Home Blog Page 1478

ECAC West Newsletter: Nov. 8, 2000

The RIT Tigers moved into the early lead in the ECAC West last weekend by defeating Manhattanville 6-2 on Saturday. Elmira had its hands full hosting Wisconsin-Superior, and lost both games by identical 4-3 scores. Meanwhile, Hobart pulled its record back to the .500 mark by downing both Cortland and Neumann this week.

Team-by-Team Report

RIT: A hat trick by co-captain Derek Hahn led the Tigers in a 6-2 victory over Manhattanville on Saturday. Hahn scored the first two goals of the game, on separate five-on-threes in the first period. He also scored the final goal of the game late in the third period to complete the hat trick and seal the win. Sandwiched in between were tallies by Errol McDonald, Brian Armes, and Jerry Galway. The win gives RIT the early lead in the league standings.

RIT takes a week off after its initial five opening games. The Tigers will use the time to heal some of their battered players and get a couple more back from the injury list. RIT’s next game is November 14 at Geneseo.

HOBART: Hobart got its record back to .500 this week by defeating Cortland 4-2 and Neumann 8-0 at home. The Statesmen opened the week on Tuesday against Cortland in a very even game. Chris Doolan and Eric Christian pushed Hobart to a 2-0 lead before Cortland narrowed the margin midway through the second period. Greg Reynholds answered that goal, and Jerry Toomey answered another Cortland goal in the third period to maintain the two-goal margin for the win. What was different in this game for Hobart?

“We did a lot of the small things, the things that make the difference, especially in our own zone,” said coach Mark Taylor.

Hobart had an easier time on Saturday, defeating Neumann 8-0. The Statesmen outshot the Knights 37-13 and enjoyed a five-goal offensive explosion in the second period.

“We did a nice job of not giving them a whole lot of opportunities,” said Taylor. Captain Tim McCarthy led the scorers with two goals and one assist, while Chris Connolly notched the shutout.

Hobart plays another SUNY team during the middle of this week, this time Buffalo State; then it’s back home for an important league contest against Elmira.

ELMIRA: There is no doubt that Elmira had the toughest opening schedule in the ECAC West, and perhaps in all of Division III hockey. They hosted Wisconsin-Superior last weekend and the results were not in Elmira’s favor.

“We got out a little on the sluggish side,” said coach Glenn Thomaris. “The experience of Superior played a big part in that.”

After an early Superior power-play goal, Elmira answered with a power-play tally by Jason Silverthorn to tie the game 1-1. A Superior goal late in the first, and another early in the second, meant Elmira was playing catchup for the rest of the game. A Soaring Eagle goal by Pierre Rivard was answered by Superior, and the closest Elmira could get was 4-3 on a late tally after pulling its goalie.

The war continued on Saturday, but all reports indicate that the refs got in the way of a good game. Seventeen penalties were called in the first period alone, and the teams had racked up 34 trips to the Box of Shame before the night was over.

“The official came in to set the tone in the game and he was calling everything,” said Thomaris. “Both teams started to get frustrated. Everyone was confused what was called and not called.”

With so many penalties, it’s no surprise that the goals all came on special teams. Mike Hulbig tallied two power-play goals, one late in the first and another just 59 seconds in to the second, to put Elmira on top. But a major penalty to Dan Gustafson 4:42 in to the second period derailed the Soaring Eagle train. Superior scored twice on the ensuing advantage to tie the game.

“We were playing pretty well with the lead until the penalties,” said Thomaris.

A shorthanded goal by Superior in the closing seconds of the second period found Elmira skating for its life in the third. Eddie Cassie tied the game 3-3 at the 5:01 mark of the third period with a power-play goal. In OT, the ref kept his arm in the air, and Superior won the game on yet another power-play goal two minutes in to overtime.

For the first time in this writer’s memory, Elmira has started the season 0-3. The Soaring Eagles get away from nationally ranked opponents this week, and will try to get that goose egg off the wins column in games against Lebanon Valley and Hobart.

MANHANTTANVILLE: The Valiants were looking for an early-season challenge, and found it in league foe RIT. When Manhattanville used its size and reach advantages to pound the RIT players, they did all right and even controlled play for most of the second period. But the Valiants also ended up in the penalty box, and this young team isn’t experienced enough yet to stop an RIT power play that is chugging along at over 48% efficiency. Manhattanville lost to RIT 6-2, and put another notch in the learning stick.

“Perhaps the most disappointing thing is that they outworked us,” said coach Keith Levinthal. Sean Keane and Chris Seifert scored the two Valiant goals.

Manhattanville continues with its travels this week with a game at Neumann.

Game of the Week

Manhattanville and RIT opened their league schedules last week, and Elmira and Hobart get into it this week. Hobart has battled back from an 0-2 start to get to .500 and is looking to extend its current two-game winning streak. Elmira, on the other hand, hasn’t tasted victory this season, and is hoping to get going before it all slips away.

 ECAC WEST vs.
SUNYAC 5-3-0
ECAC East 0-0-0
NESCAC 0-0-0
NCHA 0-2-0
ECAC NE 1-0-0
Other 1-0-0
-------
TOTAL 7-5-0

NCHA Newsletter: Nov. 8, 2000

The Wisconsin-River Falls Falcons were the only team to sweep this weekend, 7-2 and 5-2 over Wisconsin-Stout, and sit atop the NCHA standings along with St. Norbert. Lake Forest, Stevens Point and Eau Claire are tied for third place.

Team Capsules

Wisconsin-River Falls: The Falcons defeated the Blue Devils of Wisconsin-Stout 7-2 on Friday and 5-2 on Saturday to vault into a tie for the NCHA lead with St. Norbert.

Friday, the Falcons got first-period goals from Adam Kragthorpe, Tim Beres, Rob Novak and Jess Johnson to go up 4-0 after one. Stout cut the lead in half in the first three minutes of the second only to see the Falcons explode with three more goals of their own. Jeff Bernard picked up two goals and Jamie Steinert added a shorthander to finish out the scoring. Saturday saw the Falcons jump out to another first-period lead on goals from Jared Anderson and Kragthorpe. Stout scored the only two goals of the second period to tie it up, but the Falcons scored three in the third to finish things out with goals from Shane Fukushima, Steinert and Johnson.

The Falcons are on the road north as they take on St. Scholastica and Wisconsin-Superior this weekend.

St. Norbert: The Green Knights battled to a split with Lake Forest, an 8-4 win on Friday night and a 3-2 OT loss on Saturday. Friday night’s game kept the officials busy, with 37 penalties for a total of 104 minutes; 10 of the game’s 12 goals were special-teams efforts. The ‘Knights picked up goals from Chris Bodnar (2 PP), Maris Ziedens (2 PP), Trent Dickson (1 PP, 1 EV), Shane Dickson (1 SH) and Patrick Gruber (1 SH) as St. Norbert ended the night 5-for-13 on the power play. Saturday saw fewer penalties, but still a lot of special-teams play. Both goals for St. Norbert came on the power play and both from Bodnar in the 3-2 loss.

St. Norbert plays Wisconsin-Stevens Point and Wisconsin-Eau Claire this weekend, both at the brand new Cornerstone Arena in Ashwaubenon.

Wisconsin-Stevens Point: The Pointers held on to pick up a 4-2 win Friday but couldn’t beat the Blugold defense on Saturday, dropping a 4-1 decision. The Pointers’ Zenon Kochan scored twice and Ryan Maxson and Joel Marshall added tallies. Saturday, Maxson scored for the Pointers in the first, but the Pointers couldn’t get through neutral ice the remainder of the game and saw the Blugolds score four unanswered goals, winning 4-1.

Wisconsin-Eau Claire: The Blugolds battled to a split with Wis-Stevens Point, dropping a 4-2 decision Friday, but came back Saturday with a decisive 4-1 victory at home. Adam Sklader and Chris Hunter picked up goals in the 4-2 loss. Saturday saw the emergence of Ian Sgambelluri as he netted a hat trick in the 4-1 win. Sgambelluri started out his night scoring a shorthanded goal, and later added an even-strength marker and an empty-net goal. Scoring the other Blugold goal was Mike Lucenti.

Wisconsin-Eau Claire plays at Lake Forest on Friday and then heads up the road to St. Norbert on Saturday.

Lake Forest: The Foresters went 3-for-11 on the power play Friday, but couldn’t break through until their 3-2 OT win on Saturday at home. Matt Bruni, David Evans and Scott McClure each picked up power-play goals and Adrian Wong added an even-strength goal for the Foresters in the 8-4 loss. Saturday at home, things turned around. Bill Boyes got the Foresters on the board, tying the game in the first, and Wong put the Foresters up in the second, but it would be Bruni again winning the game for the Foresters, in overtime on the power play.

Lake Forest plays Wisonsin-Eau Claire at home on Friday night and Wisconsin-Stevens Pointer on home ice on Saturday.

Wisconsin-Superior: In the first East-West matchup of the season, the Yellow Jackets came out on top for a pair of nonconference victories over Elmira. Superior got goals from Josh Liebenow, Jeff Glowa, Bryan Grycan and Kris Wilson in the road win, leading 2-1 after one and 3-2 after two. Jackets’ goalie Nathan Ziemski made 27 saves, while the Jackets had 29 shots on goal. On Saturday, Superior’s Allen Hasbargen scored at the two-minute mark of overtime to lift his team to the road sweep. Elmira jumped out to a 2-0 lead, but Superior took a 3-2 lead as Jeff Glowa, Josh Liebenow and Hasbargen got third-period goals. Elmira scored at 5:01 of the third period to send it into overtime and set up Hasbargen’s game-winner. Jackets’ goalie Nate Ziemski made 29 saves.

Superior takes on Wisconsin-Stout on Friday and Wisconsin-River Falls at home this weekend.

St. Scholastica: St. Scholastica got the season off on the right foot Tuesday with an 8-3 win over MCHA foe Northland College. Northland claimed an early 2-0 lead, but the Saints responded in the second with goals from Rob Kerr, Scott Forrest and Jason Bradec. In the third, the Saints’ Josh Oyler, Sean Andrews, Nick Dolentz, Alec Nelson and Forrest added tallies to finish out the scoring. The Saints had the weekend off as travel partner Wisconsin-Superior was in Elmira.

The Saints take to the ice this weekend with their first two NCHA games of the season, taking on Wisconsin-River Falls Friday and Wisconsin-Stout on Saturday.

Wiscsconsin-Stout: The Blue Devils’ Dan Riffe and Brad Weappa each scored a pair of goals while Cale Finseth and Drew Nichols added single tallies in a 6-1 victory Tuesday over Milw. School of Eng. However, over the weekend the Blue Devils couldn’t muster enough to repeat, dropping a pair to travel partner Wisconsin-River Falls 7-2 on Friday and 5-2 on Saturday. Picking up goals for the Devils on Friday were Cullen Flaherty and Lewie Kellin. Both of Saturday’s goals came from Joe Berry.

Wisconsin-Stout heads up north to take on Wisconsin-Superior and St. Scholastica.

Series to Watch

Ever since the NCHA has gone to the travel partners scenario, it’s been very difficult to pick one series to watch. This week is a perfect example of that. We have Wisconsin-Stevens Point playing one game at St. Norbert and then one game at Lake Forest. Wisconsin-River Falls plays one game at St. Scholastica and then one at Wisconsin-Superior. Superior has Stout and River Falls. If you’re looking for fireworks, my pick is Wisconsin-Eau Claire/Wisconsin-Stevens Point heading to St. Norbert/Lake Forest. Two teams who upset the big dogs last weekend, and two teams picked to take the crown. Doesn’t get much better than this!

Between the Lines

Editor’s note: this edition of “Between the Lines” was written Monday, prior to the announcement of Mike Sertich’s replacement of Tim Watters as head coach at Michigan Tech.

Welcome back to another season of quips and controversy. This is where we try to find the nuggets of information beneath the surface, give context to those nuggets, and expose the issues that don’t get uncovered elsewhere.

With the season just getting into full swing, it’s time to try to get a pulse on what’s going on around the country.

As usual, all comments and suggestions are welcome … though I’m still sifting through my Vermont e-mail from last year. Enjoy the season.

Loophole No More

An arbitrator’s decision allowing former Michigan defenseman Mike Van Ryn out of his commitment to the Devils opened the door to a number of other players to leave school, such as Maine’s Barrett Heisten, and Michigan’s Mike Comrie.

NHL teams used to hold college players’ rights until one year after their normal graduation year, even if they left early. Non-college players have a two-year signing window after they are drafted, or else the NHL team loses their rights and they go back into the draft. That’s because Canadian major junior players are allowed to sign contracts with NHL teams and remain in juniors.

So, Van Ryn, trying to circumvent the system, left college after two years and went to the OHL as an overage junior. Each team is allowed a certain number of overage players on the roster. After being in the OHL for one year, he believed he was now a free agent. The arbitrator agreed, and now the rights of college players are only held by NHL teams until one year after they leave school, regardless of whether it’s earlier than four years.

By having the option of going to major juniors, players don’t have to play four years of college, sit out a year while negotiating with their drafted team, and then become free agents. They can leave school, go play in juniors for a year, then become free agents, essentially nullifying the draft.

There was fear the decision would hurt college players in the draft, because NHL teams would be afraid of the same thing happening. That didn’t come to fruition — this year’s NHL draft was a fruitful one for college players — but it is still an annoyance to a program that loses a player this way.

The OHL then did U.S. colleges a favor. It closed the loophole by stating that any player listed on a team roster as an overage junior must have played in the OHL the previous season.

Of course, the other two major junior leagues, the WHL and QMJHL, did not adopt the same rule. So, if a bunch of players suddenly skip out of school and jump to the WHL, as Comrie did, the OHL may choose to rethink its position.

The NCAA could help solve the problem by allowing college players to be drafted, sign contracts with NHL teams, and still stay in school. This way, the NHL team would at least have the two years while in school to sign the guy. In Van Ryn’s case, the Devils were never even afforded the opportunity to truly negotiate with Van Ryn.

As for Van Ryn, he said he wanted out of the Devils’ organization because general manager Lou Lamoriello is so stubborn about insisting players begin their careers in the AHL, no matter what. Gee, Mike, he’s only won two Stanley Cups.

Meanwhile, Van Ryn signed with St. Louis. And where is he now? Right. With the Blues’ AHL affiliate in Worcester, Mass., where he’s a minus-3 with one assist in five games.

Comrie? He’s tearing it up for the WHL’s Kootenay Ice, with 24 goals in 15 games.

Summer Breeze

It was an interesting summer in the MAAC, with the conference receiving the expected autobid to the NCAA tournament.

Some hockey factions were angered by this, saying it was undeserved. Unfortunately, the tournament expansion to 16 teams was nixed, fueling the fire of the anti-MAAC group. And clearly, there’s a right to be annoyed that a MAAC school will take the place of another deserving team. But that’s not the MAAC’s fault: blame the NCAA.

But it didn’t bode well when Quinnipiac started making noise about investigating a jump to Hockey East, and then Canisius had meetings with ECAC officials about a jump there. If things continue in that direction, a MAAC autobid could be a moot point in a couple of years.

The MAAC can’t expect to draw good teams, and build good teams, if it only allows 11 hockey scholarships. The problem is, there are some schools willing to give 18, and some schools giving none. But the ones giving none are dragging down the rest of the conference.

The MAAC had to make a concession to smaller schools, limiting scholarships so that those programs would be willing to join. In doing so, they sold their souls a bit. At some point, they have to raise the scholarship limit and bring up the conference as a whole.

As for Canisius and Niagara, the ECAC doesn’t appear too quick to accept their entry into the league. The league actually reached out to those schools, asking for them to give a presentation, but it’s the same old story: the six Ivy League schools are concerned about adding extra teams that will tip the balance of membership away from the Ivies.

Can Quesnelle?

If there’s any justice, Len Quesnelle will be able to maintain Princeton’s presence on the college hockey scene.

When Don Cahoon was after the Princeton job — following the dismissal of fellow Boston University graduate Jim Higgins — people told him to be careful what he was after, that Princeton was a place you just couldn’t win. That it was the black hole of coaching.

Cahoon proved them all wrong, and, in leaving for UMass-Amherst, he has left the program in good shape.

His right-hand man all those years was Quesnelle, a loyal assistant and 1988 Princeton graduate. He patiently waited his turn, and has been rewarded.

In a sport full of good guys, Quesnelle is one of the best. A quality recruiter and an outstanding student of the game, he has done it all while earning the respect of those around the college hockey scene.

Certainly, Cahoon helped put Princeton on the map. His connections with BU enabled him to line up nonconference games with big teams, and to get into tournaments Princeton rarely entered previously. So, Quesnelle has Cahoon to thank for leaving him a program that is able to earn respect instead of snickers. And he knows it.

But it’s Quesnelle’s job now to maintain that. They’re tough shoes to fill, but he’s learned a lot and he has plenty of experience to draw from. The only question is whether Quesnelle can create that vortex of passion that swirled around Princeton from the moment Cahoon arrived. Don Cahoon had the unique ability to be a salesman for a program that others couldn’t sell. And on sheer will, he had the ability to get players to listen, and believe in themselves.

He also has the task of shifting roles mid-stream, with upperclassmen used to him being more of a go-between.

“He hasn’t really changed,” says Princeton senior Chris Corrinet. “He doesn’t have the same intensity of coach Cahoon. He’s more low key. It makes it easier to speak with him. He brought a lot of new ideas in this year. I’m happy with the way things are going.”

Quesnelle started out on a decent note, picking up a home win and tie against Niagara. He said the biggest difference between before and now is that he has to yell more.

“My voice is sore,” he says. “I did a lot of yelling. [I’m] the go-to guy now.”

There aren’t many people like Cahoon, and Quesnelle deserves room to be his own man. It’s a difficult task, but here’s a hearty good luck salute.

As for Cahoon, he has the Minutemen off to a very nice 3-1 start in league play. Considering UMass averaged just five league wins per year over six seasons under Joe Mallen, it speaks well for Cahoon. There’s a lot of work to be done, but this situation reminds me an awful lot of when Bill Parcells replaced Rich Kotite as coach of the New York Jets.

