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This Week in the WCHA: October 25, 1996

The second weekend of WCHA play is here, and if there’s as much excitement as last week, fans are in for some memorable moments at the rink.

Last weekend North Dakota topped Denver twice at their home rink, serving notice of their talent. Colorado College and Minnesota split, as expected; Minnesota dominated play at times in Friday’s game, and even though the Gophers outshot CC on Saturday, the Tigers played better team defense and got the win. UM-Duluth made the trip to Alaska-Anchorage and swept the Seawolves. Wisconsin got a shutout in the first game against visiting St. Cloud and the Huskies came back for a close win in the second game.

This week Colorado College heads for Northern Michigan, Wisconsin is at Denver, North Dakota travels to Michigan Tech and Minnesota goes to in-state rival Minnesota-Duluth. In a non-conference series St. Lawrence visits St. Cloud State.

Here’s a look at this weekend’s games…

North Dakota (2-0-0, 2-0-0 WCHA) at Michigan Tech (4-1-0, 1-1-0 WCHA) Friday, 7:35 p.m., Saturday, 7:05 p.m., John MacInnes Student Ice Arena, Houghton, MI

This is the top game of the week, with both teams off to fast starts.

The Huskies get back to conference battle after sweeping Mankato State last weekend. For the first time since 1984-85, the Huskies have won four of their first five games, with goalie David Weninger recording his first career shutout in the 3-0 win on Saturday. Coach Tim Watters knows the weekend series will be a battle, as the WCHA is competitive this season, and North Dakota is a very good hockey club coming in. They must be very disciplined and must play sound hockey at both ends of the ice.

Dave Hoogsteen had three goals and three assists and was named the WCHA Offensive Player of the Week. He’s only 5-7, but had 10 goals and 10 assists last year, so he’s off to a great start. Jason Blake, centering Hoogsteen’s line, also had a great weekend. Defensively North Dakota held DU to just 22 shots on Friday and 20 on Saturday. And goalie Toby Kvalevog was there when his mates needed big saves.

The Fighting Sioux will have to play some solid hockey at a tough place to play. Tech is always tough on their rink because they are a physical team. Their veteran players are off to a good start and they have good goaltending. "Our keys are to continue to do what we did last weekend; get contributions from everyone," Sandelin said.

ELMO Picks: MTU 4, UND 1 on Friday; UND 5, MTU 4 on Saturday.

Colorado College (1-1-0, 1-1-0 WCHA) at Northern Michigan (1-2-1, 1-1-0 WCHA) Friday-Saturday, 7:05 p.m., Lakeview Arena, Marquette, MI

Colorado College invades Northern Michigan as both teams look to get above the .500 mark in WCHA play.

Colorado College got what they needed last weekend at Minnesota — a split. But this weekend the Tigers are looking for more. With some injured players (Chad Hartnell, Dan Peters, Lee Groom, T. J. Tanberg) out of the lineup, the entire squad must work together to get the job done. The Tigers were outshot in Saturday’s 2-1 win, but those shots came from far out. Coach Don Lucia liked the way his team played defense on Saturday and wants to continue this weekend.

NMU, a young team, has a chance to beat CC, something they haven’t done in the last eight meetings. Bud Smith will have to keep up his fine play; in last week’s 4-4 tie with LSSU he had two goals and an assist. The Wildcats must play solid hockey to win, and to keep its confidence high, which is a must for any young team. A strong effort against CC will do just that.

ELMO Picks: CC 4, NMU 1 on Friday; CC 3, NMU 1 on Saturday.

Wisconsin (1-1-0, 1-1-0 WCHA) at Denver (0-2-0, 0-2-0 WCHA) Friday-Saturday, 7:05 p.m., Denver University Arena, Denver, CO

Both Wisconsin and Denver surprised the scribes last week — Denver by getting swept at North Dakota and Wisconsin with a split with St. Cloud. These are two teams which need to find direction this weekend.

Badger goalie Kirk Daubenspeck pitched a 2-0 shutout against St. Cloud Friday and has a .952 save percentage entering this weekend. He will play a key role in these games, since Denver will try to put a full-blown offensive blitz on him. The Badger freshmen had a great weekend against St. Cloud, collectively accounting for a goal and four assists among the team;s four goals and five assists. Dustin Kuk (0-2–2), Steve Reinprecht (1-0–1), T.R. Moreau (0-1-1) and Niki Siren (0-1–1) all tallied their first points in their first series as Badgers. Coach Jeff Sauer needs two wins to tie Bob Johnson’s school record.

The Pioneers should play like a possessed team this weekend after dropping two games. Coach George Gwozdecky will need to jumpstart his squad because the Badgers will be ready to play, and early in the season the Pioneers have plenty of time to get back on the winning track. Antti Laaksonen had a goal and assist on Friday and Anders Bjork finished the weekend with the same. Now it’s time for the rest of the team to step up.

ELMO Picks: DU 4, UW 2 on Friday; DU 4, UW 3 on Saturday.

Minnesota (1-1-0, 1-1-0 WCHA) at Minnesota-Duluth (3-1-0, 2-0-0 WCHA) Friday-Saturday, 7:05 p.m., Duluth Entertainment & Convention Center, Duluth, MN

Minnesota Coach Doug Woog (suspended for a violation of NCAA rules) won’t be behind the bench, but that doesn’t take any excitement from this in-state rivalry. This series is always hotly anticipated by fans of both teams.

UMD made its trek to Alaska last weekend and survived to sweep Anchorage. However, that trip often takes a lot out of a team, and the Gophers hope to take advantage. But the Bulldogs are at home, which will help; Mike Peluso (4-1–5) and Curtis Doell (1-4–5) lead the team. Sergei Petrov and Max Wikman have a goal and three assists each. Goalie Brant Nicklin is undefeated in three games and has a 0.67 (how small?) goals against average and a .971 (wow!) save percentage.

With their off-ice problems the Gophers have had this week, there is always the chance that they’ll be unprepared — but don’t count on it. This is a series with the Bulldogs, after all. Erik Rasmussen has played everything like a first-round draft choice so far, with two goals and an assist against CC. Goalie Steve DeBus has a 2.00 goals against average and a .920 save percentage. If the Gophers keep focused, they should be in control of the series.

ELMO Picks: UM 4, UMD 2 on Friday; UM 5, UMD 2 on Saturday.

St. Lawrence (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at St. Cloud State (1-2-0, 1-1-0 WCHA) Friday-Saturday, 7:05 p.m., National Hockey Center, St. Cloud, MN

St. Cloud State will try to improve in a non-conference series with St. Lawrence, which is opening its season.

The Huskies split at Wisconsin, getting shut out in the first game but coming back with a solid effort Saturday, when SCSU got two goals and an assist from Sacha Molin and goaltender Tim Lideen turned away 30 shots to record his second win.

This is St. Lawrence’s opening weekend, a season after finishing with a 20-12-3 record which earned them a fourth-place finish in the preseason ECAC coaches poll. Last year the Saints were third with a 15-4-3 record. Top returning players include Paul DiFrancesco (16-39–55) and Derek Ladouceur (7-33–40). Jon Bracco (11-3-0, 3.62 GAA, .884 SV%) will be the main man in goal, and he can come up with big saves. The Saints are solid in all three areas of the game and are hungry for the season to start.

ELMO Picks: SCSU 3, SLU 2 on Friday; SLU 4, SCSU 1 on Saturday.

Next Week in the WCHA Friday-Saturday, Nov. 1-2 Michigan Tech at Alaska-Anchorage St. Cloud State at Colorado College Minnesota at Wisconsin Northern Michigan at North Dakota Denver at Clarkson

Copyright 1996 Jim Thies . All Rights Reserved.

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This Week in the CCHA: October 25, 1996

Last weekend the CCHA got under way with a number of interesting matches. Miami got off to a solid start, sweeping Alaska-Fairbanks three straight games on the road. Michigan overpowered perennial Hockey East foe Maine 3-0 at the Joe, only to watch as Maine trounced Lake Superior the following day 7-4. Maine forward Dan Shermerhorn scored a hat trick in the second period to put the Lakers to rest.

Clarkson’s offense proved too strong for Ohio State’s freshman goalies, and Notre Dame and Western tied 3-3 in a tough game, signaling the parity that pervades this strong league. Michigan State got the best of WMU 3-1 the following evening, and Bowling Green indicated that the CCHA may be the dominant conference early on, displaying its firepower to the dismay of Boston College fans.

This weekend will be a telling one, as Bowling Green and Lake Superior face off in the Soo for two. Ferris State and Notre Dame will make their I-70 swing through Ohio State and Miami, which will determine who will take the upper hand in the standings early on. Michigan will get their road trip to Alaska out of the way, and Michigan state will meet Hockey East rivals Boston College and Bruce Crowder’s Northeastern team on a trip out east.

I tried to pick conservatively last week, and as anyone with half a brain knows, to pick winners in a competitive league is not a lot of fun. The strength of the offenses surprised me, as goaltenders are usually dominant this time of year. But, with my record at 7-5, I will try to make amends this week.

Here is a look at the games:

Michigan (3-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Alaska-Fairbanks (0-5-0, 0-3-0 CCHA) Thursday, Friday, 7:00 p.m., Carlson Center, Fairbanks, Alaska

The Nanooks did moderately well against Miami in their home opener, despite losing. The offense struggled to only four goals in three games, and the power play has scored only once in 18 attempts.

Michigan does well to get this trip out of the way early. With a defense as strong as its offense, and a penalty kill unit which has stopped all seven attempts against it, this team should not lose. They gave up only 20 shots to Maine, and Alaska-Fairbanks is no Maine.

Pick: Michigan sweeps, Friday 6-2 and Saturday 7-1

Bowling Green (4-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Lake Superior (3-1-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) Friday, Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Taffy Abel Arena, Sault Ste. Marie, MI

Bowling Green hopes this weekend will prove it belongs with the big boys in the league. The Falcons can put it in the net (as Mike Johnson showed last weekend), with Bowling Green scoring 12 against Boston College. But this weekend special teams will come into play for both sides, in their first true league games.

Lake State has something to prove, so Steve Battaglia has to keep putting up numbers. LSSU was only two for eight on the power play against Maine, blew a lead against Northern Michigan, and have struggled five-on-five thus far. Look for a more aggressive forecheck this weekend against rival BGSU; goaltender John Grahame needs to calm his defense down.

Pick: Friday, LSSU 4, BG 4; Saturday BG 5, LSSU 4

Ferris State (3-1-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Ohio State (0-3-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Ohio State Ice Arena, Columbus, Ohio

Ferris State began with two tune-ups against Western Ontario, and the offense was productive, outshooting and outscoring their rivals, 5-4 and 6-3. The playing is over, as Ferris must do the same thing to the Buckeyes’ young goalies to gain the victory. Ohio State learned something last week: shooting helps.

The Buckeyes must use their size and speed to their advantage, mainly to help protect the goal on the defensive. Freshmen Ray Aho and Tom Connerty need all the help they can get right now. Ohio State did look strong against Clarkson for four of the six periods they played, but they lost the last one in each game, and must not falter late this week. Special teams will be critical to the outcome of this game. OSU must stay out of the penalty box, as misconducts ruined a hopeful weekend against Clarkson.

Pick: OSU 5, FSU 4

Notre Dame (1-0-1, 0-0-1 CCHA) at Ohio State (0-3-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) Friday, 7:30 p.m., Ohio State Ice Arena, Columbus, Ohio

Notre Dame has all the firepower necessary in young forwards like Ben Simon (though he missed a number of breakaways last weekend), but they still lack a physical presence compared to some teams.

