Games



    11/21/00 Cortland at Skidmore NC 7:10
    11/24/00 Plattsburgh at Middlebury NC 7:30
    11/24/00 Potsdam vs Norwich NC 4:00

    11/25/00 Geneseo at Manhattanville NC 4:00
    11/25/00 Plattsburgh vs Norwich/Potsdam NC 4:00/7:30
    11/25/00 Potsdam vs Middlebury/Platts NC 4:00/7:30
    11/25/00 Brockport vs Colby NC 3:30
    11/25/00 Oswego vs Southern Maine NC 3:30
    11/25/00 Cortland vs Mass Coll Lib Arts NC 4:00

    11/26/00 Geneseo at Skidmore NC 1:40
    11/26/00 Brockport vs Bowdoin NC 2:00
    11/26/00 Oswego vs St. Anselm/NHC NC 1:00/4:00
    11/26/00 Cortland vs Babson/St Michaels NC 1:00/4:30

    Team-by-Team Report

    PLATTSBURGH — Despite being slightly off its game, Plattsburgh State still managed to beat archrival Elmira 5-2 in its home opener. Penalty killing was the name of the game as the Cardinals not only held Elmira to no goals in eight opportunities, but scored two shorthanders in the process. After Derrick Shaw gave Plattsburgh a 2-0 first-period lead with a pair of goals, one on the power play, Peter Ollari got a shorthander early in the second. Elmira got on the scoreboard, but Brendon Hodge netted his own shorthanded goal to give Plattsburgh a 4-1 lead after two. Joe Dolci got an unassisted goal early in the third to complete the scoring. Niklas Sundberg made 32 saves for the win. Plattsburgh next competes in the Primelink Great Northern Shootout, taking on the host team, Middlebury, in the first round.

    OSWEGO — Oswego State had the week off, and travels to New Hampshire to compete in the Manchester PAL Cup, facing off against Southern Maine on the first day.

    POTSDAM — The Bears also had the week off. Potsdam State takes its unbeaten record to one of the most competitive tournaments in the country, the Primelink Great Northern Shootout, and will play the defending national champion, Norwich, for the first game.

    FREDONIA — The Blue Devils traveled to Geneva to take on Hobart, and came away with a disappointing 1-1 tie despite outshooting the Statesmen, 42-32. Fredonia State scored first on a goal by Lionel Crump, assisted by Erik Hlavaty, at the 9:31 mark of the first period. That would hold up until the 7:58 mark of the third period when Hobart scored a power-play goal. Despite getting a power play and three shots on goal in overtime, the game would end deadlocked. Jamie Kosecki made 31 saves, including three in overtime. Fredonia has Thanksgiving week off.

    CORTLAND — The Red Dragons took a rest this past week. Cortland State plays three games this week, traveling to Skidmore and then competing in the Babson Invitational to play the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts the first day.

    GENESEO — Sometimes you play a game you’d just as soon forget the instant the final horn blows. Geneseo State had such a game last weekend, getting blown out in its own barn by RIT, 13-0. Geneseo let through 62 shots on goal as the netminders, Jeff Phelps and Kevin Koury, were hung out to dry. To add insult to injury, the final RIT goal was put in from its own blue line. Geneseo hits the road this week, taking on Manhattanville and Skidmore.

    BROCKPORT — If you looked at the final score, you would never believe the game was tied, 2-2, at the end of the first period. That was the only highlight for Brockport State as it lost to Elmira, 12-3. Brockport matched Elmira in that first period goal for goal, as Christian Christensen scored at 1:39 after Elmira took the lead 17 seconds in, and Stephen Howard got a shorthander. Then Elmira went on a scoring spree netting eight second-period goals, seven of them consecutively. Brandon Marineau’s goal was the only thing that broke up the barrage. It doesn’t get any easier as Brockport takes on two top NESCAC schools in the Colby/Bowdoin Faceoff Classic in predetermined matchups.

    BUFFALO STATE — The Bengals split a weekend road trip to Manhattanville in two eerily similar games. Both times, the host team jumped out to a 2-0 lead after the first period. Both times, Buffalo State tied the game up in the second period. Both times, Manhattanville scored a goal in the third period. The only difference was that the first day Buffalo State scored twice in the third period to win 4-3, while they were scoreless in the final period the second day losing 3-2. Rocky Reeves, Brian Turner, Eric Bavisotto, and Jason Comardo got the goals in the first game. Harley Pottratz made 34 saves for the win. Second-game goals were scored by Jeff Lacapruccia (shorthanded) and Henry Jurek. Nick Berti was in net this time, making 36 saves. The Bengals take a break this week to enjoy some turkey.

    Game of the Week

    It’s not a game this week, but an entire tournament. The Primelink Great Northern Shootout has rapidly become one of the premier tournaments in Division III as it pits the two northernmost Vermont teams, Middlebury and Norwich, and the two northernmost New York teams, Plattsburgh and Potsdam. This tourney not only has area bragging rights at stake, but could be a preview of national playoff matchups come March.

    ECAC West Newsletter: Nov. 22, 2000

    The ECAC West got a mixed bag of results this week in nonleague play. RIT and Elmira started out the week by blasting two SUNYAC opponents by a combined score of 25-3. However, the league went 1-3-1 for the rest of the weekend, and was outscored 17-10 in those games.

    Team-by-Team Report

    RIT: RIT’s only game was a midweek tilt at Geneseo. The Tigers came out flat in the first period, and it looked like it might be a long night for coach Wayne Wilson early on. But a couple of favorable bounces put the Tigers up 3-0 at the end of the first period, and RIT came out flying in the second as three goals in a 2:15 span built a 6-0 lead.

    Geneseo looked tired after its two weekend games against Potsdam and Plattsburgh, and RIT skated better for the remainder of the game, eventually building the tally up to 13-0. With a score like that, it is kind of surprising that RIT had no one earn a hat trick, but Shawn Wilkins and Derek Hahn led the way offensively with two goals and two assists apiece. Tyler Euverman pitched the shutout in net, stopping all 28 shots that Geneseo mustered.

    RIT takes the 12-hour bus ride to Maine for the holidays to play against Bowdoin on Saturday and then Colby on Sunday.

    ELMIRA: Elmira’s midweek game against Brockport State started out a nailbiter as the Soaring Eagles and the Golden Eagles traded goals and went to the locker rooms knotted in a 2-2 tie at the end of the first period. But the floodgates opened after the puck dropped in the second period, as Elmira ripped off five straight goals in the first 5:31 to take control of the game.

    Elmira continued to pour on the pressure throughout the period, outshooting Brockport 29-9 as they chipped in three more goals. Two more tallies early in the third, and Elmira had built a commanding 12-3 lead for the victory. Freshman Lawne Snyder combined a hat trick and an assist for a four-point night, but sophomore Mike Hulbig took scoring honors for the evening with a hat trick of his own and two assists.

    Elmira hit the road on Saturday up to the North Country to face No. 1 Plattsburgh, where two early goals by the Cardinals meant Elmira was playing catchup for the rest of the night — a position in which the Soaring Eagles have not been very successful this season. To make matters worse, Plattsburgh notched two shorthanded goals in the second period. In between these, Elmira’s Adam Godfrey scored a unassisted goal to get Elmira on the board. Coach Glenn Thomaris pulled all the tricks out of his bag in the third when he pulled his goalie at the 7:23 mark for a 6-on-3 power play, but the Soaring Eagles couldn’t penetrate the Cardinal penalty kill. Adam Godfrey tallied another unassisted goal late in the third, but it was too late to make any difference. Elmira dropped the contest by a final score of 5-2.

    If you don’t like the color purple, don’t go to Elmira this weekend, since it’s the only color that you will see at the Thunderdome during the Elmira Invitational Tournament on Saturday and Sunday. Wisconsin-Stevens Point, St. Thomas, Williams, and Elmira all have purple among their colors — so if someone asks, you’re cheering for the purple team to win. In a preset format, Elmira will face Wisconsin-Stevens Point on Saturday, and follow up against St. Thomas Sunday.

    HOBART: The ups and downs of Statesman hockey continued this week. Hobart hosted Fredonia midweek, and rode an extraordinary goaltending performance by Chris Connolly. Fredonia netted a goal midway through the first period, but Connolly shut them down for the remainder of the game, making a total of 41 saves on the night. Unfortunately for Hobart, its offense was stagnant. Kyle Moore scored a power-play goal midway through the third period to tie the game 1-1, and that was how it ended after overtime.

    Next up for the Statesmen was a road game against Lebanon Valley, where they ran in to a goaltending buzzsaw named Lincoln Matlock. Despite putting 54 shots on net, the only puck Hobart could get past Matlock was a tally by Tim McCarthy on the power play in the third period. Hobart ended up losing the contest by a final score of 5-1.

    Hobart is idle this holiday week, next returning to the ice on November 28 to host Geneseo.

    MANHANTTANVILLE: The Valiants hosted Buffalo State in a pair of games with similar scripts but different endings. Both games saw Manhattanville score two goals in the first period, to be answered by two Buffalo State goals in the second period.

    Saturday’s game saw Camelo Scali and Tommy Prate score only 29 seconds apart in the first period. Buffalo State took the lead with a goal at 8:35 in the third, but Valiant Aaron Wallace answered at 9:11 to knot the score at 3-3. The Bengals got another tally three minutes later, and defeated Manhattanville 4-3.

    Sunday? Same script, different outcome. Chris Siefert and Bill Cummings staked Manhattanville to a 2-0 first-period lead, but Buffalo State answered with a pair of goals in the second to tie the score, one of them shorthanded.

