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Monday 10: Penn State topples top-ranked team, again, Denver breaks losing drought against North Dakota, Quinnipiac wins twice

In an ECAC Hockey battle Friday night, Quinnipiac took a 4-3 road win over Brown (photo: Emma Marion/Brown Athletics).

Each week, USCHO.com will pick the top 10 moments from the past weekend in our Monday 10 feature.

1. Penn State beats No. 1 for second consecutive week

Eighth-ranked Penn State loves a challenge.

A week after the Nittany Lions took a win and overtime loss at home against then-No. 1 Michigan, Penn State knocked off another top-ranked team with a block M as its logo. Two Connor MacEachern goals, and a goal apiece in the final minute of the second and third periods, helped PSU to a 4-2 win Thursday at Minnesota.

The Nittany Lions won’t have been so enamored with their 3-1 loss in Friday’s series finale in Minneapolis. Christian Sarlo gave PSU an early lead, but Minnesota scored three unanswered and got two goals from Bryce Brodzinski, who finished the series with three.

Minnesota goes to Michigan this Thursday and Friday. Penn State, which at 10-2 ought to rise considerably in the DCU/USCHO Division I Men’s Poll, hosts Michigan State.

2. UConn takes two shootouts against Providence in top-10 series

Seventh-ranked Connecticut and No. 9 Providence effectively skated to a pair of stalemates last weekend, in two games that are considered ties by the NCAA.

UConn took shootout victories in both games, though, giving the Huskies a lift in the Hockey East standings. The Huskies’ Justin Pearson scored the game-tying goal in Friday’s 1-1 draw in Providence, and on Saturday in Hartford, a spirited UConn comeback saw the Huskies tie Providence 6-6. The Friars led 3-0 before UConn did enough to bump its unbeaten streak to five games (3-0-2). Arsenii Sergeev made five saves in Saturday’s shootout for UConn, and Jake Percival netted the winner.

UConn has a home-and-home series this weekend with UMass-Lowell. Providence hosts Vermont.

3. Denver breaks UND spell, wins twice at Ralph

Second-ranked Denver’s recent six-game losing streak when playing against North Dakota is now a thing of the past.

The Pioneers haven’t lost in regulation in nearly a month, and their hot form continued last weekend with a pair of wins at No. 12 UND. Freshman Jared Wright’s first career goal gave DU a 3-2 win Friday at the Ralph Engelstad Arena, before he and Carter Mazur both scored twice in the Pioneers’ 6-3 victory Saturday night.

This was Denver’s third weekend sweep of the season, and the Pioneers first on the road in NCHC play.

Denver hosts Omaha next weekend. UND hosts Miami, the only team currently below the Fighting Hawks in the NCHC standings.

4. Tenth-ranked Buckeyes swept

There will likely be a new No. 10 team in the country this week, too, after Ohio State lost a pair of games Thursday and Friday at unranked Michigan State.

A late game-winner from Daniel Russell and 32 saves from Dylan St. Cyr helped MSU to a 4-2 win Thursday. It was the Spartans’ third consecutive Big Ten win, marking the first time MSU had done that since Jan. 2019.

In Friday’s rematch, Nicolas Mueller had a big first period with two goals and an assist, giving MSU the platform for its eventual 4-3 victory. Davis Burnside pulled Ohio State to within a goal 6:29 into the third, but St. Cyr kept the door shut after that, making 18 of his 33 saves in the final period.

Ohio State, which has now lost its last three games, hosts No. 18 Notre Dame this weekend.

5. BU dominates UMass twice

Fourteenth-ranked Boston University handled No. 11 Massachusetts in both games of a home-and-home series last weekend.

Ryan Greene’s two goals and three assists Friday propelled BU to a 7-2 blowout win at UMass, and a 5-1 BU home win Saturday meant that the Terriers are now 6-0-1 in their last seven games against the Minutemen. Jay O’Brien had a goal and an assist Saturday, while Matt Brown posted two helpers. Fourteen different BU players had at least one point apiece in the series.

BU has another home-and-home set this weekend against Northeastern. UMass visits New Hampshire on Friday, ahead of the Minutemen’s trip to the Friendship Four in Belfast, Northern Ireland, next week.

6. No. 4 St. Cloud salvages home split with No. 17 WMU

Western Michigan picked up a commendable two-game split last weekend at fourth-ranked St. Cloud State, beating the Huskies 4-2 on Friday before SCSU took Saturday’s rematch, 4-1.
Four different WMU skaters scored in Friday’s game, where Max Sasson and Luke Grainger both had a goal and an assist.

Former Colorado College and Minnesota standout Grant Cruikshank scored in both games for St. Cloud, and another two goals Saturday from Jami Krannila helped the Huskies avoid being swept for the first time this season.

SCSU visits CC this weekend, with Western back at home to face Minnesota Duluth.

7. Third-ranked Michigan picks up road split

A big four-goal third period Friday helped No. 3 Michigan to a 5-1 win at 18th-ranked Notre Dame, before the Fighting Irish clawed back to win Saturday’s rematch 3-2 in overtime.

Mackie Samoskevich’s goal and an assist Friday for Michigan gave him a sixth multi-point game of the season, and Adam Fantilli’s two assists clinched a seventh multi-point game from his last 11. Five different Wolverines scored in the series opener.

Michigan started well again Saturday, but a 2-0 lead eventually fell by the wayside. Tyler Carpenter, Chayse Primeau and Grant Silianoff scored three unanswered for Notre Dame.
The Irish visit Ohio State this weekend, while Michigan hosts Minnesota.

8. Quinnipiac wins twice, beats local rival

Fifth-ranked Quinnipiac used a well-firing offense to pick up two ECAC Hockey wins last weekend, beating Brown 4-3 on Friday before blanking nearby rival Yale 4-0 on Saturday in New Haven, Conn.

Three consecutive goals Friday gave Quinnipiac a lift at Brown’s Meehan Auditorium, with Michael Lombardi scoring the Bobcats’ last two in the middle of the third period.

On Saturday, Collin Graf’s first collegiate hat trick helped Quinnipiac rout Yale at the Bulldogs’ Ingalls Rink. Fifteen saves from Yaniv Perets gave him his third shutout of the season.

Quinnipiac plays Princeton in a home-and-home series this weekend.

9. Bowling Green takes two from St. Thomas

Having recently snapped a six-game losing streak, Bowling Green appears to be an upswing with three wins in a row, including two last weekend at home to St. Thomas.

Three different BGSU players scored in the Falcons’ 3-2 win Friday, and the same happened Saturday. Austen Swankler’s seventh goal and 10th point of the season went in with 17 seconds left, as BGSU completed a two-goal comeback effort in the third period.

The Falcons hit the road for their next four games, beginning this weekend against Ferris State. St. Thomas, now 2-10, plays its next four at home, starting Friday against Michigan Tech.

10. Déjà vu for RIT in sweep of Scared Heart

Atlantic Hockey-leading RIT earned matching 3-1 home wins last weekend against conference foe Sacred Heart.

Tommy Scarfone’s season-high 37 saves, including 21 in Friday’s third period, helped RIT win the series opener, as did a goal apiece from three different Tiger skaters.

When the teams returned Saturday to the Gene Polisseni Center, two goals from RIT senior defenseman Gianfranco Cassaro lifted the Tigers once more. Carter Wilkie added a goal and two assists for a RIT team that has now won its last seven games.

RIT hosts the U.S. National Under-18 Team this Saturday. Princeton comes to Rochester, N.Y., in two weeks as RIT continues its six-game homestand. Sacred Heart hosts Merrimack on Thursday.

Hockey East hands down one-game suspensions to Boston College’s Alami, Kuntar, Northeastern’s McDonough, Struble

From left, Cade Alami, Trevor Kuntar, Aidan McDonough, Jayden Struble.

Hockey East announced Monday that Boston College junior forward Trevor Kuntar, Northeastern senior forward Aidan McDonough, Boston College sophomore defenseman Cade Alami and Northeastern senior defenseman Jayden Struble have all been suspended for one game stemming from an incident at the 20-minute mark of the third period on Saturday, Nov. 12.

Kuntar will miss the game on Tuesday, Nov. 15 against UMass Lowell and will be eligible to return to the Eagles’ lineup on Friday, Nov. 25 against Notre Dame.

McDonough will miss the game on Friday, Nov. 18 at Boston University and will be eligible to return to the Huskies’ lineup on Saturday, Nov. 19 against the Terriers.

No penalties were called on Kuntar or McDonough.

Alami and Struble are automatically suspended for one game each as a result of picking up fighting majors and game disqualifications.

Rankings roundup: How the top 20 NCAA hockey teams fared, Nov. 10-12

UConn players celebrate their shootout win over Providence last Saturday night (photo: UConn Athletics).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the DCU/USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll of Nov. 7 fared in games over the weekend of Nov. 10-12.

No. 1 Minnesota (8-4-0)
11/10/2022 – No. 8 Penn State 4 at No. 1 Minnesota 2
11/11/2022 – No. 8 Penn State 1 at No. 1 Minnesota 3

No. 2 Denver (9-3-0)
11/11/2022 – No. 2 Denver 3 at No. 12 North Dakota 2
11/12/2022 – No. 2 Denver 6 at No. 12 North Dakota 3

No. 3 Michigan (9-3-0)
11/11/2022 – No. 3 Michigan 5 at No. 18 Notre Dame 1
11/12/2022 – No. 3 Michigan 2 at No. 18 Notre Dame 3 (OT)

No. 4 St. Cloud State (9-3-0)
11/11/2022 – No. 17 Western Michigan 4 at No. 4 St. Cloud State 2
11/12/2022 – No. 17 Western Michigan 1 at No. 4 St. Cloud State 4

No. 5 Quinnipiac (7-1-2)
11/11/2022 – No. 5 Quinnipiac 4 at Brown 3
11/12/2022 – No. 5 Quinnipiac 4 at Yale 0

No. 6 Minnesota State (7-3-0)
Did not play.