Ohio State has that presence, and must use it to contain the Irish. The Buckeyes led No. 8 Clarkson last week in both games, and must learn to sustain that pressure. Ohio State’s defense cannot continue to surrender as many shots as in their first three games, atotal of 122. Ohio State has an offense to match Notre Dame’s with Pierre Dufour and Brandon LaFrance leading the way.

Pick: OSU 5, Notre Dame 3

Notre Dame (1-0-1, 0-0-1 CCHA) at Miami (4-1-0, 3-0-0) Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Goggin Ice Arena, Oxford, Ohio

Notre Dame again must prove it can play physically against a stingy Miami defense. Goaltending will be a key in this one. Miami has had strong special-teams play thus far, especially killing penalties. The Redskins have killed 17 of 18 attempts.

Juniors Adam Copeland and Tim Leahy and sophomore Randy Robitaille pose a potent offensive threat. Each had three points in Miami’s first game, against Alaska last week. Look for Adam Lord to shut Notre Dame down.

Pick: Miami 6, Notre Dame 2

Ferris State (3-1-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Miami (4-1-0, 3-0-0 CCHA) Friday, 7:30 p.m., Goggin Ice Arena, Oxford, Ohio

Ferris State, with junior Andy Roach, can use this game as a measuring stick. Ferris lacks depth on offense, and their goaltending has not been tested yet. Special teams will probably be sloppy, and that will cost them against a Miami team that is rolling early.

Miami scored a total of 19 goals in their last four games, but their power play is only around 20 percent. Five-on-five, this may be one of the toughest teams in the league. Adam Lord and Trevor Prior are both experienced enough to last a game like this.

Pick: Miami 5, Ferris 3

Michigan State (2-0-0, 1-0-0 CCHA) at Boston College (0-2-0, 0-0-0 Hockey East) Friday, 7:30 p.m., Conte Forum, Boston, Mass.

Michigan State is going to find out if Steve Ferranti is their leader this week, or Mike York, or Mike Watt — all of them can score. But the power play has not, having converted only one of seven attempts so far. Hint: use the back door! Defensively, they shut Western Michigan down, but after a long trip, allow for a mistake or two.

Boston College, I am afraid, is going to have nightmares early in the season. However, the experience will pay off for them in February. Depth is the problem; sophomore Mary Reasoner might be the best of his class, but he and junior Ken Hemenway will need their linemates to beat MSU. Senior Goalie Grag Taylor is solid, with a 15-16-3 record last season, and could steal this one for Coach York, but I doubt it if Chad Alban is playing on the other end.

Pick: MSU 5, BC 3

Michigan State (2-0-0, 1-0-0 CCHA) at Northeastern (0-0-0, 0-0-0 Hockey East) Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Matthews Arena, Boston, Mass.

Michigan State will have all they can handle with a new Northeastern system in place, but if they get through the first period, the Spartans will prevail. Size, depth, speed: these things all permeate the MSU lines, whereas their opponents are lacking here and there.

Northeastern is going to be as good as everyone thinks, but not right away. It takes time to build your own team, as Crowder knows well. Four of the five top scorers from last season are gone, leaving Scott Campbell and his 32 points in 1995-96 looking for help.

Pick: MSU 6, NE 2

Copyright 1996 Kirk Koennecke . All Rights Reserved.

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This Week in the ECAC: October 25, 1996

The past weekend kicked off action for three of the 12 ECAC teams; now the other nine take to the ice for the first time this season.

The ECAC started off the season with a 3-1 record in non-conference play. Clarkson swept a pair from Ohio State, and Vermont defeated New Hampshire. The lone blemish for the ECAC was a loss by Rensselaer to Boston University. The ECAC hopes to improve on its non-conference record this weekend.

(All times EDT)

ST. LAWRENCE (0-0-0) at ST. CLOUD (1-2-0) Fri-Sat, 7:00 PM, National Hockey Center, St. Cloud, MN

The Saints start without suspended goaltender Clint Owen, which leaves Jon Bracco in goal for the Saints. His numbers from last season are actually better than Owen’s (3.69 GAA, .886 SV%), and with the two splitting time last season, there might not be the problem that everyone is predicting for the Saints. Their forwards are first class. Paul DiFrancesco is one of the finest centers in the ECAC (16-39–55), and he should be centering Scott Stevens (13-14–27) and Derek McLaughlin (10-16–26).

The Huskies come off a split with the Badgers of Wisconsin last weekend in WCHA play. After generating only 18 shots on goal and getting shut out on Friday evening, they rebounded with a 3-2 win with the help of two goals from Socha Molin. Expect to see the two Huskie goaltenders split games once again this weekend. Brian Leitza was solid in allowing only two goals on Friday, and Tim Ledeen also allowed only two goals on Saturday.

Which St. Cloud team will show up? Will it be the one that could only generate a few shots on goal, or the one that produced 37 shots on Saturday night? How will St. Lawrence start? Looks to be a defensive effort from the home team as they try to stop the quick forwards of St. Lawrence.

PICK: A St. Lawrence sweep, 4-1 and 5-4.

NORTHEASTERN (0-0-0) at RENSSELAER (0-1-0) Friday, 7:30PM, Houston Fieldhouse, Troy, NY

Northeastern begins their season on the road with their brand-new head coach Bruce Crowder. They come into the season without their top three scorers from last year in Jordan Shields (12-31–43), Dan Lupo (17-22–39), and Danny McGillis (12-24–36). They also lose both goaltenders in Todd Reynolds and Mike Veisor. What is Crowder to do? Can freshmen Todd Barclay, Roger Holeczy, and Billy Newson make an immediate impact? Can Scott Campbell and Justin Kearns add to their numbers from last year (20-12–32 and 7-9–16 respect- ively)? Should be a test for the Huskies this Friday.

Rensselaer had almost the same questions going into last week’s game against Boston University. But the freshmen looked impressive, as did the returning players. Freshman Joel Laing got the start last week, and we should expect to see the other freshman goalie, Scott Prekaski, get his first start this Friday. Eric Healey (1-0-1) looks like he is going to pick up where he left off in the scoring department, and the defense returns experience. Watch out for freshman defenseman Brian Pothier (0-1-1), who looks like a potential star for the Engineers.

Northeastern is searching, but Bruce Crowder is a great coach. The young and inexperienced Engineers got a great test in Boston University last weekend and did an admirable job and gained confidence. Northeastern has a a great chance at winning this one if Marc Robitaille and Judd Brackett get off to strong starts in their rookie games.

PICK: This is going to be a close one. RPI 5, Northeastern 4.

UNION (0-0-0) at NEW HAMPSHIRE (0-1-0) Friday, 7:00PM, Whittemore Center, Durham, NH

The Dutchmen begin their 1996-97 campaign on the road, and the same questions surround them as last year. Who will score for this team, and if they do, can they outscore their opponents? The debut of new head coach Stan Moore should see him try to find more scoring from returnees like Brent Ozarowski (13-11–24), Chris Ford (8-17–25), and Russ Monteith (5-11–16). They are solid in net with either Leeor Shtrom (3.09 GAA, .902 SV%) or Trevor Koenig (3.13 GAA, .910 SV%). They allow three goals a game, but can they score more than three goals?

The Wildcats come off a loss to highly-ranked Vermont last weekend. They also took a huge hit, as Captain Tim Murray was lost for a few weeks with a knee injury. Eric Boguniecki got the lone goal for UNH in their loss. The Wildcats played UVM tough, but could not match the outbursts of the Fabulous Frenchmen. They should have an easier time against Union. Brian Larochelle will have an easier time as well against the Dutchmen. But then again — new coach, more shots for the boys from Schenectady, who knows?

UNH has had two games to get things settled, and Union is not UVM. Union is starting a new era with Stan Moore.

PICK: UNH 7, Union 1.

COLGATE (0-0-0) at MAINE (1-1-0) Friday, 7:00PM, Alfond Arena, Orono, ME

Colgate begins their campaign with a trip to the Far Northeast and the Maine Black Bears. Colgate begins with high expectations for their star center Mike Harder (23-31–54). He should spearhead the offense which includes such returnees as Tim Loftsgard (8-11–19), Dru Burgess (8-11–19), and Jack McIntosh (7-10–17). Dan Brenzavich returns as the third-year starter (3.11 GAA, .893 SV%), and McIntosh rules the blue line for this team. Don Vaughn faces high expectations this year, and his team looks to get off to a hot start against the power from Hockey East.

Maine split a pair in the state of Michigan last weekend, losing to defending NCAA champions Michigan and defeating Lake Superior State. The Black Bears only generated 17 shots on goal against Marty Turco on Friday, but put up seven goals against the Lakers. The heroes on Saturday were senior Dan Shermerhorn, who netted the hat trick, and junior Scott Parmentier, who added two goals. Freshman Alfie Michaud was solid in net, turning back 12 of 16 shots against the Lakers and 28 of 31 against Michigan.

This should be one wide-open game with the better defense prevailing. I think that’s Colgate. It’s a tight one.

PICK: Colgate 3, Maine 2.

BROWN (0-0-0) at YALE (0-0-0) exhibition Friday, 7:30PM, Ingalls Rink, New Haven, CT

Brown starts to answer the question this weekend at the Yale Whale: who will score for them? Mike Flynn (9-13–22) is the leading scorer and Marty Clapton (8-8–16) joins him, but other than that, there is not much. A strong defense is led by Bob Quinnell, and D.J. Harding and Jimmy Andersson also bring strength to this position. It will probably be Jeff Holowaty in the net (3.33 GAA, .901 SV%), and he hopes to continue his solid play.

Yale also starts to answer a question this weekend at home: can this team win a game this year? Their leading returning scorer is defenseman Ray Giroux (3-17–20), and their leading returning forward is Matt Cumming (8-6–14). The returnees must increase their offensive output or else this is just the start to a very long season for the Bulldogs, goalie Alex Westlund (4.95 GAA, .856 SV%) and head coach Tim Taylor.

This one should be a low-scoring affair as both teams struggle to put it in the net. Brown’s defense makes the difference.

PICK: Brown 3, Yale 1.

COLGATE (0-0-0) at NEW HAMPSHIRE (0-1-0) Saturday, 7:00PM, Whittemore Center, Durham, NH

Colgate’s next dance partner is New Hampshire. The Red Raiders should enjoy the larger ice surface more than the regulation one in Orono. The forwards should excel in this rink, being that they are the speedy playmaking type. Mike Harder should find some good skating room. The key here is the defense for Colgate. If they can cover the wider surface, then they can stop the UNH forwards.

New Hampshire gets a tougher opponent tonight. The defense will be tested sorely, and here’s where the loss of Tim Murray may severely hurt the WIldcats. If Brian Larochelle goes for a second consecutive evening, he will see one of the greatest shots in the ECAC in Harder. Scoring is a must for this game, as Colgate can put them up.

Wide-open end-to-end play at Towse Rink tonight. The hot goalie is the one that makes the difference.

PICK: UNH 5, Colgate 3.

VERMONT (1-0-0) at BOSTON UNIVERSITY (1-0-0) Saturday, 7:00PM, Walter Brown Arena, Boston, MA

The game of the week in many eyes. The number-two team in the nation against number three. "Wow" is an appropriate word for this one. Half of the Final Four participants from last year clash in what should be an exciting game.

Vermont comes off a 5-1 win over UNH last week. Five points from the Flying Frenchmen, Eric Perrin (2-1–3) and Martin St. Louis (0-2–2), helped spur the victory. But the real story was that there were contributions from others. Matt Stelljes (the captain), Jason Hamilton and Matt Sanders also scored, and that’s where Vermont sneaks up on you. Most teams concentrate on that first line, and the other lines then take advantage against their counterparts. Tim Thomas will be solid as usual in the net, and a superb defense led by Jan Kloboucek will try to contain the Terrier forwards.