    “That one was a miscommunication on our bench,” said coach Keith Levinthal. “A late substitution meant we were playing 4-on-4 for a few seconds and that cost us.”

    But this night the game stayed knotted 2-2 throughout most of the third period. A late power-play goal with just 1:26 remaining by Dave Schmalenberg lifted the Valiants to the victory, earning the split of the weekend series.

    “Both games were very similar games, very hard-fought, that could have gone either way in the third period,” said Levinthal.

    A pair of games sandwiched around the holidays are on tap this week for Manhattanville. The Valiants host Wesleyan on Tuesday.

    “It will be interesting to see how we bounce back after the split,” said Levinthal.

    Manhattanville then hosts Geneseo on Saturday.

    Game of the Week

    Take your pick of either of Elmira’s games this week. Stevens Point is always a tough opponent, while St. Thomas lost a lot of scoring punch from last year’s team, but I don’t think you can count out any team from last year’s Final Four that easily. Give coach Glenn Thomaris credit for being able to put together such a formidable tournament. Unlike many tournaments recently, there isn’t any creampuff opponent in this one to give the home team an easy first-round win.

    ECAC WEST vs.
    SUNYAC 9- 5-1
    ECAC East 0- 0-0
    NESCAC 0- 0-0
    NCHA 0- 2-0
    ECAC NE 2- 1-0
    Other 2- 0-0
    -------
    TOTAL 13-8-1

    This Week In Women’s Hockey

    It’s Good To Be Green

    Another weekend goes by, and again Dartmouth sits atop the USCHO.com poll. That’s because the Big Green (7-0-0) beat its two toughest Ivy League competitors — No. 4 Harvard (3-3-0) and No. 2 Brown (3-1-0) — last weekend in Hanover, 5-4 and 3-2, respectively.

    As usual, the key for Dartmouth was consistency. In each game, the Big Green outshot its opponent, 35-23. More importantly, Dartmouth never trailed in the third period.

    To use a cliche, Dartmouth certainly plays like a team. The Big Green only has one top 10 scorer in the ECAC in senior Carrie Sekela (6, 4a), but four other players among the conference’s 25 highest scorers — sophomore Carly Haggard (5g, 4a) and juniors Kim McCullough (4g, 5a), Correne Bredin (3g, 6a) and Kristin King (4g, 3a). Apparently everyone on the squad knows to get the puck to these five, because they accounted for seven of the team’s eight goals in the two games.

    While enjoying your Thanksgiving turkey this weekend, be sure to consider Dartmouth’s undefeated record with a grain of salt. Four of the Big Green’s seven wins were one-goal games. Further, while Dartmouth continues to outshoot its opponents, it is unable to put teams away, placing tremendous burdens on the shoulders of goaltenders Meaghan Cahill and Amy Ferguson in crunch time.

    So far, however, both netminders have responded with wins. And a 3-2 victory over the No. 2 team in the nation means a lot more than a 8-1 victory over last-place Boston College (1-6-0), which the Big Green achieved in its first game of the season. Dartmouth hosts Cornell (2-4-0) and No. 6 St. Lawrence (5-2-1) this weekend with a chance to move to 9-0-0 before a showdown with No. 3 Minnesota (8-2-0) in December.

    The Spirit of the Huskies

    Since the WCHA is the junior circuit in women’s hockey, it seems only fitting that three WCHA teams have freshmen as leading scorers. While Megan Hunter (21g, 15a) leads the conference in scoring and La Toya Clarke (5g, 15a) is the highest scorer for defending national champ Minnesota, St. Cloud rookie Rickie-Lee Doyle (8g, 9a) seems to score when the Huskies need her the most.

    That’s what happened Saturday against No. 5 Minnesota-Duluth (8-3-1). After the Bulldogs smoked the Huskies on Friday, 7-3, St. Cloud (5-6-1) came back to tie UMD on Saturday, 3-3, and Doyle had a hand in all three Husky goals.

    After assisting on Abby Cooper’s goal to open the scoring, Doyle tied the game at 2-2 midway through the second period with an unassisted goal. Then with UMD leading 3-2 and less than three minutes left in regulation, Doyle scored to force overtime and an eventual tie.

    All three Husky goals came on the power play, showing that St. Cloud knows how to capitalize on its opportunities. Now it’s simply a matter of creating those opportunities when both teams are at even strength if the Huskies are to improve their 2-5 conference record.

    Showdown in Madison

    First place in the WCHA will be on the line this weekend when No. 3 Minnesota (8-2-0) travels to No. 7 Wisconsin (9-2-1). The Gophers lead the Badgers by just one point in the conference standings, and Minnesota must win in front of one of women’s hockey’s loudest crowds to stay in first place for another week.

    On paper, the Gophers have the edge. Minnesota’s scoring is so balanced that the Gophers are 8-2 even though senior Nadine Muzerall (4g, 3a), the nation’s leading goal-scorer a year ago, is tied for 28th in the conference scoring race. With rookie La Toya Clarke added to a core of veterans in seniors Muzerall, Ambria Thomas (10g, 8a) Courtney Kennedy (2g, 6a), junior Laura Slominski (6g, 8a) and sophomore Ronda Curtin (7g, 5a), the Gophers have one of the deepest offenses in the country, not to mention the excellent goaltending of senior Erica Killewald, who leads the conference in goals against average (1.85) and save percentage (.924).

    But Wisconsin has talented players at each position, as well. Rookie Meghan Hunter (21g, 15a) and sophomore Kendra Antony (7g, 15a) are two of the conference’s top three scorers heading into Thanksgiving. Sophomore defensemen Kerry Weiland (5g, 12a) and Sis Paulsen (5g, 6a) are among the league’s four highest-scoring defenseman. And netminder Jackie MacMillan is third in the conference in GAA (2.42) and second in save percentage (.910). With a little help from the Madison crowd, the Badgers could easily steal a game from the Gophers over Thanksgiving weekend.

    MIT Senior Dies in Fall

    Lucy Crespo DaSilva, a 22-year-old senior on MIT’s women’s team, fell to her death Sunday night from her 14th-floor dorm room. Police are calling it a suicide after the discovery of a note in her room.

    Crespo DaSilva, a native of Brazil, was scheduled to graduate this fall. She was planning on starting graduate work in February while maintaining her spot as a forward on the hockey team.

    MIT coach, Katia Pashkevitch, said the team was stunned to hear of her death.

    “There are a lot of flowers and candles in the locker room,” she said. “We are going to put her number 9 on our shirts in memory of her.”

    Crespo DaSilva is survived by her parents, who now live in Albany, N.Y. They were informed Sunday night of her death.

    “This was a woman with enormous gifts and potential who was involved in a variety of things over the years,” said Robert M. Randolph, senior associate dean for student life.

    Weather Forces Postponement of MAAC Game

    The Mercyhurst Lakers will not be making a scheduled trip to Connecticut for a scheduled MAAC league Wednesday night due to extreme whether conditions in the Northern Pennsylvania/upstate New York area.

    Mercyhurst is located in Erie, Pa., and that area, including the Buffalo, N.Y., region, was socked with a nasty snowstorm on Monday. Those areas border Lake Erie, and its lake-effect conditions dumped up to two feet of snow on the area in one day.

    According to league officials, Mercyhurst, which generally travels to the New England region by plane, was scheduled to make a bus trip, but was forced to cancel due to poor road conditions along the way.

    The Lakers are also scheduled to travel to Eastern New York to play Union this Friday, and Rensselaer this Saturday. Both games are still scheduled.

    No makeup date has been set for the postponed game against UConn.

    This Week In The CCHA: Nov. 16, 2000

    DWF ISO LTR

    Happy, independent, loquacious hockey writer with an eye for the underdog seeks committed, goal-oriented winner. Game players and defensive types encouraged.  Ability to hold on to No. 1 for more than a week a plus. Ah. A girl can dream, can’t she?

    Two weeks ago, Michigan head coach Red Berenson put the Wolverines’ USCHO.com Poll ranking in perspective. “We’ve been there before,” he said, “only to be knocked out immediately.”

    If Berenson ever decides to leave coaching, he could easily establish himself as a psychic.

    That very week, Michigan State beat the number-one Wolverines, opening the top spot in the poll for Minnesota. Then the Sioux took three points from the Golden Gophers, and this week the Spartans find themselves the ones to beat.   Having difficulty following the line of succession? You’re not alone. There have been five number-one teams in the USCHO.com Poll since the start of the season, and not one of them has been able to stay there for more than one week of games. After being named No. 1 in the preseason and after the first week of play (Oct. 16), North Dakota split with Michigan Tech, and Wisconsin (Oct. 23) became the team supreme.

    As the top team, the Badgers beat Boston College but lost to Northeastern, setting up a brief Michigan reign (Oct. 30).

    After the Wolverines lost to Michigan State Nov. 4, Minnesota was named number one (Nov. 6). And if you’ve been reading along, you know what happened next.   Now the Spartans (Nov. 13) will try to become the first team in the country to be named number one two weeks running, and they won’t have an easy time of it.

    This brings us immediately to the…

    Game of the Week

    No. 8 Western Michigan (8-1-1, 3-0-1 CCHA) at No. 1 Michigan State (7-1-1, 6-1-0 CCHA)
    Friday, 7:05 p.m., Munn Ice Arena, East Lansing, Mich.

    There are three teams from the CCHA in the USCHO.com Top 10. While no one is surprised that two of the three teams are Big Ten schools in Michigan, the third-ranked team — Western Michigan — may be the year’s Cinderella story in the making.

    “It’s exciting for our players,” says head coach Jim Culhane.

    The Broncos may seem like an overnight success to some, but Culhane says that deliberate and prolonged work is behind the team’s quick start this season.