No. 7 Connecticut (9-1-3)
11/11/2022 – No. 7 Connecticut 1 at No. 9 Providence 1 (OT)
11/12/2022 – No. 9 Providence 6 at No. 7 Connecticut 6 (OT)

No. 8 Penn State (10-2-0)
11/10/2022 – No. 8 Penn State 4 at No. 1 Minnesota 2
11/11/2022 – No. 8 Penn State 1 at No. 1 Minnesota 3

No. 9 Providence (6-2-3)
11/11/2022 – No. 7 Connecticut 1 at No. 9 Providence 1 (OT)
11/12/2022 – No. 9 Providence 6 at No. 7 Connecticut 6 (OT)

No. 10 Ohio State (7-4-1)
11/10/2022 – No. 10 Ohio State 2 at RV Michigan State 4
11/11/2022 – No. 10 Ohio State 3 at RV Michigan State 4

No. 11 Massachusetts (5-5-1)
11/11/2022 – No. 14 Boston University 7 at No. 11 Massachusetts 2
11/12/2022 – No. 11 Massachusetts 1 at No. 14 Boston University 5

No. 12 North Dakota (4-5-2)
11/11/2022 – No. 2 Denver 3 at No. 12 North Dakota 2
11/12/2022 – No. 2 Denver 6 at No. 12 North Dakota 3

No. 13 Harvard (6-0-0)
11/11/2022 – No. 13 Harvard 3 at Rensselaer 2 (OT)
11/12/2022 – No. 13 Harvard 5 at Union 1

No. 14 Boston University (6-3-0)
11/11/2022 – No. 14 Boston University 7 at No. 11 Massachusetts 2
11/12/2022 – No. 11 Massachusetts 1 at No. 14 Boston University 5

No. 15 Northeastern (6-3-3)
11/11/2022 – Boston College 4 at No. 15 Northeastern 4 (OT)
11/12/2022 – No. 15 Northeastern 2 at Boston College 3

No. 16 UMass Lowell (7-3-0)
Did not play.

No. 17 Western Michigan (8-5-0)
11/11/2022 – No. 17 Western Michigan 4 at No. 4 St. Cloud State 2
11/12/2022 – No. 17 Western Michigan 1 at No. 4 St. Cloud State 4

No. 18 Notre Dame (5-5-2)
11/11/2022 – No. 3 Michigan 5 at No. 18 Notre Dame 1
11/12/2022 – No. 3 Michigan 2 at No. 18 Notre Dame 3 (OT)

No. 19 Merrimack (8-3-0)
11/11/2022 – Maine 0 at No. 19 Merrimack 1
11/12/2022 – Maine 3 at No. 19 Merrimack 5

No. 20 Minnesota Duluth (6-6-0)
11/11/2022 – Omaha 3 at No. 20 Minnesota Duluth 2
11/12/2022 – Omaha 2 at No. 20 Minnesota Duluth 3 (OT)

RV = Received votes

SATURDAY RECAP: Second-ranked Denver sweeps No. 12 North Dakota, No. 7 UConn and No. 9 Providence skate to wild 6-6 tie, No. 3 Michigan upset by No. 18 Notre Dame, No. 14 BU sweeps No. 11 UMass

Notre Dame players celebrate with their fans after downing third-ranked Michigan Saturday night on home ice (photo: Notre Dame Athletics).

No. 2 Denver scored three goals in both the second and third periods to defeat No. 12 North Dakota 6-3 Saturday night at Ralph Engelstad Arena.

Denver hasn’t lost in regulation in the last eight games and picks up its third weekend sweep of the season. The Pioneers earned their first weekend sweep over the Fighting Hawks at Ralph Engelstad Arena since Jan. 29-30, 2010.

Carter Mazur and Jared Wright both had two goals in the game, while McKade Webster and Aidan Thompson also scored. Jack Devine had a pair of assists for a multi-point performance as well, and goaltender Magnus Chrona made 21 saves.

The Fighting Hawks began the scoring just seven seconds into the game as Judd Caulfield tallied off the opening faceoff.

Cooper Moore and Brent Johnson added goals for North Dakota and Jakob Hellsten made 27 saves in net. Dylan James chipped in two assists.

No. 4 St. Cloud State 4, No. 17 Western Michigan 1

Jami Krannila tallied two goals for the fourth-ranked Huskies, who earned a weekend split with a 4-1 win at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center.

Aidan Spellacy and Grant Cruikshank added to the offense with a goal each.

In goal, St. Cloud State’s Dominic Basse needed to make just 11 saves.

For the Broncos, Ryan McAllister scored the lone goal and Cameron Rowe finished with 25 saves in taking the loss in net.

No. 7 Connecticut 6, No. 9 Providence 6 (UConn wins shootout)

The seventh-ranked UConn Huskies came from behind on a goal filled afternoon Saturday, scoring six goals before forcing overtime and winning in a shootout at the XL Center.

The Huskies came away with the extra point as Jake Percival scored the shootout winner.

Max Crozier contributed four assists for the Huskies.

Providence rushed out to a 2-0 lead just 5:17 into the game as Nick Poisson and Brett Berard scored. Bennett Schimek made it a 3-0 Providence lead at 14:18.

Ryan Tverberg scored late in the first period to cut the Friars’ lead to 3-1 before back-to-back goals from John Spetz and Matthew Wood drew the Huskies even at 3-3 at 14:43 of the second period. Liam Valente tallied his first-career NCAA goal just 1:03 later, giving the Friars a 4-3 lead.

Justin Pearson tied the game once again at 18:43. Seconds later, Pearson was assessed a five-minute major and game misconduct for boarding Crozier. The Friars cashed in twice on the major penalty, Michael Citara and Jaroslav Chmelar finding the back of the net.

The Huskies tied the game with a pair of extra-attacker goals from Samu Salminen and Tverberg in the final minutes, with Tverberg’s equalizer with under five seconds to play.

Providence couldn’t convert on two breakaways in overtime and Nick Poisson was denied on a one-timer at the buzzer.

Philip Svedebäck stopped 20 saves for PC while Arsenii Sergeev made 26 for the Huskies.

No. 18 Notre Dame 3, No. 3 Michigan 2 (OT)

The No. 18 Fighting Irish earned the weekend split against third-ranked Michigan with a 3-2 overtime victory Saturday night at Compton Family Ice Arena.

Trailing by two goals at the end of the first period, Notre Dame battled back to score three unanswered goals from Tyler Carpenter, Chayse Primeau and Grant Silianoff 2:34 into overtime to get the win.

Ethan Edwards and Mackie Samoskevich scored for the Wolverines, giving Michigan a 2-0 lead 17:14 into the first period.

Ryan Bischel made 31 saves for the victory in goal and Erik Portillo stopped 28 for Michigan at the other end.

No. 14 Boston University 5, No. 11 Massachusetts 1

Jay O’Brien tallied a goal and an assist to help lead No. 14 Boston University to a 5-1 win over No. 11 UMass on Saturday night at Agganis Arena.

BU dominated UMass in both games this weekend. The Terriers outscored the Minutemen 12-3 across the two tilts and generated 45 shots on goal in each win, outshooting UMass 90-53 in the sweep.

“I thought the team played fairly well tonight,” said UMass coach Greg Carvel. “BU’s a good hockey team and I knew it was going to be tough trying to win here. I really liked the way the team came out. I thought our first period was actually pretty good, we created a fair number of chances, but I don’t think we got in front of the goaltender enough to make his life difficult. I was proud of the team tonight. We played hard. I thought the game was closer than the score. We had some kids step up and play hard tonight. We needed that. We’re really struggling with injuries. We’ve got three defensemen out right now and we played two nights in a row with five defensemen basically for the whole game.

“The kids sucked it up and the kids played hard. I was proud of their effort tonight.”

Ryan Greene scored his third goal of the weekend while Jamie Armstrong, Case McCarthy and Nick Zabaneh also lit the lamp. Wilmer Skoog and Matt Brown each secured two assists for the Terriers.

Drew Commesso turned in his second strong performance of the weekend, stopping 29 of the 30 shots he faced between the pipes.

Cole Brady stopped 32 shots for the Minutemen and Eric Faith netted the one goal in the defeat.

No. 5 Quinnipiac 4, Yale 0

Collin Graf tallied his first collegiate hat trick and QU captain Zach Metsa added a goal as No. 5 Quinnipiac blanked Yale 4-0 on Saturday night at Ingalls Rink.

Sam Lipkin recorded a four-assist night, providing a helper on each of the tallies to bring his season total to seven, the most on the team.

Yaniv Perets recorded his third shutout of the year and second in the last three outings, finishing the night with 15 saves to backbone the Bobcats’ defense.

Nathan Reid collected 41 saves in the Yale cage.

Michigan Tech 2, Lake Superior State 0

Blake Pietila earned his 14th career shutout, and his fourth shutout over the Lakers, making 20 saves in the win for the Huskies at MacInnes Student Ice Arena.

“I thought our guys battled hard tonight,” Michigan Tech coach Joe Shawhan said. “Lake State is a good team. They’re well-coached and they’re big and strong and have a lot of skill. I feel fortunate that we were able to come out of the weekend with some success.

“Arvid (Caderoth) made a really nice play on that first goal, and it was nice to have (Chris) Lipe and (Brett) Thorne back in the lineup this weekend. Everybody contributed and gave their best.”

David Jankowski and Trevor Russell registered the MTU goals.

For LSSU, Ethan Langenegger made 21 stops in the loss.

Air Force 2, Bentley 0

Luke Rowe had a goal and an assist for the Falcons, who salvaged a weekend split with their Falcons counterparts in a 2-0 shutout at Cadet Ice Arena.

Guy Blessing picked up the 25-save shutout and Andrew DeCarlo also scored in the win for Air Force.

“I feel better about this one, but not about last night,” said Air Force coach Frank Serratore. “It gets exhausting to have our backs against the wall on a Saturday after a stinker on Friday. We have to figure it out on Friday nights. It is early in the year, but this was a must-win. This was a well-earned shutout for Blessing. They generated some quality chances, but Blessing was sharp as a tack.

“I’m proud of the boys for how they responded, but not over-joyed about the weekend.”

At the Bentley end, Connor Hasley finished with 40 saves.

FRIDAY RECAP: No. 1 Gophers earn split with No. 8 Penn State, No. 4 St. Cloud State upset by No. 17 Western Michigan, No. 7 UConn ties No. 9 Providence

Minnesota rebounded from a Thursday loss to Penn State with a win over the Nittany Lions Friday night (photo: Brace Hemmelgarn).

Bryce Brodzinski scored twice in 66 seconds during the third period, lifting No. 1 Minnesota to a 3-1 victory over No. 8 Penn State Friday night from 3M Arena at Mariucci.

The win earned the Gophers a split in the series after the Nittany Lions took a 4-2 win.

“We were a lot better tonight,” Minnesota coach Bob Motzko said. “When the game was kind of quiet, we just hung in there until we could get a power-play goal. Once again, we’re playing a very veteran, very good hockey team. Then our veterans took over and that’s what we needed.”

The Gophers turned a season-high, 33-save performance from goaltender Justen Close into a home win. Minnesota’s offense came alive for the final three goals of the contest, all of which came in a 12-minute stretch, after Penn State took a 1-0 lead in the first period on a goal by Christian Sarlo.

Mason Nevers tied the game at 16:49 of the second period and then Brodzinski scored at 6:55 and 8:01 of the third period to seal the game for Minnesota. Jaxon Nelson assisted on both goals.

For Penn State, Liam Souliere made 30 saves in suffering the defeat in goal.