Boston University played a less-than-stellar game against Rensselaer last Saturday, but has enough talent to win games in which they do not excel. Bill Pierce was the main man against RPI as he scored two goals, one short- handed and one on the power play. The Terriers are another team that has depth among lines. Their third- and fourth-line play from such contributors as John Hynes, Peter Donatelli, Albie O’Connell, and Bobby Hanson make things tough on competitors. Tom Noble should be back in net against the Catamounts after defeating Minnesota in an exhibition. A defense which is not spectacular, but consistent, is led by Shane Johnson and Jon Coleman.

This is a tough game to call. It will come down to stopping Chris Drury and Shawn Bates for Vermont, stopping St. Louis and Perrin for BU, third- and fourth-line play, and special teams. This should be a barnburner.

PICK: BU 4, Vermont 3.

TEAM POLAND at HARVARD (0-0-0) Saturday, 10/26, 7:00PM, Bright Hockey Center, Cambridge, MA

I am in the same quandry that Dave Hendrickson was in. I don’t know much more about the Polish team than he does, except for one thing – they lost 6-1 to UMass-Amherst last weekend, and got pounded by Clarkson on Wednesday night. I’ll take Dave’s offer one further: a dozen of the finest from Famous Lunch in Troy for more info.

Harvard starts the season, and Peter Zakowich and J.R. Prestifillipo can become the latest in the goalie tandems which have served the Crimson so well. Henry Higdon has his chance at becoming the latest and greatest center in Crimson history, and Ashlin Halfknight joins a long string of Crimson captains. But what is Harvard’s dilemma? Scoring. Craig Adams and Craig MacDonald have a year under them, and last year’s heralded freshman class are now sophomores. In comes another touted freshmen class. Can they contribute? Lots of questions for Ronn Tomasonni.

I’ll go out on a limb on this score.

PICK: Harvard 6, Team Poland 1.

TEAM POLAND at BROWN (0-0-0) Sunday, 2:00PM, Meehan Auditorium, Providence, RI

Team Poland continues their tour in Providence. Let’s make that two dozen of Famous Lunch’s finest.

Here’s exactly what Bob Gaudet was looking for. A game situation to mix his lines, play the freshmen, and find good chemistry for his team. It also lets some of his players get the scoring touch.

That limb is getting shorter…

PICK: Brown 4, Team Poland 2.

OTTAWA at DARTMOUTH (0-0-0) exhibition Sunday, 3:00PM, Thompson Arena, Hanover, NH

Ottawa has played two Division I teams this year: Boston College, who pasted them 9-2, and UNH, which to the surprise of many tied the Wildcats 3-3. Goalie Joel Gagnon faced 76 shots on goal, and Head Coach Mickey Goulet saw goals from Mike Chelbus, Benoit Constantineau, and Andre Deschenes.

Dartmouth returns their six top scorers in David Whitworth (13-18–31), Bill Kelleher (11-16–27), Owen Hughes (4-14–18), Jon Sturgis (7-9–16), Brent Retter (5-8–13) and Alex Dumas (4-9–13). They also return two senior goalies in Ben Heller (4.98 GAA, .824 SV%) and Scott Baker (4.11 GAA, .870 SV%). This will hopefully be Roger Demment’s breakthrough year as head coach. This team has a lot of promise.

Should be another penalty-filled game, making the power play for Dartmouth very important.

PICK: Dartmouth 7, Ottawa 2.

TEAM POLAND at PRINCETON (0-0-0) Tuesday, 10/29, 7:30PM, Hobey Baker Rink, Princeton, NJ

As for Poland, we’d better make that three dozen Famous Lunch’s.

Princeton starts out the season. J.P. O’Connor returns after a one-season layoff and should be expected to bring his scoring. Others must help him, though. Sophomore Jason Given will be expected to score more than his six goals and 11 assists from last season. The defense will see a lot of new faces with Jason Smith, Barrington Miller and Dan Brown graduating. In between the pipes, James Konte is gone, and the Tigers turn to Erasmo Saltarelli.

Another limb?

PICK: Princeton 5, Poland 2.

TEAM POLAND at CORNELL (0-0-0) Wednesday, 10/30, 7:30PM, Lynah Rink, Ithaca, NY

More Poland in the United States. This one should hurt a lot as well. Make it four dozen.

Cornell begins play as the defending ECAC champions. It’s been a long time for the Big Red Faithful, and second-year head coach Mike Schafer looks for the repeat. Brad Chartrand is gone, but Matt Cooney (13-21–34), Kyle Knopp (11-19– 30), and Ryan Smart (8-19–27) return. Let’s hope Vinnie Auger (5-15–20) can be healthy for one full season. One of the best blue-line tandems in the nation includes Chad and Steve Wilson. Jason Elliot emerged as the starting goalie for the Big Red last season with a 2.35 GAA and a save percentage of .923.

Only one more game left for the Polish Nationals next week.

PICK: Cornell 9, Team Poland 0.

NEXT WEEK:

ECAC league action begins with the annual opener between Brown and Harvard; plus, non-conference action continues.

Friday, November 1 Lake Superior State @ St. Lawrence Miami (OH) @ Vermont Denver @ Clarkson Army @ Dartmouth Merrimack @ Colgate Air Force @ Princeton Providence @ Union

Saturday, November 2 HARVARD @ BROWN Denver @ Clarkson Miami (OH) @ St. Lawrence Lake Superior St. @ Vermont Merrimack @ Union Providence @ Colgate Air Force @ Princeton Army @ RPI Waterloo @ Cornell (exhibition) Team Poland @ Yale (exhibition)

Copyright 1996 Jayson Moy . All Rights Reserved.

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The Key Is In Goal

The ECAC has its share of great forwards: Mike Harder at Colgate, Martin St. Louis and Eric Perrin at Vermont, Todd White at Clarkson, Paul DiFrancesco at St. Lawrence, Ryan Smart at Cornell, Henry Higdon at Harvard, and others.

There are also a number of quality defensemen: Mikko Ollila at Clarkson, Jeremiah McCarthy at Harvard, Steve Wilson at Cornell, Jan Kloboucek at Vermont, along with others.

But at the goaltender position, there remain questions. For years coaches have preached that a great goaltender can help a team reach new levels. Nowhere was this more evident than on the big stage last year, in the NHL and the World Cup of Hockey.

The Florida Panthers were able to reach the Stanley Cup Finals based largely on the strength of their goaltender, John Vanbiesbrouck. The Panthers were not a great skating or scoring team, but the Beezer raised the level of their play.

Speaking of which, how about Mike Richter? Team USA’s netminder played a crucial role at the World Cup; while the Americans were deep offensively, Richter shined in the final series against Canada, who pelted the goal mercilessly. Without Richter, the USA doesn’t win the World Cup. Period.

The same idea can be applied to the ECAC. It is clear that goaltending can turn an otherwise-average team into a contender, or take a team with talent up front back to the middle of the pack.

The correlation between goaltending and the top of the standings is clearer than ever this season in the ECAC. Let’s examine the 12 conference teams (in reverse predicted order of finish), and assess their goaltending.

The last time Yale made a run at the top of the standings was with second-team All-ECAC goalie Todd Sullivan. Dan Choquette and Alex Westlund are now the netminders, combining for a goals-against average (GAA) of 4.59 last year. There is no question that these are competent goalies, but not of the caliber of Sullivan, who allowed well under four goals per game.

Union, in their short Division I history, has not had a strong goaltending tradition. But things seem to be changing on that front. They now have Leeor Shtrom (3.09 GAA) in the net, and because of him Union is a dangerous team. The Dutchmen were picked next-to-last, but if they find any kind of offense, they could move up several spots — because their netminder can play with the best.

Princeton’s recent rise was with James Konte in goal. In fact, one might argue that he led them to the ECAC Championship game in 1995. Konte has since graduated, and Erasmo Saltarelli assumes the role of starting goaltender. For Princeton to have success, Saltarelli must impress.

With Brown, we have the same story of solid but not spectacular. Brian Audette and Jeff Holowaty are back, and get the job done, but are not guys that can steal the show like Geoff Finch could.

RPI is another team looking for a presence in net. With a great tradition of goaltending from folks like Kevin Constantine, Darren Puppa, Neil Little, and Mike Tamburro, RPI fans have grown accustomed to counting on their goaltenders. Now two freshmen, Scott Prekaski and Joel Laing, are fighting for the job, and no one knows what that will mean.

The Harvard Crimson have been blessed with quality tandems in goal such as Chuckie Hughes and Allain Roy, Aaron Israel and Tripp Tracy. But what about now? Peter Zakowich and J.R. Prestifillipo are the candidates. As of yet they are untested, but so were the others once. If they can make the adjustment, Harvard could be in for one nice ride.

For Dartmouth, Scott Baker and Ben Heller return with a combined GAA of 4.59 and with a stronger D in front of them this season. While these two haven’t proven it yet, they will likely steal some games, and if they do, Dartmouth will be up there in the standings.

Now we get into the elite class of goalies in the ECAC, starting with Cornell. Jason Elliot is a one man gang; he backstopped the Big Red to the ECAC Championship last year, and brings back a GAA of 2.35 and a .923 save percentage. Can he do it again? If so, Cornell is in for another sweet season.

Clint Owen is the man for St. Lawrence, and he is a good one. He’s got the tools necessary to put St. Lawrence over the top. However, he will have to sit out the first half of this season because of an undisclosed violation of team rules. That leaves Jon Bracco minding the store. Though Bracco is solid, St. Lawrence will take a step back with him in the net. Life will be good in Canton when Owen gets back, but until then, what will the Saints do without him?

Dan Brenzavich leads the Colgate Red Raiders. He is overshadowed by others in his class, but Brenzavich is a winner in his own right. However, he has yet to prove he can win the big games, and until he does, how far Colgate can go remains a mystery.

Dan Murphy is Clarkson’s workhorse, a second-team All-ECAC pick for the second year running. He plays almost every game for the Golden Knights, and is as solid as they come (2.70 GAA, .912 SV%). The Golden Knights usually have the goalies; this year is no different.

What else can you say about Tim Thomas? He has done the job since he first stepped onto the ice in Burlington. A 2.34 GAA is right on his career numbers, and now that the nation knows him better, what he can do, everyone should see what the fanfare is about.

Generally, then, the second-division teams do not have a strong presence in net. Conversely, the teams at the top have the elite ones, as is usually the case.

Some of the teams in the middle of the pack could make significant moves one way or another depending on how their goaltending questions pan out. Dartmouth could finish as high as fifth or sixth, but could drop much lower if their keepers don’t perform.

On the other end of the spectrum, there are teams like RPI and Harvard, who could finish better than predicted if their goaltenders come off solidly. Harvard is in a slightly different position; they are well-regarded, but if their tandem fails to get the job done the Crimson could be in serious trouble.

Basically, the top spots in the conference could come down to which goalie can put his team on his back. The ECAC is typical in that regard — strength between the pipes is a must. Clearly some teams are set up nicely in this regard, while others will struggle. As the season goes on, we’ll find out a lot about the league by how the goaltenders play.

Watters, Talafous Accepting Challenges in WCHA

Challenges.

Some people run, while others choose to ignore them. But still others grab hold and work to overcome them. Those folks may conquer, or they may fall short.

For Tim Watters and Dean Talafous, the latest challenge is as head coach of a WCHA team — working to get to the top of one of the premier Division I hockey conferences in the nation.

Both are looking forward to the work ahead.

Watters Returns to MTU

Tim Watters returns to Michigan Tech after a splendid 13-year career in the NHL. He spent seven years with the Winnipeg Jets (1981-88) where he was a co-captain and received the team’s 7th Player Award for contributions both on and off the ice. He was signed as a free agent with the Los Angeles Kings (1988), playing for the next six years. He was voted the team’s top defenseman and won the club’s Unsung Hero Award.