    “There was development from our program from last year. We hadn’t been in the postseason tournament in three years, and then finished ninth.”

    Although the Broncos lost to the Wolverines in the first round of the CCHA playoffs, Culhane says, “I felt the team handled it well and gave Michigan two pretty good games.”  

    Culhane says that the “some of those experiences for our upperclassmen carried over and transcended this season, and our upperclassmen are leading our team.”

    If you don’t know what two upperclassmen, David Gove and Steve Rymsha, are doing this season, then you’ve been paying way too much attention to the Florida vote recount. Gove has 12 goals and 14 assists in 10 games — and no penalties. Rymsha has 13 goals and seven assists in the same number of games.

    Add Mike Bishai’s five goals and 19 assists, and you’ve got two powerful lines of offense. Rymsha is the left winger on the Bishai line, and Gove plays on the Bronco first line.

    “I won’t play them together. If you play them together, then you get a checking line that can shut them down.”

    Then there are rookies Jeff Campbell (9-5–14) and Mike Jarmuth (0-11–11), and you have even more depth.

    At this point, the Broncos have the top offense in the country. Only North Dakota’s Bryan Lundbohm (11-6–17) rivals Gove and Bishai in terms of goal production (and it should be noted that Lundbohm has played just eight games).

    The Broncos are averaging 5.40 goals per game, with a power play that clicks along at 29.2%. In fact, five of Gove’s goals and six of Rymsha’s are power-play tallies.

    But don’t think Western isn’t scoring five-on-five. The team is +72, second in the league (behind Northern Michigan’s +73), and is outscoring opponents 54-31.

    Granted, the Broncos haven’t exactly been knocking off college hockey powerhouses. Alaska-Fairbanks, a disappointing Lake Superior team, Dartmouth, Niagara — these are the teams Western has swept. The Broncos split with Alabama-Huntsville.

    So this week’s single match is the true litmus test for Western Michigan, especially since it pits the nation’s leading scorer against the Michigan State sophomore who is arguably the nation’s best goaltender.

    “In the beginning of the year, people were asking me who our go-to guy was, and it’s clear now that it’s Ryan Miller,” says Michigan State head coach Ron Mason.

    In the past, the Spartans have relied upon game-dominating players like Mike York and Shawn Horcoff, men who carried the puck rather than blocking it. But this season, Miller (.943 SV%, 1.54 GAA) has proven than he can stop more than a dozen shots per game, and he gives Michigan State the opportunity to win every game.

    Mason is well aware of the almost high noon, showdown-like potential for this game.

    “They’re maybe the best offensive team in the country, and I don’t know that we’re the best defensive team in the country,” says Mason.

    In fact, the Spartans are at just +6 this season, a far cry from the dominating defensive squads they’ve had in the past.

    “They’re [Western] certainly putting up unbelievable numbers,” says Mason. “They’re power play is phenomenal, and that’s where a lot of their scoring comes from.”

    The Broncos have the best PP in the league, but the Spartans are no slouch in that department themselves, second in overall play (.246), and Michigan State’s penalty kill (.902) is the best in the CCHA.

    Factor in the Broncos’ propensity to take penalties (25.60 minutes per game) and the Spartans loathing of the lockbox (14.67 minutes), and special teams could play a huge role in this game.

    “Our power play has been extremely good,” says Mason, “and it’s given us a chance to win almost every night. We have areas of our team that are core Michigan State values–good power play, good penalty kill, good defense–and maybe we rely a little bit more on our goaltender, but you play to the strength of your team, and this year it’s our goaltender.”

    Rustyn Dolyny (4-6–10), Adam Hall (5-4–9), Jeremy Jackson (3-6–9), and Brian Maloney (3-6–9) are the top four scorers for the Spartans, and Dolyny, Hall, and Jackson have each registered three power-play goals.

    Culhane knows that Michigan State is more than the sum of one goaltender.

    “I agree that Ryan Miller is outstanding — and obviously has a bright career at Michigan State and has a bright career ahead in pro hockey — but the likes of Adam Hall, Rusty Dolyny — they have some terrific players and a lot of depth.”

    He adds, “What else can you say about the winningest coach in college hockey?”

    The Broncos, says Culhane, are looking forward to his challenge.

    “We understand we’re going in as tremendous underdogs and we have to find a way to win.”

    Given the history of No. 1 teams this season, it would be easy to pick the Broncos to knock off the Spartans. In fact, I want to pick them, but I just can’t. Perhaps Miller is due to have a bad game. Perhaps the Broncos are due to lose to a better team.

    Pick: Michigan State 3-2

    Grudge of the Week

    When these two Ohio rivals meet, it doesn’t matter who holds the better record. There is absolutely, positively, without a doubt, zero love lost between them.  And while neither coach seems to care, the quest for the Ohio Cup is about to begin.

    Bowling Green (1-5-2, 1-3-2 CCHA) at Ohio State (6-3-0, 4-2-0 CCHA)
    Saturday, 7:05 p.m. and Sunday, 3:05 p.m., Value City Arena, Columbus, Ohio

    Do you remember the last meeting between these two teams? It’s the one that put the Falcons into the playoffs, one that the Buckeyes would like to forget.

    The 7-1 Falcon win in Bowling Green Feb. 26 was an ugly, penalty-filled game, with a third period of nothing but odd-man rushes for the Falcons.  Both teams were trying desperately to make the CCHA playoffs, and I’ve never felt sorrier for a goaltender in my life than I did for Ray Aho that day, hung out to dry as the Buckeyes threw everything they had into their lackluster offense.   The night before wasn’t much prettier, as the Buckeyes squeaked by with a 4-3 win at the Schott.

    The teams split an earlier set of games last season, with each club winning at home. BG won 3-0 Jan. 14, followed by the 4-1 Buckeye win the following night.

    The Falcons lead this series 88-50-5 all-time, but the series is closer in Columbus, where Bowling Green has a one-game edge (31-30-2). The Buckeyes have taken six of the last ten meetings.

    The games this weekend mark the first contests for the Ohio Cup. The traveling trophy, sponsored by The Buckeye Sports Bulletin, is awarded yearly to the CCHA school in Ohio (OSU, BG, or Miami) with the best record against the other Ohio teams. Ironically, the Buckeyes — the one Ohio CCHA team that didn’t make the playoffs last year — are the defending champs.  The Falcons lead with 12 titles.

    The RedHawks, however, are the only team among the three with banners in Goggin proclaiming their titles.

    Awarding the Cup will be a little tricky this season, thanks to the cluster system. Ohio State and Miami meet four times each, while Bowling Green plays its Ohio opponents only twice, each time a two-game series on the road.

    Steve Helwagen, editor of the BSB, says he’s not certain how the Cup will be decided, and suggests that the publication will eliminate one home-and-home Miami-OSU series to even out the number of games played.

    Bowling Green head coach Buddy Powers complains — tongue-in-cheek — about the toughness of his team’s schedule against the other Ohio teams.

    “They should compensate us for playing all of our games [against OSU and Miami] on the road. We never get to play home games.”

    The Falcons come off a bye week, while the Buckeyes return to Columbus after a long and productive trip to Sault Ste. Marie, having swept the Lakers 2-1 and 3-0.

    “I don’t like to have any bye weeks, personally,” says Powers, “but at this stage academically, it comes at a good time. Players had the opportunity to concentrate on their school work.”

    As for the Buckeyes, Powers says, “I think they’re feeling pretty darned good about themselves, and we’ve got our work cut out for us. It’s no easy thing to go into Sault Ste. Marie and sweep.”

    In fact, it’s no easy thing for Ohio State to sweep anyone. The two wins represent the first two-game series sweep of the season for the Buckeyes, and the first time since Nov. 27-28, 1998 on the road against UAF that Ohio State has been able to take games on back-to-back nights from an opponent.

    For John Markell, head coach of the Buckeyes, history is history.

    “Those games are done. Each weekend is different in this league.”

    Markell says that he and his young team have a healthy respect for Bowling Green — “they tied Northern Michigan in Marquette” — and that the Buckeyes can’t afford to take any opponent for granted.

    “Just because we have some success we can build on we can’t regress.”

    “It’s nice to win,” says Markell, “but I just want our team to play well, play hard. That’s my first goal is to get these young guys playing consistently.”

    He adds that the Falcons “give us a good game every time. They have the reputation for playing hard.”

    What the Falcons don’t have a reputation for is lighting the lamp.

    “We just can’t score–that’s our problem,” says Powers. “We get chances, and we don’t make it happen.”

    The Falcons are last in the league in scoring, averaging 1.75 goals per game, while allowing 3.00.

    Powers is quick to point out that goaltender Tyler Masters (9.18 SV%, 2.80 GAA) is doing his job.

    “He’s been playing well, he’s not the problem. Our problem is our offense.  There are probably some guys white-knuckling it, that’s inevitable.

    “The biggest thing for us is for guys to play the game right. Once they do that, the scoring will come.”

    Powers welcomes the return of Doug Scheuller, who was expected to be out until after Christmas with an injury.

    “He’s making strides, and that’s a big part of our D. Because we have a lot of young guys and those guys need leadership, it helps that he’s back.”

    Aside from the rivalry, there’s some shared history between the two schools.  Markell played his college hockey at Bowling Green, and BG assistant Dave Smith was a standout for the Buckeyes back in the day.

    The Buckeyes return to Columbus with two of the league’s Players of the Week, forward Jean-Francois Dufour (4-5–9) and the frontrunner for the league’s Rookie of the Year Award, goaltender Mike Betz (9.39 SV%, 1.96 GAA), but the Buckeyes are a squad of role-players and unsung heroes.