How’s that for putting pressure on someone? Sorry, Toot.

Nice Try

Speaking of the Princeton job, there were some other candidates, of course, before Quesnelle was actually named. A suprising name to some was that of Lake Superior coach Scott Borek. When USCHO.com learned that he had interviewed on campus, it raised eyebrows, knowing he had just signed a contract extension with Lake Superior.

At first, Borek denied he had interviewed there, but changed his tune after he was found out. He said he was afraid how it would look to potential recruits.

You certainly can’t blame him for being concerned about the perception, but this wasn’t just passing interest on Borek’s part. It’s clear he’s been at odds with the LSSU administration at times. And he’s an East Coast/Ivy League guy, having graduated from Dartmouth.

The charade turned comical the next day, however, when a press release was distributed out of the LSSU sports information office.

The release claimed that Princeton contacted Borek first, as if Princeton athletic director Gary Walters knew Scott Borek from a hole in the wall. The release went on to say that Borek just sort of stopped in to Princeton, taking time out from a trip East for his brother-in-law’s wedding in Connecticut.

Nice try.

Never mind that Borek stayed at a local hotel the night before his interview.

“Hey guys, just passing through — how ’bout a job interview?”

Borek was then quoted as saying, “I am not interested in pursuing the Princeton position, and I am withdrawing from further consideration.”

And “I was flattered they wanted to talk to me … but I have no intention of leaving Lake State.”

Yeah, no kidding, coach. That statement was made a day after Len Quesnelle was hired for the job. I should hope you wouldn’t still be interested in the job at that point.

Borek has been a decent and fun guy to talk to when I’ve had the chance: but, c’mon, coach, you can’t kid a kidder.

And then there’s this …

Speaking of sordid publicity-office behavior, this one is not remotely comical.

In May, Corey LaTulippe, the former Vermont walk-on candidate who filed a lawsuit against the school and hockey team members amid a hazing scandal, recanted some of his earlier statements during a court deposition.

This was quickly followed by an article from someone named Peter Freyne, a writer for a local Vermont weekly known as Seven Days, essentially ripping LaTulippe and exulting a big “Ah-hah!”

In what amounted to a diatribe — more like a thinly-veiled jealous rage — against the daily Burlington Free Press, Freyne latched onto LaTulippe’s statements and rode them to ridiculous conclusions. “Sooner or later, the truth always comes out,” Freyne wrote.

Never mind that LaTulippe pulled back from only a small percentage of his charges, and that most of what he originally described was eventually declared undeniable by investigators. (The case was eventually settled out of court.)

It was a condescending, sarcastic, anger-laced attack against LaTulippe and his mother.

In and of itself, this diatribe could be sloughed off as the act of a small-time writer trying to make a name for himself. In fact, no one outside of Vermont would’ve known this article existed, were it not for one simple act:

The University of Vermont’s sports information office saw fit to take that article and forward it via e-mail to a host of people. The distribution list included local and national media, other SIDs and hockey officials.

Can someone explain to me what Vermont hoped to gain by doing this? Were we supposed to believe that, out of all the articles written about the situation, Vermont just wanted to make sure everyone had a copy of this for their archives?

“Hey, everyone, just thought you might want to see this.”

First, Vermont didn’t want anyone to talk to them about the situation, then they are suddenly chomping at the bit to get this “news” out? As if they have an interest in LaTulippe lying? Why would that make them feel better?

Freyne’s article was irresponsible, at best. Vermont’s distribution of his piece came across as a spiteful and childish act that should have been condemned, and would have been had more people known about it.

Now you do.

Well, I’ll allow that good people sometimes do bad things. So, folks, here is my open invitation to respond, unedited, to this. If anyone from Vermont would like to write a message explaining the motivations behind this, please feel free to do so, and I will run it in my column … unedited … free of charge.

The unkindest cut

Last summer, Russ Bartlett came back to Boston University, thinking he was about to begin his junior season. As a sophomore, he was the team’s third-leading scorer. But BU head coach Jack Parker had other ideas. Saying Bartlett didn’t fit into the team plans, he cut him. Bartlett was allowed to stay on scholarship, but he wasn’t going to play for the Terriers.

It’s hard to question Parker from a team standpoint. The Terriers roared back to the top of the Hockey East standings, and were a fourth-overtime goal away from the Frozen Four.

Meanwhile, the team that eliminated the Terriers, St. Lawrence, was the beneficiary of Parker’s decision. Head coach Joe Marsh, who was among the recruiters initially going after Bartlett, immediately re-contacted the now ex-Terrier. Bartlett had to sit out last year, but will have two more years of eligibility remaining.

This bodes well for the Saints, who needed a replacement for Brandon Dietrich, who departed for the pros.

But forget the on-the-ice stuff for a second. What does this all say about the NCAA and Parker? Well, it’s hard for me to really get upset at Parker over it, though there are people who do. I don’t know enough about the situation to judge that one way or another.

But should Russ Bartlett have been allowed to play for St. Lawrence last season, without having to sit out a year? Absolutely.

NCAA rules say you must sit out a year in residence when you transfer. This restrains players from jumping around all over the place. But how about when a coach who recruited you quits or gets fired? Many people believe a player should be able to transfer at will under those circumstances. The Bartlett case is even more clear-cut (pardon the pun). He was cut from the team. To be disallowed from playing the next season seems incredibly silly, not to mention unfair.

This is something the NCAA has to look into immediately.

No Sweet 16

Some under-informed types have misinterpreted my stance on the NCAA’s decision against expanding the men’s tournament field to 16 as an anti-Title IX stance. So, let me state clearly and boldly: Title IX is good legislation, and has done more for equality in this country than anything passed in the last 40 years.

The anti-Title IX faction says there’s not equal interest in women’s sports. But that could just as easily be a product of society.

The anti-Title IX faction loves to tout horror stories of men’s programs being dropped so that women’s programs could be added.

But, while it’s unfortunate for those athletes, you could just as easily argue that those programs never would have existed for decades had schools given equal opportunity from the outset. I don’t expect that rationale to make fans or participants in those dropped programs feel any better, but the net result is still the same.

Title IX says there needs to be equal participation in, or equal money spent on, the men’s and women’s programs.

If you want to demonize something, let’s start with the biggest culprit: football. There’s no justification for allowing more than 70 football scholarships in a game where only 30 players play regularly. Hockey dresses 18 players in a game, and gets 18 scholarships.

So, there, is that clear now?

Nonetheless, this does not change the fact that the NCAA is wrong. Nixing a plan to increase the men’s tournament to 16 teams because of supposed gender-equity issues is a completely misguided stance.

The NCAA faced political pressure to forsake all increase of expenses in men’s sports until women’s sports are equal in opportunities and finances.

What it failed to understand or recognize was how men’s hockey, as the NCAA’s third-highest money maker, would make even more money if increased to 16 teams — money that could go to benefit an expanded women’s hockey championship.

This is not anti-women. This is an obvious win-win situation.

Early takes on college hockey

It’s a little too soon for a new coaching hotseat list. Nonetheless, this raised some eyebrows: Alabama-Huntsville sweeps Bowling Green, and the Falcons do not score a goal in either game.

Speaking of which: I’m a fan of polls. I think they’re fun conversation pieces. That said, they shouldn’t be taken too seriously. So, I’ll try not to. Nonetheless, it was hard for me to swallow Michigan being No. 1 last week. It didn’t last, so maybe I shouldn’t worry about it, but what exactly have they done? Who have they beaten? The aforementioned Bowling Green? Miami? Alaska-Anchorage and Merrimack? Yep, those are the answers. The CCHA is clearly on a downtrend. These things tend to cycle, and I’m sure it will come back around again. But league coaches are deluding themselves if they think this is anything but a down cycle for the CCHA. At least Northern Michigan coach Rick Comley had the guts to admit it.

This will be another interesting year in the ECAC. So far, things haven’t looked good for a couple teams. Last year’s NCAA teams, Colgate and St. Lawrence, have struggled. Clarkson, which always starts slow, has been particularly down so far. This is a crucial year for that program and coach Mark Morris. A lot of people expect Cornell to be near the top, but I have to see it to believe it, and losing to Sacred Heart certainly does nothing to give you faith. Harvard is also expected to start making some noise again, now with Mark Mazzoleni in his second year. But if it doesn’t, the natives may start to get restless very quickly.

Can anyone possibly question the dominance of Hockey East right now? Top to bottom, this may be their strongest year yet, with Providence and Northeastern looking good early, and UMass-Amherst playing well under Don Cahoon. It’s hard to figure Providence looking so good last Friday in defeating Maine, then getting shallacked by Brown the next day, but that’s just college hockey.

In the WCHA, it’s starting to look like Don Lucia’s breakout year at Minnesota. His old school, Colorado College, saw some veterans have trouble adjusting to new coach Scott Owens last year. The Tigers are 6-0 this year, but they’ve played Mankato, Michigan Tech and Minnesota-Duluth.

And, by the way, Michigan Tech has gotten progressively worse under Tim Watters, reaching a new NCAA record for losses last year, his fourth at the helm. Now they have started 1-7-1, with no prospect of improvement. Can it possibly get any worse?

Watters Out, Sertich In at MTU

Tim Watters is out as head coach of Michigan Tech.

Tim Watters is out as head coach of Michigan Tech.

Former Minnesota-Duluth head coach Mike Sertich will replace Tim Watters as head coach of Michigan Tech, effectively immediately.

Sertich made the announcement himself this morning during a show he hosts on WDSM 710 AM in Duluth. He had been hosting the show for three weeks.

Watters, a 1981 graduate of Michigan Tech and 14-year NHL veteran, has coached the Huskies since the 1996-97 season, going 39-116-9 (.265), including a 1-7-1 record this season. He has averaged 6.5 league wins per year over the four full seasons at the helm. Last year’s 4-34 mark set an NCAA record for most losses in a season.

He agreed to step down as coach after meeting with school athletics director Rick Yeo.

“We’re most appreciative of all the efforts put forth by Tim,” Yeo said. “Tim is a good man, and unfortunately things just didn’t work out the way either of us had hoped.”

Sertich, 52, resigned as coach at Duluth at the end of last season. He was 335-306-44 at UMD over 18 seasons, including a loss to Bowling Green in the 1984 NCAA championship game and a Frozen Four appearance the next season. The Bulldogs, however, went 22-49-4 in his last two seasons, and Sertich said it was time for a change.

Sertich will get a chance to return to his old stomping grounds immediately; the Huskies are scheduled to play in Duluth this Friday and Saturday.

“We’re very fortunate to have Mike Sertich step in,” Yeo said. “Mike is a first-class guy who has a lot to offer.”

Huskies assistant coaches Marc Boxer and Peter Wilkinson will remain with the team. Sertich will finish the season as interim coach while a national search for a permanent replacement is conducted.

Minnesota Women Win After Zamboni Postponement At Harvard

Monday at Bright Hockey Center, Minnesota beat Harvard 3-2 in a contest delayed one day by equipment difficulties of an unusual sort.

Sunday’s women’s game between the No. 2 Gophers and the No. 5 Crimson was postponed after two different Zamboni ice resurfacing machines stopped working at the arena.

Attempts were made to find a temporary replacement at nearby rinks, but those efforts came up empty, leading to the 24-hour delay.

Approximately 90 minutes before game time, the first Zamboni was resurfacing the ice when it caught fire. The fire was extinguished, but the Zamboni was ruined.

After dragging the first Zamboni off the ice, the second one came out, but after just a couple of laps, that one began to belch smoke. It then ground to a halt and leaked antifreeze onto the ice.

In need of a third machine, Bright Center officials first went down the road to Buckingham, Browne & Nichols, a local prep school near Harvard, but no one was in the rink. They then began trying to contact other rinks in the area — including those at Boston College, Boston University and Northeastern — but to no avail.

Already past the scheduled start time, the game was postponed at that point.


Thanks to Lee Urton for contributing to this report.

Two New Programs, One Close Tie

Tom Osiecki has coached long enough to have plenty of encounters with former players and acquaintances over the years.

But none of those meetings have been quite like the matchup Osiecki will experience this weekend.

A longtime prep hockey coach in Minnesota, Osiecki will make his collegiate coaching debut Friday when he brings the St. Olaf women’s hockey team into its first ever contest. And he’ll be facing one of his former players when Jason Lesteberg also makes his collegiate coaching debut for the first-year program at Wisconsin-Stevens Point.

“Jason is a close member of our family,” Osiecki said. “To see him like a colleague for the first time is really neat.”

Lesteberg played three years of prep hockey at Burnsville (Minn.) High School from 1987-90 for Osiecki, who led Burnsville to two state titles and two runner-up finishes from 1983-87. In fact, Osiecki’s son, Mark, was a former National Hockey League player and standout at Wisconsin, and currently coaches the Green Bay Gamblers of the United States Hockey League.

“It will be exciting for me because he is somebody that I’ve taken a lot of my coaching philosophies from after playing for him,” Lesteberg said. “He is somebody that everyone idolized and who caused a lot of players to get that urge to go into coaching.”

But the story between the two goes far beyond their days on the ice in Burnsville.

Lesteberg has taken several family trips with the Osiecki family and has been best friends with Osiecki’s son, Matt, since age 10. Osiecki and Lesteberg’s father, Dennis, also coached their sons’ 13-year old Babe Ruth baseball team to a state title. Osiecki was even Lesteberg’s first football coach when he was 11.

“These situations are not that unusual in coaching,” Osiecki said. “I’ve faced former players several times in my career, so this is not a first, but Jason is really close to my son Matt and our family so this will be extra special.”

And it’s not like the pair decided to open their coaching careers this way. The season-opening matchup was scheduled before Osiecki was even hired at St. Olaf.

“It’s really ironic the way it all worked out,” Osiecki said. “It will be very exciting for me, it’s something I’m really looking forward to.”

Osiecki says he knew Lesteberg has what it takes to be a coach since his playing days in Burnsville.

“He loved the game and got into it thoroughly, studying the game,” Osiecki said. “He was always well beyond people in the depth of the game.”

And on the other hand, Lesteberg credits his former coach as a major influence on his young career.

“After all the impact he’s had on my hockey career, I guess it’s only fitting to begin my coaching career against him,” Lesteberg said. “It’s very exciting and will always be a great memory.”

Hockey Hopes Revived at North Dakota State

Plans for North Dakota State to start a men’s and women’s ice hockey program beginning in 2002-03 have been revived, according to an article in The (Fargo) Forum today.

According to the article, Fargo developer Jim Roers has stepped forward and announced plans to privately fund a new 3,500-seat on-campus arena. The arena, which would host the women’s hockey team, local youth teams, and serve as the men’s practice facility, would be adjacent to the current Bison Sports Arena. Estimations place the cost at $8 to $10 million.

The men’s team would actually play its games at the nearby Fargodome, an 18,500-seat facility that houses the NDSU football team, concerts and other events.

Hockey at NDSU was put on hold after taxpayers rejected a $40 million, publicly-funded facility during a referendum last spring. That plan would have imposed a half-cent sales tax on state residents, and failed by a 62-37 percent margin.

Roers has met with school president Joseph Chapman and athletic director Bob Entzion. According to the paper, the two sides have discussed a variety of issues, including what percentage NDSU can contribute to the project.

The article lists four of Chapman’s main concerns: that it doesn’t take away money from other programs; that it include both men’s and women’s hockey; that it will be self-supporting financially; and that student concerns will be addressed.

“I’ve made no secret about it,” Chapman said to The Forum. “I think it would be good for NDSU, North Dakota and Fargo. I’m real interested to see what they’ll come up with.”

Roers is looking to work on the details during the winter, and is optimistic about breaking ground by next summer.

A number of obstacles still remain, however, including, not just the obvious funding issues, but NCAA issues as well. NDSU, a Division II institution, is looking to be a Division I hockey program, but the NCAA currently has a moratorium on programs changing classifications.

ECAC Column: Nov. 2, 2000

The ECAC In Western New York?

On October 2, 2000, Tim Dillon of Canisius and Mike Herman of Niagara made a presentation to the ECAC in regard to a joint application to gain admittance into the ECAC. The two Western New York schools are hoping to become the 13th and 14th members of the ECAC.

Will these two schools join?

“At this time, the group (ECAC administrators) feels comfortable where they are and are not looking to expand,” said ECAC Assistant Commissioner Steve Hagwell.

It seems that the ECAC will not go beyond 12 teams for the next few years at least, and that perhaps Canisius and Niagara’s bid to join would likely go unrequited.

“We certainly are not closing the door on Canisius and Niagara,” said Hagwell. “It is up to Tim Dillon and Mike Herman to determine what their next steps will be. They have to look and decide what it is they want to do.”

Other factors oppose the bid — one being the fact that the 12 ECAC Division I men’s teams want to mirror a women’s Division I league, something that has already begun, as evidenced by the realignment of the Women’s Division I league in 2001.

Then there is also the question of whether or not other schools such as Quinnipiac, which has expressed an interest in joining the ECAC, have a chance at becoming members within the next few years. Would Quinnipiac get the same decision?

“Right now, I would say that the answer is yes,” said Hagwell. “(The ECAC) is happy with the current setup.

Canisius and Niagara will most likely look elsewhere, and as a result, Quinnipiac’s options have also been narrowed. That’s not to say that down the road, the ECAC won’t be accepting these institutions, but the ECAC will remain at 12 teams for the foreseeable future.

It’s The Start Of The Season. That Means Harvard-Brown

There may be no Teddy bears or oranges thrown on the ice, nor special edition t-shirts made in honor of the occasion, but Harvard and Brown will take the ice at Meehan Auditorium on Saturday night to officially begin the ECAC season. Per the norm, the ECAC is the only league beginning its regular season in the month of November.

The Bears have a mini-step up on the Crimson after taking on Moncton last Sunday afternoon in an exhibition contest. Thankfully for head coach Roger Grillo, familiar names such as John Petricig, Keith Kirley and Jon Zielinski showed up on the scorecard at the end of the night. Last year’s top scorer, Matt Kohansky, finished off the night with the game-winning tally in overtime. Brown will gladly walk away with the win, even though it doesn’t really count towards anything. After all, they only experienced six total victories in all of last season.