Watters, a Kamloops, B.C., native, played his college hockey with the Huskies and scored 19 goals and 93 points in three seasons. In 1981 he helped the Huskies to a third place finish in the NCAA tournament and was named an All-American and to the All-WCHA team.

He got a taste of coaching last year as an assistant with the Boston Bruins. He liked the experience and returned to Houghton in August.

“It’s just fabulous to be back; it’s great being back in Copper Country,” said Watter. “Ever since I turned pro, we’ve had a summer home close by. For me and my family, being back coaching the Huskies is a great thing.”

The Huskies are off to a good start with a 4-1 overall and 1-1 WCHA record. And Watters is happy about the team’s early-season success.

“Our players have picked up the systems very well. Whenever there’s a coaching change there are always periods of adjustment for everyone. The players are getting a feel for me and I’m doing the same with them. But it’s gone quite well and we’ll keep going strong.

“We had players step to the front: Andre Savage, Jeff Mikesch, Rob Kinch and Jason Prokopetz. They’ve done a very good job for us. I think throughout the year a lot of players will have the chance to prove what they can do. We lost a lot of players to graduation and other things, so there will be plenty of opportunities.”

So why would a man with a chance to coach in the NHL move to a new challenge at the collegiate level?

“I believe this program has great potential,” he said. “It’s a program I went through and went on to be successful. This program can offer, in my eyes, besides the top education and good hockey, a school in an area that brings the best out of people. Quality people are here and that is the type of program we want; we want to attract quality people.”

That sounds like a solid theme to work with, and Watters has proven at least two things in his career; he understands what it takes to be successful and he knows how to accomplish his goals.

“Right now the best thing about our young season is I am very pleased with the character of the team. It is a great group of individuals and all the coaches look to mold them into a good hockey club.”

North to Alaska

Last May, Dean Talafous became just the second coach in Alaska-Anchorage hockey history. He firmly believes in the hockey program and wants to win a national championship. He believes he can accomplish that lofty goal, or he would not have taken the job.

But he also knows that it will take time, a commitment from everyone in the program, and a “no excuses” attitude.

That attitude helped Talafous win a 1994 NCAA Division III national title at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls and a berth in four straight championship finals. No other NCAA Div. III team advanced to the finals four straight years. Plus he spent several successful seasons in the NHL.

Talafous isn’t new to the WCHA, having played at Wisconsin (1971-74), where he helped the Badgers to the NCAA title, being named tourney MVP in the process. Before going to UW-River Falls he was an assistant at Minnesota when the Gophers won two WCHA titles.

So far this year he has enjoyed some early-season success with a 2-2 overall record. Last weekend the Seawolves dropped a pair of close WCHA games to Minnesota-Duluth, and are 0-2 in the league.

“So far the players have been real receptive to our ideas,” said Talafous. “We have three captains who are good listeners. They follow instructions and the rest of team follows their lead. Stacy Prevost, David Vallieres and Todd Bethard have been good leaders.

“We are much farther along than I thought we would be at this point. We have to look at our own progress and not the end results. We must play strong defense and then generate more offense. In the areas of discipline and team defense we are moving along. Most important is the effort from the players has been there; there’s a good work ethic with them.”

The Duluth, Minn., native will apply the same tactics used on him to convince players to move to Alaska and play hockey.

“We can make people aware of how Alaska can grab you — the beauty and friendly people,” he said. “There’s no other place on earth with the beauty of the ocean and mountains. People here come from other places and have to bond together and support each other to get along. Alaska is not for everybody, but for the player who wants adventure and the experience of a lifetime, there’s no other place like it.”

Talafous has noted the attention the Seawolves get and that has been his biggest adjustment this year.

“The big difference [from UW-River Falls] is the media attention. There is tremendous community interest. I’m speaking, doing TV, radio and newspaper interviews on a daily basis. We must be organized to get the job done on the ice, which is number one for us. People desperately want a winner here.”

With time and that “no excuses” attitude, the winning can’t be far off.

Minnesota Head Coach Suspended

Minnesota today suspended hockey coach Doug Woog and pulled one scholarship from the program for Woog’s role in obtaining cash to help a former player pay tuition expenses after his eligibility had ended.

The decision was announced by men’s athletics director Mark Dienhart at an early-evening news conference at Mariucci Arena.

Dienhart said Woog gave Chris McAlpine $500 in 1994 to put towards spring quarter tuition during his senior year. He also said the University has reported the NCAA rules violation to the national association.

In a St. Paul Pioneer Press report today, unnamed sources contend the money was not Woog’s and was not given by anyone affiliated with the university. McAlpine reportedly was given the cash after changing his mind about signing a professional contract in favor of completing his senior year of classes. By that time, however, McAlpine’s tuition money for the quarter had reportedly been allocated to another player.

In an emotional appearance before the media, Woog admitted to making an error and violating an NCAA rule. He expressed remorse for the attention he has brought to the university, his players and Dienhart, whom he called a friend. Woog says his decision to give the money to McAlpine happened quickly, was not premeditated and was not done with malice.

Specifically, these are the provisions of the university’s self-imposed penalties:

  • Woog will be suspended for at least one week, without pay.
  • The program’s scholarships will be reduced from 18 to 17 for the 1997-98 academic year.
  • Woog will be required to attend, at his expense, an NCAA rules seminar.

    The duration of the suspension could increase depending on the findings of the internal investigation. He will not be behind the bench for the team’s games at Minnesota-Duluth Friday and Saturday nights, and could miss games in the following weekend at Wisconsin. Those schools represent Minnesota’s biggest traditional rivals.

    During the suspension, Woog will not be allowed to have contact with his players or assistant coaches.

    Dienhart said the scope of the penalties was determined following consultation with the NCAA, which will conduct its own investigation into the matter. Dienhart said the penalties would have been much stiffer had the violation occurred while McAlpine had eligibility remaining.

    This is the first NCAA violation of significance by Woog, who Friday began his 12th season as Minnesota’s head coach. Last spring, however, he was suspended by the WCHA for abusing an official during the association’s playoff tournament.

    Associate head coach Mike Guentzel will coach the team during Woog’s absence.

  • NCAA To Investigate Minnesota

    The University of Minnesota and the NCAA are engaged in an investigation into possible rules infractions, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reported Sunday, October 20, 1996.

    Reportedly Gopher head coach Doug Woog gave co-captain Chris McAlpine $500 after the conclusion of the 1993-94 hockey season, once defenseman McAlpine had used up his hockey eligibility. The money was to be used to finish school.

    University officials had no official comment to make on the matter.

    McAlpine played four years for the Minnesota team, from the 1990-91 seasons. In his senior season he was co-captain, and is on the all time leader board for assists and points by a Minnesota defensemen. He was named to the second team All America squad in 1994.

    McAlpine is currently with the Albany River Rats of the AHL.

    Erik Drygas: Trying to Triumph Over Tragedy

    On October 7, in practice only days before the opening of the season, University of Alaska Fairbanks sophomore defenseman Erik Drygas fell head first into the boards when he caught a skate edge during a drill and severely fractured his fifth cervical vertebra. Two days later he underwent successful surgery to stabilize his neck and he remains in the intensive care unit in Fairbanks Memorial Hospital.

    Fortunately, his spinal cord is intact although he has only very limited feeling and movement in his upper body and none in his lower extremities. It is uncertain whether he will regain any increased movement. He is expected to be transported to a spinal rehabilitation clinic in the next week.

    Those are the facts of this story, but if you were with us in Fairbanks you would see the impact this has had on everyone in the community. When Travis Roy was injured last year, many people here were affected and rallied to help him out. It was a terrible accident and we cared, but now it has happened to us too.

    Erik is not just a Nanook hockey player to us. He is also from our hometown. His parents, Mark and Kathy, are long time residents of Fairbanks. Erik grew up here and learned to play hockey here. He played youth hockey here and at Lathrop High School. He was even a Nanook stick boy when the university program was in its infancy. He had to leave home to play junior hockey, but he chose to come back and play for the Nanooks.

    He scored his only collegiate goal so far, in his very first game and on home ice too. He and his teammates from Fairbanks help children here dare not just to dream about things that a generation earlier we considered impossible.

    In the last few days many people throughout the community have begun the task of helping Erik and his family in this very difficult situation. We were glad to hear that Erik’s medical expenses will be paid, but they will exhaust the Drygas’ insurance, and then the university’s coverage on him, before being paid by catastrophic coverage maintained by the NCAA for the student-athletes.

    There are however going to be extensive needs for Erik and his family that will not be paid. He will be rehabilitating a long way from Fairbanks. His family will need help with their transportation costs. Even to talk to Erik on a regular basis will be expensive. His parents will certainly miss time from work. When he comes home, they may need to make special modifications to his housing and for transportation.

    Even if Erik makes a full recovery, the non-medical expenses during the next year will be very great for the Drygas family. We try not to think of the worse possibilities, but we know what they are.

    In order to help Erik and his family, we have established the Erik Drygas Fund and this weekend has been declared Erik Drygas Weekend while the University of Alaska Fairbanks hosts Miami University in the CCHA openers for both teams at the Carlson Center. Most of the activities this weekend will be centered around raising funds for the Drygas family and recognizing what Erik has meant to people and symbolizes in the community.

    This will be just the beginning of at least a full season of activities planned by the UAF Face Off Club, the University of Alaska Fairbanks, the Alaska Gold Kings professional hockey team, the Carlson Center, the Fairbanks Amateur Hockey Association, local service clubs, AM 970 radio, and many, many other groups and individual members of the Fairbanks community.

    Erik means something to us that is hard to explain and we are going to help him out. There isn’t really any other choice. He and his family need us right now and what has happened to him has happened in some small way to every one of us. In a community that is sometimes polarized by issues that now seem so trivial, that is something we are coming together on. When Erik comes home — and we will be waiting for that — I sincerely hope we remember what we are doing now.

    Please letters or cards of encouragement and best wishes for Erik Drygas to the following address:

    Erik Drygas
    c/o UAF Face Off Club
    P.O. Box 81043
    Fairbanks, AK 99708

    Donations or contributions should be designated for the Erik Drygas Fund and may be sent to UAF Face Off Club at the above address or to:

    The Erik Drygas Fund
    Denali State Bank
    119 North Cushman
    P.O. Box 74568
    Fairbanks, AK 99701

    This Week in the ECAC: October 18, 1996

    The ECAC teams finally get into action this weekend with four games, including a renewal of the Hockey East-ECAC rivalry with two games on Saturday October 19.

    Boston University (0-0-0) at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (0-0-0) Saturday, 7 p.m., Houston Field House, Troy, NY

    The Detroit Red Wing scrimmage game renews its rivalry this season after taking one season off (both teams uniforms look like the Red Wings). Both Boston University and RPI have a lot of questions to be answered offensively and defensively.

    BU: BU took a huge stride in confirming the fact that they "reload" rather than rebuild last weekend with a 4-3 exhibition win over Minnesota. They played a tight physical game and their forwards had a great game with Matt Wright getting two goals and Chris Drury getting one. The defense is still solid, and will try to contain RPI’s fast forwards.

    RPI: RPI had a down season last year, and look to rebound. They lost a lot of scoring up front with four of their top 5 scorers gone to graduation, but the real question is in goal for RPI as two freshmen will compete for the starting job. Scott Prekaski and Joel Laing will duke it out. It’s possible that they two netminders might split duty in Saturday’s game.

    Keys to the game:

    1) Special Teams. BU killed Minnesota on special teams last week, but also allowed a shorthanded goal. RPI is totally untested on the power play as only three players from last year’s power play unit return. The team that stays out of the box will benefit the greatest.