    The most impressive Buckeye on the ice right now has received little attention, but at this point appears nearly peerless. Senior captain and defenseman Andre Signoretti (2-5–7, +8) leads all CCHA defenders in plus-minus, but that’s only half the story. The speedy, solid D-man may be the league’s best defenseman: impossible to take off the puck with a forecheck of his own that can change the flow of play; a wicked hard shot and point anchor on the power play; the guy you want back if you’re on the wrong end of an odd-man rush.

    Like Western Michigan, Ohio State has a chance to prove something this weekend. A home sweep, combined with a concentrated and disciplined effort, may go a long way toward solidifying the Buckeyes’ claim to being a top-tier team.

    Picks: Ohio State 3-1, 4-2

    Ganga Watch

    Speaking of Buckeyes, Nick Ganga had no penalties and no points last weekend, so Ganga still has six goals and an assist, and three penalties for six minutes. It’s still 25 games and 44 minutes to go.

    This Week In Hockey East: Nov. 16, 2000

    Time For The Panic Button?

    Boston University’s losses to UMass-Lowell and Northeastern last weekend dropped its record to 2-4-1 with a 1-3-1 mark in Hockey East. Is it time for Terrier fans to go bungee jumping off the Tobin Bridge without the cords? After all, this is the worst start — other than 1998-99 — for a BU team since the late eighties.

    The school’s enviable record of 10 NCAA appearances in the past 11 years contains only one blemish: The Lost Year of 1998-99. That season the Terriers opened with four defeats, stood at 1-6-1 after eight games and 2-8-1 after 11. They finished 14-20-3, lost in the Hockey East quarterfinals, cleaned out their lockers and went home.

    Is a similar fate in store for this year’s squad?

    Although it’s too early to tell, the highly probable answer is no.

    To begin with, 2-4-1 is a long way from The Lost Year’s 2-8-1 opening mark. If the Terriers lose the next four, then the Tobin may be worth talking about.

    Until then, it’s worth noting that they also started slowly last year, opening with a 2-3-0 record before winning four straight. The Terriers would eventually come within a clanged post in quadruple overtime of reaching the Frozen Four.

    Additionally, in 1992-93, they began at 2-3-1 and then 3-4-1, but finished 29-9-2 and did reach the Frozen Four.

    So it all may be much ado about nothing.

    That said, coach Jack Parker was none too happy with his team’s performance in the Friday night loss to Lowell, 4-2.

    “The lack of intensity at times was appalling,” he said. “We’d dump it in and then we wouldn’t go get it. We’d overskate the puck and wouldn’t stop and go back. In general, it was a pretty poor effort by us.”

    Parker muttered many similar words on many similar nights in The Lost Year. There was an ominous quality to hearing them again.

    Fortunately, he felt very different about the Terriers’ effort against Northeastern on Sunday. They lost, 4-1, and played poorly in the second period, but had much to be encouraged about as well.

    “When you lose 4-1, you think you’d be unhappy, but I was pretty happy character-wise in how hard we played,” he said. “There’s the old saying of two out of three a’int bad. I thought we played great in the first. I thought we played real hard and real smart in the third except for a couple mistakes. … I was real disappointed that we seemed to revert to the way we played against Lowell in the second period.”

    Going into the season, BU looked solid except for the big question mark in goal caused by the late departure of Ricky DiPietro. His successors, Jason Tapp and Sean Fields, haven’t been All-Hockey East, but neither have they consistently been Swiss Cheese. Arguably, the goaltending could have been faulted in only two of the losses. Fields was spectacular in a win over Merrimack and the duo has been either solid or at least adequate in the other four games.

    The problem has surprisingly been with the offense. Specifically, the even-strength offense. The power play has been the best in the league to date, scoring 27.3 percent of the time. However, while the Terriers have scored 12 goals on the man advantage, they’ve only added 10 other goals in seven games. Add the one strength to the other weakness and the net result is an average of only 3.00 goals per game, next to last in Hockey East.

    The problem, unfortunately, appears to be getting worse, not better. In the last three games, the Terriers haven’t scored a single even-strength goal; in the last four, only one. With three of those four contests coming against teams projected to finish eighth and ninth in the league, those are ominous numbers.

    “We couldn’t generate any offense other than on power plays,” said Parker after the Lowell game. “That’s the thing that has got me most concerned. Our five-on-five goal scoring has evaporated.”

    Two nights later against Northeastern, he saw improvement but the same even-strength result: a goose egg.

    “The way we’re playing five-on-five, at least we got some opportunities,” he said. “But we’re still not scoring goals. We’ve got to find a way to get them through the goaltender five-on-five.”

    So with a 2-4-1 start that has included an anemic offense and some inconsistent goaltending, can it get any worse?

    Ummm… Eighth-ranked New Hampshire is on tap this Friday.

    Time to assume another Lost Season? Time to bang away on that panic button? Time to head for the Tobin?

    Not so fast.

    “I don’t like the fact that we’re two games under .500 in the league,” said Parker. “I don’t like the fact that we’ve struggled offensively. But in Providence I felt we played a really hard game. I felt we played real smart and real hard in both games against Merrimack. And I thought we played well [against Northeastern] except for spans of that second period.

    “So I’m pretty pleased with our overall effort. I’ve been saying all along that I like my team, but the league is too hard.”

    So what’s the solution? BU to the MAAC?

    Actually, the Terriers’ days atop Hockey East may not be over. This season could still end happily for BU fans. One easily overlooked factor points to easier times ahead, notwithstanding Friday’s date with UNH.

    “We’re 1-3-1 in the league and four of our first five games have been on the road,” said Parker. “This is a tough league to win on the road. That’ll be to our advantage later on.”

    TV Talk

    So is there going to be a Hockey East TV deal with Fox Sports New England or not?

    It says here that it’s going to happen. All the details appear to be agreed on. The only things missing are the John Hancocks on the dotted lines.

    The mystery, of course, is why it’s taken this long. Nonetheless, it’s all but certain that the deal will be completed.

    Perhaps that’s akin to calling Florida for Gore at 7:49 p.m. over a week ago. But this is a marriage that works for both sides.

    Poll Thoughts

    Let’s say that Maine or BU opened the season with wins over UNH and BC on the road and then lost to St. Lawrence in overtime one night before defeating Clarkson in OT the next. With a 75 percent winning percentage over very tough competition, where do you think the Black Bears or Terriers would be ranked?

    Certainly somewhere in the top five in the country.

    Let’s say, on the other hand, that a team of less prestige opened with a 3-3-2 record or, even worse, 2-4-1. Would such a team be in the Top 15 or even getting votes?

    Doubtful.

    Of course, if you’ve been paying attention to the early results this season, you’ll know that Maine has started slowly at 3-3-2 while BU has gotten out of the gate in even shakier fashion at 2-4-1.

    Nonetheless, Maine is ranked 11th in the USCHO.com Poll and the Terriers are third in the list of “Others receiving votes.”

    On the other hand, Yale has been dealt what this writer considers an egregious injustice. The Bulldogs sit at only the 14th spot despite a 75 percent winning percentage against competition that includes BC and UNH.

    Don’t get me wrong. BU and Maine have built their reputations painstakingly over the years and deserve every last morsel of respect. And that respect gives me every reason to believe that both teams will soon be earning Top 15 status. However, reputations and respect shouldn’t be the primary factors in the national rankings.

    Performance is what matters. And based on performance, Yale should be a Top Five team. Based on performance, Providence, with its 5-2-1 record that includes wins over New Hampshire and Maine, should be higher than 13th. And based on performance, Northeastern’s 5-2-1 record that has included games against a Murderers Row of BC, Wisconsin, Maine, BU and St. Lawrence deserves more than 10th place.

    End of sermon.

    Another Rant

    While I’m at it, let me rail against the rare member of the media who doesn’t care enough to get it right. The overwhelmingly vast majority cares and cares deeply. They take pride in their work.

    But recently I heard a broadcaster who couldn’t be bothered to pronounce the players’ names correctly. His team was playing against Merrimack and he butchered at least three names. Goaltender Joe Exter was “Exeter.” Vince Clevenger was “Clavenger” to rhyme with avenger. Worst of all, Ron Mongeau was pronounced “Mon-goo” instead of “Mon-joe.”

    If someone is covering a game either on the radio or on TV, all he needs to do is pick up the line charts for that evening. A pronunciation guide is provided for any name that isn’t said the way it’s spelled.

    How hard is that?

    If you don’t care enough to get it right, go into a lesser calling where as long as you’ve got good looks no one cares if you spout inaccuracies. Lesser callings like, say, President of the United States.

    The WWF and Hockey East

    “That’s a big-time wrestling line!” said Merrimack coach Chris Serino after the Warriors defeated UMass-Lowell last Sunday.

    While there were no scantily clad female managers, turnbuckles, fireworks or choreographed posturing, it’s easy to see what Serino is talking about. Kyle Kidney (6-2, 240) leads the impressive muscle on a line with Jeff Boulanger (6-2, 210) and Brad Rooney (5-10, 190). With Rooney dwarfed by his two wingers, one could call this trio “The Rose Between Two Thorns.”

    Kidney and Boulanger are indeed thorns in the corners and in front of the net, where they’re almost impossible to dislodge. They’re a big reason why a coach like Serino will say after a game, “That’s the toughest team we’ve faced down low. They’re big and strong and they wall the puck off — protect the puck [with their bodies] — real well. We’ve played Michigan and Michigan State and Lowell is as tough of a team as I’ve seen down low.”