No. 2 Denver 3, No. 12 North Dakota 2

A trio of freshmen connected for the game-winning goal in the third period to give No. 2 Denver a 3-2 victory over No. 12 North Dakota Friday night at Ralph Engelstad Arena.

Jared Wright tallied his first career goal on a rebound at 6:33 of the third period off assists from Lucas Olvestad and Aidan Thompson to break a 2-2 tie.

The win was DU’s first over North Dakota since Jan. 17, 2021, ending a six-game losing streak in the all-time series. The Pioneers also picked up their first win over the Fighting Hawks at Ralph Engelstad Arena since Dec. 8, 2018, ending a seven-game streak.

Thompson also netted his first career goal in the game for the Pioneers while Carter King tallied as well. Kyle Mayhew registered two assists for a multi-point performance and goaltender Magnus Chrona made 21 saves and now hasn’t lost in regulation in the last seven games.

The Fighting Hawks twice knotted the contest after trailing, but the Pioneers responded each time to regain the lead.

Griffin Ness and Chris Jandric scored for North Dakota and Drew DeRidder finished with 16 saves.

No. 3 Michigan 5, No. 18 Notre Dame 1

Four straight goals in the second period, including a pair in a 21-second span, propelled No. 3-ranked Michigan past No. 18 Notre Dame 5-1 win on Friday night at Compton Family Ice Arena.

Back between the pipes after missing last week’s split at Penn State with an illness, Erik Portillo stopped 23 shots.

Mackie Samoskevich opened the scoring and added an assist for his sixth multi-point game of the year while Adam Fantilli chipped in a pair of assists for his seventh multi-point performance in 11 games.

Eric Ciccolini, Dylan Duke, Jackson Hallum and TJ Hughes also scored for the Wolverines.

Ryan Bischel made 39 saves for the Fighting Irish with Nick Leivermann netting the lone goal in the loss.

No. 17 Western Michigan 4, No. 4 St. Cloud State 2

The 17th-ranked Broncos scored the game’s first two goals and never trailed in downing No. 4 SCSU 4-2 at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center.

Aidan Fulp, Jamie Rome, Max Sasson and Luke Grainger scored for WMU and Grainger and Sasson added assists for two-point games.

In net, Cameron Rowe made 19 saves for the win.

For the Huskies, Micah Miller and Grant Cruikshank scored and Jaxon Castor turned aside 26 shots between the pipes.

No. 5 Quinnipiac 4, Brown 3

Rhode Island native Michael Lombardi scored a pair of goals in his home state, the final two for No. 5 Quinnipiac in a 4-3 road win at Brown on Friday night at Meehan Auditorium.

The Bobcats, who won their fourth game in a row, erased deficits of 1-0 and 2-1 before taking the lead for good on the Lombardi tallies. Ethan de Jong and Jacob Quillan both scored to tie the game twice in the second period.

Skyler Brind’Amour joined de Jong and Lombardi with a multi-point night, providing a pair of assists on the final two goals of the night.

Yaniv Perets stopped 21 shots for the Bobcats in getting the win in goal.

James Crossman and Tony Andreozzi scored for Brown, Cole Quisenberry had a goal and an assist, and Ryan Bottrill two assists.

Mathieu Caron made 32 saves in the Bears’ cage.

No. 7 Connecticut 1, No. 9 Providence 1

Chase Yoder scored short-handed in the third period and Philip Svedebäck made 26 saves as No. 9 Providence skated to a 1-1 tie with No. 7 UConn on Friday night at Schneider Arena.

The Huskies claimed the extra point in the Hockey East standings with the shootout win.

Logan Terness had 35 saves for UConn and Justin Pearson scored the equalizing goal late in the third period.

UConn’s Sami Salminen was the lone scorer in the shootout.

Michigan State 4, No. 10 Ohio State 3

No. 10 Ohio State fell 4-3 at Michigan State Friday night at Munn Ice Arena as the Spartans swept the series after winning 4-2 Thursday night.

The teams were tied at one less than seven minutes into the first period, but the Spartans scored back-to-back goals for a 3-1 lead after the opening stanza.

Nicolas Muller scored twice for the Spartans while Miroslav Mucha and Tiernan Shoudy added goals to back Dylan St. Cyr’s 33 saves in goal.

Muller and Mucha also chipped in with assists to fashion multi-point games.

Ohio State drew within one twice but was unable to get even.

For the Buckeyes, Joe Dunlap, Davis Burnside and Travis Treloar scored as Jakub Dobeš had 28 stops in taking the loss between the pipes.

Canisius 5, American International 2

Members of the senior class scored all five goals to lead Canisius to a 5-2 victory over AIC Friday night at LECOM Harborcenter.

Keaton Mastrodonato scored twice while Markus Boguslavsky, Simon Gravel and Ryan Miotto also found the back of the net for the Golden Griffins. Mastrodonato, Boguslavsky and Miotto all added assists to give the three players multiple points for the game.

Jacob Barczewski made 27 saves between the pipes to pick up the win, moving within one save of reaching the 2,000 save plateau for his career.

For the Yellow Jackets, Oscar Geschwind and Blake Bennett scored with Jarrett Fiske finishing with 26 saves in the AIC cage.

Northern Michigan 2, Bemidji State 0

Northern Michigan goaltender Beni Halasz picked up his first career shutout and Artem Shlaine and Kristof Papp each had a goal and an assist to lead the Wildcats over the Beavers at the Berry Events Center.

Halasz made 25 saves for NMU.

At the other end, Mattias Sholl collected 33 stops for the Beavers.

D-III West Hockey Game Picks – Nov. 11-12, 2022

The UW-Eau Claire Blugolds take on Augsburg Friday night. (Photo by Jake Seykora, UWEC Athletics)

It’s the middle of the November and the matchups are interesting to say the least. UW-Eau Claire and Augsburg face off in a key non-conference game that could have tourney implications down the road. And one of the biggest surprises of the season, UW-Stout, takes on Lake Forest as it looks to stay unbeaten.

Check out more on those matchups and others in this week’s picks.

Friday

UW-Eau Claire (2-0) at Augsburg (1-1-1)

Ranked 15th in the DCU/USCHO Division III men’s poll, the Blugolds have an opportunity to send a message that they are a legit contender at the national level. They have scored seven goals in the first two games off 12 assists and just shut out Gustavus last week. It will take a complete game for a win, but the Blugolds are capable of pulling it off.

The Auggies are ranked fifth nationally and have the ability to dominate on both ends of the ice.  Six different players have scored goals for Augsburg and that balanced attack will be needed to get out of here with a win. Home ice could be the difference.
Augsburg, 3-2

UW-Stevens Point (1-1-2) at Saint Mary’s (1-2-1)

The Pointers are off to a tough start but have a little momentum going into the weekend after picking up its first win last week.

With only seven goals in the first four games, they’ll try to get the offense cranked up against the Cardinals.

For Saint Mary’s this is a statement game opportunity as the Pointers are always one of the country’s best teams. The Cardinals, who just snapped a three-game winless streak, need to make this a low-scoring affair to come out of here with a win.
UW-Stevens Point, 3-1

Northland (0-3-1) at Hamline (1-2)

Despite not winning a game yet, the Lumberjacks have shown they are going to play hard and compete every night. The goals that have been scored have been spread out and a strong start could be the key to success against the Pipers. 

Hamline has been up and down in the early going of the season, and like the Lumberjacks, they compete hard. This is a matchup that could easily go either way.
Northland, 3-2

Saturday

Saint Scholastica (2-3) at Gustavus (0-2-1)

After dropping three consecutive games, the Saints got on track and hope to build on that momentum. They scored 10 goals in a win over the Gusties on Thursday and look to close out the series on a high note.

The Gusties are hungry for a bounce-back win and getting it means getting off to a strong start and shoring up things defensively in order to get their first victory of the season. That won’t be easy against a Saints team that may have found its groove from an offensive standpoint.
Saint Scholastica, 5-2

Saint John’s (3-1) at Concordia (2-3)

The Johnnies capitalized on great special teams play to knock off the Cobbers 7-3 on Thursday night, scoring three power play goals. Saint John’s is 8-for-20 on the season on power-play opportunities and they’ll look to continue that success on Saturday.

Concordia has dropped its last two games, giving up five more goals in each of the last two. A great defensive effort will be needed to come out of this series with a split.
Saint John’s, 5-3

Friday and Saturday

Marian (1-1) at Adrian (3-0-1)

Nothing beats a test against the No. 1 team in the country. The Sabres haven’t played since the last weekend of October and will need to shake off the rust early in this NCHA series. They have given up 11 goals on the year and have to be able to get the job done on defense against an Adrian team capable of scoring at will when all things are clicking for the reigning national champs. Winning won’t be easy, especially on the road, but if the Sabres can keep it close into the third, anything is possible. The Bulldogs are looking to extend their 35-game unbeaten streak this weekend.
Adrian,5-2 and 6-3

Lake Forest (2-2-1) at UW-Stout (4-0)

The Foresters are looking to bounce back after dropping a pair of games last week to MSOE. This is a team that has the ability to score goals in bunches, scoring five or more four times. 

But the Blue Devils have a dangerous offense as well. They scored 15 goals in their first two games and have been one of the best stories in D-III hockey in the early part of the season. They have added confidence from beating nationally ranked Augsburg last weekend.
UW-Stout, 5-3

USCHO Edge: Looking at long-term odds to win the men’s Division I hockey national championship

Boston University senior defenseman John Copeland leads BU into this weekend’s home-and-home series with UMass (photo: Matt Woolverton).

While there are some handsome games to handicap below, and you will get plenty of details on them, I wanted to take the opportunity to talk about some long-term lines that are available through DraftKings on the eventual national champion.

Michigan was the preseason favorite on the line and continues to be. Right now the Wolverines would pay +500, or 5-to-1 on any bet you make. Minnesota is +700 and Denver is +800. Those are your three current favorites to win the national title. But is this ia worthy bet?

For a favorite so short, I would say no. You’re better off waiting for the actual tournament to arrive and, if you really believe in your favorite, bet some money on them in each game and make about the same – if not a larger – profit.

So when does it actually make sense to wage a futures bet on the eventual national champion? I feel like any team that is 20-to-1 or higher (reads on the line as +2000). Notre Dame and Massachusetts are both +2000, Northeastern and Quinnipiac are both +2500.

The one team that keeps standing out to me, though, is Penn State. Heading into the Michigan weekend, despite the 8-0-0 record, Penn State was +5000, or 50-to-1. After Friday’s 7-4 win, those odds dropped to +3000. But after the Nittany Lions rallied from three down in the third and earned a single point in a 4-3 overtime loss, the odds didn’t change for Penn State. Today, they are +2500 after beating Minnesota on Thursday. Still, one of the better values out there.