    2) Depth. It will be between the third and fourth lines for both teams. Whomever controls on the later lines will be the winning team.

    3) Goaltending. Tom Noble is solid for BU, RPI is untested.

    It should be a game in which BU will experiment with forward lines and get tuned up. RPI is looking to see how their new freshmen will fit in, and as soon as depth gets into the game it should be an easy win for BU.

    Pick: BU 7 RPI 2

    Vermont (0-0-0) at New Hampshire (0-0-0) Saturday, 7 p.m., Whittemore Center, Durham, NH

    The two New England rivals face each other again in another renewal of this classic confrontation. Vermont is looking to get to the Final Four again while a lot of questions surround UNH.

    UVM: Everyone knows about Martin St. Louis and Eric Perrin. They will once again be the keys for UVM. Sound backup lines will continue and the scoring should enhance the Catamounts chances. Sound goaltending from Tim Thomas should again bolster UVM this season.

    UNH: Dick Umile wonders where his club will be this season. As Dave Hendrickson pointed out, UNH lacked goaltending, scoring, and depth last season. The Wildcat faithful hope that has been solved. This will be the starting point for this season, and this is where the lines will be worked out.

    Keys to the Game:

    1) Goaltending – Tim Thomas is solid, and nothing less is expected. For UNH who will be in goal? Larochelle should get the start but is he the answer for this game?

    2) Speed – The first line of St. Louis-Perrin-Ruid is fast. In the spacious confines of Towse Rink at the Whittemore Center they will have a field day. It is up to UNH to stop it. Can UNH’s speed go up against UVM’s?

    3) Defense in front of the goaltender – This is critical for UNH. They must protect the net because all 4 lines for UVM seem to find the slots and spaces in the box in front of the crease. You won’t beat Thomas with long shots, you can beat him in front though.

    UVM is clearly one of the top teams in the nation. UNH wants to be there. Not yet though Wildcats.

    Pick: UVM 6 UNH 2

    Clarkson (0-0-0) at Ohio State (0-1-0) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., OSU Ice Rink, Columbus, OH

    A powerful team against one which people predict will be powerful in the future. Looks like a rout on paper, but then that’s why they play them.

    CU: Clarkson always seems to get it done. When they lose their top scorers, someone else steps up. Last year it was Todd White, and he is back this year to wreak havoc again. The defense is extremely solid once again, and goaltender Dan Murphy will be also strong once again.

    OSU: A 7-2 loss to Bowling Green last week answered some questions, but there are still many to be answered for John Markell. The goaltending situation still needs to be addressed, as well as the scoring. Though four of the top five return, they seemed non- existent last week.

    Keys to the games:

    1) Goaltending – When all is said and done, OSU has an untested freshmen in the net, Clarkson has a veteran that is solid and amazing.

    2) Special Teams – The Golden Knights can be deadly on the power play, as well as on the penalty kill. Jean-Francois Houle is a great two-way player. OSU is still finding their special team combinations.

    3) Defense – Clarkson’s defense is strong. They return many players and have a great offensive talent on the blue line in Mikko Ollila. OSU has not yet proven their blue line crew can take care of business.

    Clarkson is so much stronger on paper than the Buckeyes. But the games have to be played. It will not be pretty.

    Pick: Clarkson with the sweep. 8-1 and 4-2.

    Copyright 1996 Jayson Moy . All Rights Reserved.

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    This Week in the CCHA: October 18, 1996

    Last week the CCHA teams got off to a strong start for the most part, playing a number of tune-up games. The week did not begin on a positive note, as Alaska-Fairbanks defenseman Erik Drygas injured his neck in practice, and remains in serious, but stable condition in the hospital. A team meeting was called, and Drygas’ jersey hung from the goal posts as Fairbanks faced interstate rival Anchorage over the weekend, losing two hard-fought contests.

    Ohio State lost to Bowling Green in a game that has been called "rough" by some. Hey, that is what the CCHA is about, tough grind-it-out hockey! Miami can score, and Michigan looks the same! Notre Dame started off on a positive note, and so did Western Michigan. Ferris State split, and LSSU got its first win mid-week. The real tests begin this week for most, with some intra-conference games that will be great barometers for the national picture.

    Here’s a look at this week’s match-ups:

    Miami (1-1-0) at Alaska-Fairbanks (0-2-0) Thursday, Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., Carlson Center, Fairbanks, AK

    Look for Miami to test both of its goaltenders this week to figure out who can carry the load. With the first test coming on the long road trip, Miami will no doubt need to overcome sloppy play early on, until their legs return. Randy Robitaille and Dan Boyle proved Miami can score against Windsor, but the defense was missing early, and the goaltending by Adam Lord was mediocre.

    Alaska will need to play strong defensive hockey to stop the trapping Miami forecheck. Cody Bowtell and the offense will need to produce more then three goals to beat Miami. Look for Miami to dominate by Sunday.

    PICK: Miami 2 out of 3, but Alaska wins Thursday. Boston College (0-0-0) at Bowling Green (2-0-0) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., BGSU Ice Arena, Bowling Green, OH

    Boston College will have to rely on their goaltending to keep then in a game against a stingy Falcon defense, and a scary offense. Bowling Green brings a 47 percent power play, and a 94 percent penalty kill with them. Mike Johnson looks to add to his five goal opening weekend. Look for Bowling Green to physically dominate.

    Do not count out Boston College and Marty Reasoner, but depth will be the difference. BC coach Jerry York finally has his team playing for him, but it is too early for them to beat Bowling Green.

    PICK: FRIDAY, BG 4, BC 2; SATURDAY, BC 4, BG 3; Split.

    Clarkson at Ohio State Friday and Saturday, 7 p.n., OSU Ice Rink, Columbus, OH

    Ohio State will look to work out the kinks on offense with a young group of talented forwards who need time to gel. Brandon LaFrance and Tyler McMillan will lead a weak power play that only converted one of eight chances last weekend.

    Clarkson will provide a strong test of the Buckeye’s speed and goaltending, from the likes of senior Todd White, a 29 goal scorer last season, and captain Jean-Francois Houle, who netted 14. This will be a great challenge, which is just what OSU needs after playing sloppy early against Bowling Green. Goaltender Dan Murphy is very solid in the pipes, and could steal one alone for Clarkson.

    PICK: OSU 4, CLARKSON 3 FRIDAY; CLARKSON 5, OSU 3 SATURDAY; SPLIT

    Western Ontario (0-0-0) at Ferris State (1-1-0) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., Ewigleben Arena, Big Rapids, MI

    This is a great weekend for Ferris State to work on its defensive posture against a solid Western Ontario forecheck, as well as a chance to score some goals, and build confidence in players like sophomore’s Kenzie Homer and Joel Irwin, who each scored two last week.

    Ferris should have enough depth to outshoot, and outscore Western Ontario’s mediocre roster.

    PICK: FSU SWEEP

    Maine (0-0-0) at Lake Superior State (1-1-0) Sunday, 2 p.m., James Norris Ice Arena, Sault Ste. Marie, MI

    Maine will have LSSU matched for speed, depth, and goaltending, but not spirit as LSSU is 15-3-1 in their last 19 at home. Look for the Lakers to win a tight game with strong goaltending in John Grahame backing them up. Ted Laviolette and Matt Alvey are a strong tandem on offense, but the power play struggles, as does the penalty kill early.

    Maine will have to rebound energy-wise from a long trip to the Soo, and the physical pounding they will get from Michigan, but young toughs like Trevor Roenick can handle it. Special teams will win this game. If Maine’s power play gets going, watch out.

    PICK: LSSU 4, MAINE 2

    Maine (0-0-0) at Michigan (2-0-0) Friday, 7:30 p.m., Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, MI

    This weekend will show us a lot about three of the top teams in the nation, and could mark the beginning of a downhill slide for Maine, for playing Michigan, and LSSU at home is tough. Look for Michigan’s depth to overpower a suspect Maine defensive core. Jason Botterill and Bill Muckalt will challenge Maine’s defensive capabilities, especially on their power play which is 41 percent so far. Depth will win out in this one, Maine lacks what Michigan reaps.

    PICK: MICHIGAN 4, MAINE 2

    Western Michigan (0-0-0) at Notre Dame (1-0-0) Friday, 7 p.m., Joyce Athletics and Convocation Center, South Bend, IN

    Notre Dame will need youngsters to step up in order to handle a physically formidable Western Michigan team. Joe Dusbabek and Ben Nelson did just that last week, putting crucial points on the board.

    This will either be the coming out party of Western’s goaltender Matt Barnes, or that of Dusbabek and Ben Simon for Notre Dame. Western’s penalty kill is putting out the fires, going 100 percent on the kill last week. If the offense can score more than three, it is their game.

    PICK: WESTERN 3, NDAME 2

    Western Michigan (0-0-0) at Michigan State (1-0-0) Saturday, 7 p.m., Munn Arena, East Lansing, MI

    Michigan State will use all its firepower on offense to break away from the Western Michigan defense by the end of this one. Steve Ferranti’s three goals lead the way, and an 80 percent penalty kill isn’t too shabby either, it will get better.

    With fresh legs, it will be a tough night for Western to win over Chad Alban who is unstoppable at home. PICK: MSU 5, WMU 3

    Copyright 1996 Kirk Koennecke . All Rights Reserved.

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    Charges Against McLeod Could Be Dropped

    Bruce McLeod’s three counts of felony theft will be dropped given good behavior, the AP reported Thursday.

    McLeod, former Minnesota-Duluth athletic director and WCHA chairman, was charged with three counts of felony theft in relation to $18,000 in misappropriated funds on six checks. Five of the six checks were ruled inadmissible due to a statute of limitations.

    Charges for the remaining check, in the amount of $6,000 and written from the checking account of the golf and tennis programs, will be dropped provided McLeod enters a program for first-time offenders, as ruled by a St. Louis County District judge on Wednesday, October 16.

    McLeod resigned from his post as athletic director as an independent audit was being conducted on the financial records of Minnesota-Duluth in late August.

    This Week in the WCHA: October 18, 1996

    The WCHA season gets off to a roaring start this weekend with four series, one that features two of the top teams in the league meeting in an early-season battle.

    Colorado College, the coaches’ pick to win its fourth straight league championship, invades the University of Minnesota, which was picked to finish second by the coaches. The series could set the stage for the rest of the 1996-97 season as each team would like to start fast and make the other play catch up.

    In other weekend series, which all have the makings as close, hard-fought contests, have Minnesota-Duluth at Alaska-Anchorage, Denver going to North Dakota and St. Cloud State at Wisconsin. In non-conference action Michigan Tech hosts Mankato State in a series while Northern Michigan hosts Lake Superior State on Friday.

    Colorado College (0-0-0 overall, 0-0-0 WCHA) at Minnesota (0-0-0 overall, 0-0-0 WCHA), Friday, 7:05 p.m. CT, Saturday, 8:05 p.m. CT

    This conference opener will be watched closely by most people in the WCHA and for good reason; Colorado College and Minnesota are two of the top teams in the league and will battle to the end of the season to claim the No. 1 spot.

    Colorado College Coach Don Lucia wants his team to play consistent hockey all season long and not peak for any series, especially one so early in the season. "This series isn’t really that important," he said on Wednesday. "This is the first of a 32-game WCHA schedule. We have to be patient with our young team. We want to be consistent and if we get a split on the road, especially at Minnesota which is a very tough place to play, that will be just fine."

    Minnesota Coach Doug Woog has a different outlook because of how CC was able to get ahead early last year in the standings. "Really the last three years we’ve been playing catch up. We want to stop that this year. We had a great winning streak last year and still trailed them. It’s important to not get behind."