    Kidney has gotten off to a great start offensively with four goals and three assists in seven games. In part, this has come from consistently using his 6-4, 240 frame to be a Thorn instead of trying to be a Rose.

    “He’s focusing more this year on being a power forward,” said UML coach Tim Whitehead. “As a result, he’s getting his share of the points. In the past, I’d tell him that he was trying to be a finesse player sometimes. Not always, but too much.

    “He’s not a finesse player. He’s going to get his points with hard work, hitting people and creating loose pucks and putting rebounds in from in front of the net. Those are the types of goals he’s going to get if he sticks to staying within himself and plays his game. This year he is playing more as a power forward.

    “He’s never going to lead the country in scoring, but he doesn’t have to. He just has to be a consistent power forward. If he does that, he’ll be good defensively, he’ll be physically intimidating and he’ll get his share of points.”

    The physical intimidation factor shouldn’t be underestimated. It’s an advantage the River Hawks hold over most teams and is a key component to their strategy of out-grinding teams.

    “Kyle’s physical intimidation is very important, especially since he’s one of the captains,” said Whitehead. “For us to be successful in Hockey East, we need to be a physical team. So his playing that power forward role is very important to us.”

    Home Ice Domination

    What Hockey East team has a perfect undefeated and untied record at home? If you guessed Northeastern, Providence or UMass-Amherst, you were wrong. Close, but wrong. Those three — 3-0-1, 5-0-1 and 2-0-1, respectively — all have one tie as a blemish.

    Boston College? Wrong! Not even close. BC and UMass-Lowell are last in the league in home records with .500 marks. (Yes, that’s right. Not a single Hockey East team has a losing record in its own barn.) Lowell is 3-3-0 while the Eagles have the bizarre combination of a 2-2-0 mark at home, but 5-0-0 on the road.

    No, the lone team whose record hasn’t been sullied even by a tie is Merrimack. The Warriors have won all four contests at the partially refurbished Volpe Complex.

    “We’re starting to make people scared to come into our building,” said Ryan Kiley after scoring the game-winner against Lowell on Sunday afternoon.

    The acid test will come this weekend when Boston College invades North Andover, but the Warriors have already hosted BU and sent the Terriers home with a loss.

    “We do have a sense of confidence playing in our own building,” said coach Chris Serino. “It’s funny, because I remember when I first got here I read some articles in the paper where the players said they’d rather play on the road than here.

    “That’s certainly not true anymore. Guys love playing here.”

    The Quip Corner

    If Merrimack wins a game and Serino doesn’t say at least one very funny thing, it’s an upset of epic proportions. After Sunday’s win over Lowell, the Merrimack coach didn’t disappoint.

    Kiley was describing his game-winner and said, “Coach says whenever I get close, don’t hesitate. Just shoot the puck.”

    Serino shook his head, put a mock disgusted look on his face and muttered, “All of a sudden, they’re listening to me!”

    A few minutes later, a questioner asked about the upcoming weekend.

    Question: “You’re going to be undefeated going against BC on Friday.”

    Serino: “Whoa, whoa, whoa!”

    Question: “Undefeated at home, I mean.”

    Serino: “I thought I might have been sleeping here for a while.”

    Kiley: “That sounded pretty good!”

    Serino: “I’ll remember that quote for a couple years from now.”

    One week earlier, a Hockey East visitor offered another quote of note. Yale All-American Jeff Hamilton was asked about his team’s brutal opening schedule of UNH, BC, St. Lawrence and Clarkson.

    “Yeah,” he said, “you can blame Coach for that one!”

    Wanna bet a fourth-liner would have had a different response?

    The End Of A Streak

    It wasn’t up there with Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting record, but Northeastern’s Sean MacDonald saw a personal 51-game streak come to an end Sunday night against BU.

    However, while Joltin’ Joe was undoubtedly sad to see his end, MacDonald’s emotions were quite the opposite. His goal against the Terriers broke a 51-game scoring drought for the senior dating back to Nov. 13, 1998. “It’s a relief and it’s exciting, too,” he said. “It’s nice to contribute offensively to the team’s cause.”

    MacDonald played with a separated shoulder and a sore leg, the latter courtesy of taking a shot in practice. After the game, he appeared for the media with large ice packs on the two injuries.

    “I’m playing a little banged up, but it’s part of hockey,” he said with a shrug.

    So did the goal make the injuries feel just a little better?

    “Absolutely,” he said. “The goal and the win. The win is the most important thing. That’s a very good hockey team we beat.”

    A Faceoff Primer

    Northeastern’s Chris Lynch, the subject of last week’s trivia contest, scored a goal against BU on Sunday in the most fitting way possible: off a faceoff. One of the masters of the art, Lynch won two draws back to the point, but on the resulting shots BU netminder Jason Tapp made the saves.

    The third time was a charm. He pulled the puck back to Joe Mancuso, who put it on net and Lynch scored on the rebound.

    “He won two, they changed lines and then he won it again,” said coach Bruce Crowder.

    Ironically, Lynch hadn’t been experiencing his usual faceoff success that game.

    “I’d been struggling on faceoffs earlier in the night and then I won those three in a row,” he said. “It’s kind of ironic that on nights that I do well on them, I don’t get anything and tonight [I struggled] and then won a few and I put it in.”

    According to Northeastern’s statistics, Lynch has won 130 of 198 faceoffs (65.7 percent) through the first eight games.

    So what is his secret to winning draws so consistently?

    “Experience and practice and the way I position my body,” he said. “I’m cheating without cheating. I position my legs where I’m off to one side and I’m leaning so I have the leverage to get [the puck] back. And it’s the quickness of the hands, too.”

    Condolences

    Condolences go out to UNH coach Dick Umile and his family after the passing of his father. I never met the elder Umile, but if he was anything like his son, he was a fine, fine man indeed.

    Trivia Contest

    Last week’s contest asked which Hockey East player had not scored a five-on-five goal in over a year, but still had a hat trick to his credit?

    The answer was Northeastern’s Chris Lynch, whose hat trick earlier this year included a power-play goal, one while shorthanded and a third into an empty net. His last five-on-five tally was in last year’s season opener on Oct. 16, 1999 against Bowling Green.

    That is, until last Sunday night when he broke that streak against BU. Lynch, whose faceoff prowess is discussed above, already has six goals this year and has been a big part of the Huskies’ impressive start.

    Thanks to Mike Trocchi, writer for The Northeastern News, for noting that statistical oddity.

    The first to answer correctly was Mark Begley, who selected the following cheer:

    “NORTHEASTERN… The new Hockey East POWERHOUSE!!!”

    This week’s question asks which Hockey East player would be Yogi Bear’s favorite. (That’s the cartoon character, not Yogi Berra, the baseball player.) Send your answer to Dave Hendrickson.

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

    Thanks to those who suggested either use of a microwave or a teakettle to avoid burning the house down as described two weeks ago in this space. And a big thanks to all of you for not suggesting a brain transplant.

    Thanks also to those who noticed that there was no “And Finally” section last week and hoped for its return. Sorry, but last week’s column was almost novel-length as it was.

    Time and space is short again this week, so here are a few thoughts on the astounding events in Florida.

  • When I heard that Gore had “won” Florida, I thought it was probably over. When I heard he’d also taken Pennsylvania and Michigan, I knew it was over. Nonetheless, as a political junkie, I transcribed some interviews while continuing to follow the results. … and nearly fell off my chair when Dan Rather announced at around 10:00 that they were pulling Florida back.
  • The stunning fact is that the networks called the state for Gore and then they called the state for Bush. And had to retract them both! And they quickly called New Mexico where the vote is still up in the air.
  • One wonders how well some media members would hold up if subjected to the same scrutiny as the Presidential candidates. What would the reaction have been if Gore or Bush had trouble finding New Mexico on the map like Tom Brokaw did? (Tim Russert: “The one in the blue.”) My guess is that Brokaw would be consigned to Potatoe-ville with Dan Quayle.
  • And how about Time magazine’s Margaret Carlson putting both feet in her mouth by referring to the servicepeople whose absentee ballots could decide the election as “taxdodgers.” She later apologized, but could any politician survive a comment like that?
  • On the other hand, I could listen to Russert and Cokie Roberts analyze politics all night long.
  • Yes, Rather, Roberts and Russert are all on different networks. The remote control got a workout.
  • Those ballot counting machines have an error rate between two and eight percent? Surely they’ve dropped a few decimal points when giving us that number.
  • As someone who became addicted to the late Theodore White’s Making of the President series, I can only wonder what an amazing account he would have written of this year’s events.
  • Saturday sure will be a day when the whole nation’s eyes are riveted on Florida. Yup, Florida – Florida State football.
  • You know that you’re working with engineers when someone mutters, “Why would you ever stay up to hear about the election? It’s not like quantum mechanics where observing something changes the results.”
  • Hockey East Renews Contract with Fox Sports Net

    Hockey East announced today that it has signed a two-year deal with Fox Sports Net New England. It includes nine regular season contests during the 2000-01 season and two to three Hockey East quarterfinal matches, as well as the semifinals and the championship game at the FleetCenter in mid-March. The pact extends a three-year relationship that ran through last season.

    logos/conf-he.gif

    Six of the nine regular season games have been determined with the other three left open as “wild cards.” The six feature Boston University, Boston College, Maine and New Hampshire twice each, and include eight of the nine league teams, omitting Merrimack. The broadcasts begin with the Boston University-Boston College rivalry on Jan. 7, 2001.

    All games will be shown live except for the second playoff semifinal game, which will be on tape delay.

    Combined with local and regional telecasts on the BU, UNH and Maine networks, the Fox Sports Net package guarantees that at least 20 percent of the league’s 108 regular-season head-to-head battles will be televised, an all-time high.