The long-term bet values are pretty good, if you’re willing to tie up your money for a long amount of time. You also land in a position if you are a game away from a national championship that you can hedge against your bet and still make some money if you get that close to a national title.

All things to consider when looking long term.

Here are this week’s five games that our writers handicapped:

All odds courtesy of DraftKings Sportsbook:

No. 10 Ohio State (-125) at Michigan State (-105); o/u 5.5

A few weeks ago, we might consider this a blow away. But Michigan State’s recent play, including last weekend outscoring Wisconsin, 10-1, has people taking not of the Spartans who will play this series at home.

Ohio State still remains consistent but lost five points on the line for Friday after falling, 4-2, in the series opener against Sparty. Ohio State is now -125 (was -130) and is a virtual pick ’em against a Michigan State team that is now -105.

Sweeps are always difficult to come by, but you’re not getting much value to chose Ohio State tonight.

Jim
Ed
John
Dan
Chris
Jack
Matt
Paula
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

No. 8 Penn State (+165) at No. 1 Minnesota (-205); o/u 6.5

After Thursday night’s 4-2 victory for Penn State, we saw a significant line move as each team jumped 20 points in the opposite direction. Minnesota remains a heavy favorite at -205, but was -225 before Thursday’s game, the fourth loss in eight games for the currently top-rated Gophers.

Penn State should begin being more of a darling for the books and its win on Thursday not only moved their line on Friday from +186 to +165, but also lowered their odds to win the national championship from +3000 to +2500. That’s now half of the +5000 line that was offered prior to last weekend when Penn State sat at 8-0-0.

Jim
Ed
John
Dan
Chris
Jack
Matt
Paula
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

No. 7 Connecticut (-110) at No. 9 Providence (-120); o/u 5.5

Can Hockey East provide a matchup of two hotter teams? UConn is 9-1-1 and competing for a top spot in the national polls. Providence comes off of taking five-of-six points from UMass a weekend ago, which is pretty decent for this Friars team that might not be getting the respect it deserves.

Now the question is what UConn can do on the road in a game where goals might be at a premium.

Imagine that no matter who wins, the score will be 2-1 or 3-2. That’s one of those facts of this series. Heavy hockey, difficult to get scoring chances.

All that said, no one would be surprised if this Friday was like last, where one team scored four quick goals and the game went haywire. Defense became optional and systems were lost.

That would derail this matchup but the reality is this should be a tight-checking game.

Jim
Ed
John
Dan
Chris
Jack
Matt
Paula
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

No. 14 Boston University (+150) at No. 11 Massachusetts (-185); o/u 6

Are BU and UMass two of the top teams in Hockey East? You might think so, but line makers don’t agree.

UMass is a massive favorite at home this week, despite having dropped three games in a tow (two in overtime). BU is coming off a bye week which allows them to heal some injuries. So the +150 number if relatively solid odds.

But should you jump on the Terriers? Tough question. BU won on the road in Amherst a season ago, but does that say much? The Terriers are definitely in a position to prove things.

Should UMass be in that spot too? Maybe. Since the Denver sweep which opened people’s eyes, life hasn’t been easy for the Minutemen, losing three straight after five wins in a row. Right the ship will be the motto in the UMass locker room this weekend. BU’s might be continuing to sail.

Jim
Ed
John
Dan
Chris
Jack
Matt
Paula
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

No. 2 Denver (-115) at No. 12 North Dakota (-115); o/u 6

There may not be a team that bettors should worry about more than North Dakota. The Fighting Hawks are 2-3-2 in their last seven with just one regulation win that that span. Their last five games have been away from home, which can be a semi-excuse, but what to we know about North Dakota?

We know more about Denver, which is 5-1-0 since its two-game series sweep at UMass. The Pioneers are limiting their opponents to two goals or less in that span outside of the 4-3 OT loss to St. Cloud State last week.

Still, Vegas isn’t ready to give much credence to the second-ranked Pioneers.

Will home ice matter this weekend? It should being in Grand Forks, but this also can be filed in the category of “you never know.”

Still, we like North Dakota here though wonder if the games will be very high-scoring. That over/under of 6 seems near perfect as 4-2 might be the score each night.

Jim
Ed
John
Dan
Chris
Jack
Matt
Paula
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

Thoroughbreds break out of gate fast

Skidmore has found early success with a strong team game and contributions up and down the lineup (Photo by Edward Jacobs – Team Shred)

After a tough overtime loss to Chatham to open the season, the Skidmore Thoroughbreds have raced out to a four-game winning streak including last weekend’s upset of Geneseo. Skidmore has outscored their opponents by a 17-6 margin in that span including surrendering just one goal in wins over Chatham, Wentworth, and SUNY-Canton. With the start of NEHC play this weekend, Skidmore is looking to extend their strong start to the season and show they can contend among the strong teams in their conference starting with New England College and Norwich this weekend.

“We are taking it day by day,” said head coach Rob Hutchison. “We have a really good group of players here that are focused and having a lot of fun. We are happy with the start but it is only five games and we are getting into our league schedule now where ever night is a battle. The NEHC has great teams and players, and we will find out quickly where we stack up with games against Norwich, Babson, Hobart, and Elmira all before the break. We are going to need to continue to improve to continue to get the results we want and compete in the conference.”

So far this season, Skidmore has made a lot of noise with outstanding goaltending, special teams, and balanced scoring. The power play is clicking at 40% including four goals against Geneseo last Saturday. So far, eleven different players have scored goals and the penalty kill is perfect (0-20) in the opening stretch of games. Add in the rock solid goaltending of Blaine Moore and Tate Brandon who combined have a .948 save percentage and Skidmore has all the elements for success on the ice.

“This is probably the deepest group we have had here,” noted Hutchison. “Every night it seems like we have different guys chipping in and contributing on the scoresheet. I really like our commitment to special teams. We have a lot of guys back that get a lot of minutes playing on the PK and take pride in doing that job well. Of course it always helps to have great goaltending when you are shorthanded but our special teams work hard every day in practice and it is carrying over to the games.

One of those special teamers that is flourishing early this season is center Thomas Finck who already has scored a shorthanded goal this season. Finck (3-2-5) along with fellow junior Everett Wardle (2-5-7) gives Skidmore a strong one-two punch at the center position that has helped the depth and balance of scoring on this year’s roster.

“Both guys lost their sophomore seasons to COVID but had solid freshman seasons and really continue to develop and take that next step in their development,” said Hutchison. “Thomas has a great hockey IQ and is really our Swiss Army Knife in all the things he brings to the ice for us including the PK. Everett understands the game really well, is great on face-offs and consistently is raising the game of his linemates on our first line.”

The Thoroughbreds don’t see their schedule getting easier through the semester break as NEHC play brings a host of ranked teams on the calendar and the Skidmore Invitational over Thanksgiving weekend adds potential games against Wilkes or Oswego to an already challenging first-half schedule.

“We are riding the wave of positivity right now,” said Hutchison. “We keep working and having fun and are enjoying how things have been going very early in the season. While we want to build on that, we know that tough times will come and we will need to use that positive attitude to re-focus, fix and continue to move forward so we are playing our best hockey when it is going to matter most later this season.”

Skidmore looks to improve on their 4-1-0 record in road contests this weekend against NEC and Norwich to open their NEHC conference schedule.

 

 

Reigning D-III men’s hockey champions benefit from early-season tests

The Adrian Bulldogs have been tested early this season, but that’s been a good thing for the reigning champs. (Photo Credit: Adrian Athletics)

Practice was cut short the other day for the reigning national champion Adrian men’s hockey team. Head coach Adam Krug demands a lot of his team, and on this afternoon, the Bulldogs just aren’t at the level they need to be at.

“We had a bad day of practice, and after the second drill, I told the guys the day was over,” Krug said. “To some that might not look good, but it’s good for this group.”

Being the reining national champion sometimes requires challenging players in different ways, and Krug knows that as well as anyone in the game.

“Every team in the country is going to play hard, and they are going to play even harder against us because we have the target on our back,” Krug said.

That was evident from the jump this year. Adrian was challenged in a 3-2 exhibition win over Trine.

The Bulldogs (3-0-1) also had to rally for a 4-3 win over nationally ranked Utica after trailing 3-1 in a game on Oct. 28.

“We knew they were going to give great effort and play hard, and we got a little complacent after scoring the first goal,” Krug said. “It was great for our guys to battle back. We didn’t go through a lot of adversity last year. We played with the lead a lot. To hae an early test and show our mettle, and prove we can come back is big for us.”

The Bulldogs, who are unbeaten through 35 consecutive games dating back to last season, were also tested during a 2-2 tie with nationally ranked Augsburg. The Auggies won the shootout 1-0.

“I’m glad we tied Augsburg. If we win the shootout, do the guys think we won? Maybe,” Krug said. “We took four penalties in the third period with a 2-1 lead against a ranked team. You can’t do that. Since we had the tie, we use it as a positive and a lesson learned.”

Adrian has outscored the opposition 21-11 so far this season and is the No. 1 team in the nation in the DCU/USCO Division III men’s poll.

Matus Spodniak leads the team with eight goals and three assists. Sam Ruffin has come through with two goals and four assists. Twelve other players have tallied at least two points. Dershawn Stewart and Nic Tallarico have both appeared in two games and have made 65 and 54 saves, respectively, on the season.

“I like a lot of what we do,” Krug said. “We play hard. We play the right way. We have the ability to score goals. The big thing is to clean some things up defensively. Some early-season type of things. We want to be better in all aspects of our game.”

The Bulldogs know the road ahead won’t get any easier. But they are confident and they believe they have the potential to contend for another title.

“We have had some good measuring stick games so far, and I think we are a pretty good team,” Krug said. “I like our team and this team has the ability to achieve the same goals it did last year. We just have to keep working hard and continue to get better as a team.”

This Week in NCHC Hockey: Western Michigan captain Polin ‘the epitome of leadership and professionalism’

Jason Polin is serving as Western Michigan’s captain for the 2022-23 season (photo: Ashley Huss).

Three years and a bit into his collegiate career, there’s little about the way Western Michigan forward Jason Polin operates that surprises the Broncos’ coach.

Pat Ferschweiler has been in Kalamazoo that whole time, starting in 2019 when he became Western’s associate head coach. Polin was fresh off a 35-goal campaign in his last of three seasons with the USHL’s Cedar Rapids RoughRiders, and Ferschweiler, who was elevated as WMU’s head coach last August, quickly saw future captain material in him.

Polin wears the ‘C’ now in his senior season, and his leadership continued to shine through last weekend as he bagged consecutive hat tricks in a home sweep of Miami.