The Bears will have plenty of new faces on the bench this season; Grillo is hoping that the new infusion of blood pushes the Bears to more goals and a better record.

“We’ve brought in 10 new young men and hope that they can help us in an area which hurt us last year, and that was scoring up front,” he said.

Aside from a scrimmage against Dartmouth, the Crimson has been untested this season. Their strength will lie up front with their forwards, particularly Chris Bala, Steve Moore, Dom Moore and newcomers Tyler Kolarik and Rob Fried. Both Bala and Moore showed up in Cambridge this season a whole lot bigger and stronger, while the freshman class has brought much-needed speed to the forward lines. The scouting report is pretty easy here: Harvard needs to score early and often in order to win games.

“We recruited a rather large class because we lost eight seniors and brought in nine freshmen,” said head coach Mark Mazzoleni. “Our strength will be up front with our forwards.”

The clear liability is defense. The team began the season with a depleted squad and quickly lost another key body in Graham Morrell. After missing all of last season with a shoulder injury, Morrell suffered another one early on and is out of the lineup indefinitely. That leaves only five true defensemen listed on the Harvard roster.

Fun In New Haven

The Bulldogs of Yale are certainly having some fun. Yale defeated Moncton on Saturday, 6-2, and in the process saw Jeff Hamilton pick up three points in his debut for the 2000-2001 season. The much-heralded return of Hamilton will be noticed by ECAC observers this weekend when the Bulldogs take to the ice on Saturday at New Hampshire and then at Boston College on Tuesday.

Head coach Tim Taylor, for one, is happy to have Hamilton back, and back to complement Ben Stafford. The two have the potential to be the most lethal combination in the ECAC this season.

It’s what’s underneath those two that has Taylor concerned.

“There aren’t too many teams in our league who have enough offense,” he said. “In Stafford and Hamilton I have two kids that could be 40-point guys. Hamilton had proven it and Stafford has the potential to take another 10-point jump.

“Those two kids are a given, and the question mark is if some of the single-point producers can get to the 10- to 20-point level, so that’s the challenge.”

Notes

Cornell/Sacred Heart
This weekend the Big Red of Cornell open their season at home against Sacred Heart in a reunion of sorts. Sacred Heart head coach Shaun Hannah captained the Big Red in 1994 and returns to face his alma mater for the first time as a head coach. On the Pioneer side of the bench will be Peter McRae: the forward turned defenseman will be facing his brothers, twins Mark and Matt, for the first time on collegiate ice.

Rensselaer/Union
These two teams renew their Capital District rivalry. The Capital Skates Trophy is up for grabs for the fifth time as the Engineers have won the game the last three times. This season the format shifts, as a regular-season game is now the trophy game rather than a third non-conference neutral site game. … Union’s administration has asked for a modification of the tradition of throwing oranges onto the ice after the first Union goal; instead of oranges, fans are asked to bring stuffed animals to throw on the ice. All thrown animals will be collected for charity.

Quinnipiac/St. Lawrence/Clarkson
The Saints and the Knights take on the preseason number-one MAAC team. The Saints had last week off, while Clarkson dominated Waterloo in an exhibition. Only Clarkson has played Quinnipiac before, and last season the Knights took a 4-0 victory in a game which was scheduled after Vermont canceled its season.

Colgate/Ferris State
The Red Raiders took last weekend off and head to Big Rapids for a pair. Last season the Red Raiders split a pair of games with the Bulldogs at home.

Dartmouth/Western Michigan
This is also another return half of a home series as the Big Green travel to Kalamazoo. Last year the teams split the series in Hanover over Thanksgiving weekend.

Niagara/Princeton
New head coach Len Quesnelle makes his debut behind the Tiger bench in regular-season competition; last weekend the Tigers tamed Wilfrid Laurier, 3-0. Last season the Tigers opened the season against Niagara in the Punch Imlach Classic and took it on the chin, losing 7-2.

Queen’s/Vermont
The Catamounts play their second straight exhibition game. The Cats could not have been too happy with last weekend’s 5-0 exhibition loss to former Princeton Tiger Dominique Auger and his St. Francis Xavier X- Men.

Women’s Column: Nov. 2, 2000

In Season of Parity, Rookies Will Be Crucial

With so many of last year’s superstars throughout the country lost to graduation or the U.S. National Team, the schools with the best freshmen could go far this season. Here’s a look at which rookies have stepped up thus far.

New Hampshire: Forward Janine Goulet and defenseman Kristen Thomas

This back line-front line duo provided all the scoring Sunday as the Wildcats (3-0) beat then-No. 10 Ohio State (2-3) to jump to No. 6 in this week’s USCHO.com poll. Both of goals by Thomas (3g, 0a) came on the power play, while Goulet (3g, 1a) scored the game-winner midway through the opening period. This did not come as a surprise to UNH coach Karen Kay.

“We recruited kids who knew what was expected of them this season and looked forward to the challenge,” Kay said. “All of our freshmen are being given opportunities to play in all situations, including our power-play and penalty-kill units, and this puts them in positions to succeed.”

On a team that lost its four leading scorers from last season, as well as its best defenseman to injury, it is crucial that rookies contribute on offense and defense. Goulet’s experience in the Ottawa Senior AAA league and Thomas’ strong slapshots from the point give the Wildcats a competitive balance which could make them a contender this season.

“Our rookies must make an immediate impact on our program in order for us to challenge for an ECAC or NCAA championship,” Kay said. “We are a team that has to get better each game we play this season in order to be there in the end when it counts.”

St. Cloud State: Forward Ricki-Lee Doyle and defenseman Kobi Kawamoto

Like Janine Goulet for New Hampshire, it always helps to have a few Canadians on your team. So St. Cloud State (2-4) went out and added several rookies from north of the border, and the dividends are paying off immediately.

Kobi Kawamoto (2g, 4a), a member of Canada’s first Under-22 team, is a legitimate scoring threat from the blue line. That makes scoring up front a lot easier for Ricki-Lee Doyle (3g, 4a), who leads the Huskies in points. Doyle, a native of Calgary, Alberta, spent last season training at the Olympic Oval High Performance Program, as did teammate Leanne Perrin, another rookie defenseman for the Huskies.

Ohio State: Defensemen Kelli Halcisak and Emma Laaksonen

The Buckeyes (2-3) are set at the blue line this season. That’s because they have a pair of past and future Olympians there to let Ohio State coach Jackie Barto alternate two very solid defensive lines throughout a contest.

Kelli Halcisak (1g, 5a) played on the U.S. National Team for the last two seasons at the Three Nations Cup. Emma Laaksonen won a bronze medal for Team Finland at Nagano in 1998 and should play for the Finnish again in Salt Lake City next year. With two defensemen who can handle the puck up and down the ice and threaten to score from the point, Ohio State should be much more competitive this season.

Rookie of the (Very Early) Year

The most impressive freshman thus far has been Wisconsin’s Meghan Hunter (11g, 4a), the reigning WCHA Player of the Week. Hunter had a hand in 10 of the Badgers’ 12 goals against St. Cloud State last weekend. In each contest she recorded a hat trick and two assists. Hunter leads all scorers so far (although some teams have not yet played their first game) and complements a Wisconsin offense that will have to score more goals to give netminder Jackie MacMillan a chance to beat teams like No. 3 Minnesota-Duluth (which she already did two weeks ago) and No. 2 Minnesota.

Aggression in Ann Arbor

Rivalries propel college sports.

Sure, professional teams have them, too. There’s Yankees-Dodgers or Yankees-Red Sox, or pretty much Yankees-anybody in baseball; the NFL has the Cowboys and the Redskins, or the Vikings and the Packers. Pro hockey has Red Wings vs. Blackhawks, Rangers vs. Islanders, and Alexei Yashin vs. Ottawa Senators management, teammates and fans.

But those rivalries ebb and flow, often dictated by the relative competence of the teams in question. It’s hard to care as much about the game when one team is out of the playoff picture, for instance.

Not in college. Collegiate rivalries are driven by sheer force of will, by the desire to beat the #$*% out of that other school just for the glory of the alma mater. For bragging rights. For mom and apple pie. If it’s for the national championship, great. If one team is unbeaten and the other is scraping to escape the conference cellar, fine.

The game is what matters.

That brings us to the BroadcastSports.com Game of the Week: Saturday in Ann Arbor, Michigan State and Michigan duke it out in an early-season barometer of both teams’ CCHA fortunes.

The rivalry between the Spartans and Wolverines is as storied as any in modern college sports, replete with last-minute rallies, NCAA titles, and all the stuff that helps sportswriters earn a living during hockey season.

And fittingly, these two teams are again the favorites in the CCHA, with Michigan topping the league’s preseason coaches poll and Michigan State second, and the order of finish reversed in the media poll. This week, undefeated Michigan is the top-ranked squad in the USCHO.com national poll, while Michigan State holds down the No. 6 spot.

The stage is set. Let’s meet the players.

Michigan fans released a collective groan when last season’s leading scorer, Hobey Baker finalist Mike Comrie, departed for the Western Hockey League. But the Wolverines’ rookie crop of last season has helped to make up the difference, meaning that very little has changed in the land of maize and blue.

Leading the sophomore charge is Andy Hilbert (4-10–14), who is tied with senior Josh Langfeld (7-7–14) as Michigan’s leading scorer. Fellow soph Mike Cammalleri (2-10–12) has been an early-season playmaker as well, while Mark Kosick (4-4–8), last season’s top returning scorer, isn’t exactly chopped liver.

At the blue line, the duo of Jay Vancik and Dave Huntzicker — who combined for a plus/minus rating of +56 in 1999-2000 — have helped Michigan hold opponents to 2.50 goals per game this season; Vancik has also displayed a knack for timely offense, scoring the game-winning goal last Saturday against Miami. Junior Jeff Jillson leads the blueliners in scoring at 2-3–5 despite having appeared in only six of the Wolverines’ eight games thus far.

In nets, Michigan continues to look to Josh Blackburn, sporting a 5-0-2 record and a 2.43 goals against average. However, the Wolverines may or may not have Blackburn’s services this Saturday: the junior was forced out of Saturday’s Miami win after a charge by Pat Leahy led to a collision with the crossbar. In that game, senior backup L.J. Scarpace picked up the win in relief, and he would go Saturday should Blackburn be unavailable.

Michigan State, meanwhile, has experienced mixed fortunes thus far. The Spartans are 4-1-1 overall, but strength of schedule has been middling, with the loss and tie coming against No. 13 Nebraska-Omaha and unranked Merrimack, respectively. Not bad, but hardly conclusive either way.

Like the Wolverines, the Spartans lost their offensive sparkplug in Shawn Horcoff; unlike the Wolverines, the Spartans knew it was coming, and made plans accordingly. In the preseason, senior winger Rustyn Dolyny (3-3–6) was tabbed as Horcoff’s successor, in much the same way that Horcoff succeeded Mike York, and York succeeded … well, you get the picture. Continuity is the name of the game at Michigan State.

With that in mind, we inspect the defense, which in East Lansing is not synonymous with the defensemen. A tradition of two-way forwards is preserved this season in the person of Brian Maloney (2-4–6), while among the blueliners sophomore John-Michael Liles leads the offensive output and Andrew Hutchinson anchors the stay-at-home crowd.

Also a contributor defensively is senior center Andrew Bogle, though his status for Saturday (along with that of junior Joe Goodenow) is questionable after a shoulder injury suffered against Nebraska-Omaha last weekend.

The last line of defense, of course, is netminder Ryan Miller. The sophomore has taken over the starting job this season, producing to the tune of a .935 save percentage and a 1.81 goals against average. As noted by head coach Ron Mason, maybe this season the Spartans have a goaltender who will make the defense look good, instead of the sometimes-perception of MSU as a team whose defense comes first from its skaters.

So what to expect? Neither teams scores a ton, though both are competent on offense. Both defenses have been strong, so a tight, low-scoring game would seem apropos, with the possibility of special-teams play turning the outcome. The Wolverines still take a lot of penalties, and both squads have good penalty killing and solid power plays. A game-winner on special teams wouldn’t be a surprise.

So who gets it? Wait and see.

WCHA Column: Nov. 2, 2000

The Usual Suspects

Is this WCHA season’s first few weeks a case of the rich getting richer?

With North Dakota sitting in fourth place with only a .500 conference record? Not exactly.

But the teams we’re used to seeing at the top are there again, and the teams we’re used to seeing at the bottom are also there again.

Wisconsin is tied for first, Minnesota-Duluth, despite having played only two games, is last and there’s a familiar scattering among the teams in the middle.

So, yes, it does appear to be status quo in the WCHA.

“I think the teams that are at the top right now are the teams that most everybody expected to be there,” said Troy Jutting, whose Minnesota State-Mankato team has a 1-5 conference record through six games.

Said Minnesota coach Don Lucia: “A lot of it’s based on schedule — who you play and when you play them.”

In that case, you have to give Michigan Tech and Mankato a bit of credit. Each is 1-5 in the league, but for each that win came against North Dakota. The other two opponents for both teams have been Wisconsin and Colorado College.

Speaking of Colorado College, the Tigers have jumped out exactly as they needed. With eight points through four games, they have leapfrogged to the top of the standings and will make someone knock them off.

They have shown they can flash the offense when needed (a 6-2 win over Mankato), win with defense (a 3-1 win over Tech), and come out ahead in one-goal games (a 6-5 win over Mankato and a 3-2 win over Tech).

Last season, that wasn’t the case.

But let’s look more at that schedule issue. CC has its four wins against teams that have a combined two wins. Same for Wisconsin (against the same teams, no less).

Third-place Minnesota has a pair of wins over 10th-place Duluth and a win and a tie against ninth-place Alaska-Anchorage. Fourth-place North Dakota split with Tech and Mankato.

Denver and St. Cloud State split last weekend’s series, and each is 1-1 and tied for fifth place.

Is there enough yet to draw conclusions about the order in which these teams will finish? Certainly not, especially in the cases of Duluth, Anchorage, St. Cloud and Denver — the teams with only two games played in the league.

But Lucia may be onto something with his line about scheduling. For the Gophers, the task becomes immediately tougher. They host Wisconsin in this season’s first series pitting legitimate title contenders.

Then they face North Dakota in Grand Forks. Then they have a home-and-home series with St. Cloud to end the 2000 part of the league schedule. They pick it up in January at Anchorage, then at home against North Dakota and at Wisconsin.

If they’re still breathing by that point, we may have ourselves a contender.

After this weekend’s series with Minnesota, Wisconsin doesn’t have a truly tough stretch of games until February, when the Badgers play North Dakota, St. Cloud and CC in successive weekends.

That affords the Badgers the opportunity to, much like last year, open up a lead on the rest of the league before February.

Later this month, Colorado College hosts St. Cloud a week before going to Wisconsin. The Tigers are one of the teams that doesn’t play at North Dakota this season, a development that could work in their favor.

Oh, yes, North Dakota. Let’s not forget about the team that has won the MacNaughton Cup in three of the last four years, and the national title in the other. Counting the Sioux out of this race because of two losses in October is like counting out the New York Jets in a Monday Night Football game.

“North Dakota will certainly rebound,” Wisconsin coach Jeff Sauer said. “They’re not going to stay in that position the whole year.”

But they can’t afford to lose games to the Michigan Techs and the Mankatos of the WCHA. That’s not meant to disparage those teams, but to get ahead in this league, a contender needs to beat the teams picked to finish lower in the field.

“The teams like Michigan Tech and Mankato that beat them, those are games that they needed to win so they become very important,” Sauer said. “That’s why I tried to stress the importance of those games for our team.”

You can’t say there are unimportant games for anyone hoping to win the WCHA.

The Bulletin-Board Battle?

It’s a study in contrasts.

On one hand, you have the weathered veteran. Sauer, he of 18 years of Wisconsin-Minnesota.

On the other, Lucia, a relative newcomer to the Border Battle.

Their words indicate their positions.

“I think it meant more last weekend than this weekend,” Sauer said, referring to his team going out East last weekend and showing it could play with the best they have to offer.

“That’s not the issue for me,” Lucia said in regard to his team’s 0-5 record last season against the Badgers.

“They think they’re pretty good,” Sauer said of the Gophers. “I think our schedule’s been a little tougher than theirs to start the year. We’ll see how that equals out here along the way. Our guys are anxious. We’re certainly not intimidated going up there to play.”

“We’re playing against a team we couldn’t beat last year,” Lucia said, “so the big thing for us is we have to get a game this weekend and prove that we are going to be contending with the better teams in our league.”

It’s probably safe to call Sauer “Mr. Bulletin Board” this weekend. Lucia, we can call him “Mr. Diplomatic.”

But since when has diplomacy had anything to do with Wisconsin-Minnesota? Herb Brooks and Bob Johnson weren’t exactly cordial. Sauer and Doug Woog? Forget about it.

This is apparently a new era. And, for once, this Border Battle means something nationally. Wisconsin is No. 2 in this week’s USCHO.com poll; Minnesota is No. 5.

But Lucia doesn’t exactly like that No. 5 by his team’s name.

“To be honest, we’re probably overrated,” he said. “I think we’re a top-15 team in the country. Whether we’re a top-five, I’m not sure I think we’re that good.

“We’ve got a long ways to go as a hockey team. We certainly haven’t been tested yet or played a top team, and that’s going to begin for us over the next month. We’ll find out a lot more where our program’s at and where the talent level is at at the end of November.”

They’ll find out a little something this weekend. To keep taking strides toward erasing last year’s struggles, the Gophers need to shake this futility streak.

The Badgers are undefeated in their last seven games against Minnesota, including the last five in Minneapolis (counting the Final Five semifinal last year at Target Center).

“The better team has won,” Lucia said. “They were better than we were last year; now we’re going to try to find out if we’ve closed that gap this weekend.”

For the Badgers, the first loss of the season came in a game in which they had to throw everything at Northeastern just to get into overtime. They scored twice in the last 93 seconds to tie the game at 4 before Northeastern won it in OT.