    “We are very pleased with the increasing amount of exposure we will be receiving this season and beyond, especially through our continuing partnership with Fox Sports Net New England,” said Hockey East commissioner Joe Bertagna. “Their network has enabled us to reach fans that would otherwise be out of our range of influence and we look forward to sharing that advantage for years to come.”

    Regular Season Schedule

    (all games at 7:00 p.m.)

    Sunday, January 7 Boston University at Boston College
    Saturday, January 13 Boston University at Maine
    Saturday, January 20 New Hampshire at Northeastern
    Saturday, January 27 Maine at Boston College
    Saturday, February 3 UMass Amherst at UMass Lowell
    Saturday, February 10 Providence at New Hampshire
    Friday, February 16 “Wild Card” Game
    Saturday, February 24 “Wild Card” Game
    Saturday/Sunday, March 3 or 4 “Wild Card” Game

    Hockey East Tournament Schedule (6 games)

    Thursday, March 8 Quarterfinal Game, 7:00 p.m. **
    Saturday, March 10 Quarterfinal Game, 7:00 p.m.
    Sunday, March 11 Quarterfinal Game (If Necessary), 7:00 p.m.
    Friday, March 16 Semifinal #1 – LIVE, 5:00 p.m.
    Friday, March 16 Semifinal #2 – TAPE DELAYED, 8:00 p.m.
    Saturday, March 17 Championship Game – LIVE, 7:00 p.m.

    ** – The Thursday night game is tentative; host schools decide whether to begin their series on Thursday or Friday night.

    This Week In The WCHA: Nov. 16, 2000

    Last season, Wisconsin had one losing streak — two games. The last two games, in fact.

    The 2000-2001 Badgers are in the midst of a five-game losing streak.

    Yes, a lot of things have changed in little time in Madison, Wis. One of them is the evaporation of the sense of invincibility — that feeling from a year ago that they were going to be in every game, no matter how they played.

    Poof.

    The Badgers are being forced to work for every shot, every goal, every win this season. It started in the first week and doesn’t appear ready to stop any time in the near future.

    But does the five-game skid have any chance of subsiding soon? The Badgers, as with everything else, will have to work for it.

    It’s almost puzzling to see the night-and-day transition between the Badgers that won their first seven games of the year — not all of them pretty, mind you — and the team of the last two-plus weeks.

    “It’s the same team that won seven in a row to start with,” Wisconsin coach Jeff Sauer said, but what’s changed? Is it the determination? Is it the coaching? Is it the offense? Is it the defense? Is it the goaltending? Is it the schedule?

    Wait … we may have a winner there.

    The Badgers racked up their first six wins of the season against relatively inferior WCHA opponents Michigan Tech and Minnesota State-Mankato, and against UMass-Amherst, which probably won’t be confused this year with a team competing for the Hockey East title.

    Wisconsin did get a key victory over Boston College in a No. 1-vs.-No. 2 matchup, but the closest the Badgers have come to the number one since has been on the power play, where they are 1-for-29 in the last five games.

    The loss to Northeastern started the Badgers on a slippery slope down the USCHO.com rankings. From No. 1 to No. 12 in a matter of three weeks.

    In that time, Wisconsin fell to Minnesota on the road and Alaska-Anchorage at home. That leads us to now, and a feeling of anxiety in the Badgers’ locker room.

    “I hope it’s not something that’s going to linger,” Sauer said. “The guys have worked hard, they’ve continued to work hard in practice and they know what has to be done. It’s not like we have to beat it into their heads every night. The important thing is we continue to get that work ethic and good things will happen.”

    But work ethic alone isn’t enough. They need goals. Some on the power play would help.

    After starting the season 11-for-52 in the first seven games, the Wisconsin power play, as noted before, has seen the bottom drop out.

    “Here’s the point: Both nights this weekend, if we score a couple goals [on the power play] it’s a different story,” Sauer said, referring to 5-3 and 3-2 losses to Anchorage. “The point is, the power play has got a lot to do with not scoring a lot of goals.”

    So what’s the story at even strength? A top team shouldn’t have to rely on its power play to do the scoring, and Sauer knows why his offense hasn’t been able to produce as it once did.

    “The biggest thing is not moving the puck quick enough,” Sauer said. “The other teams are forcing Dany Heatley. We get the puck in the other guys’ hands, we’ve got to move the puck quicker and take advantage of what they’re giving us and we haven’t done a good job of that on the power play the last couple of games.”

    The road, as is common in the WCHA this season, gets no easier for the Badgers. Colorado College is at the Kohl Center this weekend before the College Hockey Showcase, with Michigan on Thanksgiving night and Michigan State next Sunday.

    “We’ve got eight games to play before Christmas and the big thing for us is we have to establish ourselves again,” Sauer said. “Whether it’s against CC, Michigan or Minnesota, whoever, we just have to worry about us and go out and play.

    “CC’s a pretty good team, but you can see what’s happening around the country: A lot of people are beating a lot of people, and that’s just going to continue.”

    There’s plenty of reason to be down on the Badgers right now. They’ve lost four WCHA games midway through November where they lost five all of last season.

    But a big response this weekend would put them back where they need to be.

    “I’m not discouraged at all,” Sauer said. “I’m disappointed in what we’ve done, but we’ve only played eight WCHA games; we’ve got 20 to play. Hopefully we can get ourselves back untracked here.”

    Welcome Back, Part 1

    What a whirlwind of events for Mike Sertich and Michigan Tech in the last week and change.

    Try to follow along:

  • Tim Watters goes out at Tech.
  • Sertich goes from retired coach/radio talk show host to Tech interim coach.
  • Sertich goes from Duluth, Minn., to Houghton, Mich., for a news conference and practice with the Huskies.
  • Sertich goes back to Duluth for his first game in his return to the bench, where he meets a pink visiting locker room he had a hand in painting.
  • The fans at the Duluth Entertainment and Convention Center give Sertich a nice welcome. Sertich wasn’t sure what to expect.
  • Tech wins in overtime on Friday; Sertich isn’t quite sure what to do.
  • Duluth wins on Saturday.

    So now, everything’s back to normal, right? Well, Sertich is back in Houghton, reportedly staying with friend and Tech Athletics Director Rick Yeo until he can find a place of his own.

    You call that normal?

    Sertich was appreciative of his welcome from the fans in Duluth.

    “There was a very warm reception from the fans,” Sertich told the Duluth News-Tribune. “I didn’t expect as much, but maybe I should have. The people here have always been good to me.”

    But things aren’t exactly perfect just yet in Tech. When Matt Ulwelling scored in overtime on Friday, Sertich wasn’t sure how to react.

    “When the game was over, I was looking for someone to hug,” Sertich told the News-Tribune, “but I don’t know anyone on the team well enough to hug, so we shook hands.”

    A strange set of circumstances, indeed.

    The Job Search

    While we’re on the topic of Michigan Tech, there hasn’t been a flood of speculation as to who the next full-time coach will be.

    Maybe it’s because Sertich has the job for the season and the position won’t open up for at least another four months. Yeo said Sertich would even be considered as a full-time replacement for Watters after the season ends if he’s interested and things go well.

    But the Tech job is a dangerous one, especially for someone looking to break in as a Division I head coach. Remember that Tech is predominantly a Division II school, meaning the resources there are not along the same lines as Wisconsin or Minnesota. That means recruiting is tougher.

    Plus, Houghton gets approximately 6,000 inches of snow each winter, and winter lasts roughly from September to June.

    All joking aside, this job could be a tough sell.

    Welcome Back, Part 2

    You can’t help but think Scott Sandelin would want his return to North Dakota to be under better circumstances.

    How about this: The Minnesota-Duluth coach brings his 8-0, nationally ranked team into Ralph Engelstad Arena for his first game against mentor and North Dakota coach Dean Blais.

    Sure. Now wake up.

    In reality, the Bulldogs are 1-7, have led in only the one game they won, against Michigan Tech last Saturday and are still searching for some offense.

    That won’t make this weekend any less special for Sandelin, who spent six years as an assistant with the Sioux, winning two national championships.

    But don’t think for a minute he wouldn’t love to follow his first collegiate victory (last Saturday vs. Michigan Tech) by showing his former boss what he learned.

    What Does It All Mean?

    Does anyone want to be No. 1? Does anyone want to be the frontrunner in the WCHA?

    Apparently not. Not, at least, until it matters.

    Still, despite getting only one point out of a series at North Dakota, Minnesota has joined Colorado College as the top team in the league. That, of course, is due to the Tigers’ sweep at the hands of St. Cloud, which, despite being in sixth place, is in a pretty good position.

    Confused? Let’s try to get some answers here.

    The key problem with looking at the standings by points right now is that the teams have played anywhere from four to 10 conference games. But by ranking the teams by the average number of points each has earned per game, we can see the true ranking of the teams as it stands right now.

    Colorado College and Minnesota are at the top at 1.5 points per game, but they are joined by sixth-place St. Cloud State. North Dakota (1.375) comes in fourth; Alaska-Anchorage (1.25) is in fifth; Wisconsin (1.0) is in sixth; Minnesota State-Mankato (0.8) is in seventh; Denver (0.667) is in eighth; Michigan Tech (0.4) is ninth; and Minnesota-Duluth (0.333) is last.

    The significant jumps come from the teams that have played only four games — St. Cloud and Anchorage. The Seawolves, 2-1-1 and seventh in the league standings with five points, are averaging more than a point a game. The Huskies, like the leaders, are on pace to win three of every four games this season.