His second career hat trick came Friday in 17th-ranked WMU’s 7-1 win, on a night where underclassman teammates Ryan McAllister and Max Sasson each had three assists. Polin then had a career-high five points in the Broncos’ 5-2 victory Saturday, and McAllister again helped create three goals to finish the weekend with six assists.

Sasson had a four-point game of his own on Saturday, with three helpers. How his goal that night came about won’t show up on any box score, though. More’s the pity, from Ferschweiler’s telling of it.

“Jason was on a 2-on-0 breakaway with an empty net, and he passed the puck to Max Sasson so that he could get the empty-net goal instead of (Polin) scoring his fourth,” Ferschweiler said. “He made the whole play. He skated all the way around the D, the whole deal, was going in and passed to Max. I said, ‘Poley, what’s going on?’ He goes, ‘I had enough today, Coach,’ so he gave one to Sasson.

“He’s the epitome of leadership and professionalism, and is just a great kid, as well. I have zero, ever, problems with him. He’s a world-class kid, a very, very good hockey player and he does it right every day. It’s the perfect situation for a coach to have that kind of leader on your team.”

Ferschweiler feels Polin is the best defensive forward in the NCHC, but after a six-goal weekend, what he does around the other team’s net is getting more attention.

Polin collected a career-high 16 goals and 26 points in 39 games last season, but his nine goals and 16 points through 11 games this time around have him on pace to do even better.

“He came in as a good player, and now he’s such a mature, very good hockey player,” Ferschweiler said. “He has just super-sized his game, and he kind of did the same thing in junior, then came in as a freshman as a good, complete player that plays on the puck, a 200-foot player. He was doing all those things from the start.

“We always talk about how good and how professional he is and how he does everything right, and then sometimes his offense gets overlooked a little bit. He is a very good offensive player, as well, and certainly this year he’s off to a tremendous start.”

Ferschweiler hopes that continues during WMU’s challenging upcoming slate. The Broncos’ next five games, including this week’s trip to No. 4 St. Cloud State, are all against ranked teams, and as of now, seven of the Broncos’ next 11 would be. Michigan Tech and Michigan State, both of whom WMU could meet in the Great Lakes Invitational, are currently receiving votes.

But, future opponents are for a future version of the Broncos to concern themselves with.

“We take it one weekend at a time, one game at a time,” he said. “We’re programmed to play just the game that’s ahead of us, and we’re not a team that looks right or left, or forward or back.

“We’re going to have a real challenge on our hands with St. Cloud on their Olympic sheet against a veteran-laden team, and our singular focus right now is to find points up there if we can, and then move onto the next weekend.”

D-III East Hockey Game Picks – November 10, 2022

Utica returns home for the first time this season looking to build momentum from last weekend’s pair of overtime wins against Stevenson (photo: Jeff Pexton/Perfect Game Imaging).

Well, it is week three of the season and while some early power teams have emerged, last week’s results and my picks clearly showed that every game is up for grabs. I finished last week with a sub-par performance going 4-6-0 (.400) which puts the season total at 10-10-2 (.500). That rate is coin flip territory so no time like the present to get a bit better with my prognostications. Here are the picks with a strong hope I can get a Thursday slate right for the first time this season:

Thursday, November 10, 2022

Fitchburg State v. Salem State

The Falcons fell to Plymouth State to open MASCAC play and were done in by the penalty kill unit. Sure, there has been some attention to that in practice from Coach Fuller and results against a tough Vikings squad is a win on the road – Fitchburg State, 5-3

Plymouth State v. Westfield State

The Panthers are still searching for their game but seem to be very focused in conference play. Valtteri Valtonen in goal for the Owls will not make things easy for the visiting Panthers who eke it out with help from an empty-net goal  –  PSU, 3-1

Friday, November 11, 2022

(9) Oswego v. Cortland

The Lakers are off to a great start in SUNYAC play and Cal Schell has been solid in goal to support a deep roster that challenges and pressures all over the ice. Cortland looking to rebound after a tough outing against Plattsburgh, but Oswego  will score late to take the win  – Oswego, 3-2

(7) University of New England v. Curry

The Ice House has proven to be a tough place to play against Curry and the Nor’easters will need to battle the full sixty minutes and find a way to be Reid Cooper. This is a great weekend matchup with the visitors stealing a big road win – UNE, 2-1

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Skidmore v. (10) Norwich

Norwich and Clark Kerner have found ways to win some very close games already this season but now travel to face a Skidmore team coming off a big win against Geneseo. The points mean a lot and the Thoroughbreds show they are among the contenders in the NEHC – Skidmore, 3-2

Manhattanville v. Wilkes

The Colonels have struggled a bit out of the gate but will look to get things trending more positively against the Valiants. Phil Erickson will lead the offense that gets it done in the third period – Wilkes, 5-3

(3) Geneseo v. Plattsburgh

The Cardinals are flying high and face a Knights team looking to rebuild momentum in conference play. I think this one is a close contest, but it is very hard to pick against a Geneseo squad playing at home in front of their wildly supportive fans –  Geneseo, 3-1

Chatham v. (5) Utica

It took a couple of overtime goals last week for the Pioneers to even their record and start the UCHC campaign on a winning note. No overtime required this week as Utica starts fast at home and finishes strong against a tough Cougar team – Utica, 5-2

Canton v. Rivier

The Raiders broke into the win column last week but face a solid Kangaroo group that can play fast and physically with anyone. Special teams are the difference in this one with the visitors earning the win – Canton, 4-1

Assumption v. St. Anselm

The two teams are expected to be in the hunt for the NE-10 title and both have already exhibited some scoring depth. Michael Zampanti is off to a good start for the Greyhounds, but Andrew Andary is the difference in a Hawks win – St. Anselm, 5-4

Yet another great slate of games with opportunities for leaps in the standings or the polls with good results on the ice. Looking for more consistent play as teams find their game and showcase the reasons they should be in the mix for conference bragging rights  – “Drop the Puck!”

 

ECAC Hockey adjusts format for men’s, women’s postseason tournaments with men starting change in 2023, women in 2024

ECAC Hockey has announced changes to the postseason tournament format for its men’s and women’s conferences.

Effective March 2023, the men’s tournament will feature a single-game first-round format the weekend of March 4-6 with seed Nos. 5-8 hosting seed Nos. 9-12. The four winners of the first-round games will advance to the league quarterfinals March 11-13 to face seed Nos. 1-4 in best-of-three-game series. The quarterfinals winners will advance to the semifinals and championship March 18-19 in Lake Placid, N.Y., where they will play for the Scotty M. Whitelaw Cup as league champion.

The adoption of the single-game format in the first round is a change from the best-of-three games format that has been utilized in the men’s league since the 2002-03 season.

The women’s league will feature all 12 teams in the postseason beginning with the 2024 championship.

In 2023, the women’s tournament format will remain the same as in past years, with quarterfinals action showcasing the top four seeds hosting the first-round winners the weekend of Feb. 24-26. The four quarterfinal winners will then advance to the semifinals and championship game March 4-5 on the campus of the highest remaining seed.

The winners of the men’s and women’s tournaments will receive the conference’s automatic bid into their respective NCAA tournaments.

This Week in CCHA Hockey: Northern Michigan searching for more consistency as Wildcats ‘have to figure out a way to win’

AJ Vanderbeck has posted 17 points through 11 games this season for NMU (photo: Northern Michigan Athletics).

The way Northern Michigan has played this season had, until this past weekend at least, baffled Grant Potulny.

The Wildcats’ underlying numbers have looked good, even great.

They have a top-10 power play, a top-15 offense, one of the best faceoff percentages in the country, a player in AJ Vanderbeck who is among the nation’s top-five scorers (eight goals, nine assists) and a goaltender in Beni Halasz who is the best rookie goaltender in the CCHA, if not the country.

And yet, the Wildcats have struggled to string together consistent, reliable results this season – hence their record hovering around .500 for most of the season.

“I think the biggest thing is we have to figure out a way to win,” NMU’s sixth-year head coach said. “I think we were playing well enough to win in a lot of games, but some games we were scoring four goals and giving up five. Some games we were only giving up two but only got to one. So we have to find that balance of consistency to where we’re averaging three a night and giving up two a night. That needs to be the recipe for success.”

Last weekend against Lake Superior State, the Wildcats seemed to have found it. NMU played two solid games on the road and won 4-1 and 5-3 against its Upper Peninsula rivals, increasing their record to 7-5-0 and putting them in the top half of the CCHA standings.

It was the first time this season, according to Potulny, that the Wildcats put together a “back-to-back two-game effort.”

NMU hadn’t done that much this season, and certainly hadn’t done it the weekend before against Alaska. They lost to the Nanooks 2-1 in their series opener but did manage to win 3-2 in the finale. Conversely, against Anchorage the week before that, they won 9-1 but lost 3-2 in game two.

So against Lake Superior State, Potulny focused on starting well.

“Last weekend was magnified because not only was it league games, but they were also rivalry games. And the other thing is, we’ve had struggles there. It had been a tough place for us to play,” Potulny said. “So kind of the mantra for the week was, start on time on Friday, get to your game first and hopefully you can have success in both games.”

The Wildcats, who lost in Sault Ste. Marie 7-2 and 4-1 in the regular season in 2021-22, were able to prevent the Lakers from running away with it this time around. Vanderbeck had a goal and an assist in both games, while David Keefer and Vincent DeMay also scored for NMU and Halasz made 48 saves. In Friday’s game, NMU scored three in the second and third periods to break a 1-1 first-period tie and earn the win.

On Saturday, it was a little trickier, as the Lakers had gone up 3-1 on a second-period shorthanded goal. What

“That could have been a real dagger for us,” Potulny said. “I thought if we kept it at two, we’d have a chance to extend the game. Then they extended it to three and I kinda thought, ‘Sheesh, we’re really going to have to claw back, and hopefully we can get it to overtime.’ But it was early enough in the period that we were allowed to keep playing. … Great response by the guys.

“This is the first time I think we’ve started building momentum. We had some success early in the year, won three in a row and swept a team on the road, but I didn’t think we were playing great. I thought we were doing enough to win. I feel like now we’re starting to get into that window where we can start building some momentum.”

It helps to have such a strong roster – especially up front. Vanderbeck leads the CCHA in both goals (tied with Minnesota State’s David Silye) and points, while he and Andre Ghantous are the co-leaders for assists. In fact, at the moment Vanderbeck is No. 1 in nearly every offensive category aside from goals per game, and that’s only because he’s played one more game than Silye.

“AJ is having a very good year, and I think Andre, his engine is starting to really warm up,” Potulny said. “He’s a guy that, when he really catches fire, I think he plays like the best player in the league. He hasn’t hit that stride yet, but he’s really close to hitting one. That being said, he’s still playing great hockey.”