So Wisconsin stands at 7-1, but apparently not tremendously disappointed it is not 8-0.

“They were pretty resilient,” Sauer said. “The fact that we didn’t win was disappointing but I think we felt good about getting ourselves back into the game. It wasn’t like they beat us, I don’t think. I think we felt that if we played them again we certainly could beat them.”

Boy, Sauer’s all about the bulletin board this week.

What Ifs

Michigan Tech and Mankato may be exactly where people expected them to be, but each could legitimately state they should be 3-3 in the league.

The Huskies had a chance to win two games in particular. They lost a 3-2 game to Colorado College and a 4-2 decision to Wisconsin in which the teams were tied in the third period.

The Mavericks lost a pair of one-goal games to Wisconsin, one of them in overtime.

“We’ve played some good hockey games and played some very good hockey teams,” Jutting said. “Obviously, a couple of bounces here or there might have changed things, but you make those bounces for yourself, too. And we haven’t created enough opportunities to make those bounces for ourselves.”

Each of these teams can at least say the worst is over — for now. And each got took a victory from North Dakota.

“That was a good win for us and we’d like to think we can build from there,” Jutting said. “But I think you have to go out every night and play hard. If you do that, eventually good things will happen for you.”

The Net Effect

Mankato’s Eric Pateman will miss his third straight week of action because of a bad back when the Mavericks play Michigan Tech this weekend.

“His back is getting better, but as goes with backs, that can change in a day,” Jutting said. “Right now he’s working hard and trying to get it back in shape and it has been getting better so hopefully that’ll continue.”

Mankato can feel fortunate, though, that backup Todd Kelzenberg has played well enough to keep the team in games.

His numbers aren’t stellar — a 3.88 goals-against average and a .907 save percentage — but the effort is exactly what the Mavericks have needed to get through a tough situation.

“He’s done a very nice job for us,” Jutting said. “Todd’s worked very hard even though he didn’t get to play in about a year and a half because Eric played so well. But Todd is a great kid with a great attitude. He kept working hard and kept preparing like he was going to get a chance to play. Fortunately for him, he did get a chance and he’s done a very nice job for us.”

No Goals, No Wins

Is Minnesota-Duluth falling into the no-scoring, no-win trap again?

The Bulldogs haven’t led a game so far this season and have been outscored 27-7.

Needless to say, that’s not the way to go about winning.

And just for an added challenge, they’ll have to play the rest of the season without freshman winger Nick Anderson, who has scored two of the team’s seven goals. He suffered cartilage damage in his already injured right knee and will undergo a major reconstruction next week.

He’s expected to get a medical redshirt for this season because he played in only four games.

He Said It

“We’re sick of learning lessons…. We’re not into moral victories anymore.”

— Alaska-Anchorage captain Regg Simon, after the Seawolves lost a three-goal lead in a 3-3 tie last Saturday.

News and Views

  • North Dakota’s loss to Mankato last weekend again proved that any team can beat any other in the WCHA. But in North Dakota’s case, fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice … shame on you again.
  • With Friday’s victory over Denver, St. Cloud State reached the .500 mark overall for the first time in the Division I history of the team. The Huskies moved to 233-233-28, but then lost on Saturday in the team’s first chance to go over .500 since Game 1.
  • Colorado College’s sweep of Michigan Tech last weekend was the Tigers’ first road sweep since the 1998-99 season. CC defeated Anchorage 1-0 and 2-1 in late February 1999. Maybe that explains their fifth-place finish last season. If the Tigers want to continue their stay at the top of the conference, they’ll need more road sweeps this season.
  • Last Friday, Denver put only 25 shots on the St. Cloud goal in a loss. Last Saturday, the Pioneers put 35 shots on goal in a victory. See a trend?
  • Tech’s Matt Snesrud is questionable for this weekend’s series against Mankato with a groin injury. Snesrud, a senior, has been one of the most durable players in the WCHA during his career. Before last weekend, he had not missed a collegiate game because of an injury and missed only two over three-plus years.

    On The Docket

    The league’s only undefeated and untied team, Colorado College, puts that mark on the line against Duluth in Colorado Springs.

    But this weekend’s big matchup is Wisconsin vs. Minnesota at Mariucci Arena. It’s good to see this mean more than just interstate pride these days. Should Minnesota get a pair of wins, that No. 5 ranking will look a lot better.

  • Hockey East Column: Nov. 2, 2000

    Does Hockey East Have A Big Five?

    Over the past few seasons, four Hockey East teams — Boston College, Boston University, Maine and New Hampshire — have been dominant on the national stage.

    Of the 12 NCAA berths earned by the league over the last four years, the Big Four have accounted for all of them. Since the most recent decade began in 1990, Hockey East teams have earned 34 berths.  All but five of them went to the four perennial powerhouses, the exceptions being Providence (1991, 1996), UMass-Lowell (1994, 1996) and Northeastern (1994).

    It looked that way at the beginning of this season, too.  The Big Four would be a tough nut to crack.

    Lowell coach Tim Whitehead said, “For anyone that finished in the bottom half last year, something special has to happen to get into that top half of the league.”

    Well, “something special” may be happening at Northeastern.  While BU and Maine have gotten off to so-so starts, the 4-1-0 Huskies stand one period removed from a perfect record and a legitimate shot at the number one ranking in the country.  Had they not given up five goals on 14 Notre Dame shots two weeks ago, they would have had a better claim after upsetting Wisconsin last weekend than anyone else.

    What if…  Woulda-Coulda-Shoulda.  If “if ands and buts” were candies and nuts, we’d all have a Merry Christmas.

    The fact is that they did give up those five goals in the second period against Notre Dame.  Just like the fact is that they did give up a soft goal against Wisconsin with 15 seconds remaining to let the Badgers back into a game that should have been wrapped up.

    Goaltending remains a concern, as is Northeastern’s ability to export consistently their success at the Dog House to the road.   But there are plenty of reasons for Husky fans to assume that the impressive win over Wisconsin — not to mention the season-opener against St. Lawrence — was no fluke.

    And the top one is maturity.  The junior-senior leadership rallied the Huskies to an overtime win after the deflating goal with 15 seconds remaining in regulation.

    “Maturity is one of the things we’re counting on this year,” said coach Bruce Crowder. “We gave up a really weak goal and could have folded the tent, but the kids rebounded and we went after them in the overtime.”

    That maturity is also why they won one night earlier.

    The Friday night contest against UMass-Lowell was exactly the kind that buried Northeastern last year.  Keep in mind that the Huskies sported a .500 record against the Big Four last year.  It was the teams lower in the standings that did them in.

    “These games are the easy ones to coach,” said coach Bruce Crowder after upsetting Wisconsin.  “If you can’t get up for a team coming in that’s number one in the country, then you shouldn’t be playing the sport.

    “That’s why [Friday night’s] game was so important. It was a real character builder for us, winning up at Lowell.  That’s an area we had to get better at and we did.

    “I told the guys all week that there was only one game this week and that was on Friday night.”

    Crowder then added with a smirk, “[After that win] I surprised them and told them there was a second game this weekend.”

    As expected ,the defense has been strong.  Perhaps also as expected, the goaltending has been inconsistent.

    The big surprise has been the scoring.  The top line of Graig Mischler at center with sophomore Mike Ryan on one wing and freshman Scott Selig on the other has been just about as effective as any in the league.  In five games, they have 11 goals.

    “As a coach, you’re constantly looking for perfection,” said Crowder. “But they’re very offensive and they’re very skilled. There are other parts of their game that we want them to get better at, but [they are scoring] like we’re hoping for.”

    In particular, Ryan appears to have come into his own after struggling as a freshman.  Last year he scored four goals total;  he now leads Hockey East with seven.

    “I’d like to tell you it’s coaching, but it’s not,” said Crowder.  “It’s just that the kid is working hard.”

    The offensive strength of the first line has taken some of the scoring pressure off the second unit.  Willie Levesque and Chris Lynch, who have had several different left wings, are grinders who don’t bury the puck consistently.  The first unit’s success has covered that up and let the twosome grind away effectively and have strong nights like Lynch’s hat trick against Lowell along with the nights when all their shots find the pipe or the goaltender.

    On a down note, the Huskies have lost Matt Keating to a wrist that was cut by a skate in practice.  He will be out until December.

    On the plus side, freshman Trevor Reschny has been effective in the early going, totaling three goals and being a constant breakaway threat.

    “I hope [beating Wisconsin] sets the bar high for us,” said captain Jim Fahey. “We’ve got a great team in there.”

    While it certainly is possible to overstate the importance of games in October and November, the upcoming weekend may tell a lot about Northeastern’s fortunes.  The Huskies travel to Boston College on Friday and then host Maine on Saturday.

    “They’ve got to get in their mind that they expect to win every time they go out,” said Crowder. “It’s not going to happen every night, but if you have that mentality, it’s going to carry you a long way.”

    Quip of the Week

    Northeastern’s win over the River Hawks last weekend snapped a regrettable streak for Crowder.  Since leaving for Northeastern in 1996, Crowder was winless in seven attempts back at Lowell.

    “I guess that’s why I left,” he said, “because if it took me five years to win here, I’d have been fired anyway.”

    Thinking Long-Term

    UMass-Amherst got a big victory on Friday, shutting out Merrimack, 3-0.  It marked the first time in five years that the Minutemen opened their league schedule on the plus side.

    Unfortunately, they followed that with an ugly game on Sunday, losing to Boston College, 9-5.

    “We felt on Friday night that we had organized a little bit for the first time this year,” said coach Don Cahoun.  “I was hoping we could carry it over from there, [but] we were a little disheveled again.

    “It was very similar to the game [that opened the season] against Wisconsin when it was 9-6.  Hey, they just have more guns than we do right now.

    “But a lot of it is that I’m letting these guys run and play a little bit to show me what they can do and not play very defensive-oriented.  That’s going to help the younger kids develop, but it’s going to expose some of our weaknesses against some of the teams that are more prolific than we are.”

    Indeed, Cahoon has a couple freshmen who could develop into significant contributors.  Thomas Pock has scored three goals already.  Scott Horvath has two and adds a physical dimension to the UMass front line.  Horvath is 6-3, 228, and plays every bit of that.

    Cahoon minces no words when asked about how he evaluates the benefits of playing more conservatively for better short-term results as opposed to more offensively to aid in the long-term development of players like Pock and Horvath.

    “[There’s] no fear of failure,” he said. “You can’t just sit here and worry about what’s going to happen in the short term. You’ve got to look at this thing on a long-term basis.”

    Recovery at Alfond

    Hockey fans everywhere had to be pleased to see coach Shawn Walsh welcomed back behind the Maine bench on Friday night.

    However, Walsh wasn’t the only one at Alfond Arena who was recovering from kidney cancer.  Anne Britt — mother of Richard Britt, the Maine trainer who died in a tragic accident two years ago — was also in attendance.  Like Walsh, she also had a cancerous kidney removed by Dr. Gennaro Carpinito, uncle to Maine forward Niko Dimitrakos.  Despite the recent surgery, she was in her regular seat to cheer on Shawn Walsh and her Black Bears.

    Reportedly, Anne Britt’s operation was a success and early signs indicate that the cancer was localized and completely removed.

    USCHO has been a strong voice in support of Shawn Walsh’s fight.  Here’s hoping that Anne Britt and other college hockey fans in similar circumstances across the country will also experience a full recovery.  The rinks are better places with them there.

    Father and Son

    Boston College forward Ben Eaves had a little extra motivation when the Eagles played Wisconsin on Friday.  Eaves’s father, Mike, scored 94 goals and assisted on 173 others as a Badger from 1974-78.  His 267 points puts him atop the all-time Wisconsin scoring list.

    “I guess there was an [extra factor] in the back of my mind, knowing that he was a great player for them,” said Ben with a big grin.  “I wanted to give a good showing.”

    Eaves the Younger did assist on BC’s second goal and has looked good at one point on the power play.

    However, he left Sunday’s game against UMass with back spasms and remains day-to-day.

    Trivia Contest

    Last week’s contest involved a player who competed against Hockey East the previous weekend and has a last name beginning with “B”.  That last name is close to a word found in a Tom Wolfe title.  What is the name of the player and the book by Wolfe?

    The player was Lake Superior State forward Jeremy Bachusz and the book was From Bauhaus to Our House.

    Michael Fortino answered that one in the wee, wee hours of Friday morning.  As a result, he has selected the following cheer:

    “We are the Terriers…and we smell your fear.”

    This week’s question concerns four players from outside of the league who competed against Hockey East teams last weekend.  They are: two brothers, someone whose last name is also a city in Massachusetts and someone whose last name is a vegetable.

    If you can name the four players (or at least a couple of them) mail your answer to Dave Hendrickson.

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

    A couple weeks ago, I almost burned the house down.

    Twice.

    Our town water smells funny, so no one drinks water out of the tap.  I had a sore throat and needed to gargle with warm salt water.

    So I put a little spring water in a pan and put it on a burner. I’d be back in a couple minutes, but meanwhile there was a problem with a feature article I was writing.  I sat down in front of my computer, frowned, deleted a few lines, tried something different, deleted those lines and …

    … two hours later noticed the smell of melting Teflon.

    The pan — bone dry for what must have been a rather considerable time — looked a little warped on the burner.  When I held it over the sink and turned on the water, the pan hissed and a mushroom cloud of steam escaped to the ceiling.

    Telling myself what a moron I was, I put another pan on the burner with another inch or so of spring water.  My throat, of course, was still sore.

    Assuring myself that the smoke detector would have gone off if the melting Teflon had turned into flame, I returned to my computer.  This time, I’d just fix one little thing and then return to the heated water.  Really.  I had learned my lesson.  Just one little thing.

    Well, this time there was no melted Teflon and it didn’t take me two hours to emerge from my allegedly deep thoughts.  I didn’t last much longer than an hour.

    The pan was bone dry again, of course.

    Not wanting to go for the hat trick, I poured some salt into a glass of cold spring water and gargled.

    It would be a relief if this had been an isolated incident.  But last Saturday, I promised to be ready to leave the house at 1:30.  Working on a different article this time, I happened to glance up at the clock, subconsciously note that it read 1:23 and then seconds later jumped up.

    “1:23!”

    I hadn’t shaved yet.  I needed a shower.  Badly.

    Seven minutes is not long enough for me to look and smell presentable. (Seven hours isn’t long enough either, but that’s another sad topic.)

    I was late.  It was not for the first time.

    On Sunday, I was supposed to take something out of the oven at 4:20 and let it cool.  Since only a fool would trust me, the timer on the stove was set.  Not even I would fail to notice the ding, ding, ding, even though I was writing again.

    At 5:00, I rescued the charred remains of supper from the oven.  I don’t know how I failed to hear the ding, ding, ding of the timer for forty minutes.  But I did.

    You can say one thing about me.  I’m consistent.


    If you like Dave Hendrickson’s writing, ask for information about his fiction in Food and Other Enemies ($14).


    ECAC West Newsletter: Nov. 2, 2000

    The RIT Tigers got the season off to a flying start by winning both the Fredonia and Rochester Hockey Cup tournaments decisively. Manhattanville also got off to a good start this season, downing Lebanon Valley in its opener. But Hobart dropped a heartbreaker to Brockport and another to Geneseo, while Elmira opened up with a loss at Oswego for the second straight year.

    Recent Results

     10/17:
    RIT 6 vs Oswego 3 Fredonia Tournament

    10/18:
    RIT 7 vs Fredonia 2 Fredonia Tournament

    10/17:
    RIT 8 vs Geneseo 4 Rochester Hockey Cup
    Hobart 5 at Brockport 6 OT Rochester Hockey Cup

    10/18:
    Manhattanville 5 at Lebanon Valley 2
    Hobart 1 at Geneseo 3 Rochester Hockey Cup
    RIT 10 vs Brockport 1 Rochester Hockey Cup
    Elmira 3 at Oswego 7


    STANDINGS: LEAGUE || Overall || Home
    GP W-L-T Pts GF-GA || GP W-L-T GF-GA || GP W-L-T
    =====================||======================||===========
    RIT 0 0-0-0 0 0-0 || 4 4-0-0 31-10 || 0 0-0-0
    Manhattanville 0 0-0-0 0 0-0 || 1 1-0-0 5-2 || 0 0-0-0
    Elmira 0 0-0-0 0 0-0 || 1 0-1-0 3-7 || 0 0-0-0
    Hobart 0 0-0-0 0 0-0 || 2 0-2-0 6-9 || 0 0-0-0

    Note: Standings listed in order of overall winning percentage until
    league play starts.

    Team-by-Team Report

    RIT: Looks like the Tigers picked up this season where they left off last year, even with the same game strategy: fall behind early in the game, then come roaring back with a barrage of goals. In its opening game in the Fredonia tournement against Oswego, RIT got two penalties in the first 30 seconds of the game and Oswego converted the resulting power play for the 1-0 lead. But RIT scored two goals midway through each period to take the 6-3 win. Senior Pete Bournazakis had a four-point night with two goals and two assists.

    The Tigers didn’t mess around in the championship game of the Fredonia tournament. Five different Tigers scored by midway through the second period for the commanding lead, and RIT went on to take the title with a 7-2 victory. Co-captain Jerry Galway notched the four-point night this game, with two goals and two assists of his own.

    Geneseo jumped in front of the Tigers early in the opening game of the Rochester Hockey Cup — not a worry to the Tigers, though, who answered with seven straight goals. RIT took the third period off, allowing Geneseo to score three goals of its own, but the Tigers coasted to the 8-4 win to advance to the championship.

    Same script, same result was the story of the championship of the Rochester Hockey Cup against Brockport. The Golden Eagles get a goal 4:21 in to the contest, and RIT scores ten straight to continue its romp through the SUNYAC in early-season tournaments. This is RIT’s second straight championship in the Rochester Hockey Cup. Tigers Tyler Euverman, Mike Bournazakis, and Josh Faulkner were all named to the All-Tourney team, and Galway earned tourney MVP honors with a three goal and four assist performance.