    But that’s all through four games for each team. St. Cloud has a home-and-home series with Minnesota to contend with this weekend. Anchorage stayed in the Midwest this week and plays at Mankato. The Seawolves then host North Dakota and Denver before traveling to St. Cloud to close out the calendar year.

    And for the relative struggle North Dakota had at the start of the year, the Sioux are still in a pretty good position. Don’t count them out for a second.

    Higher And Higher

    St. Cloud State’s ranking at No. 6 in this week’s USCHO.com poll is the school’s highest ever. (We just won’t mention that other poll, which has the Huskies at No. 5, therefore making that the highest ranking for the program.)

    On the heels of a statement-making sweep of Colorado College on the road last weekend, it’s another statement for the Huskies’ program.

    But what does it mean? Not much to coach Craig Dahl.

    “Those polls mean absolutely nothing,” he told the St. Cloud Times. “Those things take care of themselves if you do your job. Right now we realize that [ranking] is going to be like a bullseye on our back. It’s only going to make people want to beat you all the more. But it brings a responsibility with it that we want, and that’s to be the best and play the best.”

    He Said It

    “I’m in shock right now. It’s unbelievable. I haven’t felt this in my college career. And now that we’ve tasted it, we want more.”

    — Alaska-Anchorage sophomore defenseman Matt Shasby, on the Seawolves’ sweep of Wisconsin.

    News And Views

  • Alaska-Anchorage freshman Pete Talafous notched his first collegiate point last Friday against Wisconsin. It was a homecoming of sorts for Talafous, the son of the Seawolves coach. He played high school hockey for Hudson (Wis.) High School, although that’s actually closer to Minneapolis than Madison.
  • Denver is staring at six consecutive home games over the next three weeks — league series against Michigan Tech and Minnesota sandwiched around non-conference games against Boston University and Providence. The Pioneers could build up some momentum here for a charge toward a suddenly vulnerable top of the standings.
  • Michigan Tech allowed seven power-play goals last weekend. Minnesota-Duluth scored a total of eight goals last weekend. Notice a trend?
  • Along the same lines, Duluth defenseman Andy Reierson scored a hat trick, notching three power-play goals, in the Bulldogs’ 5-3 victory on Saturday. It set the UMD record for power-play goals in a game and was the junior’s first hat trick.
  • Anchorage goaltender Chris King grabbed his second WCHA Rookie of the Week honor of the year. Not bad for someone who had to battle just to start.
  • Before last Friday, a Minnesota victory when the Don Lucia-led team was ahead after two periods was as much a certainty as the Electoral College producing a clear winner in the presidential election. Sure enough, both failed. Minnesota was 21-0-2 under Lucia when leading after 40 minutes and led 5-3 on Friday before four North Dakota third-period goals led to a 7-5 Sioux victory.

    On The Docket

    All 10 WCHA teams are in league series this weekend, including a home-and-home duel between Minnesota and St. Cloud State.

    The Colorado College-Wisconsin series means plenty, and not just in the standings. CC, still tied for first in the WCHA, and Wisconsin, a ways back in the pack, each need a win to get back in business.

    And don’t forget about Alaska-Anchorage, staying in Minnesota this week and hoping to bottle the performance they got in sweeping Wisconsin last weekend. The Seawolves play at Minnesota State-Mankato.

  • This Week In The ECAC: Nov. 16, 2000

    A Sparkling Debut

    Don’t look now, but the Union Skating Dutchmen are number 15 in this week’s USCHO.com poll, the first-ever national ranking for the 10-year-old Division I program. The Dutchmen did get some votes in the “others receiving” category in 1993-94, while ending the regular season unbeaten in nine straight and in 1996-97, during a six-game winning streak in the middle of the season.

    “It’s a nice honor to be considered among the top 15 programs in the country and it’s obviously good for Union College and the exposure that it provides our institution,” said head coach Kevin Sneddon. “It’s a nice compliment to our players who have put forth a great effort thus far in the season and hopefully it will help with recruiting.”

    Even though it’s early in the season, Union is one of the nation’s nicest surprises. The Dutchmen were picked to finish 11th in both the coaches and media polls, and 10th by this column. But after a weekend sweep of Cornell and Colgate, the Dutchmen sit alone atop the ECAC at 3-0-0 and 5-1-0 overall.

    Is it really a surprise, though, that the Dutchmen are off to a nice start?

    “I knew we had something special in our leadership and it’s something that we’re going to have to continue to work at it; it’s by no means perfect,” said Sneddon. “We’ve got a long way to go and there are a lot of things that we have to work on, on and off the ice, in terms of building the team, but the guys are on the same page and everyone is geared towards the same goals.

    “When you have a good team, where everyone is on the same page and you have good leadership, you’re bound to have some good things happen.

    “They have some confidence — a lot of that was built last year with nine one-goal losses, and we spent a lot of time in the off- and preseason focusing on the mental aspect of the game.”

    Gaining confidence and getting mentally tough in all situations. Those are the little things we work on to make sure that we are comfortable with. If you go into a game tied, you have to be comfortable with that process instead of being nervous about it and they’ve done a nice job accepting that advice.”

    And it certainly looks like the Dutchmen are following that advice. In their three ECAC games, the Dutchmen and the opposition were tied in the third period. Each time they have won. Tied at two with Rensselaer, scoreless with Cornell and tied at two with Colgate in the third periods of each game, the Dutchmen, each time, scored the winning goal next.

    “It’s about the kids, to be honest with you,” acknowledged Sneddon. “It’s nothing to do with me or my staff. We’re here to try to provide the athletes with the great competitive environment to learn the lessons and they’re doing the hard work. We’re certainly putting in a lot of time to help them out, but credit the senior leadership and the great work ethic that the guys are putting forth.

    “They deserve the accolades, and my job is to make sure that it’s a nice compliment that they don’t read the newspapers and the articles and get swollen heads. We’ve got to stay focused and remember that it’s a process and that we can’t too ahead of ourselves and that’s where I come in. To motivate them and certainly build on the positives and not get caught up in a lot of the accolades, because it doesn’t mean a lot right now.”

    The Dutchmen are hot, but this weekend they are off for exam time at Union, with its trimester schedule. The Dutchmen don’t get back on the ice until the day after Thanksgiving, against Mercyhurst.

    “You can look at it two ways, the positive or the negative, and we always choose to look at it as a positive,” said Sneddon on the untimely week off. “We have some injuries that are going to give our guys a chance to heal, and they’re in exams so it’s very important.

    “That’s the single most important reason they are here at the institution: to get a quality education. Now it’s time to focus on the books this week, and it’s good that we’ll have time to get through the toughest academic portion of the term. We can put that behind us and focus on Mercyhurst.”

    A Commentary On The Polls

    While we think it’s great that Yale is 14th and Union is 15th in the USCHO.com poll, there is something that just does not sit right with us.

    Let’s take Yale, for example. Yale, in the period after the previous USCHO.com poll was voted, defeated No. 2 Boston College and then split with Clarkson and St. Lawrence. This was after defeating New Hampshire to open its season. That’s a 3-1-0 mark against quality competition. Yet, the pollsters have Yale No. 14.

    Let’s take Michigan for an example now. The Wolverines are 7-2-2 with losses to Michigan State and Ferris State, and wins over Merrimack, Alaska-Anchorage, Bowling Green (2), Miami (2) and Ferris State. No disrespect to those teams, but they aren’t Boston College and New Hampshire (whom the Wolverines tied).

    Colorado College, in its first main competition of the year, went 0-2 this past weekend, dropping a pair to St. Cloud, yet is seventh.

    Why is it that when a Michigan splits, they don’t drop significantly in the polls? Why is it that a five-game losing streak (as Wisconsin is on right now) only pushes a team down to 12th place in the poll? New Hampshire split this weekend, as did Providence.

    Yale went 2-1 on the week. Union went 2-0. Harvard, Cornell and Rensselaer split.

    What we’re trying to get at here is that we think that the ECAC gets absolutely no respect in the national polls. Why is that? Maybe it’s because there haven’t been enough games yet, or maybe the competition is not viewed as being as tough as other conferences out there. Or maybe it’s just an image.

    It seems that if a team like Colorado College, Michigan or Boston University gains a split or loses two on a weekend, the viewpoint is, “Well, they had a bad night, but they’ll be right there again.” Whereas if Yale, St. Lawrence (which split) or Rensselaer drops a pair or splits on the weekend, it’s, “Well, the real Yale/St. Lawrence/Rensselaer has come out.”

    Is that right? Of course not. Let’s start looking at things the right way, shall we, pollsters?

    The Lone Wolf

    One team that believes in simple math these days is Princeton. With a new coach and nothing to lose this season, the Tigers are counting every single point. As a result, the team finished its first full league weekend with two points over arguably the hardest road pair in St. Lawrence and Clarkson. To make life even sweeter for Princeton, the team is now 1-0-3, coming off its first unbeaten home weekend in over 10 years, and is the only unbeaten team left in the nation — the lone wolf, so to speak.

    “Every point is important,” said Princeton head coach Len Quesnelle. “We’ll be looking back saying what a big point it was. This league is always so tight, sometimes one point makes the difference. That’s why we’re trying to get points every weekend.”

    If you look at even more numbers, you’ll see that the Princeton special teams got quite the workout this past weekend. Over the course of two days, the penalty-kill unit went 4-for-10 while the Tigers power play connected for six goals in 13 attempts.

    Quesnelle was especially impressed with goaltender Dave Stathos, who kept his team in the thick of things through most of the weekend and finished with 77 saves in two games.

    “Dave was unbelievable … He’s off to a great start and is capable of having a big year,” said Quesnelle.

    “When you can walk away with two points, it’s always positive. If we got more points it would’ve been even better, but those points will be valuable come the end of the season.”