Potulny said he’s also excited to see other players starting to heat up, like UConn transfer Artem Shlaine (6g-4a-10pts), CCHA preseason rookie of the year Joey Larson (3g-6a-9pts), and juniors Kristof Paap (3g-2a-5pts) and Michel Colella (3g-6a-9pts).

“We’ve got nine forwards that consistently give you a pretty good effort every night, and we’re still working through the guys that are kind of complimenting the remaining forward group,” Potulny said. “I feel pretty good about us generating offense.”

As for Halasz, the Wildcats seem to have quickly found their No. 1 goaltender. The freshman from Budapest didn’t get much preseason hype but is, statistically, up there with the league’s best returning goalies (Michigan Tech’s Blake Pietlia and Bemidji State’s Mattias Sholl). Halasz has a 1.98 goals-against average and a .926 save percentage in eight games this season.

“Beni’s won the job. He’s won the room. He’s an infectious kid. His personality is incredible,” Potulny said of the Hungarian. “And he’s still learning. As we go, there are going to be new experiences for him every week, like starting two games on the road, or seeing different teams. He’s still learning on the fly, and we like what he brings.”

The Wildcats host Bemidji State this weekend and hope to continue their winning ways.

“Hopefully some of our struggles early in the year are behind us and it didn’t affect us in league play,” Potulny said. “But I think Bemidji might have a better team this year than they did last year, and I think they had a pretty darn good team last year. Our focus right now is starting the game on time on Friday, and hopefully that sets us up to have a really good weekend.”

D-III Women’s East Week 2: Recaps from each conference, NESCAC play is almost here

Norwich stays undefeated, shutting out UMass-Boston 10-0 on Saturday (Photo by Jasmine Olson)

Another great week of Women’s D-III hockey out east as more teams began their regular season play, leaving only the NESCAC teams who begin their season Friday November 18 featuring the current #1 defending champions Middlebury who host Trinity for a pair of home games. Next weekend, the eastern half of D-III Hockey will finally be in full swing. Here are some of the notable results from conference play. 

CCC

#9 Endicott swept Nichols this weekend, defeating them 5-0 & 3-1. Kaylee Liberty scored three goals and added an assist to the stat-sheet in the pair of games. Teammate Samantha Fantasia added two goals of her own with an assist. Nichols goaltender Mckenzie Muir, despite giving up three goals in the 3-1 loss, had a spectacular night, making 52 saves on 55 shots.

Suffolk got a pair of wins over Salve Regina 2-0 & 5-1, as they look to continue their rise and potentially become ranked. Last season the Rams went 19-6, a program best in nearly all categories, they’ve now begun this year 3-1 and look to continue stacking wins. 

NEHC 

#4 Elmira rolled this weekend, getting two road shutouts, defeating Univ. Southern Maine 3-0 & Salem State 9-0. Elmira outshot USM 43-14 & Salem St. 56-6, dominating in all categories of the stat sheet. Against USM, Claire Meeder tallied two goals and an assist for Elmira and Leonie Kuehberger got a 14 save shutout victory. USM goaltender Haley McKim had a very respectable performance, making 40 saves on 43 shots. Against SSU, Elmira had eight different players score, eight goals were unassisted, except for Holley Riva who scored two goals and assisted on one. Elmira goaltender Alayna Breivogel had a pretty easy night, getting the 6 save shutout victory. 

William Smith got a pair of wins to remain undefeated at 3-0. Defeating Salem State 4-2 on Friday and Univ. Southern Maine 3-0 on Saturday. It was a penalty-filled Friday night as William Smith carded 6 penalties for 12 minutes and SSU carded 6 for 15 minutes as Tea Miles was given a five-minute major for contact-to-the-head 14:22 into the 3rd period, totaling 27 minutes between both teams. After spending over one-third of the game in the box, both teams went a combined 2-12 on the powerplay (one pp goal per team). Against USM, a much cleaner game in terms of penalties, Kayla Ketchabaw scored two goals, leading her team to the 3-0 victory. Annie Hauser recorded the 21 save shutout victory.

#10 Norwich thrashed UMass-Boston on Saturday, shutting them out 10-0. Norwich led in shots 45-8, Olivia Boyer & Mikah Baptiste scored two a piece. Surprisingly, this game could’ve been a lot more than 10 as UMass-Boston had 8 penalties for 16 minutes, Norwich only took advantage of three of them, going 3-8 on the powerplay. Leocadia Clark had an easy night, recording the 8 save shutout victory. 

NEWHL 

Plattsburgh picks up a pair of wins, defeating Morrisville 7-1 & 8-1 (Photo by Gabe Dickens)

#3 Plattsburgh State rolled past Morrisville this weekend, winning both games 6-1 & 7-1. On Friday, Plattsburgh outshot Morrisville 56-18 and then 57-12 on Saturday. Plattsburgh’s Mae Olshansky led the way recording four goals and three assists this weekend, Ivy Boric got a hat-trick in game two and added an assist in game one, while Sara Krauseneck recorded five assists over the two games. 

Head Coach Kalie Grant and her SUNY Canton Roos went 1-1 on the weekend at home, shutting out Buffalo State 5-0 and falling to Oswego State 4-1. Grant continues to build a strong foundation in Canton, starting her first season 2-1-1. Against Buffalo State, Canton outshot them 51-22 while Sirena Alvarez earned herself a 22 save shutout victory. 

Oswego State went 1-1 on the road this weekend, falling to Potsdam 2-1 and as mentioned, defeated Canton 4-1. In an undisciplined game by both teams Friday in Potsdam, both teams recorded 10 penalties for 20 minutes, going a combined 1-17 on the powerplay (Oswego scoring the lone goal). Kaylee Merrill of Potsdam scored two goals and goaltender Ellie Zurfluh made 32 saves on 33 shots, getting the win. Oswego followed that loss up with a big win 4-1 over Canton, however, both teams packed the penalty box once again, Oswego committing 5 for 10 minutes, Canton committing 10 for 18. 

UCHC 

#6 Nazareth, coached by Chris Baudo, swept Chatham on the weekend, winning 5-2 & 4-1. Coach Baudo had glowing remarks about his team this season as they faced a heavy turnover from last season, losing many players to graduation. 

“We are very excited about our team culture this year as we infuse nine first-years into the program. Our approach will be the same in valuing the day to day process of creating identity and growing as a team. We believe the outcomes will be tied directly to our daily approach and focusing on ourselves and our own improvement. We have a fair amount of players who have earned increased roles from years past, and we are excited to see them thrive when those opportunities present themselves. We believe in our group and their ability to achieve great things.” 

Nazareth sweeps Chatham on the weekend, winning 5-2 & 4-1 (Photo by Faith Hainsworth)

In response to this weekend’s games, he added: “We grew over the weekend against Chatham. Mike O’Grady’s group is well-coached and tough to play against. Our staff was proud of the group for committing to our game plan and believing in one another. We worked through some adversity and ultimately got contributions across the board in earning the two wins. Our staff is really excited about the trajectory of our team—both for individual growth and the collective–as we move forward.”

Nazareth heads to Wilkes this weekend for a pair of road league games. 

Notable Out-of-Conference Scores

#14 SUNY Cortland swept Stevenson this weekend, winning 7-0 & 8-1.

Plymouth State & Curry split games, Curry taking game one 2-1 & PSU taking game two 3-2.

After this upcoming weekend, NESCAC begins play which means we’ll finally be in full swing out east. As another great week of D-III women’s hockey concludes, another one begins. 

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Sacred Heart hoping ‘incredible feat’ of three goals in 21 seconds against Mercyhurst is springboard for more victories

Sacred Heart players celebrate one of their three goals in 21 seconds last Friday night against Mercyhurst (photo: Ed Mailliard).

I had the chance recently to talk to Pierre-Luc O’Brien, who starred for Sacred Heart from 2004 to 2008.

O’Brien was a three-time Atlantic Hockey all-star as well as a Hobey Baker finalist. He holds the school’s record for career points (156).

When asked about his favorite college hockey memory, O’Brien related the “Miracle at the MIC” that happened on Nov. 4, 2006, at the Mercyhurst Ice Center in a game between Mercyhurst and O’Brien’s Pioneers.

Trailing 4-0 with around four minutes to play, Sacred Heart scored four goals in three minutes, three by O’Brien, to send the game to overtime, with SHU getting the game-winner about three minutes into the extra frame.

Last Friday, there were echoes of that game in a contest between Sacred Heart and Mercyhurst at the MIC. Not quite a miracle, but something to behold.

Trailing 3-1 midway through the second period, Sacred Heart scored three times in 21 seconds to take a 4-3 lead that it would not relinquish, eventually prevailing 6-3.

Three goals.

21 seconds.

“I don’t know how you explain it,” said Pioneers coach C.J. Marottolo. “I can’t recall ever seeing anything like that. It was an incredible feat.”

Rookie Marcus Joughlin got things going at 10:03, followed by Dante Fantauzzi at 10:13. Ryan Steele’s second goal of the game came 11 seconds after that, at 10:24.

“After getting down by two, we were pushing hard to get that next goal and some momentum,” said Marottolo. “After the first one, the bench had a lot of energy.

“I picked my head up and it was Dante Fantauzzi getting the first goal of his college career. The third one, we won a race and threw it at the net.”

It was a huge momentum shift that Marottolo said he didn’t want to lose.

“I said to the guys that the next shift (after the third goal) was huge. We needed to keep doing what we were doing and not get caught up too much in the excitement.”

Sacred Heart earned five of six points at Mercyhurst and is tied with Rochester Institute of Technology atop the Atlantic Hockey standings.

The teams square off in Rochester this weekend. SHU brings a balanced, veteran group that is poised to make some noise this season. Steele is one of three players who opted for a fifth year for a chance to play in Sacred Heart’s new on-campus rink, the Martire Family Arena, which opens in January.

“There was a lot of anticipation going into this season for a lot of reasons,” said Marottolo. “We have a lot of depth, but we’re still working through the kinks as we move through the season. But we feel that we have a team that should be competing for a championship.”

A big challenge comes up this weekend against RIT.

“It will be a great test for us,” said Marottolo. “RIT’s obviously playing very well. Their special teams are at the top of college hockey. And it’s always a great atmosphere. They get great fan support. You really can’t ask for anything more.”

To be successful, Marattolo says his team needs to stick to the script and use its advantages.

“We need to stay out of the box and manage the puck well,” he said. “That doesn’t guarantee anything but it’s a good start. “We want to play fast, use our speed not just on offense but on defense too.”

The teams have developed a bit of a rivalry as a result of some fiercely contested postseason meetings.

Sacred Heart ended RIT’s season in 2018, and RIT returned the favor in 2019 and 2022, with all three playoff series requiring three games to settle.

“We always seem to end up playing each other,” said Marottolo. “We Know each other well. I have a lot of respect for (RIT coach) Wayne (Wilson) and his staff. They do things the right way.”