    In a change from recent memory, RIT starts league play early in the season this year. Next up for the Tigers is hosting Manhattanville. RIT will be missing both Josh Faulkner and Jared Conlon for the game, who got DQ’s in the last game against Brockport.

    MANHANTTANVILLE: The Valiants got off to a good start this season, defeating Lebanon Valley 5-2. Manhattanville ousthot Lebanon Valley 49-27, but its offensive advantage was tempered when the Valiants had to kill off nine man-down situations. Aaron Gauthier scored a shorthanded goal just 18 seconds in to the second period for the eventual game-winner, and Tommy Prate picked up where he left off last year, leading Manhattanville in scoring with one goal and one assist.

    Manhattaville heads to RIT to begin league play this weekend. The Valiants came within a breath of upsetting the Tigers last year at RIT, and they will look to finish the job this time around.

    ELMIRA: Flashback to October 28, 1999. Elmira traveled to Oswego for the first game of the season, and dropped a tough, physical game to the host Lakers 4-3. Forward to October 28, 2000, when Elmira traveled to Oswego to open the season once again. Exactly one year to the day apart, and yet the results were almost the same. Elmira and Oswego combined for 21 penalties this time around and once again Elmira dropped its season opener to Oswego, this time by a score of 7-3.

    “It’s beginning to be an old habit of late,” remarked coach Glenn Thomaris. One bright spot for Thomaris was the offensive output of freshman Lawne Snyder, who tallied one goal and two assists.

    “My captain (Steve Kaye) came up to me after the game and said we shouldn’t open at Oswego next year,” quipped Thomaris. “I told him that we are scheduled to open up on the road at UW-Stevens Point for a pair of games next season. But I’m not sure that will be any easier.”

    Elmira’s schedule gets no easier this week. Wisconsin-Superior comes to town for two games. The Soaring Eagles will be looking to improve on the split they earned last year in Superior.

    HOBART: The Statesmen played very opportunistic hockey for the first 20 minutes in its opening contest against Brockport. A shorthanded goal by Matt Pane just 49 seconds in to the contest got them rolling. Zach Mundy, Jeremy Toomey, and Tim McCarthy each added power-play goals, and all of the sudden Hobart was up 4-0 and rolling along.

    A fan in the stands was overheard to say, “Maybe this really is a new beginning for Hobart.” Unfortunately for Hobart, Brockport righted the ship and started to win many of the one-on-one battles. A late third period goal by Brockport tied the game 5-5 and sent it in to overtime, where the Golden Eagles scored to take the contest away from Hobart, 6-5. Statesman Greg Reynholds finished the night with four assistants to lead Hobart.

    Hobart didn’t fair much better against Geneseo in the consolation game of the Rochester Hockey Cup, losing 3-1. Matt Pane continued his hot play, scoring the lone Statesman goal in the third period.

    “I thought we got better with each period in this game,” said coach Mark Taylor, “and I thought we played pretty well in the third period.”

    Hobart plays its home opener on Tuesday against Cortland, and then stays at home to host Neumann over the weekend.

    Upcoming Games

    10/31:
    Cortland at Hobart (7:30pm)

    11/3:
    Wisconsin-Superior at Elmira (7:30pm)

    11/4:
    Neumann at Hobart (4:00pm)
    Manhattanville at RIT (7:30pm)
    Wisconsin-Superior at Elmira (7:30pm)

    Game of the Week

    While some would say a league contest should automatically get picked for the game of the week, the best this week will probably be Elmira’s pair against Wisconsin-Superior. Two nationally-ranked teams meeting early in the season almost always portends a good game, but the rivalry that quickly developed last year between Elmira and Superior guarantees that this series will be interesting, to say the least.

     ECAC WEST vs.
    SUNYAC 4-3-0
    ECAC East 0-0-0
    NESCAC 0-0-0
    NCHA 0-0-0
    ECAC NE 1-0-0
    Other 0-0-0
    -------
    TOTAL 5-3-0

    NCHA Newsletter: Nov. 2, 2000

    In the opening weekend of NCHA action, St. Norbert won the first game of the season, 6-1, over Wisconsin-Eau Claire to take an early lead in the NCHA standings. In non-conference action, Wisconsin-Superior won both of its games against Marian College (8-1 and 8-0), and UW-Stout cleaned up, 6-1, over Milwaukee School of Eng. (MSOE) on Friday, and 5-3 over 1999-2000 MCHA champ Minn.-Crookston on Saturday.

    Wisconsin-Eau Claire followed up their loss to St. Norbert on Friday night, with a 4-2 win over MSOE on Saturday.

    Team Capsules

    St. Norbert

    The Green Knights got the 2000-01 season kicked off in style with a 6-1 victory over Wisconsin-Eau Claire on Friday night. The Blugolds scored first, but Shane Dickson, Maris Ziedens and Ryan Wempe responded with first period goals and that would make the difference. Adam Sedgwick and Chris Bodnar scored goals in the second, and Patrick Gruber added a tally in the third to finish off the SNC victory. Wisconsin-Eau Claire goalie, John Walker, made 27 saves while SNC goalie Derrick Myers made 13 in the win.

    St. Norbert takes on Lake Forest, who will be making their first trip to the ice this season, in a home and home NCHA series.

    Wisconsin-River Falls

    The Falcons rebounded from their tough weekend with Marian with a 10-1 win over 1999-2000 MCHA champ, Minn.-Crookston. Shane Fukushima and Rob Novak each tallied two goals, while Jamie Steinert, Jeff Bernard, David Almquist, Matt Elsen, Evan Stensrud and Jared Anderson each added single goals for the Falcons. Falcon goalie Jacque Vezina made 17 saves in the victory, while Golden Eagles goalies Michael Dickson and Jeff Horner combined for 47 saves in the rout.

    River Falls returns to the ice this weekend with a home-and-home NCHA series against Wisconsin-Stout.

    Wisconsin-Stout

    The Blue Devils got their 2000-01 campaign off on the right foot, taking a pair of games from the MCHA’s MSOE (6-1) and Minn-Crookston (5-3). Dan Riffe and Brad Weappa each scored two goals, and Cale Finseth and Drew Nichols both added single tallies to lift Stout to Friday’s win. Blue Devil goalie Ben Plester had 22 saves and the Blue Devils threw 51 shots on goal. On Saturday, the Blue Devils were able to put three on the board before Minn.-Crookston could respond. Nate Legler scored the only goal of the first period and Derek Nichols and Andy Anderson added goals in the second for Wisconsin-Stout, with Drew Nichols finished things off in the third. Blue Devil goalies Ben Plester and Justin Wiskie combined for 19 saves.

    The Blue Devils have a home-and-home NCHA series with Wisconsin-River Falls to kick off their NCHA season this weekend.

    Wisconsin-Superior

    The Yellow Jackets came out strong in their first trip to the ice this past weekend, taking a pair of yawners from Marian College, 8-1 on Friday and 8-0 on Saturday. Friday, the game stayed pretty even through two periods as the ‘Jackets lead 2-0 on goals from Jeff Glowa and Milan Tomaska, but broke things wide open in the third with 6 goals. Yellow Jackets’ third-period goals came from Ivan Prokic (2), Glowa, Chris Hackett, Ryan Kalbrener and Rob Ziemer. Saturday would be like a bad case of deja vu for Marian, as the ‘Jackets would put another eight spot on the board with goals from Kris Wilson, Prokic, Eric Pitoscia, Ryan Kalbrenner, Glowa, Colin Kendall, Chris Hackett and Allen Hasbargen. Nate Ziemski picked up both wins for the ‘Jackets in the nets, making a combined 33 saves while watching his team put up 97 shots on the weekend.

    Wisconsin-Superior is heading East this weekend to take on Elmira for two games. This is the first meeting of these teams following their brawl-marred series last season in Superior.

    Wisconsin-Eau Claire

    The Blugolds had the opportunity to take an early lead in the NCHA standings on Friday, as they hosted the Green Knights of St. Norbert, but couldn’t hold on to an early 1-0 lead, giving up six unanswered goals. They rebounded well on Saturday against MSOE, picking up two goals each from Jamie Minor and Adam Sklader. Both of Minor’s goals came on the power play while Sklader added one power play and one even strength goal.

    Wisconsin-Eau Claire has a home-and-home NCHA series this weekend with Wisconsin-Stevens Point as the Pointers open their season.

    Wisconsin-Stevens Point

    The Pointers had their final intra-squad game on Friday and came out of it unscathed. They take to the ice for the first time against another team this weekend, as they face Wisconsin-Eau Claire in a home-and-home NCHA series.

    Lake Forest

    The Foresters have yet to take the ice, but will do so this Tuesday, as they host MSOE. Then this coming weekend, they will have a home and home NCHA series with NCHA leader St. Norbert.

    St. Scholastica

    The Saints have yet to take the ice, but they finally will Tuesday as they head down the road to Northland in a non-conference match-up. They are off this coming weekend.

    Series of the Week

    Even though most of the league will be in NCHA competition, I’m picking the Wisconsin-Superior/Elmira series as the one to watch. First off, it’s the first East/West matchup of the season and these two teams just don’t like each other much.

    D-III Column: Nov. 2, 2000

    Like Autumn, the Division III hockey season begins slowly, almost quietly. Some teams have already played four games, while other programs have just this week begun practice, and won’t see game action for another two weeks.

    There have been some surprises and some controversy already, so let’s recap what may have slipped below the radar as the season got underway.

    SUNYAC

    Most of the major news of this young season, both on and off the ice, has to do with SUNYAC teams.

    League play for the SUNYAC begins this weekend, and all eyes will be on Plattsburgh as it travels to Fredonia and Buffalo State, minus some star players.

    The Cardinals, ranked No. 1 in the USCHO.com Division III Preseason Poll and the only SUNY team yet to see NCAA action, were rocked by a hazing incident involving seven upperclassmen. Plattsburgh is handling the situation internally and has not released any names. Sources indicate that the players involved have been suspended from one to four games, and the suspensions may not all be served simultaneously. Stay tuned for more details.

    The other seven SUNYs were making news on the ice, as each team has already participated in at least one tournament so far.

    Back on October 20 and 21, Fredonia hosted its fifth annual Invitation Tournament. The Blue Devils started off sluggishly in both games, eventually overcoming Neumann, 4-2, but never getting it together against RIT, losing 7-2.

    Last weekend saw many more tournaments, including Potsdam’s Pepsi Invitational, a three-team round-robin affair won by the host Bears. Cortland finished second, losing to Potsdam (5-3), but beating Neumann (8-1).

    In Buffalo, Fredonia got back on track by going 2-0 in the All Sport Invitational, as did the host Bengals. Johnson & Wales and Lawrence went winless in yet another non-traditional setup.

    Last, but not least, the Chase Rochester Cup tournament was held for the second straight year to determine local bragging rights for the 2000-2001 season. Brockport made some noise by overcoming a 4-0 deficit to beat the Hobart Statesmen, 6-5 in overtime. Geneseo dropped an 8-4 decision to RIT in the other semi, but went on to win the consolation game over the Statesmen.

    Brockport was seriously outgunned against RIT in the Rochester Cup final, losing 10-1. Golden Eagle super sophomore Brandon Marineau, who scored the overtime game-winner against Hobart, did not dress against RIT. He had been benched by coach Brian Dickinson for picking up his second consecutive misconduct penalty the night before. Marineau had also been whistled for a misconduct in Brockport’s 9-7 exhibition win over Humber.

    ECAC West

    ECAC West teams are a respectable 5-3 so far, but take away RIT’s 4-0 and things look a lot worse. For a second year in a row, the Elmira Soaring Eagles traveled to Oswego and laid an egg in their first game of the season, this time losing 7-3.

    Things don’t get any easier this weekend when seventh-ranked Elmira hosts No. 10 Wisconsin-Superior for a pair. Intensity may be even higher than usual at the domes, based on the off-ice brawl last year between these two squads at the “Hive” in Superior.

    “All eyes will be on that weekend series,” said head coach Glen Thomaris. “(Superior is) a big, physical team. Both games should be fun and exciting for the fans to see.”

    Hobart got off to a rough start under new head coach Mark Taylor, blowing a 4-0 lead against Brockport in the Chase Rochester Cup semifinals, and then losing to Geneseo, 3-1, in the consolation game.

    The Statesmen redeemed themselves with a mid-week win over Cortland State, and now face a pair of upcoming games against Neumann and Buffalo State. Hobart should be favored in both games.

    RIT got off to a fast start, capturing the Fredonia and Rochester Cup championships on consecutive weekends. The Tigers, ranked No. 6 in the USCHO.com poll, outscored their opposition 31-10 in those four games.

    Captain Derek Hahn was named MVP in Fredonia, notching two goals and four assists on the weekend. Hahn was missing from the Tiger lineup in the Rochester Cup, however, for personal reasons. No problem for the Tigers. RIT’s other captain, Jerry Galway, captured the Chase MVP hardware with three goals and four assists.

    Manhattanville got things off on the right track with a 5-2 win at Lebanon Valley. The Valiants will travel to RIT this weekend to kick off the ECAC West conference schedule. Last season, Manhattanville came within five minutes of upsetting the Tigers at RIT.

    NCHA

    Just like every season, expect the unexpected in Division III’s toughest conference. Ninth-ranked Wisconsin-River Falls was pushed to the brink by Marian two weeks ago, escaping with a 1-1 tie and a 3-2 overtime win. But last weekend, the Falcons easily handled Minn-Crookston, which beat Marion for the MCHA title last season, 10-1.

    Wisconsin-Superior had an easier time with Marian last weekend, 8-0 and 8-1.

    Number-four St. Norbert won the first conference game of the season, defeating Wisconsin-Eau Claire 6-1. The Green Knights limited the BluGolds to just 14 shots on goal.

    Six more teams begin conference play this weekend, everyone except Wisconsin-Superior, which travels to Elmira for a pair, and St. Scholastica, which is idle.

    MCHA

    Division III’s newest conference is taking its lumps in nonconference play, going 0-11-1 so far. A highlight was the performance of Marian goaltender Terry Dunbar, who made 81 saves in the series with Wisconsin-River Falls (1-1 tie and 3-2 overtime loss).

    Interestingly, Dunbar also made exactly 81 saves the following weekend against Wisconsin-Superior, but allowed 16 goals in the process as the Sabres lost 8-1 and 8-0.

    Conference play begins the weekend of November 10.

    MIAC

    Play starts this weekend in what should be a wide-open race in the only conference to send two teams to the nationals last season. St. Thomas captured the top spot in the MIAC preseason poll, but the Tommies won’t dominate the way they did last year after losing a huge chunk of their offense. Expect Concordia and St. John’s to battle with the Tommies all season long, and watch out for dark horse Augsburg.

    “This team may be the best team, talent-wise, since I’ve been here,” said Auggie head coach Mike Schwartz. “There really aren’t any glaring weaknesses. We have three solid lines of forwards coming back, our defense is a young, but talented group, and our goaltender is one of the best in the nation.”

    ECAC Northeast

    Only two teams (J&W and Lebanon Valley) have seen action so far. Conference play begins this weekend when defending champs Wentworth hosts Stonehill.

    ECAC East

    Be patient, ECAC East fans. Your season starts in two weeks.

    NESCAC

    Ditto for the NESCAC.

    Commentary

    Strictly opinion — call me a geezer, but I’m not in favor of the newfangled round-robin tournaments. The format is fine for when you have only three teams (like the Pepsi Invitational in Potsdam), but if you have four teams, you should have championship and consolation games the second day.

    Instead, under the new and “improved” format, you have predetermined pairings to ensure that teams from the same conference or region don’t play each other. It’s already happened in the All Sport in Buffalo and the Elmira and Bowdoin/Colby tournaments are also set up that way. I think the excitement of the championship game is lost when all the games count equally.

    And what’s wrong with traditional enemies squaring off? In many cases, that makes for a great game — a rivalry with even more on the line.

    If the traditional format is good enough for the Frozen Four and the Beanpot, it’s fine with me.

    CCHA Column: Nov. 2, 2000

    Bustin’ Out

    It’s not surprising that the Wolverines remain undefeated in this young season, topping the USCHO.com poll.

    But can you name the other CCHA team undefeated in league play?

    Yes, it’s the Western Michigan Broncos (4-1-1, 3-0-1 CCHA), currently one point behind the Wolverines and one ahead of both Michigan State and Nebraska-Omaha.

    Lofty company for a team that finished the 1999-2000 season 12-22-3.

    “Obviously, we’re pleased with our start,” says Western Michigan head coach and newly crowned king of understatement Jim Culhane.

    “It’s been an enjoyable month of October for us. We hated to tear that page off the calendar.”

    In October, the Broncos swept Lake Superior State, defeated and tied Alaska Fairbanks on the road, and beat a pesky Alabama-Huntsville team. Through the month — and including exhibition wins over Waterloo and the U.S. Developmental team — the Broncos have posted no fewer than four goals per game.

    Western Michigan is outscoring opponents 36-23 in overall play (27-14 CCHA), and leads the league in goal production, averaging 6.00 goals per game overall, 6.75 against conference opponents.

    One look at the league scoring leaders shows you that Westerns’ offense is as easy to define as one-two-three: David Gove, Steve Rymsha, and Mike Bishai.

    That trio of Broncos lead the league in conference scoring, and Gove is the only player in the league to have reached double-digit goal production in overall play. In fact, Gove is the first player in Division I men’s hockey in the nation to reach ten goals.

    By any standards, Gove had a great season last year, when he tallied 18 goals and 28 assists for 46 points. But Culhane says he always knew that the senior hadn’t yet reached his full potential.

    “David’s shooting the puck and it’s going in for him,” says Culhane. “We’ve always talked to David about taking shots.”

    Coach, a word of advice: keep talking.

    Gove (10-8-18, 8-6-14 CCHA) is on pace to score to score over 30 goals per season, if he keeps pouring it on.

    Gove isn’t the only one scoring for the Broncos. Rymsha (7-7-14, 7-6-13), is second on the team, second in the CCHA in conference scoring, and tied for third in the league with Josh Langfeld for overall points.