    But Woog doesn’t think there is a team that will run away from the pack this year. "I don’t think losing a series will hurt a team as much this year because there isn’t a team as dominant as CC was last year. However, still this is a significant series and teams need points against contending teams."

    The Gophers must be better defensively against CC than they were in the 4-3 loss to Boston University last weekend. "We learned that we must be more responsible at team defense. That will be a big factor in the game."

    "I think both teams are similar in that they are young," Lucia said. "We are very young up front and last weekend we found out that it will be harder for us to score goals this year. We lost some great scorers from last year’s team. Now the question is who will step up and do that this year. Defensively we return a lot of talent and Judd Lambert is great in goal."

    Lucia has a great deal of respect for the Gophers. "Mike Crowley is a big-time player and we can’t give them a lot of power plays because he will quarterback that for them and do a great job. Erik Rasmussen is excellent and Ryan Kraft has played very well against us the past two years."

    Woog knows that the talented defensive players that CC has will make it tough for the Gophers to score. "It’s pretty simple; CC has great defense. Eric Rud and Scott Swanson are two of the best pair of defensemen in the WCHA."

    Lucia admits the CC – UM series has grown into a great event. "If there is one team we would like to beat it’s Minnesota, and I think it works the same way with them. This has grown into a very healthy rivalry in the past few years."

    ELMO Picks: CC 4, UM 3 on Friday; UM 4, CC 2 on Saturday.

    Minnesota-Duluth (1-1-0 overall, 0-0-0 WCHA) at Alaska-Anchorage (2-0-0 overall, 0-0-0 WCHA), Friday-Saturday, 7:05 p.m. AT

    Both the Bulldogs and the Seawolves had good showings last weekend when UMD split with Army and UAA topped rival Alaska-Fairbanks twice.

    UMD outshot Army 90-35 last weekend and any time any team can average 45 shots a game, something is going well offensively. The Bulldogs will try to keep that up this weekend. Freshman goalie Brant Nicklin get the shutout in the 3-0 win Saturday, but faced just 12 shots. Winger Sergei Petrov leads UMD with a goal and three assists. Center Mike Peluso had two goals and an assist on Friday and defenseman Curtis Doell had a goal and two assists. In all 11 players picked up points.

    UAA Coach Dean Talafous picked up his first two wins quickly last weekend when his team topped Alaska-Anchorage. And, typical of Talafous teams, they allowed just four goals in the two games. That’s something Talafous would like to see continue against UMD, but that may be a bit more difficult after the Bulldogs scored seven goals. Stacy Prevost had the hot hand with a goal and four assists. Eric Tuott had two goals. The Seawolves were 3-10 on the power-play and held UAF to 0-8. Both stats are Talafous trademarks.

    ELMO picks: UAA 3, UMD 1 on Friday, UMD 4, UAA 2 on Saturday.

    Denver (0-0-0 overall, 0-0-0 WCHA) at North Dakota (0-0-0 overall, 0-0-0 WCHA), Friday-Saturday, 7:35 p.m. CT

    This should be another good opening-weekend series between two teams who have high expectations of the season.

    Look for Denver to open up the guns this weekend and let their offensive talent flow. The Pioneers are one team in the league that have enough depth up front to get into a skating game with any opponent. That could happen this weekend with the Fighting Sioux.

    UND Coach Dean Blais knows Denver has a talented group and he will be looking to shut down the opponent. The Fighting Sioux will have to rely on some tight defensive play to be successful. Even though it is early in the season this series will tell Blais a lot about his squad.

    ELMO picks: DU 6, UND 3 on Friday, DU 4, UND 3 on Saturday.

    St. Cloud State (0-0-0 overall, 0-0-0 WCHA) at Wisconsin (0-0-0 overall, 0-0-0 WCHA), Friday-Saturday, 7:05 p.m., CT

    St. Cloud and Wisconsin will look to get off on the right skate this year as they meet in an early-season series in Madison.

    This is the Badgers’ first game of the year under veteran Coach Jeff Sauer. The Badgers have been successful in opening the season at home with a 21-11-1 record. The Badgers haven’t lost a home opener since 1988 (Minnesota winning, 3-2). Erik Raygor has played eight games against the Huskies and has two goals and three assists. Goalie Kirk Daubenspeck has a 1-5-2 record with a 4.89 goals against average against the Huskies.

    St. Cloud’s reliable Mark Parrish and Matt Cullen led the way in the Huskies 4-2 exhibition loss to Alberta last weekend. Both had a goal and assist. The Huskies will need a solid effort at both ends of the rink this weekend. But that’s what coach Craig Dahl is counting on.

    ELMO picks: SCSU 4, UW 1 on Friday, UW 3, SCSU 1 on Saturday.

    Mankato State (1-1-0 overall) at Michigan Tech (2-1-0 overall, 1-1-0 WCHA), Friday, 7:35 p.m. ET, Saturday, 7:05 p.m. ET (nc)

    The Huskies got a split last weekend against Northern Michigan and will look for even more success this weekend against Mankato State. Coach Tim Watters got that all-important first win and this weekend the Huskies should concentrate on improving all phases of their game against a new Div. I opponent. There is always the possibility of overlooking an opponent, but Watters will have his team ready to play.

    Mankato State is a new Div. I program and they picked up their first win at that level last weekend (5-4 in overtime over Ferris State). Veteran Coach Don Brose, who has worked for years at getting the Mavericks to Div. I, couldn’t be happier with his team. Going to MTU and winning will be a huge challenge for MSU. Right now Brose and his team are getting used to the Div. I play and taking small steps one at a time.

    ELMO picks: MTU 5, MSU 1 on Friday, MTU 6, MSU 2 on Saturday.

    Lake Superior State (0-1-0 overall) at Northern Michigan (1-1-0 overall, 1-1-0 WCHA), Friday, 7:05 p.m. ET (nc)

    Whenever NMU and LSSU meet there’s plenty of action and that’s especially true with the Cappo Cup on the line. Wednesday the Lakers opened the series with a 5-0 win on their home ice.

    Coach Rick Comley and the Wildcats split a series with Michigan Tech last weekend and that had to help the confidence of this young team. Trevor Janicki, Curtis Sheptak and J. P. Vigier each had a goal and assist. With each passing game the Wildcats will get better. The goal is to be good enough near the end of the season to put a push on for a WCHA Final Five spot. A strong showing Friday will help erase the memory of Wednesday’s loss and the team’s confidence.

    In Wednesday’s win five Lakers scored goals with Matt Alvey getting a goal and an assists. Joe Blaznek had the only power-play goal. John Graham made 15 saves to record his fifth career shut out.

    ELMO picks: LSSU 4, NMU 2.

    Next Week in the WCHA Wednesday, Oct. 23 Canadian National Team at Alaska-Anchorage Friday-Saturday, Oct. 25-26 Colorado College at Northern Michigan Wisconsin at Denver North Dakota at Michigan Tech Minnesota at Minnesota-Duluth St. Lawrence at St. Cloud State (nc)

    Copyright 1996 Jim Thies . All Rights Reserved.

    Return to News and Articles Return to US College Hockey Online

    Lowell Goalie Suspended

    UMass-Lowell athletic director Dana Skinner has confirmed reports that goalie Martin Fillion was suspended for violating team rules.

    Tuesday’s Boston Globe reports that Fillion’s suspension spans four games. He will miss Lowell’s Hockey East-opening series against UMass-Amherst Oct. 25-26, and the two game stint with Boston College on Nov. 1-2.

    Reportedly, Fillion will be eligible to play again on Nov. 8 against Merrimack.

    Fillion, a native of Winnipeg, Manitoba, was the work-horse for Lowell last season posting a 24-9-3 record with a 3.79 goals against average. Fillion was a preseason All-Hockey East selection this season.

    New Ohio State Arena No ‘False Image’

    When you walk into the meager hockey office in the current Ohio State University Athletic Department you at once realize, because of location, the significance of this program in relation to others. The office itself is located on the inside of the basketball arena, within the rotunda, with a minuscule ice rink adjoining it.

    Anyone who has played there, or held a meeting in that office, would describe it as a crowded environment. Three coaches have to share a space which is no larger than the average dorm room on campus, and house not only their work-related materials, but team equipment as well. It does not meet modern CCHA standards, let alone Division III standards.

    There has been a change in that dungeon-like office, though. Now on the wall directly opposite the doorway, behind Coach John Markell’s desk, is a huge framed picture of the new Schottenstein Center, an arena which does not exist yet, but will bring OSU, and this program, out of the dungeon, and place it on a pedestal before long. It is an artist’s rendition, and art it is!

    This $84 million arena will house both the men’s and women’s basketball programs, as well as the ice hockey team. It is, as Coach Markell referred to it, “a state of the art facility.”

    One important construction aspect to note is that the arena will have two practice courts adjacent to the main arena to be utilized for practice by the basketball teams. This will allow for the hockey program to use the facility for regular practices, as well as games. The Big Ten and the CCHA will make efforts to cooperate in scheduling so that date conflicts will not occur. These are important steps to ensure hockey gets its due in the new venue.

    What Coach Jerry Welsh did not have for 17 seasons, and what Markell is just beginning to realize, is the benefit of image. Any recruit can come and visit the wonderful campus, and surroundings of Columbus, Ohio, but go home wondering why this kind of university has such a pathetic rink. The only answer was always that their was no support coming from athletics internally. Now that ground has broken, that image problem has vanished.

    Ohio State, the largest school in the nation, is consistently ranked among the top public universities in the country, will now begin to compete with the likes of Boston University, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Colorado College. There are other schools out there, but they will hardly be able to offer the complete package to athletes that these programs can.

    For starters, there is history at Ohio State. Also, a diverse environment which will attract certain athletes who are looking for a change. There is also this place called High Street, which in the off season can provide young men with more fun than any other campus anywhere.

    Oh, and let’s not forget that this arena will be the best. We are talking about a 17,500 seat, Olympic-sized ice surface. Not to mention the special reception area, team meeting room, coaches rooms, workout facility, and other perks.

    Sounds like Minnesota, but it’s not. It is in every respect a pro arena, with sight lines easy on all spectators’ eyes, and luxury accommodations for those who want them. Even if it takes a couple of years to fill the seats, the atmosphere will be a huge improvement on the old for Ohio State.

    Andy Geiger, the relatively new athletic director, is helping things along. His support of the program is important, and his presence at games, home and away, is intentionally cultivating that new image he wants the program to have. New uniforms last season resemble professional jerseys, and this years’s recruits have a glimmer in their eyes. It is because they can see the ground moving right in front of them on the corner of Lane and Olentangy, right next to the Woody Hayes Facility, the supreme football practice headquarters.

    When you look at this building, and the new baseball stadium in the works, and see the sight for the Nicklaus Golf center, all in one gorgeous sports park, it takes your breath away.

    The concrete and the dust are welcome in Columbus. It has been too long a wait, but the Buckeyes are preparing for the new millennium, and they are going first class all the way.

    The Men Who Would Be Reasoner

    If you think you’re going to read about network journalist Harry Reasoner, you need to watch less TV and more hockey.

    The Reasoner is Marty Reasoner, Boston College’s slick playmaker. Reasoner, Marty that is, garnered last year’s Hockey East Rookie of the Year award and should be one of the league’s top forwards this year.

    Who will be this year’s Marty Reasoner?

    Unlike Hockey East we’ll pick our pre-season rookie team and keep going for three lines, three pair of defensemen, and three goaltenders. Now admittedly this exercise is nothing short of journalistic Russian roulette will most of the barrels full, but at the very least you’ll find our picks entertaining.