An early-season battle for first place ups the ante.

“There’s a little bit of a rivalry for sure,” said Marottolo. “Good rivalries start with good games, and we’ve had a lot of them.”

This Week in ECAC Hockey: Dartmouth navigating way through ‘heavy’ early-season road schedule

Matt Hubbarde has been a consistent player thus far in 2022-23 for Dartmouth (photo: Robert Blanchard).

There are always a few scheduling quirks to a college hockey season.

Teams can wind up on an extended road trip somewhere along the line, or they might play a few extra games at home. Some other team’s scheduling requirements might necessitate a single game in the middle of the week, and the ever-present butterfly effect can force someone into playing the same opponent twice in three weeks while not seeing another team for months on end.

One team somehow always ends up as the winner, but while front runners are usually teams playing without a conference or a regular home building, Dartmouth, a team with a beautiful home arena and steady conference membership, didn’t top the list.

So maybe that’s why it’s so strange that last weekend’s five-point series against Brown and Yale was the only time the Big Green will play conference games at Thompson Arena for the 2022 portion of their season.

“It’s going to get heavy,” said Dartmouth coach Reid Cashman of the team’s first half. “I played for [Quinnipiac head coach] Rand Pecknold, and he used to say that you can’t win the league or win a championship in October or November, but you can certainly lose it. I’ve always thought about that since Rand’s always done a good job with Quinnipiac getting off to good starts, so to the point, having two Ivy League opponents come into our building with us getting five out of six points is extremely critical.”

There really isn’t a concrete reason why Dartmouth is playing so many road games at the start of the year, but it’s not difficult to infer or draw conclusions around some of the circumstances. The opening weekend game at Harvard was a single matchup in Cambridge because the return match at home in February is scheduled around the Crimson’s participation in the Beanpot, and the Big Green are part of the Friendship Four in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where they are scheduled to play Quinnipiac in a non-league game.

That meant four games against Quinnipiac, Princeton, Clarkson, and St. Lawrence needed to move into the second half of the season, and an extra home game against Harvard had to be played on the Friday before the Beanpot championship. The Crimson additionally scheduled a game against Quinnipiac on the Friday before the semifinal matchup against Boston College, which is customary to avoid playing two league games on either weekend flanking the Beanpot, but a single game for Harvard meant a more local team would have to play in that weekend series.

That it wound up at home was a supreme effect from Princeton’s requirement that Jan. 6 and Jan. 7 include home games at Baker Rink for the 100th anniversary celebration of the arena. With its pair of doubleheaders of women’s and men’s hockey, February 3 and 4 became a home series for Dartmouth.

Combined with an eventual bye week, Dartmouth’s only road games after Jan. 7 are at Brown and Yale before it finishes the season with a trip to the North Country to play Clarkson and St. Lawrence. Seven straight games across four different weekends are at Thompson Arena, which coupled with the team’s annual game against Vermont and the Ledyard Classic holiday tournament, meant the Big Green had three games and two conference games at home between the start of the season and the New Year’s holiday.

It also meant taking a 6-0 win from Yale and a shootout win from Brown after coming from behind twice in a 2-2 tie were about as critical as it got for the first half of the season.

“We worked really hard during the last week of practice because of our disappointment [with the opening weekend],” Cashman said. “We spent a lot of time talking about our expectations and our foundation, how we expect our team to play. We got out to Yale and in the first period, I think we almost tried too hard because we were gripping our sticks so tight. Things just weren’t connecting. But after the first, we just said to take a breath and believe in what we’d done with our work to go play some hockey. Then Luke Haymes scores a goal in the first three minutes, and we took a breath and gained some confidence that snowballed from there.”

Haymes scored twice against Yale and bookended the day with both the first and final goals of a six-goals shutout, and he later tied the Brown game with a late first period goal on the power play. It was his second power play goal of the weekend and helped elevate Dartmouth in a stickier game against the Bears, who scored early in the first period after the Big Green went down a man. Later in the third period, Braiden Dorfman’s second goal of the weekend tied things again before Joey Musa hit the third and final shootout shot to take the extra point and push the team into an early fifth place slot in the ECAC standings.

“We’re still figuring out where we’re at,” Cashman said. “We’re putting young guys in a position to succeed, but to their credit, they’ve worked really hard to stay in those spots and play those minutes. We’re happy with the way our sophomores came out, and Matthew Hubbarde was one of our best players against Brown [despite not scoring a point].”

Dartmouth now heads to Union and RPI for this weekend’s series in the Capital District before a bye week sends the Big Green to Belfast. They’ll return to play at Cornell and Colgate before hosting UMass Lowell in their remaining first half home game on December 9, two days before the road game at Vermont.

NCAA Division I Women’s Hockey: Wednesday Women with guest Grant Salzano – Calculations, Math and Hockey East

Nicole: In case you missed it in the first Wednesday Women of the year, the format is a little different this year. I’ll be joined by guest writers throughout the season to share their unique insight. This week I’m joined by Grant Salzano, Boston College alum and writer at BC Interruption whose Pairwise Predictor is an indispensable tool as the season winds down. 

Grant: Glad to be here and glad some folks find the calculator useful! I know the annual changes from the NCAA make it tough to keep up with, but it’s been nice to be able to see how the committee is ranking the teams as the season goes on.

Nicole: You put out three different calculators. Can you explain what each one does, why it’s worthwhile to look at all three and what fans should take away from glancing at those calculations week in and week out?

Grant: Sure, so the three calculators are KRACH, the Pairwise, and a ranking of my own called the “GRaNT” Rankings (which stands for Grant’s Reasonable and Not Terrible Rankings and is only slightly tongue-in-cheek). First and foremost, let me just make it perfectly clear that as someone with a firm grasp on how these formulas are calculated, I find KRACH to be far and away the most sound ranking system. It’s a little difficult to explain with an “Explain Like I’m 5” description, but essentially what it’s doing is setting each team a rating so that when you add up how many games a team with that rating should have won, it exactly equals the number of games they actually won. It’s very satisfying mathematically and does a really good job of accounting for schedule strength.

One thing I like about KRACH is that it makes it very clear that anyone can beat anyone on a given day. I’m (obviously) a big numbers guy, and as such I sometimes have to remind myself that these games are played by people, and not even professionals, either, who have maximized every bit of their talent and have less variation in how well they play. What I mean is, it’s not as simple as looking at the KRACH rankings, no matter how big the sample size is, and seeing Wisconsin is ranked above Boston College and saying that, therefore, Wisconsin is better than Boston College. In fact, KRACH says that not only can the Eagles beat the Badgers, but that we should actually expect it to happen once in about five tries. It’s a little thing, but it does give a little bit of a glimpse back into the human side of the sport, in a way, despite it being a mathematical formula.

The Pairwise calculator has more practical use just because it mirrors how the NCAA selects the national tournament, and as such is the only one that “matters.” In women’s hockey, the Pairwise is essentially just “RPI NPI with slight adjustments.” There are limitations to the Pairwise’s ability to account for schedule strength, and the adjustments it makes are a bit arbitrary (it is weighted 70% for schedule strength, which, as far as I can tell, is a number that was just pulled from a hat), but it’s what the NCAA uses, so it’s what we need to be following throughout the year.

GRaNT is the same idea mathematically as KRACH but where it looks at goal differential instead of wins and losses. I won’t go into the mathematical details, but you can go into the weeds here if you are a nerd for numbers like I am. Despite GRaNT being my own ranking system, I do much prefer KRACH since the only real goal for a hockey team is to win, not to blow out its opponent. 

But I think GRaNT is useful for two reasons – one, just because more rankings is always better (which is why I lament the loss of Rutter and WCHODR in the pantheon of women’s hockey rankings), just like more political polling gives you a clearer view of upcoming elections because it can help smooth out any biases. But also because I think there is some use in seeing that a team is always blowing out or shutting out their opponents. That seems especially true in women’s hockey, at least to me, where you can often get several teams with very few losses and the magnitude of their victories can give you some added insight as to who has been the stronger team.

Nicole: That’s actually all super helpful, even for me. I’m a stereotypical “no math, ever” writer, so having you break it down that way helps me more easily remember and wrap my head around it and I think will help fans see what those different rankings are telling us. Thank you for that. 

You spend a lot of time compiling data and crunching numbers between your calculators and compiling votes for SB Nation’s weekly poll at The Ice Garden. Is there anything that has surprised you or stood out? Where do you think the biggest gap exists between public perception of a team and where they actually fall statistically in your calculations?

Grant: So far the biggest surprise has to be the early strength of the top ECAC teams, right? Maybe it’s just that my hopes have gotten beaten down so many times through the years that I’ve finally started to believe the western hype, but it had really seemed to me for the last couple seasons that the gap between the WCHA and everyone else was just getting blown wide open. Now we’ve got Quinnipiac starting off really strong, Yale coming in and knocking them off with a win immediately, Colgate with a hot start, Cornell with a hot start – I mean, these four teams are a combined 30-3-0. Now, they’re only playing peer programs from the east so far… but they’ve done just about all you can ask of them.

To answer your question about the gap between public perception and the rankings, 90% of that answer is going to just come down to sample size. Yale isn’t going to end the season #1 in KRACH, but that’s where they sit just four games in. I suspect Wisconsin is a fair bit better than their 8th place KRACH ranking as well.

But beyond just the obvious “it’s still early,” answer… look, the regional differences are real. Nobody hates saying that more than me. The problem is, even for a ranking system like KRACH that does a decent job of accounting for schedule strength with limited inputs, we have so few games between the top eastern and western teams that the math ends up with a lot of noise trying to correct for it. It’s like if you try to boost the volume of a quiet audio source; you’ll get a lot of distortion in there.

There’s a lot of reconciling someone filling out a ballot – be it for USCHO, USA Today, or SB Nation – needs to do between conferences. Aside from one week where I brought Quinnipiac up to #3, six of my seven ballots for the SB Nation poll have had WCHA teams one through four. From there it’s pretty much all ECAC teams, with a question of where to throw Northeastern in the middle of them. I think the conference stratification, and more specifically the regional stratification between the WCHA and everyone else, is that stark, and to me it’ll take a lot more than just one month of games to help turn that trend, especially when it’s ECAC teams are the ones beating ECAC teams and WCHA teams are the ones beating WCHA teams.

Nicole: Let’s talk about Hockey East. 

Grant: That’s very mean of you.

Nicole: You do this to yourself.

I definitely want to talk about Vermont, Providence and Northeastern, but let’s start with your Eagles.

Grant: Wow that’s even more mean.

Nicole: Like this is my fault?

I know you had high hopes for Boston College heading into the season based on how good the roster looked on paper. That has not really panned out. What have you seen from your favorite team that accounts for some of that dissonance? 