    Rymsha is followed closely by Bishai 94-9-13, 4-7-11 CCHA), third in the CCHA in conference scoring, fifth in the league in overall points.

    But the beauty of this Bronco offense, as Culhane is quick to point out, is that it’s not just a three-man show. A dozen Broncos have registered at least one goal, and 18 players have at least an assist.

    “That’s what’s fun for the players and for us as a team,” says Culhane. “Yeah, we have a couple of guys who have the touch, but other guys are scoring, too.”

    Last weekend, Western Michigan scored 15 goals in two games against Lake Superior State, eight of them on the power play. Culhane says that he and the Broncos are enjoying this while it lasts. “We’re getting bounces of the puck. At times you think that puck has eyes for the back of the net. We’ll take it.”

    Gove had two goals in the 5-2 win on Friday, and two in the 10-3 win Saturday. Rymsha had a goal Friday and a hat trick Saturday. Bishai had a goal Friday and two Saturday.

    Additionally, Jeff Campbell had a goal each night and Brent Rumble scored twice Saturday.

    The Broncos showed last season that they had the ability to score goals but difficulty keeping the puck out of their own net. While the team hasn’t completely turned it around, Culhane says that Western’s play in the month of October is “a tribute to our team,” adding that his players have “really worked hard to improve.”

    One area of improvement has been between the pipes. Goaltender Jeff Reynaert began the season at the bottom of the league’s goaltending stats, and has improved to post an .886 overall save percentage, .894 against conference opponents.

    Reynaert is still, however, facing a lot of shots. He’s averaged nearly 30 saves in league games (26.00 overall). Culhane says Reynaert will continue to be the go-to guy for the Broncos.

    “The one game he wishes he would have had back is that one Friday night against Alabama-Huntsville. He’s our starter, he knows that, but we also have the confidence in J.J. [Weaks] that if Jeff has an off night J.J. can come in and play well enough to keep us in the game.”

    In front of the Western net is where the team needs to work hardest, says Culhane.

    “That’s been something we identified all last year, that we needed to play better without the puck, better on our penalty kill, better in our own zone. Those are the things we continue to work at, that the players realize we need to do better — on the PK, better at tying up sticks in our own end.”

    The Western Michigan penalty kill is effective just 72.7% of the time in overall play, not a good stat when your team takes more penalties than any other in the league, averaging 32.33 minutes per game.

    Culhane knows that his team has yet to meet one crucial defensive test: a low-scoring victory.

    “There are going to be games where you don’t see five or six goals scored…and we have to be able to win those games where we don’t have an opportunity to score those goals. We need to know as a hockey team that we have the ability to win those 2-1 games.”

    While the Bronco coach is happy with his team’s fast start, he says he has his feet on the ground. “We know it’s a tremendously long season, and we don’t want to have any dramatic peaks and valleys, just keep it at an even keel.”

    And the votes in the USCHO.com Poll?

    “We don’t pay much attention to that stuff. We worry about our guys — academically, what they’re doing out there socially, and what they’re doing out on the ice.”

    More Us vs. Them

    The CCHA is now even against other D-I conferences, posting a 15-15-7 record against non-league opponents.

    Jim Culhane says that no one has considered CCHA road vs. home nonconference records, and adds that no one travels to play non-league opponents as much as do the teams in the CCHA.

    “We play, as a conference, the majority of [nonconference] games on the road. Compare that to the ECAC schools and Hockey East. We as a league are the only league that travels extensively to play out of conference teams. Yeah, the ECAC and Hockey East play each other, but if we go out there to play, we have a lot further to travel.

    “A winning percentage is almost always higher at home.”

    This season, CCHA teams have played 22 of the league’s 37 nonconference games on the road. The league is 8-4-3 in non-league play at home, and 7-11-4 on the road.

    Culhane would like to remind people that as a league the CCHA travels further overland to play conference opponents, too.

    Last week, two teams tangled with non-league foes, and prevailed three out of four times. Northern Michigan swept Minnesota-Duluth in Duluth, 7-1 and 8-3, while Ohio State beat Maine 3-2 (OT) before losing 2-0. The Buckeyes are just the third CCHA team to beat a Hockey East opponent this season.

    The Game Is the Grudge

    Any time these two teams meet, there’s more on than line than mere points. And the grudge spans generations.

    No. 6 Michigan State (4-1-1, 3-1-0 CCHA) at No. 1 Michigan (6-0-2, 4-0-0 CCHA)
    Saturday, 7:05 p.m., Yost Arena, Ann Arbor, MI

    Each time the Spartans and Wolverines play, the games are wrapped in rivalry, history, myth, and legend. It never gets old, and Michigan head coach Red Berenson knows why.

    “I think it continues to thrive because both programs are competitive, competitive nationally and with each other. And there’s always a lot at stake — whether it’s bragging rights, recruiting advantages, first place.”

    And this season fans of each team will be treated to four regular-season meetings that count in the conference standings, rather than just the two in last year’s first season of cluster play.

    “This year it’s a little different because it’s four meetings,” says Michigan State head coach Ron Mason. “So it’s a bit unusual that we’re playing four for sure, which we haven’t done in a long time. Quite often they’re back to back.”

    Both teams enter the weekend having swept a conference opponent one week prior. Michigan beat Miami 3-2 and 6-2 at home, while Michigan State took two games from Notre Dame in South Bend, 5-1 and 3-2.

    Berenson doesn’t make much of the Wolverines’ unbeaten status, nor Michigan’s No. 1 ranking.

    “You go a game at a time. We’re off to a pretty good start, and we squeaked out a couple of wins last weekend. The games were close, and the second game was closer than the score indicated.”

    Michigan held a 2-1 lead going into the last period of the 6-2 win, when Miami’s Jason Deskins scored his third goal of the year to tie the game early in the third. But later in the period, the Wolverines exploded for four unanswered goals, starting with Jay Vancik’s power-play tally at 8:50. Andy Hilbert, Jed Ortmeyer, and Mike Komisarek put the RedHawks away, with Ortmeyer and Komisarek scoring less than a minute apart in the final two minutes of the game.

    As for being No. 1, Berenson says, “That’s good respect, but we’ve been there before and been knocked out the following week.”

    Mason says that since it’s the only game each team plays this weekend, player focus will intensify as the week progresses. “Hopefully we can get off to a good start in that building.”

    The Spartans have been plagued with early-season injuries, and Mason says “that’s been a factor.”

    Andrew Bogle hurt his right shoulder against Nebraska Omaha Oct. 20. “He’s our senior center,” says Mason. “He doesn’t put up numbers, but he’s always a factor in games.”

    Without Bogle and Joe Goodenow, who hurt his right shoulder Oct. 13 against Alaska Anchorage, Mason says, “We’re not as effective.”

    Also dinged up are sophomores Brad Fast and John-Michael Liles, both hurt against Notre Dame last weekend. Fast and Liles are expected to play this weekend, and Bogle is probably. Goodenow may play.

    Mason concedes that his Spartans may not appear to be as dominant as recent Michigan State squads have been, but that this team has a not-so-secret weapon.

    “Our team is not the type of team that you can say, ‘Hey this is an unbelievable team,’ but we do have an unbelievable goaltender.”

    Ryan Miller is allowing 1.81 goals per game in overall play, and sports a .935 overall save percentage. The numbers are even better against conference opponents: 1.50 GAA, .950 SV%.

    “For the past six years,” says Mason, “our team has maybe made our goaltenders look good, and now it’s our goaltender who’s keeping us in games. That’s why he’s playhing every game.”

    Going into the Spartans’ first game against the top-ranked team in the country, Mason says, “From my perspective, we just have to play well. Up to the Saturday night game against Nebraska, I don’t think we played well at all. That game, we had some semblance of organization.”

    Surprisingly, neither team leads the league in overall scoring. Michigan is third, notching 4.25 goals per game, while Michigan State is fifth (3.17).

    Michigan State and Michigan are, however, one and two respectively in goals allowed per game. The Spartans give up 1.83 to the Wolverines’ 2.50.

    Michigan State’s power play is impressive at .303 overall, tops in the league, while Michigan is second (.250).

    Michigan State’s penalty kill is second (.880), and Michigan’s is third (.820).

    The Spartans take far fewer penalties (13.00) than do the Wolverines (20.00).

    Here’s the four-one-one on this monster rivalry:

  • Michigan leads the all-time series 118-101-8.
  • Michigan leads in Yost 61-37-1.
  • Michigan is 2-0-1 against Michigan State in the last three meetings.
  • The Spartans and Wolverines skated to a 3-3 overtime tie in their last game, Feb. 26, 2000.
  • All eight games in the series since 1998-99 have been decided by two or fewer goals.
  • In the same eight games, the winning team has scored more than three goals just once.
  • Michigan dominated this series from Feb. 7, 1928, through Feb. 23, 1957, the longest Spartan winless streak against the Wolverines.
  • Michigan State’s longest unbeaten streak in the series was from Jan. 21, 1981-Nov. 18, 1983.
  • Michigan is the only CCHA school to lead its all-time series against Michigan State.

    Pick: History and home ice are on the side of the Wolverines. Michigan 3-2

    Travels With CCHArlie

    To play the Ohio State Buckeyes in Columbus, the Alaska Fairbanks Nanooks have already traveled approximately 3,793 miles. And they haven’t been home since last week.

    The Nanooks played a pair in Bowling Green Oct. 27-28, losing 4-2 and tying 1-1. Rather than fly back to Fairbanks only to return for two games against OSU, the Nanooks are spending the week between games in a Ramada Inn on the north side of Columbus.

    The players miss a whole week of school — “Our teachers are the coolest,” said one Nanook after a practice at the OSU Ice Rink — but head coach Guy Gadowsky says the week away from home helps to build team unity.

    “I think there are definite advantages, especially early in the year. It’s great to get the guys together on a road trip.”

    The coach says that spending a week in Columbus is a break from the limelight for his players as well. “In Fairbanks they’re very well known and there are a lot of demands on their time. They’re recognized everywhere they go. And we put a lot of demands on their time with off-ice training.”

    Gadowsky says that the players keep up with their schoolwork with the help of computers at Ohio State’s Younkin Success Center, home of OSU’s Student Athletic Support Services.

    “Every day we go to the study tables at the Younkin Center, where there are computers available and reference materials as well. Obviously, two hours at the Center are not enough to complete all their work, so they work a lot on their own.”

    Gadowsky says that the long trip — by plane from Fairbanks to Seattle, Seattle to Cincinnati, and Cincinnati to Columbus, then by bus north to Bowling Green and back — is a chance for players to “catch up on their rest.”

    The second-year coach says that his players are thoroughly enjoying their trip. They’ve paid for ice time at the OSU Rink, so they practicing an hour each day.

    “At times, sure you’d like a little more ice time, but that too can be a plus. You go out there and work very hard for a short period of time,” says Gadowsky.

    But it isn’t all studying and practice for the Nanooks. There’s time for a little fun, too, like watching the Columbus Blue Jackets beat the Los Angeles Kings at Nationwide Arena on Nov. 1, and the game of Ultimate Frisbee the team played in a field on the way back to the hotel after a practice early in the week.

    The NHL game was a first for many of his players, says Gadowsky.

    Gadowsky says his players are “responsible, mature people,” and he trusts them when they venture outside of the hotel by themselves to do some limited exploring.

    I can tell you that the players impressed me when I met them at a practice. I mean, I met them, literally. Gadowsky brought me onto the ice and introduced me to the team, and as each player left, he shook my hand and introduced himself.

    These players were personable, down-to-earth, and very polite. I can well believe that they’re also responsible and mature.

    And they know the right things to say, too. Well, at least Chad Hamilton does. When I asked one of my favorite CCHA bruisers what he liked about being in Columbus, he put his arm around me and said, “The beautiful women, of course.”

    Ganga Watch

    Ohio State’s Nick Ganga had a scary moment in the Buckeyes’ 2-0 loss to Maine last Saturday. He and a Black Bear went into the Maine net together, and Ganga came pretty darned close to taking a penalty.

    Instead, the OSU junior again spent no time in lockdown. Through five games, he still has two penalties for four minutes, total. He had no points against Maine.

    Ganga has vowed limit his time in the box to 50 or fewer minutes this season, which would be a reduction of over half. He now has 29 games and 46 minutes left.

    Your Weekly Gazette

    Alaska-Fairbanks senior Pat Hallett is on course to break the single-season record for penalty minutes by a forward. Hallett, averaging 5.2 minutes per game, needs to average just 4.3 per contest to earn that particular title. Bad-boy Hallett has already drawn two 10-minute misconducts this season. The Nanooks (0-4-2, 0-2-2 CCHA) are in Columbus for two this weekend.

    Ryan Fultz had a point in four of Bowling Green’s five goals against Alaska Fairbanks Oct. 27-28, and goaltender Tyler Masters saved 52 of 55 Nanook shots on goal (.945 SV%) while allowing only three power-play goals in 125 minutes. BG (1-4-1, 1-2-1 CCHA) travels to Marquette this weekend.

    My beloved Defenders of the Realm, the Ferris State Bulldogs, are called upon to defend our borders once more. This week, the winless Bulldogs (0-4-2, 0-3-1 CCHA) host the Colgate Red Raiders (1-1-2, 0-0-0 ECAC). The two teams split last season in Colgate (Dec. 10-11), with Colgate taking the first game 4-1, and Ferris picking up the second game 3-2. Ferris State is 7-4-0 against ECAC teams since 1990, and 16-3-1 (.825) in nonconference home games dating back to 1990.

    The Lakers (3-4-0, 0-2-0 CCHA) have given up 13 power-play goals in their last four games, after not allowing a single one in the first 179 minutes of the 2000-01 season. In the past four games, Lake State’s penalty killing unit is effective 60.6% of the time. And from the this-has-nothing-to-do-with-that file, the Lakers are the tallest team in the CCHA, with an average height of 6’1″.

    The Miami RedHawks’ newest defender is a forward in disguise. Ernie Hartlieb has been asked to fill in on the blue line as Miami’s defense has thinned because of injuries. Senior defensemen Clarke Wolford had reconstructive shoulder surgery before the start of the season and is expected to be out until January, while rookie defender A.J. Kratofil suffered a broken collarbone against Clarkson and will miss the next five to seven weeks. Miami (1-4-1, 0-2-0 CCHA) looks for its first conference win at home against Notre Dame this weekend.

    Michigan sophomore Mike Cammalleri’s season-opening, seven-game scoring streak was snapped Saturday night in the Wolverines’ (6-0-2, 4-0-0 CCHA) 6-2 win over Miami. Cammalleri had two goals and nine assists in those seven games. And when L.J. Scarpace picked up that win, he was the first Michigan netminder since Dec. 29, 1999 other than Josh Blackburn to receive a decision in a game. Blackburn injured his shoulder and is questionable for the Michigan-Michigan State game.

    With their two wins over Notre Dame, the Spartans are now 18-17-5 all-time against the Irish in South Bend. Michigan State (4-1-1, 3-1-0 CCHA) now has a winning road record against every CCHA opponent except for Michigan (41-62-1) and Northern Michigan (3-4-1).

    All five Maverick rookies who played last weekend registered their first collegiate points against Ferris State. Andrew Wong had two goals and an assist. Aaron Smith and Scott Turner each had their first goals on Saturday, and defenseman Mike Gabinet had an assist in that contest. Goaltender Dan Ellis had two assists in Friday’s contest. For the Mavericks, senior Allan Carr is out indefinitely with a concussion, and Josh Lampman (wrist) and Joe Yurecko (mononucleosis) are probable for this weekend’s games. UNO (4-1-2, 2-1-1 CCHA) travels to Lake State this weekend.

    With the Wildcats’ 7-1 win at Minnesota-Duluth Oct. 27, head coach Rick Comley recorded his 556th career victory to grab sole possession of seventh place on college hockey’s all-time win list, passing Michigan Tech’s John MacInnes. Northern’s sweep of Minnesota-Duluth marked the first time in school history that the ‘Cats took back-to-back games from UMD on the road. Northern Michigan (4-1-2, 2-1-1 CCHA) is 7-20-2 all-time in Duluth.

    Ernie Hartlieb isn’t the only versatile player in the CCHA. Senior Notre Dame forward Jay Kopischke played on the blue line for the Irish in Notre Dame’s two losses to Michigan State Oct. 26-27. Kopischke, who had played forward for all of his previous 106 collegiate games, was even on the weekend and registered an assist. The Irish (2-5-1, 0-2-0 CCHA) are injured and ill on the blue side of things.

    Ohio State (3-2-0, 1-1-0 CCHA) continues to play disciplined hockey. The Buckeyes are averaging just 12.4 penalty minutes per game. That doesn’t give their penalty killing unit a lot of time on the ice, which is almost a shame; the Buckeye PK is the best in the nation, effective 96% of the time.

    It’s not all offense for Western Michigan (4-1-1, 3-0-1 CCHA). In the Broncos’ wins against the Lakers Oct. 27-28, goaltender Jeff Reynaert lowered his goals-against average from 4.28 to 3.66 by stopping 64 of 69 Laker shots (.928 SV%).

  • SUNYAC Newsletter: Nov. 2, 2000

    Potsdam Wins Own Tourney, Oswego Dominates, Brockport Wins Thriller; Conference Play Begins This Weekend

    Potsdam State took both games in its own tournament, beating Cortland State, 5-3, and Neumann, 10-1. Cortland defeated Neumann, 8-1, but lost later in the week to Hobart, 4-2.

    Meanwhile, both Buffalo State and Fredonia State won two games in the All Sport Invitational. Oswego State scored a huge win over Elmira, 7-3, and Brockport State notched a come-from-behind overtime win against Hobart, 6-5, only to lose to RIT, 10-1. Geneseo State did the opposite, first losing to RIT, 8-4, before defeating Hobart, 3-1. Finally, Plattsburgh State, amidst hazing allegations and suspended players, opened the season with a 7-2 exhibition win over Humber College.