    GOALTENDERS

    Our third string netminder is Marc Robitaille, one of Northeastern’s two freshmen goalies. Robitaille, 20, played last year for the Gloucester Rangers in Ontario’s Central Junior Hockey League where he racked up a 2.94 GAA in 35 games.

    Robitaille is competing for Huskie netminding duties with fellow frosh Judd Brackett from the Junior Whalers and seldom-used senior Kevin Noke. According to head coach Bruce Crowder, “Marc has separated himself from the rest of the pack. Of course, there’s a lot left to be seen, but at this point he’s out in front.”

    Robitaille won’t duplicate his 2.94 GAA for the rebuilding Huskies, but that shouldn’t stop him from being one of only three league netminders this year to establish himself as a number one goaltender in his inaugural season.

    UNH’s Sean Matile nails down the second string spot. Matile played major junior hockey which forced him to miss last year as well as the first ten games of this year. Wildcat fans hope that he’ll be worth the wait.

    Coach Dick Umile has tried to rein in runaway expectations, but has also indicated that Matile could contend for Rookie of the Year honors. “When Sean comes back,” he said, “we think that we’ll be real solid in our goaltending.”

    Matile, a big boy at 6-3, 220, last played in the British Columbia Junior Hockey League (BCJHL) for the Vernon Lakers. He compiled a 4.32 GAA and .892 save percentage in his last year there. Although mediocre at best, those statistics were reportedly more a measure of the weak team he played for than his own puckstopping ability.

    Since then he has drawn raves from everyone from Maine’s top recruiter Grant Standbrook to teammates who practiced with him last year to fans who eyeballed his performance during Wildcat Midnight Madness.

    Maine’s Alfie Michaud takes our top spot with a bullet. The more we hear about him, the more we like his chances. Michaud posted a spectacular .920 save percentage and 2.68 GAA last year while going 25-16-2, earning him a unanimous Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League All-Star selection.

    Maine preseason press releases termed Michaud’s backups, Javier Gorriti and Ed Washuk, “walk-ons in the truest sense of the word.” As a result, Michaud, who played in 49 games last year, should get the call as long as he can stand. And if someone can prop up his exhausted body, that’ll be considered standing.

    Although he looks to be the runaway winner among rookie dufflebags in games played, Michaud’s first-team status reflects more than mere endurance. Teammates who have practiced against him, as well as fans who watched him in Maine’s traditional Blue-White game, are convinced that the kid can flat-out play. They compare him to BC’s Greg Taylor, with the footnote that opponents had better beat him on the second or third shot, because they’ll rarely get the first one past him.

    Michaud compares himself to NHL goalie Felix Potvin. “I like to come out and challenge. I have a lot of speed and I try to use it to my advantage,” said Michaud in an article by Larry Mahoney in the Bangor Daily News. In the same article head recruiter and goalie coach Grant Standbrook commented, “Alfie was the best goalie I saw in North America last year.”

    Michaud could seriously challenge for Rookie of the Year, especially considering how vital he will be to Black Bear fortunes. All of Maine’s netminding eggs are in Michaud’s basket, so his performances alone could dictate whether Maine will once again be among the top teams in the league or whether they will fall back to also-ran status.

    Seven of the last nine years Maine goaltenders have earned All-Hockey East honors. Michaud should eventually carry on that Black Bear tradition.

    DEFENSEMEN

    Our number five and six defensemen are Providence’s Josh MacNevin and UNH’s Dan Enders.

    Enders is only 5-10, 178, but that didn’t stop him from being named a USHL second-team All-Star last year. Playing for the league champion Green Bay Gamblers, Enders tallied a 7-19–26 stat line while proving that size is no measure of toughness; he totaled 153 penalty minutes in 45 games.

    Enders has reportedly looked good in practices, but played little in New Hampshire’s exhibition game against Ottawa. However, coach Dick Umile had the confidence to use him during a key 4-on-4 late in the game, so we’re gambling that Enders will force his way into the rotation and make an impression once he’s there.

    MacNevin, a fourth round NHL draft choice, is an offense-minded blueliner who played last year for the Junior A national champion Vernon Vipers (BCJHL). A second-team league all-star, he tallied 13 goals and 45 assists for 58 points in 51 games. He was also named Vernon’s top defenseman and Rookie of the Year.

    MacNevin should have plenty of opportunity to show his stuff. Paul Pooley’s Friars graduated five senior defensemen last year. MacNevin should not lack for ice time.

    Our second-team defensemen are Merrimack’s Andrew Fox and New Hampshire’s Jayme Filipowicz. Fox (13-31–44 in 64 games) was selected to the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League All-Star squad. He also won team awards for MVP, Outstanding Ability and Gentlemanly Conduct, and Most Popular Player.

    Coach Ron Anderson commented that Fox — along with fellow freshmen Sandy Cohen, Chris Halecki, and Drew Hale — “has looked very good and [is] ahead of where I thought [he’d] be. We’ve only been on the ice for four or five days. Give [him] another week and I think we’ll be real pleased.”

    If Fox (6-1, 200) lives up to his billing, he could become the third Warrior defenseman and fourth Merrimack player overall in the last four years to earn a berth on the league’s All-Rookie team. He would join fellow blueliners John Jakopin and Darrel Scoville, as well as forward Casey Kesselring.

    Filipowicz (6-3, 215) will make an immediate impact on the UNH blueline. He was reportedly the top scoring defenseman (7-29–36) in the USHL last year, and Dick Umile is already showcasing those talents.

    Umile paired Filipowicz with Jason Krog on the points on each power play in New Hampshire’s exhibition game against Ottawa. He displayed poise and an ability to find the open man, rather than contributing with booming slapshots.

    UNH’s defense struggled last year. If Filipowicz continues his fine blueline play against tougher competition, it will go a long way to catapulting the Wildcats to the top of Hockey East.

    BU’s Tom Poti and BC’s Mike Mottau comprise our top pair of blueliners. The two New England prep stars ranked in virtually everyone’s list of Top Five incoming freshmen.

    Mottau (6-20–26 in 31 games) hails from Thayer Academy. The New England Hockey Report says, “… Mottau has tremendous talent. He’s highly mobile. He has great hands. He’s an excellent stickhandler…. He also has a highly accurate shot — both wrister and slapper.”

    Don’t look to find Mottau (6-1, 180) in the BC sin bin very often, though. He totaled a mere 14 PIMs in 31 games.

    Poti, a similarly gifted offensive force, has already caught Coach Jack Parker’s eye. Out of BU’s five freshmen, Parker says, “Tom Poti probably looks the best. [He looks] very, very comfortable and [is] a very talented kid…. I consider him the best incoming freshman defenseman [in the league].”

    Chris O’Sullivan’s departure leaves an opening (among others) on one point of the Terrier power play. Poti will be a leading candidate to fill that role.

    Since Brian Leetch swept not only Rookie of the Year but also Player of the Year honors in 1986-87, BC’s Ian Moran has been the lone blueline winner of the top freshman prize. Poti could be primed to repeat that feat.

    FORWARDS

    Maine’s Cory Larose, UMass-Lowell’s Greg Koehler, and Northeastern’s Billy Newson comprise our third line.

    Newson comes to the Huskies from the Hartford Jr. Whalers. Although his scoring statistics were not available, another Newson stat leaps out. He stands a mere 5-8, 165 pounds. Talent, however, often comes in small packages. Such appears to be the case with Newson.

    Coach Bruce Crowder likes what he sees in the roadrunner. “He’s got great speed and he sees the ice really well. He’s also a great competitor.”

    The Huskies finished last in league scoring last year and then graduated about half of its offense. Newson should be one of the solutions to that problem for Crowder, especially on Northeastern’s large ice surface where he seems destined to blast past opposing defensemen.

    Lowell’s Koehler has already gained a measure of fame for his part in Ken Dryden’s Home Game documentary. Koehler (6-2, 195), a twenty-one year old from the Ontario Provincial Junior Hockey League, tallied 33-64–97 numbers in 49 games last year.

    He begins this season centering an all-rookie line with Mario Leblanc and John Campbell on the wings. The line impressed in Lowell’s exhibition opener against Concordia. UML coach Tim Whitehead said of the three, “We are really pleased with how our freshmen [forwards] have come in and played at a higher level.”

    Larose, 21, was named BCJHL Playoff MVP for his efforts in leading his Langley squad to the league championship finals. He also posted 28-46–74 numbers in 54 regular season games.

    Larose (6-0, 180) opens the season centering what will probably be the Black Bears’ top line. Flanking him will be top goal scorer Shawn Wansborough and a reportedly much improved Steve Kariya, himself a league All-Rookie selection last year. He will also man one of the points during Maine power plays.

    Merrimack’s Sandy Cohen, BU’s Chris Heron, and Lowell’s Mario Leblanc form our second line.

    Cohen led the Sioux City Musketeers with 27-27–54 numbers during the regular season. He then elevated his game during the playoffs, carrying a sub-.500 team to the semifinals on the shoulders of his ten goals and ten assists in nine games.

    He then upped the ante in the US Junior A Hockey National Championship Tournament when he netted seven goals and five assists in three games.

    Smart alecks might opine that Cohen will be a “money player” who never gets to play in a “money game” at Merrimack. But Cohen could be just what the Warriors need to get into money games. Merrimack has needed the sniper that could win for them their fair share of the close games and give them a shot at big time games in March. Based on his performance last year, Cohen is the man.

    Perhaps we’re nuts to select seventeen-year old Chris Heron (5-10, 168) for our second line. But perhaps we’d be nuts to leave him off. Playing for the Bramalea Blues in the Ontario Provincial Junior A Hockey League, Heron piled up 48-59–107 numbers. Stats like that make one look past the peach fuzz that may or may not be on Heron’s cheeks.

    Other, deeper Terrier teams might have had the luxury of redshirting Heron or playing him sparingly while he matured. This Terrier team, however, will look to get an immediate contribution from the highly sought after recruit. It says here they’ll get it.

    UMass-Lowell’s Mario Leblanc (17-25–42 in 25 games) played in the second-line shadows while prepping at Cushing Academy. The unstoppable first line of Jason Philbin, Ryan Moynihan, and Nick Gillis, not to mention blue chip blueliner Tom Poti, grabbed most of the headlines. However, at Lowell he is already emerging from his former teammates’ shadows.

    As noted previously, he is now paired with our third line selection Greg Koehler and John Campbell to form an impressive All-Frosh line. Since there are only four returning forwards with any scoring totals of significance, it wouldn’t be shocking to see Leblanc, Koehler, and perhaps Campbell manning Lowell’s second powerplay unit.

    The New England Hockey Report says that Leblanc (5-11, 190), “has a very good shot and moves the puck well. A strong forechecker, he can hit and take a hit — he has a nasty streak too.”

    Our top line can do it all. BC’s Jeff Farkas, BU’s Dan Lacouture, and Providence’s Fernando Pisani provide a mix of playmaking, sniping, and physical play in the corners.

    Pisani (6-1, 185), ranked by The Hockey News as the number eight recruit overall, led his St. Albert Saints to an Alberta Junior Hockey League (AJHL) title. An eighth round NHL draft choice, Pisani (6-1, 180) topped the AJHL with a 40-63–103 stat line in 60 games. He also piled up 134 PIMs.

    Coach Paul Pooley has begun the season playing Pisani with Russ Guzior and Mike Omicioli, a line that should top any of the Friars’ lines last year.

    Lacouture totaled 24-35–59 in 29 games for the Junior Whalers in the East Coast Junior Hockey League. A power forward at 6-3, 193, he was an early second round NHL pick. Lacouture cannot fill the physical void left in the wake of Mike Grier’s departure; only Grier could do that. However, Lacouture could develop into the Mike Pomichter of the late 90’s for BU. In the meantime, he will be the top power forward among league freshmen.