    As a side note, what would a Princeton game with Clarkson be without a little controversy? When Princeton scored in the third period of the game, many Golden Knights thought that George Parros ran into goaltender Shawn Grant to aid the tally. For the first time in years, Clarkson’s ire was not raised by Benoit Morin.

    Congrats On 250, And The Cats Are Back!

    Vermont completed its first full weekend of ECAC play in almost a year with a sweep of Harvard and Brown. Let me repeat that one more time for those disbelievers: Vermont — a team whose very hockey future was in jeopardy a mere 10 months ago — is now 2-0 in league action. Who would have thought, indeed.

    It was somewhat appropriate that while the Catamounts were enjoying redemptive success on the ice this weekend, the players were simultaneously giving head coach Mike Gilligan his 250th career win. Rows of friends, family and former players packed Bright Hockey Center on Friday night in anticipation of the big moment. Sixty minutes of hockey later, Gilligan heard the final buzzer and was handed the game puck by his assistants and current players.

    “Everyone knew he had a lot of family and friends in the stands,” said senior Jim Gernander following the 5-3 victory over Harvard. “It was great for us to get him his 250th win here, especially after all he went through with us last year. To give him that in Boston is just a great feeling.”

    It was also a great feeling for Gilligan to have his team pull out two crucial victories on the road and see his offense post 11 goals in two games. After Ryan Miller and Graham Mink combined for five points on Friday, senior J.F. Caudron led the charge the following night with a hat trick against Brown. Heading into the season, Gilligan wasn’t sure what he would get from an offensive standpoint, so the six-goal explosion by his team — especially Caudron — was a welcome sign.

    “[Caudron] has some real offensive flair,” said Gilligan following the 6-1 win over Brown. “He seems to be picking up where he left off, which is getting the job done for us offensively.”

    Not to rain down on the parade, but here’s some food for thought. In Vermont’s two victories, the Catamounts finished with 63 shots on net and 11 goals for a 17.5% success rate. Its opponents posted 87 shots on net and three goals for a 3.5% success rate.

    You can analyze this two ways, but it certainly shows that Vermont has been able to capitalize on opportunities while its opponents have struggled royally to convert on the offensive end. Credit obviously has to be thrown Andrew Allen’s way after the netminder racked up 86 saves on the weekend.

    Allen’s play was especially critical during the Harvard game when the Catamount defensemen were having significant trouble containing the Crimson speed up front. The moral of the story is that Vermont is not dominating teams up and down the ice, but rather being opportunistic. It will be interesting to see how long the Catamounts can rely on teams to score only three percent of the time.

    Notes

    Clarkson at St. Lawrence

    The 2000-2001 edition of the North Country War starts this weekend in Appleton Arena. St. Lawrence took three points on the weekend with an overtime win over Yale and a tie against Princeton while Clarkson lost to Yale in overtime and tied Princeton.

    “We beat ourselves, that’s the frustrating part, because we did a lot of good things,” said Clarkson head coach Mark Morris. “We played really well at times in both games, but mental mistakes and bad penalties cost us dearly. It is really hard to swallow because we were not outplayed. It was not our best hockey, but it was not so bad that we could not have won the games.

    “I don’t expect to play a flawless game right now, but we need a much better effort from our elder statesmen. Our young guys are coming around pretty good, but we need our veterans to perform as veterans should. We really need to make a statement right now. We have proven how well we can play. Now it is a matter of being consistent.”

    “We would have liked to have gotten two wins, but on the road in a league with as much parity as this one, three points is a good weekend,” said St. Lawrence head coach Joe Marsh. “We’ve made steady progress and we just want to keep moving in the right direction.”

    Harvard/Brown at Cornell/Colgate

    It’s that time of the year in Ithaca once again: the Harvard-Cornell game at Lynah. The Lynah Faithful always get up for this game and each team finished up the weekend with a win after a loss.

    The Big Red defeated Rensselaer with only 10 forwards dressed, and Harvard got a superb effort from its younger players in defeating Dartmouth.

    “It was a solid effort for us to come through a lot of adversity,” said Big Red head coach Mike Schafer. “It’s funny with what we could do with 10 guys.”

    “When you are starting a combined 10 freshmen and sophomores, you better hope that some of them get on the scoresheet if you are going to have any offense,” said Crimson head coach Mark Mazzoleni.

    Meanwhile, both Brown and Colgate got swept on the weekend.

    “We had a lot of chances,” Brown head coach Roger Grillo said after the 6-1 loss to Vermont on Saturday. “But it was a very frustrating game.”

    “We’re not real deep and it’s been a concern for us about where our offense is coming from and it’s starting to bite us a little bit right now,” said Colgate head coach Don Vaughan. “We’ve got to find a way to generate some more offense five-on-five.”

    The Red Raiders will head home after playing seven of their first eight on the road.

    “We’ve been on the road awhile and it will be nice to get back home,” said Vaughan. “It gets tough, but it’s a long season and we’re not pushing the panic button yet.”

    Rensselaer

    The Engineers split this past weekend defeating Colgate, 3-2, and then losing, 3-2, to Cornell.

    “Take away the second period and I thought we played a pretty good game,” said head coach Dan Fridgen of the Cornell game. “We played an average first, but we did a real good job in the third. We just couldn’t put it in the net.”

    Yale

    En route to making their debut in the USCHO.com poll, the Bulldogs played a close weekend set, losing to St. Lawrence in overtime and then defeating Clarkson in overtime.

    “This whole weekend was quite a test for us,” head coach Tim Taylor said. “After the devastating loss last night, I was interested to see how we would respond. We came up with our best game of the season.”

    Dartmouth

    The Big Green split their set of games this weekend. They picked up a win over Brown and then lost to Harvard on Saturday.

    “We couldn’t finish any of our chances [Saturday],” head coach Bob Gaudet said. “That doesn’t concern me, however, because there will be plenty of nights for us this year when the puck goes in the net.”

    If It’s So Easy, You Try It

    Welcome to out new weekly feature. It’s a game of trying to best the two of us. We’ve gotten a lot of flak for our predictions for the coming week’s games, so we figured that people should start to put their money where their mouths are.

    Starting this week, we will chose a random ECAC fan, and that fan will pick all the games that we pick for the column. If this fan beats us, he/she gets to come back next week and take us on again. If we tie, it’s a push and that fan gets to come back the next week. Should he/she go down in humiliating defeat, then we choose a new fan to go against us the next week and the humiliated fan will have to own up to the two of us beating him/her.

    At the end, the fan that wins the most weeks against us will wear the crown.

    This week our first victim will be Vic Brzozowski, a Clarkson fan. All of his picks are complete with his commentary — unedited. Also, games that end in a tie are counted as ties in the record, but if you pick a tie and it’s not a tie, you lose.

    The Picks

    Friday, November 17
    Yale at Dartmouth
    Vic — The Green have been very disappointing. Yale 5, Dartmouth 3
    Becky and JaysonYale 6, Dartmouth 3

    Harvard at Cornell
    Vic — A real rock-em, sock-em affair, fish and all. Hahvad 3, Cornell 3, ot
    Becky and JaysonCornell 4, Harvard 3

    Princeton at Vermont
    Vic — How Princeton got two points last weekend: The Ref Friday and Chokley in the SLU nets Saturday. No such luck at the Gut. Vermont 5, Princeton 1
    Becky and JaysonVermont 4, Princeton 1

    Brown at Colgate
    Vic — The Providence game was a fluke, Bruin fans. Colgate 4, Brown 1
    Becky and JaysonColgate 5, Brown 2

    Saturday, November 18
    Princeton at Dartmouth
    Vic — Princeton is shut out this weekend. Dartmouth 5, Princeton 2
    Becky and JaysonPrinceton 5, Dartmouth 2

    Yale at Vermont
    Vic — My second tie. Yale 4, Vermont 4
    Becky and JaysonYale 5, Vermont 4

    Brown at Cornell
    Vic — Cornell has trouble scoring, but Brown is even worse. Cornell 3, Brown 2
    Becky and JaysonCornell 3, Brown 1

    Harvard at Colgate
    Vic — Central NY is a long way from Boston. Colgate 4, Hahvad 3
    Becky and JaysonHarvard 6, Colgate 2

    Clarkson at St. Lawrence
    Vic — You really didn’t expect me to pick against the Knights, did you? And I really don’t expect Joe to start Chokley in the nets. Clarkson 3, SLU 3
    Becky and JaysonSt. Lawrence 4, Clarkson 3

    UMass-Amherst at Rensselaer
    Vic — I hardly ever pick RPI to win. Umass-Amherst 4, RIP 2
    Becky and JaysonRensselaer 4, UMass-Amherst 2

    Tuesday, November 21
    Vic — Can you tell I don’t like BU? Hahvad 5, It sucks to BU 4
    Becky and JaysonHarvard 4, Boston University 2

    Princeton at Yale
    Vic — Hamilton, Stafford and Deschenes are too much. Yale 4, Princeton 2
    Becky and JaysonYale 6, Princeton 2

    Maine at Cornell
    Vic — My second least favorite team in Hockey Least. Cornell 3, Maine 2
    Becky and JaysonMaine 4, Cornell 2

    UMass-Amherst at Vermont
    Vic — Only because it is being played in Gutterson. Vermont 5, UMass-Amherst 4
    Becky and JaysonVermont 4, UMass-Amherst 3

    If you are interested in putting your money where your mouth is, drop us an email to be eligible when Vic bites the dust.


    Thanks this week to Dan Fleschner, Sean Peden, Mike Volonnino and Scott Esposito for their contributions

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