    Previous Week’s Results

     10/24/00  Findlay - 5, Fredonia - 1
    10/27/00 RIT - 8, Geneseo - 4 Chase Tournament
    10/27/00 Brockport - 6, Hobart - 5 (OT) Chase Tournament
    10/27/00 Buffalo State - 6, Lawrence - 2 All Sports Invitational
    10/27/00 Fredonia - 3, Johnson and Wales - 1 All Sports Invitational
    10/27/00 Potsdam - 5, Cortland - 3 Pepsi Invitational

    10/28/00 RIT - 10, Brockport - 1 Chase Tournament
    10/28/00 Geneseo - 3, Hobart - 1 Chase Tournament
    10/28/00 Fredonia - 8, Lawrence - 0 All Sports Invitational
    10/28/00 Buffalo State - 7, Johnson and Wales - 5 All Sports Invitational
    10/28/00 Cortland - 8, Neumann - 1 Pepsi Invitational
    10/28/00 Oswego - 7, Elmira - 3
    10/28/00 Plattsburgh - 7, Humber College - 2 Exhibition

    10/29/00 Potsdam - 10, Newmann - 1 Pepsi Invitational
    10/31/00 Hobart - 4, Cortland - 2

    UPCOMING GAMES THIS WEEK

    11/03/2000 Oswego at Brockport SU 7:00 ET
    11/03/2000 Cortland at Geneseo SU 7:00 ET
    11/03/2000 Plattsburgh at Fredonia SU 7:00 ET
    11/03/2000 Potsdam at Buffalo State SU 7:00 ET

    11/04/2000 Cortland at Brockport SU 7:00 ET
    11/04/2000 Oswego at Geneseo SU 2:00 ET
    11/04/2000 Potsdam at Fredonia SU 7:00 ET
    11/04/2000 Plattsburgh at Buffalo State SU 7:00 ET

    Team-by-Team Report

    PLATTSBURGH — The Cardinals opened their 2000-01 campaign under a cloud of hazing allegations, hosting Humber College in an exhibition game. With various players forced to sit this game out, Plattsburgh State’s depth was tested, but Brendon Hodge notched a hat trick, Guy Come scored twice, and Tyler Keenan and Jeff Hopkins got single tallies. Plattsburgh outshot Humber 48-21 as Niklas Sundberg played most of the game in goal with Frank Barker getting some action in the final 10 minutes. Plattsburgh continues to look forward as they travel to western New York to open conference play at Fredonia and Buffalo State.

    POTSDAM — The Bears started the season with their traditional Pepsi Invitational. This time only two teams visited the North Country, so a round -robin format was used. Potsdam State opened up with a 5-3 victory over Cortland State as the Bears jumped out to a 3-0 lead on goals by Mike Snow, Erick Curtis, and Joe Wlodarczyk, the latter two on a power play. After Cortland cut the lead to one, Anthony Greer scored a third-period goal only to be quickly followed by another Cortland goal. Wlodarczyk finally put the game away with his second of the night, an empty-netter, as Todd Manley made 33 saves. Two nights later, the Bears crushed Neumann, 10-1, plastering the net with 56 shots and keeping the tournament trophy at home. Wlodarczyk scored twice again, and Dave Weagle also got a pair. Ryan Venturelli and Matt O’Connor split duties in net. Potsdam hits the road to start SUNYAC play with games at Buffalo State and Fredonia.

    OSWEGO — The Great Lakers had one game this past week, but it was a huge nonconference contest as the Elmira Soaring Eagles came into town. Oswego State used size to its advantage, outmuscling the smaller Elmira squad. It paid off in the second period as the Eagles scored four times to break open a 2-1 game. Seven different Lakers scored: Tim Thomas, Chris DiCarlo, Nate Elliott, John Hirliman, Kevin Klesspies, Jim Blosser, and Joe Pecoraro. Joe Lofberg made 31 saves for the win. Oswego will be looking to maintain the momentum in-conference at Brockport and Geneseo.

    CORTLAND — The Red Dragons traveled to Potsdam for the Pepsi Invitational to start their season off, by first facing the host team. Cortland State lost to Potsdam, 5-3. After spotting the Bears a 3-0 lead, Scott Louis scored a shorthanded goal then Steve Aiello scored early in the third period to cut the lead to one. Potsdam came right back and scored, but Jeff Olsen kept the game close once again. Cortland couldn’t tie the game up relinquishing an empty netter. John Larnerd and Mark Paine saw action in net. The next night, Cortland took their frustrations out on Newmann in an 8-1 win. Shawn Ruddy scored twice while six other Cortland players got a single goal. Mark Paine made 23 saves for the win. Cortland traveled again, this time to Hobart where they lost to the Statesmen, 4-2. Once again, the Red Dragons spotted the opposition with a lead, this time 2-0, before Greg Menchen scored. After Hobart scored again, Ruddy cut the lead to one only to see Hobart get the final goal. Larnerd made 35 saves in the loss. Cortland stays on the road playing at Geneseo and Brockport.

    GENESEO — The Ice Knights hosted the first night of the Chase Tournament facing off against RIT. Geneseo State’s Pat McKendry scored first, but that only seemed to wake RIT up as the Tigers got the next seven goals in the game. Bryan Bowser finally stopped the bleeding with back to back goals in the third. After RIT scored a shorthanded goal, Jon Schnepf got the final tally in the last minute. Kevin Koury and Jeff Phelps both played goal. The next night the tournament continued in Brockport, and Geneseo took third place defeating Hobart, 3-1. The Ice Knights scored all three goals in the second period. The scorers were McKendry, David Bagley, and Bowser. That lead held up despite a Hobart goal 15 seconds into the third period. Phelps got the win with 30 saves. Geneseo goes back home to host Cortland and Oswego.

    FREDONIA — After losing to Findlay 5-1 early in the week, Fredonia State got back on track with impressive wins against Johnson and Wales, 3-1, and Lawrence, 8-0. In the Findlay game, Dan Showalter got the lone Blue Devil goal as Fredonia could not stay with a program moving up to Division I. Fredonia then headed to Buffalo State for the All Sports Invitational for two predetermined games. Ari Aberman scored two power play goals in the first period, and Erik Dolesh added a shorthander in the second. A late third period goal by Johnson and Wales was not enough to put a scare in the Blue Devils. Will Hamele made 23 saves for the win. Fredonia had it even easier the next night getting off 53 shots against Lawrence in the shutout win. Dolesh, Tim Pulley, and Dave Mugavero each got a pair of goals. Lionel Crump and Mike Mason got one apiece. Jamie Kosecki blanked Lawrence with 18 saves. Fredonia has a tough opening weekend of conference play as they face Plattsburgh and Potsdam at home.

    BROCKPORT — Brockport State hosted the second night of the Chase Tournament, but first they had to travel to Geneseo to face Hobart in the opening game. The Golden Eagles staged a thrilling comeback as they initially found themselves down 4-0 after the first period thanks to three power play goals and one shorthander. Brockport started their comeback with two power play goals by Adam Prescott and Christian Christensen. Dave Braunstein cut the lead to one before the second intermission. After Brockport fell behind by two goals early in the third, two more power plays by Prescott and Nick Smyth knotted the game. Being a tournament game, the overtime went beyond the normal five minutes which was a good thing for the Golden Eagles as Brandon Marineau got the game winner at 13:23 of the extra stanza. Back home in the championship game, Brockport faced RIT. Brockport scored first on a goal by Nate VanKouwenberg, but that was the only highlight of the game for them as RIT scored the next ten goals for a 10-1 victory over the host team. Brockport stays home to face Oswego and Cortland.

    BUFFALO STATE — The Bengals opened the season by hosting the All Sports Invitational. The first game pitted them against Lawrence, and Buffalo State came away with a 6-2 victory. After letting up the first goal, Joe Urbanik scored twice. Lawrence tied it up before the Bengals scored four unanswered third period goals. Urbanik got his hat trick, and Todd Nowicki, Rocky Reeves, and Jad Ramsay rounded out the scoring. Harley Pottratz made 24 saves for the win. The next night saw a wild affair as Buffalo State and Johnson and Wales traded groups of goals throughout the game. The Bengals eventually came away with a 7-5 win. Urbanik tallied two more times. Trever Harrington also got two goals with single tallies coming from Pat McDevitt, Reeves, and Stephen Troup. Pottratz again played the whole game in net making 31 saves. Buffalo State hosts Potsdam and Plattsburgh this weekend.

    Game Of The Week

    Just how much are the off-ice affairs affecting Plattsburgh? We’ll find out for sure in their first SUNYAC game as they face Fredonia. Though Fredonia is not as strong as in their glory days, they always get up against the Cardinals, so this will be a good test for both teams.

    MAAC Column: Nov. 2, 2000

    Lakers’ Performance One for the Books

    When a league is as young as the MAAC hockey conference, it’s not hard to see records broken often. But last weekend, the Mercyhurst College Lakers had an offensive night to remember, lighting the lamp twelve times en route to the most lopsided win in league history, a 12-0 thrashing of Bentley College.

    Besides being the largest margin of victory in any MAAC game, it also surpasses Quinnipiac and Iona’s mark for most goals in a regular-season game. Both schools had scored 11 goals in previous years against Fairfield. Quinnipiac still holds the record for most goals in a MAAC game, 13, when they routed Farifeild, 13-2, in a first-round playoff games two years ago.

    Lakers head coach Rick Gotkin obviously was pleased to see such an offensive explosion, but cautions that he still doesn’t believe his team is an offensive powerhouse.

    “Any time you can get four points in two games, it’s always a good weekend,” said Gotkin. “But it’s tough to judge for us. We thought we played pretty well, but we don’t expect to score that many goals every time out.”

    Mercyhurst was able to use three goaltenders in the game, resting top goaltender Peter Aubry. Still, even his backup staff was able to shut down Bentley and preserve an impressive shutout streak against the Falcons.

    The shutout streak is a bit of an odd statistic. These two schools, both of which entered the MAAC last season in the league’s second year, faced each other on opening night a year ago. That evening, Bentley jumped out to a 4-0 lead early in the second period. But Mercyhurst, as they did many times last season, stormed back and won the game by a final of 6-4.

    Since Bentley scored that fourth goal at the beginning of the second period a year ago, the Lakers have not allowed a single goal to the Falcons. That includes last weekend’s 12-0 shutout and two blankings last January, 5-0 and 8-0. Putting all of that together, the Lakers have not allowed a goal to Bentley in 219:14 — quite an impressive stat.

    But stats like that one are not what concerns Gotkin. He’s much more interested in talking about the balance he is seeing, or the excellent play of his younger players.

    “Honestly, I think the best thing for us so far is that we’ve used 18 or 19 guys both nights,” said Gotkin. “The scoring has been spread around. Against Holy Cross (a 6-2 victory) we had six guys score goals, and I think 14 guys had points against Bentley.”

    Actually, it was 15, Rick, but who’s counting. Regardless, the balance is music to his ears.

    “I think if you want to be successful in our league you have to have depth,” Gotkin continued. “I think the teams that can come at you with four lines all game are the ones that are going to be win night in and night out. Not all the teams can and that’s the difference.”

    Though most of the swamis out there picked Mercyhurst near the top of the league, everyone, even Gotkin himself, questioned whether they Lakers could be successful with a lineup that consists of eight freshmen meant to replace seven graduated seniors. Pleasantly for Gotkin, the freshmen have surprised.

    “The freshmen have been awesome,” said Gotkin. “We think every recruiting class gets better, and this one is no exception.

    “But our veterans need to get a lot of credit as well. They’ve done a good job at making sure the rookies fit in.

    “It’s a long year,” reminds Gotkin. “It’s great to come out of the gate like we did. But we’ll be tested every weekend.”

    Weekly Awards

    ITECH MAAC Player of the Week:
    Eric Ellis, Sr. F, Mercyhurst

    Ellis scored the first goal of the game and tallied two assists in a 6-2 win over Holy Cross on Friday night at the Mercyhurst Ice Center. In the 12-0 win over Bentley on Saturday night, he scored a goal and tallied four assists. Ellis assisted on both game-winning goals and recorded eight points (2G, 6A) over the weekend as the Lakers won their first two MAAC games.

    ITECH MAAC Goalie of the Week:
    Chance Thede, Sr. G, American International

    Thede, the Yellow Jackets’ all-time saves leader, recorded 41 saves in a 3-0 shutout victory over Fairfield on Friday night in helping AIC win its first game of the season. The shutout was the second of his career. On Saturday night, Thede posted 13 saves in a relief appearance in the loss to Quinnipiac.

    ITECH MAAC Rookie of the Week:
    Chad Nordhagen, Fr. F, Iona

    Nordhagen scored the only goal of the game at the 19:46 mark of the second period to lead the Gaels to a 1-0 victory over CHA opponent Wayne State on Friday night. The goal was the second of his young career and his first game-winner.

    Iona Trapped by Wayne State

    Maybe it doesn’t take a coach in the MAAC to figure out how to slow down the high-scoring offense of Iona. Maybe it just takes a coaching icon like Wayne State’s Bill Wilkinson.

    It was Wilkinson who last week was able to hold the Iona offense to just four goals in 120 minutes of hockey. His secret — something that definitely surprised Iona coach Frank Bretti.

    “Wayne State came in and used a trap — which was kind of interesting for us,” said Bretti. “We were surprised by it. I’d expect them to use that against a powerhouse offense, but I wouldn’t think they’d feel the need to us it against us.

    “It did make things kind of fun, though,” Bretti added. “The entire weekend was a chess match. We had to make a lot of adjustments throughout the weekend, which, as a coach, was interesting to see how players react and really was kind of fun.”

    Even with Wayne State’s successful trap, the Warriors were close to leaving New Rochelle, N.Y., without anything to show.

    Thanks to great goaltending by Iona’s Mike Fraser, one goal was too many for Wayne State to allow on Friday, as Fraser blanked the Warriors en route to a 1-0 victory. And Saturday night, the Iona offense came into the game flying, scoring twice early and making the sweep look possible.

    But three unanswered goals by Wayne State gave the Warriros the edge in the third, before Iona rallied to tie the game at three. Bretti admitted that he thought the game was heading to an extra frame when the Warriors stunned the packed house at New Roc City.

    “Saturday, we thought we were going into overtime,” Bretti said. “The game-winning goal happened so quick. We were breaking out of the zone on the weak side, but their forechecker saw us coming. He was able to intercept our winger, got the puck and fired it to the slot. They had a guy going to the net and bang! Just like that, it was in.”

    Bretti, though, was quite happy with the weekend outcome

    “We played pretty well on the weekend,” said Bretti. “Like I said, it was a fun weekend to coach and play.

    “We got to handle a lot of things we had worked on. For example, the pulled goalie situation — they pulled the goaltender on Friday and we’d worked on that all week in practice.”

    With two CHA games behind them, Iona has to battle twice more this weekend against a CHA team: Alabama-Huntsville.

    “Huntsville has won three games thus far against teams in the four major conferences,” Bretti said. “That alone says a little about what we’re facing this weekend. Huntsville will be the toughest opponent we’ve faced to date.

    “Huntsville’s an exciting atmosphere to play in. It could be a little bit of a difficult environment and that will be good for us.”

    Hitting the Road: Full Speed Ahead

    There was one consensus about the MAAC before this season started, and that was the fact that Quinnipiac University, the two-time defending regular-season champion, was a clear preseason favorite.

    And with six games played in the Braves’ season, things look right on course.

    “We’re pretty much on track so far,” said head coach Rand Pecknold of his Braves, who have compiled a 5-0-1 record thus far. “There’ve been a lot of positives early in the year. We played Iona two games and took three [of four] points from them, and they’re very good this year. And we’ve been two tough clubs in Army and Air Force. So we’re pretty happy at this point.”

    But with every positive, comes a negative, at least in Quinnipiac’s case.

    “Injuries have hit us hard, though,” said Pecknold. His Braves, who last season lost top forward Chad Poliquin for the season early on, this year have lost the services of Dan Ennis.

    Ennis, a junior defenseman who was fifth on the team in scoring with 29 points (five goals, 24 assists) is one of the top defensemen in the league.

    Pecknold, though, can’t blame injuries on anything besides luck.

    “A lot of this is just bad luck. My first few years [at Quinnipiac] we didn’t have many injuries. But the last two season’s we’ve had a lot of them. But good teams deal with adversity, and we’ll deal with it. We’re deeper this year than in year’s past, so hopefully that will help.”

    And help is what the Braves will need, as they leave the comforts of home and travel North — way North — to play Clarkson and St. Lawrence this weekend.

    “We’re definitely excited to go up North and play two teams of the high caliber of St. Lawrence or Clarkson,” Pecknold said. “They’re both not only good this year, but have been powerhouse teams in the ECAC for the last 10-15 years.”

    Pecknold realizes that Quinnipiac may be the ambassador for the MAAC in the win column against teams like St. Lawrence and Clarkson. To date, no MAAC team has beat a team from one of the “Big Four” conferences, something that makes outsiders doubt the ability of the league in relation to the national picture.

    “It’s important that we go up and play well. It’s a big weekend for us and the league,” said Pecknold. “We have to deal with some adversity. But you have to move on.”

    Adversity certainly will be a factor, but on a more positive side, the Braves have seen some impressive performances to date. The top three scorers in the MAAC are all from Quinnipiac — Chris Cerrella (10 points), Shawn Mansoff and Ryan Olsen (nine points each). On top of that, both goaltenders, senior J.C. Wells and rookie Justin Eddy, have impressed. Pecknold notes that Eddy, particularly, has been a surprise.

    “Justin surprised us a little. We thought it would take him a month or two to play at the top of his game,” noted Pecknold. “But all three starts he’s been fantastic. I don’t want to downplay it, we knew he’d be good. But we thought it would take a little longer to mature and get used to the college game.”

    Eddy’s numbers are near the top of the league. He ranks first is win percentage (1.000, 3-0-0), third in goals against average (1.33) and fourth in save percentage (.943).

    But all of those units — goaltending, scoring and defense — will have to work together this weekend for the Braves to pull off the upset

    “We’re just excited to go up and play,” said Pecknold.

    And that pretty much sums it up.