    The Hockey News proclaimed that Farkas was the number one recruit in the country. Farkas (5-11, 175) piled up 36-64–100 numbers for the Niagara Falls Scenics out of the Metro Toronto Junior Hockey League. He has not only played on the national Select 16 and 17 teams, he also played in last year’s World Junior tournament and this summer’s Under-20 competition.

    Farkas, the latest in a recent parade of blue-chippers to BC, also doubles as our Rookie of the Year selection. He becomes our “Man Who Would Be Reasoner”, a fitting title since they’ll be celebrating wins out of the same Boston College locker room this year.

    USCHO All-Hockey East Rookie Team

    First Team
    Forward: Jeff Farkas, Boston College
    Forward: Dan Lacouture, Boston University
    Forward: Fernando Pisani, Providence College
    Defense: Tom Poti, Boston University
    Defense: Mike Mottau, Boston College
    Goaltender: Alfie Michaud, Maine

    Second Team
    Forward: Sandy Cohen, Merrimack
    Forward: Chris Herron, Boston University
    Forward: Mario Leblanc, UMass-Lowell
    Defense: Jayme Filipowicz, New Hampshire
    Defense: Andrew Fox, Merrimack
    Goaltender: Sean Matile, New Hampshire

    Third Team
    Forward: Billy Newson, Northeastern
    Forward: Cory Larose, Maine
    Forward: Greg Koehler, UMass-Lowell
    Defense: Josh MacNevin, Providence College
    Defense: Dan Enders, New Hampshire
    Goaltender: Marc Robitaille, Northeastern

    Hockey East Medley

    USCHO All-Hockey East Preseason Team and Award Winners

    Goaltender              Dan Dennis              Providence College
    Goaltender Martin Legault Merrimack

    Defenseman Jon Coleman Boston University
    Defenseman Darrel Scoville Merrimack
    Defenseman Mike Nicholishin Mass Lowell
    Defenseman Ken Hemenway Boston College

    Forward Chris Drury Boston University
    Forward Marty Reasoner Boston College
    Forward Mark Mowers New Hampshire
    Forward Shawn Bates Boston University
    Forward Eric Boguniecki New Hampshire
    Forward Dan Shermerhorn Maine

    Player of the Year Chris Drury Boston University
    Rookie of the Year Jeff Farkas Boston College
    Coach of the Year Jerry York (tie) Boston College
    Ron Anderson Merrimack
    Len Ceglarski Award Derek Bekar New Hampshire

    USCHO Hockey East All-Nickname Team

    Northeastern Sports Information Director Bill Doherty is college hockey’s founding father of player nicknames. His top two from last year were the priceless Mike (Bud) Veisor and Dan (Hobey Dobey) McGillis. Here is USCHO’s list of Hockey East nicknames, some original and some that have floated around Hockey East in recent years. Regretfully, Marc (Nachos) Grande was pulled from this list because he was a late roster scratch from Doherty’s own Huskies.

    Boston College
    Peter Masters (and Johnson)
    Mike (Hockey Is My) Correia
    Brian Callahan (Tunnel)

    Boston University
    Michel (Bunny) Larocque
    Tom (Barnes &) Noble
    Peter (Ninja Turtle) Donatelli
    Brendan (90210) Walsh
    Matt (You May Be Wrong, I May Be) Wright

    Maine
    Dan Shermerhorn (Of Plenty)
    Reg (Stanford) Cardinal
    Chris (Oakland) Roeder

    UMass-Amherst
    (Tony the) Tiger Holland
    Tom Perry (and the Heartbreakers)
    Dan (Hey) Juden
    Chris (Leaky) Fawcett
    Joe (Leon) Trosky
    Rob (U2) Bonneau

    UMass-Lowell
    Mike (First Tee) Mulligan
    Anthony (Gino) Cappelletti
    Ryan (All That Glitters Is Not) Golden

    Merrimack
    Martin Legault (My Eggo)
    Claudio (Wood) Peca
    Jason (Touch and) Feeley

    New Hampshire
    Eric (Hole-In-One) Nickulas

    Northeastern
    Arttu (D2) Kayhko
    Jeff (Mo) Vaughan
    Jonathan (Prank) Calla

    Providence
    Dennis Sousa (Phone)
    Jon Rowe (Row Row Your Boat)
    Dan Dennis (The Menace)


    The Greatest Hits of Hockey East

    “I Got You, Babe” – Northeastern and new head coach Bruce Crowder. They say our love won’t pay the rent… may be all too true as last year’s Coach of the Year deals with a roster bereft of talent.

    “I Feel So Lonely, I Could Cry” – PC’s Hal Gill, the only returning Friar defenseman from last year’s top six.

    “Bat Out Of Hell” – Chris Drury on a breakaway.

    “The Fool On The Hill” – who else, but the NCAA? Their ethically bankrupt decision to effectively strip a UNH women’s recruit of her scholarship because she took an advanced English course instead of one with “75% grammar” typifies an organization frequently in need of both brain and heart transplants.

    “Bridge Over Troubled Waters” – Jerry York. He inherited a cesspool from Steve Cedorchuk and has resurrected the Eagles as a recruiting machine and emerging Hockey East power.

    “Two Out of Three Ain’t Bad” – UMass-Lowell, where three goalies were one too many in 1994-95. Scott Fankhouser returns from a year in the juniors to reunite The Swiss Cheese Trio. After a strong year from Fillion last year, however, there will be no trio nor Swiss Cheese. Look for new head coach Tim Whitehead to avoid the mistake of two years ago and tap one of the three as the odd man out.

    “Back in the Saddle” – (not to be sung until December 24) Shawn Walsh. His detractors, and there are many, would instead nominate him for everything from “Lyin’ Eyes” to “Mistra Know It All”, but this writer will veto that choice, looking past his errors and welcome back a hopefully wiser Walsh who has been a great ambassador for the sport.

    “The Sounds of Silence” – Jack Parker, when an official is having a bad night. (NOT!)

    “Take This Job and Shove It” – Referees and linesmen within earshot of Parker on bad nights.

    “All Revved Up With No Place To Go” – Tim Lovell, who may sit out the 1996-97 season before returning for his final year in 1997-98.

    “Crazy Love” – Tim Lovell, again, if he instead returns in mid-season for the UMass-Amherst. Why trade a full regular season with the Black Bears for half a regular season and playoffs with the Minutemen?

    “Wild Thing” – hairy BU fan “Sasquatch”

    “My Hometown” – native Maine-iac Aaron Boone, who turned down reported full scholarships at UMass-Lowell and Merrimack to walk-on at Maine.

    “Hit Me With Your Best Shot” – Merrimack’s Martin Legault, who looks to return to All-Hockey East status after an off year last season.

    “Hello, Goodbye” – Maine’s Jeff Tory and Blair Allison, who left the Black Bears days after announcing they were staying.

    “(You Look) Wonderful Tonight” – BU goalie Tom Noble, who magically still has every hair in place at the end of each game.

    Fillion Reportedly Suspended for Six Games

    Martin Fillion, UMass-Lowell’s pre-season All-Hockey East goaltender, has been suspended for six games for undisclosed disciplinary reasons, according to an article in The Lowell Sun.

    Lowell coach Tim Whitehead confirmed after his team’s exhibition win over Concordia that he had banished Fillion to the stands for disciplinary reasons, but declined to elaborate. When asked if the punishment could extend to the opening night of the regular season, he answered, “It might.”

    Since the appearance of the Sun, Lowell officials responded that, “[Writer] Chaz [Scoggins] is speculating,” and declined further comment.

    If the article is correct, Fillion will miss the first five games of the season, all against league opponents. The five games would include home-and-home series against UMass-Amherst and Boston College, as well as the opener to a home-and-home against Merrimack.

    Fillion was Lowell’s only selection to the All-Hockey East pre-season squad.

    Lowell’s other goalies are senior Craig Lindsay, who appeared in seven games last year (4.24 GAA, .866), and sophomore Scott Fankhouser, who returned to the River Hawks from a reportedly exceptional season in the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League.

    Fairbanks Player Recovering after Surgery

    University of Alaska Fairbanks defenseman Erik Drygas is recovering in the Intensive Care Unit at Fairbanks Memorial Hospital after suffering a serious neck injury resulting from a head-first collision with the boards during practice on Monday, October 7, 1996.

    On Oct. 10, Drygas underwent surgery to repair a severe fracture to his fifth cervical vertebra. The injury has left Drygas partially paralyzed from the waist down with limited response from his upper body.

    It is not known at this time the extent in which Drygas will recover from this injury.

    The hockey world was rocked by a similar incident last year, when Boston University freshman Travis Roy fractured a vertabrae 11 seconds into his first collegiate shift.

    Hockey East Announces Preseason Picks

    Hockey East announced its preseason picks during its Media Day held today at the Fleet Center. Boston University took the top spot in the Coaches’ Poll, in which a first place vote is worth one point, second place two points, and so on. They were also the only team to place three players on the preseason team.

    Coaches’ Poll

    TEAM                    POINTS
    1. Boston University 12
    2. New Hampshire 20
    3. Boston College 31
    4. Maine 40
    5. Providence 41
    6. Merrimack 60
    7. UMass-Amherst 63
    8. Northeastern 66
    9. UMass-Lowell 72

    All-Hockey East Preseason Team

    F: Shawn Bates, Boston University
    F: Eric Boguniecki, New Hampshire
    F: Chris Drury, Boston University
    F: Mark Mowers, New Hampshire
    F: Marty Reasoner, Boston College
    F: Dan Shermerhorn, Maine
    D: Jon Coleman, Boston University
    D: Hal Gill: Providence
    D: Ken Hemenway, Boston College
    D: Jason Mansoff, Maine
    G: Dan Dennis, Providence
    G: Martin Fillion, UMass-Lowell

    Howell’s Pre-season Picks for 1996-97

    1) Michigan: Like you thought it would be Princeton?
    2) Minnesota: A little young, perhaps, but good depth and the Wooger seems pretty optimistic.
    3) Vermont: I can think of three reasons to justify this selection …
    4) Michigan State: A very tough team with slight worries on D.
    5) Denver: Last year’s late season collapse was probably an aberration.
    6) Bowling Green: A great bet, especially if Petrie is healthy.
    7) Boston University: Still the best in Hockey East, but definitely some worries due to recent defections.
    8) Colorado College: Have to break in the rookies in a hurry.
    9) Lake Superior: See Colorado College.
    10) Clarkson: Todd White, Dan Murphy and a cast of bangers.
    11) St. Lawrence: How you can resist putting these two teams together? A great group of youngsters.
    12) New Hampshire: We’ll see if Umile successfully retooled the defense and goaltending.
    13) Maine: A lot depends on last-minute roster developments. The Black Bears will probably surprise those who have written them off.
    14) St. Cloud: This year’s up-and-comer.
    15) Boston College: If only because of Marty Reasoner.
    16) Western Michigan: Thank the Lord for the UIC transfers, or the Broncos would have had some big problems.
    17) Harvard: Much rides on the freshmen and sophomores.
    18) Minnesota-Duluth: Who comes out of the pack in the WCHA? Why not UMD?
    19) Cornell: I don’t think Mike Schafer turned from a genius to an average coach over the summer.
    20) Merrimack: OK, boys, don’t let me down this year.

    Others I considered: Michigan Tech, Providence.

    I think Michigan is a brain-dead choice for No. 1 and the next eight are those that I mentioned, although anything could happen to shuffle them within that pack. It seems as if there are numerous teams relying heavily on the contribution of frosh and sophs (CC, Lake State, Harvard, St. Cloud, etc.) and that should make things interesting. This is not a particularly strong year for seniors, but I think the young talent bodes well for the future.

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