    Braves’ Streak Alive After a Year

    Quinnipiac’s wins last weekend extended a very impressive regular-season unbeaten streak for the Braves to 26 games. It was one year ago this weekend that the Braves last lost a regular-season contest, when they dropped a 6-4 decision to Mercyhurst.

    Over the 12 months, Quinnipiac has compiled a 23-0-3 record in regular-season conference games. Outside of conference play, Quinnipiac has only lost three games on that stretch — to Maine, Clarkson, and MAAC rival Iona in last year’s conference tournament.

    Ironically, Iona has accounted for three Quinnipiac blemishes over the stretch. Besides the Braves’ loss to Iona in last year’s conference tournament, Quinnipiac tied the Gaels twice, once in the middle of last season and once to open this year.

    Around the League

    AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL
    The Yellow Jackets recorded their first victory of the season with a 3-0 shutout of Fairfield on Friday night. AIC lost to Quinnipiac 10-3 on Saturday… The Yellow Jackets have two games this weekend against Mercyhurst. They face off against the Lakers at 7:30 on Friday and Saturday night… Junior forward Olivier Gagnon provided the bulk of the scoring with his first two goals of the season, including the game-winner against the Stags… Gagnon netted two more goals Saturday afternoon in the loss to first-place Quinnipiac… The Yellow Jackets lost all three games against Mercyhurst last season.

    ARMY
    The Black Knights lost a couple of tough games over the weekend. They were defeated by first place Quinnipiac 4-1 on Friday night and 3-1 to 12th ranked Rensselaer on Saturday… Army’s next games are November 10th at Bentley and November 11th at Holy Cross… Goalie Scott Hamilton totaled 72 saves in Army’s two games, including a season-high 39 in a terrific performance against RPI on Saturday. He kept the Black Knights in the game with a 21-save second period… Coming into this season Hamilton had never started more than three consecutive games in his career. He has started all five this season…Senior K.C. Finnegan scored Army’s lone goal of the weekend. Finnegan’s first tally of the season tied Quinnipiac 1-1 late in the second period… The Black Knights are two-thirds of the way through a school-record six-game road trip… Junior Joe Carpenter extended his games played streak to 63 games. He has not missed a game in his career.

    BENTLEY
    The Falcons played to a 2-2 tie against Canisius on Friday and were routed by Mercyhurst 12-0 on Saturday… Bentley has two home games this weekend. They host defending MAAC Champion Connecticut at 7:30 on Friday and Holy Cross at 7:30 on Saturday… Junior defenseman Steve Tobio tallied two assists which helped Bentley earn its first point in a 2-2 tie against Canisius on Friday night… Freshman Mike Mulligan scored the game-tying goal against Canisius. Mulligan scored on the rebound of his own shot out front, giving Bentley a 2-0 lead… Senior goalie Ray DeVincent made 52 stops for Bentley as the Falcons salvaged a 2-2 tie with Canisius on Friday.

    CANISIUS
    The Ice Griffs tied Bentley 2-2 on Friday night and beat Holy Cross 6-1 on Saturday night… Canisius has two road games this weekend. They have a 7:00 tilt Friday night at Holy Cross and take on Connecticut at 6:00 Saturday night… Junior forward David Deeves sparked the Ice Griffs in both games this weekend, scoring the game-tying goal late in the third period against Bentley and assisting on two goals in Canisius’ 6-1 victory over Holy Cross… Marc Bouffard scored two goals on the weekend and Deeves notched three points on a goal and two assists… Junior goalie Sean Weaver recorded 52 saves over the two games and a 1.44 goals against average over the weekend posting a 1-0-1 record in MAAC play.

    CONNECTICUT
    The Huskies went 0-1-1 in MAAC play this weekend tying Sacred Heart 1-1 on Friday and losing to the Pioneers 5-1 on Saturday… Connecticut’s only game this weekend is a matchup on the road against Bentley at 7:30 Friday night… Friday night’s game marked the home opener for the Huskies and the 2000 MAAC Championship banner was unveiled before the start of the game… Senior Michael Goldkind netted the first goal of the game on a power play with assists from senior Ciro Longobardi and freshman Eric Nelson … On Saturday, Goldkind scored the only Huskie goal on a power play opportunity that tied the score at one… Freshman goalie Artie Imbriano stopped 17 shots on Friday night and in his second start on Saturday, he saved 26 shots.

    FAIRFIELD
    The Stags were shutout 3-0 by American International on Friday night in their only action over the weekend… Fairfield has three games this week. On Thursday, they travel to Ann Arbor, MI were they will play the U.S. Under-18 team at 7:00. They will stay in Michigan and play two games against CHA member Wayne State. These games are at 7:05 Friday and Saturday night… The Stags put 41 shots on AIC goaltender Chance Thede but could not come up with a tally. It marked the most shots posted by a Fairfield team since January 8th of last year when the Stags tied the Falcons of Bentley College 4-4. .The Stags dressed 20 players Friday night vs. AIC and 18 were freshman or sophomores and only 2 were juniors… Freshman Bill Whitfield was the most recent of the three Stag goaltenders to get the start against AIC. In 59:02 minutes, Whitfield stopped 22 shots and allowed 2 goals. His save percentage is .917 while his goals against average stands at 2.03. His record is 0-1-0.

    HOLY CROSS
    The Crusaders lost to Mercyhurst 6-2 on Friday night and 6-1 to Canisius on Saturday… Holy Cross hosts the Ice Griffs on Friday night at 7:00 and go on the road to face off against Bentley at 7:30 Saturday night… Sophomore Brandon Doria and junior Pat Rissmiller have continued their fine play from the end of last season when they were the top two scorers for the Crusaders. So far this season, they are the only two goal scorers on the team. Rissmiller leads the team with four points (2G, 2A) and Doria is second with three points (2G, 1A)… Junior Derek Cunha made his second start for the Crusaders and stopped 34 shots in the loss to Mercyhurst… Freshmen goaltenders Brad Holzwart and Rick Massey played their first regular season games against Canisius. Holzwart started making 15 saves over the first two periods while Massey made 20 saves in the third period… Freshman Jeff Dams recorded his first collegiate point, assisting on Doria’s power play goal against Canisius.

    IONA
    Iona travels to Alabama to play two games against CHA opponent Alabama-Huntsville. Both Friday and Saturday night games are at 8:00… Sophomore forward John Gilbert had two goals for Iona in Saturday’s 4-3 loss to Wayne State. Gilbert has a team leading four goals and five points while Nathan Lutz also has five points on the season with most coming in the assist category… Sophomore goaltender Mike Fraser recorded his third career shutout, making 31 saves in Iona’s 1-0 win over Wayne State… Forward Chad Nordhagen, the ITECH MAAC Rookie of the Week, provided the only offense of the game, scoring his second collegiate goal and first game-winner, in the 1-0 win Friday night. For the season, Nordhagen has 2 goals and 0 assists.

    MERCYHURST
    Mercyhurst hosts American International on Friday and Saturday night. Both games commence at 7:30… Mercyhurst never trailed in the two games this weekend, en route to an 18-2 scoring margin and a 2-0 record… Senior Eric Ellis, the ITECH MAAC Player of the Week, assisted on both game-winning goals and tallied eight points (2 goals, 6 assists) in the two games over the weekend… The hat trick by junior Louis Goulet against Bentley was the third of his career.

    QUINNIPIAC
    Quinnipiac goes on the road and into the ECAC to play its next two games. On Friday night at 7:00, they faceoff against St. Lawrence and on Saturday night at 7:00, they battle with Clarkson… Senior Shawn Mansoff had a great weekend where he totaled six points on three goals and three assists. For the season, he is tied for the team lead with Chris Cerrella with 10 points (5 goals, 5 assists)… Freshman Justin Eddy and senior J.C. Wells have been solid in net so far this season. Eddy is 3-0 with a 1.33 GAA and a .943 save percentage. Wells is 2-0-1 with a 2.92 GAA and a .868 save percentage… After six games, 14 different players have scored at least one goal for the Braves… Quinnipiac saw its streak of 15 consecutive penalty kills come to an end against AIC on Saturday…The Braves are averaging 5.17 goals per game and are allowing just 2.17 goals per game.

    SACRED HEART
    Sacred Heart is on the road for its only game this week. They faceoff against ECAC opponent and head coach Shaun Hannah’s alma mater, Cornell at 7:00 Saturday night… Junior forward Chris Mokos had a goal and three assists in the 5-1 victory over the Huskies. He has four points on the year and is tied for the team lead… Freshman forward Mike Reagan tallied two goals in the win on Saturday night. For the season, he has four goals including three on the power play… Sophomore goalie Eddy Ferhi made 27 saves on Friday night to preserve a 1-1 tie with Connecticut.

    St. Thomas Tops MIAC Poll

    St. Thomas, with five first-place votes, came out on top of the MIAC coaches poll in a vote taken during league meetings Monday at Augsburg College.

    Each coach ranked all teams from first to ninth. Points were awarded on a 1-to-9 basis, with the lower total going to the team ranked first.

    Final Results

    1. St. Thomas (5)          14
    2. Concordia-Moorhead (2) 20
    3. Augsburg (1) 28
    4. St. John's (1) 31
    5. St. Olaf 47
    6. Bethel 52
    7. St. Mary's 66
    8. Gustavus 67
    9. Hamline 80

    The Homecoming

    “I feel blessed that I’ve been hit with this.”

    Even the fashionably late were at their seats on time. A special buzz was in the air. A local radio station had distributed thousands of signs bearing the words “WELCOME BACK COACH” and fans were waving them throughout Alfond Arena.

    It was Homecoming Weekend at the University of Maine, but this was a homecoming to beat all homecomings. Coach Shawn Walsh, who had missed the first four games of the season while undergoing a second 20-day cycle of immunotherapy treatments for kidney cancer, was miraculously returning to the Maine bench just six days after his last dose of Interleukin-2.

    The Alfond horn sounded, but was immediately drowned out by the roar of the fans, eager to show support, admiration and appreciation for their hero. Shawn Walsh was where he wanted to be, where his players wanted him to be and where the fans wanted him to be: in his familiar position behind the Black Bear bench.

    NCAA protocol dictated the introductions of the visiting Ohio State University starters and coach John Markell. The Maine-iaks in the balcony chanted, as is their wont, “Big deal! So what! Boring!”

    As the introductions turned to the Maine starters, the band cranked it up and the fans cheered.

    Then it was time.

    Some couldn’t even hear public address announcer Jim Baines as the volume grew, but that was of little consequence. Every last person in the house knew the name of Shawn Walsh. He needed no introduction. On their feet cheering, the Alfond Arena faithful welcomed him back in a thunderously enthusiastic, extended appreciation.

    “I was grateful for that reception,” said Walsh after the game. “It was good to be back. The reception by the fans was fantastic.

    “But it was good to get through that and have it be just hockey again.”

    Having it “just be hockey again” is what Walsh has wanted since being diagnosed with cancer in late June. Given his druthers, he’d sooner don the skates and run a two-hour practice like he did just four days after his last treatment than elaborate on the nasty side effects of Interleukin-2.

    “Running practice was invigorating,” he said. “I’m glad my doctors gave me the approval to go ahead so I can enjoy what I enjoy doing in life. It’s just so wonderful to be back.

    “Intrinsically I think I feel better than I did when we won the national championship just because the therapy is over and I don’t have to go through that again. I’m back and coaching.

    “To have gone through the last four months is a mountain that is over with. I don’t want to look back on it too much, other than to appreciate how thankful I am of my wife and her family and Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn, who hosted both of us [in California during the treatments]. They opened up themselves unselfishly and their family to us for almost a two and a half- or three-month period.”

    During that time, Walsh received immunotherapy treatments at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center designed to shock his immune system into fighting the tumors. The first 20-day sequence ran through mid-September. Following a few weeks of recuperation — and coaching — back in Maine, he then began the second, and final, 20 days on Oct. 2. He flew home on Oct. 23, two days after his last dose.

    “It was a lot harder [this time],” he said. “I was told it might be, but then I was told that because I was used to it, it might be easier.” Walsh laughed and added, “But I think that may have been doctors making sure you show up.

    “Any part of your system that could go wrong, probably would go wrong. From your digestive system to your urinary system to every system. Immunotherapy is a tough thing to go through, but if you’ve got loved ones who support you, you can get through it.

    “Once you get rolling on it, you just continue on with it. You just deal with it. It’s part of your life. You don’t look back.”

    While he was away, assistant coach Gene Reilly ran the team, earning Walsh’s applause for how well everything was kept on track. The Black Bears opened against then number one ranked North Dakota, getting only a loss and a tie for that weekend despite outshooting the Fighting Sioux, 91-58. One week later, Maine dispatched the U.S. Development Team in an exhibition game and then thumped St. Lawrence, a nationally ranked team that had been picked to finish first in the ECAC, 8-2.

    “Maybe the best tonic when I got out of the hospital and it was finally over was when the team phoned me at Kurt’s house and sang the school’s fight song to me after we pounded St. Lawrence,” said Walsh. “That was the best tonic I could have had. It meant a lot to me emotionally.

    “It helped how well we played. I was sitting on Kurt’s couch on Saturday afternoon, L.A. time, just listening to the game. When we got up to 5-1, I was just tickled, thinking, we’ve got it going pretty good right now.

    “Other than my family, that’s what I love to do. That’s what I bleed, so to speak. To see the team perform so well makes you feel really good.”

    An additional source of encouragement — surprising to many Hockey East observers — has come from Boston University coach Jack Parker. BU and Maine have been fierce rivals over the past decade and the two coaches are as fiery competitors as they come. The two, however, have shared laughs over such ironies as Walsh getting earlier medical care at a BU school.

    “Jack has really been a good friend throughout this,” said Walsh. “He’s probably called more than any other coach in the country. It’s kind of funny because he’s probably the guy I’ve gone against the hardest. But it’s one of the things you learn to appreciate when you go through this.”

    Walsh flew back to Maine on Monday, Oct. 23, his immunotherapy treatments complete. In three to four weeks, his doctors will take new CAT scans and see if the cancer in is remission.

    “The way it works with kidney cancer is that they will not consider my treatment successful unless the tumors have shrunk by at least 50 percent,” said Walsh. “But the encouraging sign that we’ve seen is that I had had a significant amount of fluid buildup in the left side of my abdomen.

    “It was an area that was not surgically touched, so they couldn’t figure out why there was the buildup unless I had some blockage somewhere in my drainage system. Four different times they took up to two liters of fluid out of my body.

    “Miraculously, three weeks ago that fluid stopped building up. It’s gone. There’s no more accumulation. So that is probably the single biggest encouraging sign that my doctors have been given. Maybe there’s been shrinkage of the tumors that were blocking the system.”

    Walsh paused and laughed ruefully. “Based on what that high dose of Interleukin-2 does to you, it better do something to those darn tumors because I’ll tell you, it knocks you sideways.”

    If Walsh’s doctors find that the cancer isn’t in remission but instead has progressed, they’ll move to another type of treatment.

    “We’ve got plenty of other alternatives,” said Walsh. “There are already new alternatives that are out there that weren’t out there four months ago.”

    For now, though, Walsh is focused on doing what he loves to do — what he bleeds to do — and that is coaching the Black Bears. While acknowledging that it would have been physically impossible to make it behind the bench for the Ohio State game had it been scheduled on Monday instead of Friday, Walsh emphasized his quick recuperation from the effects of the immunotherapy.

    “Each day I get a lot stronger,” he said. “I walked my mile [two days before the game] in 16 minutes and 15 seconds. So now I know what I’ve got to beat next time.”

    Running the practice that same day served as a test for whether he was ready for the demands of game-day coaching.

    “[Would] I need a rocking chair behind the bench?” he wondered.

    The two-hour practice banished that thought. Although deferring to his assistants for an occasional break, he proved both to himself and to his players that he was ready for the challenge.

    “I was yelling at one of the players,” said Walsh, “and one of the other players on the ice chuckled and said to another veteran, ‘Well, he’s back.'”

    And back he was two nights later for the Homecoming game. Although speculating earlier in the week that “I’m not sure if a bad call is going to get me as upset as it used to,” Walsh indeed had a few choice words for the officials, particularly after one non-call involving a play in which Tom Reimann had been shaken up.

    “I don’t think my coaching style is going to change a heckuva lot,” said Walsh.

    Fatigue did hit him, but not during the game action itself.

    “I got a little tired in between periods,” he said. “My adrenaline was pumping during the period and that probably contributed to it.”

    As it turned out, there would be no Hollywood ending for Walsh’s Homecoming game. The Black Bears would gain a split of the weekend one night later, but on this evening Ohio State won it in overtime despite a significant Maine territorial advantage that was evidenced by a lopsided 60-24 shot disparity.

    But maybe an even better Hollywood ending is still in store for Shawn Walsh: this coach with the courage of a lion will triumph over his cancer. He’ll be behind the Black Bear Bench not just in 2001, but in 2005 and 2010 and 2015. Maybe such is the Hollywood ending that awaits Shawn Walsh.

    “Right now, I don’t worry about the prognosis,” he said. “I can’t control that. I can only control how much I enjoy life. How happy I am to be back in Maine. How much I love the University of Maine — the people at the University — and appreciate them maybe a little more than I did in the past.

    “I live a pretty fast life and I can forget about things like that and [forget to] appreciate how great people are and how great life is. And how great I’ve been blessed to have had the job that I’ve had and have had the success that we’ve had.

    “You appreciate things so much differently [after going through all of this]. You appreciate everything about your life. I’ve read this before [about people in similar circumstances] and I couldn’t understand it until now.

    “You feel blessed. I feel blessed that I’ve been hit with this. It’s woken me up to appreciate what life is all about. And that’s people. Whether it’s Kurt Russell or Goldie Hawn and how great they’ve been to us. Whether it’s my wife. Whether it’s her family.

    “It’s how wonderful people are — people in this state and the support I’ve had. You just pinch yourself and say, ‘Man, are you lucky!'”


    Thanks to Wayne T. Smith and Jim Leonard. Without their contributions, this story would not have been possible.

    Latest Stories from around USCHO