Grant: I hate to keep bringing up the east/west stuff but I think there’s a part of that here as well. I don’t follow youth/high school/club hockey all that closely, but from what I can tell, a lot of the U17 and U18 players are coming more and more from out west. Then of course those girls get to have more top-end competition which makes them even better. Boston College has 16 Massachusetts natives out of the 26 players on the roster. Look at the programs that have surpassed BC over the last few years: Northeastern has 6 players from Massachusetts. Colgate has 4 players from all of New England + New York combined. Quinnipiac has just 4 as well. 

What that tells me is that as the sport has grown, and the talent pool has expanded both nationwide and internationally, Boston College trying to lock down Massachusetts recruiting has seen us fall behind. When I see BC “look good on paper” it’s a result of a lot of our local recruits looking good against local competition. And that’s really not a knock on those players or even a knock on Massachusetts youth hockey – it’s just that there is now so much more talent everywhere else that Massachusetts isn’t the hotbed it used to be.

Who are BC’s top players? Hannah Bilka, Texas. Abby Newhook, Newfoundland. Cayla Barnes, California. Abby Levy, New York, but played at Shattuck in Minnesota. You’ve got one truly elite player in Kelly Browne who’s from Massachusetts, and when it’s just one despite being where 62% of your roster is from, you can see how the numbers start to fall apart.

And it’s more than just east/west. Northeastern has succeeded largely through tapping into the rapidly growing glut of girls’ hockey talent worldwide. That requires significant investment of resources to get those players to come consistently, and as Boston College does not give need-based financial aid to international students, I can’t imagine it’s worth the time necessary for the coaching staff to search out those international gems (aside from the handful of elite Canadians we’ve brought in) when you’re only talking maybe one player every couple years since they’re going to pretty much have to be on full scholarship unless they pay their own way.

Nicole: I don’t think I knew that about BC and international students. That is actually a really big deal with the changing landscape of women’s college hockey and how teams have been able to elevate themselves when they’re not able to recruit the top American talent. We’ve seen a lot of that in Hockey East – at Vermont and Maine in particular.

Switching gears, I wanted to talk about this both because it’s Hockey East, but also because of your work on the numbers. Northeastern’s fanbase was upset when yesterday’s poll came out and the Huskies were eighth. However, all of your various ranking systems have them seventh and with a pretty big gap, numbers-wise, between them and sixth place. What do you think the disconnect is there?

Grant: As someone who roots for the team that was The Good Hockey East Program Who Hasn’t Won The Natty before Northeastern was, I just know they have a massive chip on their shoulder and feel like they should get more respect than they’re getting. But the pollsters early on have had to consider the fact that Northeastern, as good as they are, have played like a great team that has lost several players in the offseason (including a Patty Kaz winner and another Kaz finalist), and frankly, their results have not been of a team that wants to claim to be a top 4 program.

Who could you rank them ahead of right now? Certainly not Colgate or Quinnipiac out east. And the rest comes from acting like losing to Maine and tying Providence is the same as the top WCHA teams trading losses. It just isn’t, and beating up on UNH is not going to impress anyone, sorry.

Nicole: To piggyback off that point, one issue they are going to deal with is that while the strength of schedule of the teams around them is going to continue to improve theirs is mostly going to remain where it is and they won’t be able to get much in the way of quality win bonus points. 

Grant: That’s right. Northeastern has just one game left against a top ten team the entire rest of the season, a game against Cornell in Nashville. That’s it. Just from a numbers perspective, Northeastern would have to nearly run the table the rest of the way just to keep pace with a team like Quinnipiac who can lose some games against Cornell, Colgate, Clarkson, and Yale without losing much ground. That goes for the Wisconsins of the world who get games with Duluth, Minnesota, and Ohio State to bulk up their resume. Northeastern does not even have an opportunity to build a resume.

And one last major problem NU has now – according to my back of the envelope math (and forgive me if my numbers are wrong, I’m having to do this all by hand), the WCHA has a 0.806 winning percentage out of conference, the ECAC 0.725, and Hockey East an incredibly pedestrian 0.529. Probably something like 90% of the non-conference games that will be played this year have already been played, which means these numbers are pretty well baked in at this point and these non-conference records are how the various ranking systems sort through teams from different leagues. The long and the short of it is that Northeastern winning most of its games against teams in a league that barely went 0.500 out of conference is not going to impress anyone.

Nicole: What do you think we’ll see within Hockey East this season? Is Northeastern still a shoo-in to win it all? Are they the only team that will get into the NCAA tournament? How do you think Providence and Vermont stack up? 

Grant: I’ll probably have a better answer to that after this weekend when the Eagles play Northeastern. I’d like to have a better idea of how good the Huskies are. My early thoughts are that they are still on their own level relative to the rest of the league, but that they’re more vulnerable to a single-elimination bad game than last year and seeing someone like a Vermont or a Providence or a BC winning in a one-off wouldn’t be the stunner it would have been a year ago.

Despite the expanded national bracket it’s looking like Hockey East might need to have an upset winning in the league tournament to get a second team in – right now both the CHA and NEWHA frontrunners are below the cut line, so a second Hockey East team would have to be 9th in the Pairwise at worst to make it. There’s a long way to go, of course, and it’s possible just from a numbers perspective that someone could emerge as a strong second place team and eke their way in as the top ECAC and WCHA start beating up on each other with the conference schedules starting up in earnest… but I mean, hell, even Northeastern is barely in at #7 right now.

Nicole: We’re now two or three weeks into the Ivy League season and those teams have not disappointed, both in their games and with bringing the chaos. I said this on Twitter, but I’ll go ahead and out myself as someone who said I thought Cornell was going to have a good offense, but that it might take awhile. The Big Red put 15 goals on the board against St. Lawrence and Clarkson, so it’s safe to say I was definitely too cautious in that assessment. Both of their weekend games were surprises in their own right. I definitely didn’t see them giving up six goals – that’s definitely something to keep an eye on.

But the bigger shock was the Big Red hanging an eight-spot on Clarkson. The Golden Knights had some big injuries, but were still handling themselves pretty well. That is a heck of a statement win for Cornell and has to be a bit of a mind-blower for the Golden Knights. I assume they’ll try and shake that off, but it feels like they were super exposed and have some reassessing to do.

I’m trying to hold off on reading too much into Yale’s first few games since it’s such a small sample. They started a week later than the rest of the Ivies, so it’s hard to get a grasp on them overall with just four games to assess. It’s certainly gone well so far. I was worried for them against Quinnipiac with so little time on ice before the game, but they scored four goals on 20 shots and kept the Bobcats in check offensively. 

Now that we’ve seen the top teams play each other a bit and everyone but Yale suffered a loss, how are you feeling about how the conference will shake out? Which one of these teams is the most likely to take their league crown and go on to dethrone the WCHA? 

Grant: Based on how Quinnipiac played against BC I’m pretty sure they could take down the Bruins on a good day! I laugh so I don’t cry, honestly… haha

In all seriousness, Quinnipiac does seem to have themselves quite a team this year. They returned a whole lot of their scoring and have started out red-hot. Colgate has consistently been knocking on the door, so I’d expect them to be one of the main contenders with the Bobcats. The other teams have more question marks – how does Cornell get going? Can Yale really match their wild out-of-nowhere run from last year? Is Clarkson legit or a paper tiger just beating up on bad teams? Are Harvard and Princeton just having a tough start or are they the top ten teams some folks felt they were in preseason ballots? 

Geez, when you actually write it out, it’s pretty wild how deep that conference is.

Nicole: Well I wasn’t planning to talk WCHA, but I feel like we should with St. Cloud handed Minnesota their first loss of the season on Monday. The game doesn’t count for conference standings – it was the Hockey Hall of Fame game, which the Gophers play in every year, while the opponent rotates. Last night’s game took place at Andover High School, a perpetual Minnesota girls high school hockey contender. 

This wasn’t a win the Huskies eked out – they jumped out to a 3-0 win, held off three power plays in the second, made 22 blocks and added an insurance goal in the third. Sanni Ahola was absolutely stellar in net, but don’t write this off as a win on the back of the goalie standing on her head. It was a complete effort from St. Cloud. 

It was SCSU’s first win over Minnesota since 2010 and their first win over a #1 since 2007. The Gophers had a 63 game unbeaten streak against the Huskies going into the game. 

St. Cloud had a tough start to the season, facing Ohio State, Wisconsin and Minnesota three weeks in a row. Since then, they’ve won five straight.

The loss is probably going to light a fire under the Gophers, which doesn’t bode well for their opponent this weekend, Wisconsin. But perception wise, Minnesota’s loss to St. Cloud is actually pretty helpful for the Badgers. UW was pushed to OT by the Huskies a few weeks ago and that had folks raising their eyebrows. The Badgers lost to Penn State in the opening game of the season. The Nittany Lions were ranked, but it was an unexpected loss for Wisconsin. St. Cloud’s win here takes over the top spot in “most unexpected upset.”

Grant: Most unexpected so far anyway. You just know we’ve got about one a week coming this year… 

That one result certainly did affect the Pairwise, though you would expect that this early in the season. The Gophers dropped from 2nd (behind the just-started Yale Bulldogs) to 5th. It just goes to show how deep it is at the top this season, and how much parity women’s hockey has gained over the last several years. It was definitely the right time to expand the tournament field.

Nicole: Look at you dropping that nugget right there at the end. I like it. 

As a chaos gremlin, I’m fully on board with tacking “yet” onto the end of “most unexpected loss.” This season has featured so many great games already and we’ve got several months to go. The possibilities are endless and it’s going to be so much fun to watch!

This Week in Big Ten Hockey: Michigan State-Ohio State rivalry continuing this weekend in East Lansing, ‘tight games’ expected

Erik Middendorf potted four goals in a game last weekend for Michigan State in one of the Spartans’ wins over Wisconsin (photo: Sarah Smith).

When fans think of Big Ten rivalries, the classic that comes to mind is Michigan vs. Ohio State.

It’s easy to forget that the mutual disdain between these two bordering states extends well beyond the Wolverines and Buckeyes. While it may not be as well known, the Michigan State-Ohio State rivalry is intense, especially when it comes to hockey.

“You can go back since I’ve been here and it seems that everything’s a one-goal or overtime game, no matter what team’s doing well or not doing well,” said Ohio State coach Steve Rohlik.

Since the start of Big Ten Hockey in 2013-14, the Buckeyes and Spartans have each seen ups and downs. Ohio State has been all over the place in the final standings, making a Frozen Four appearance in 2018, taking the regular-season championship in 2019 and two seasons later finishing five points ahead of the last-place Spartans, tied with Penn State for fifth in the final standings.

In that same span, Michigan State finished at or just one step above last place in the conference every year but once, when the Spartans finished the 2014-15 season in second place.

This weekend, the Buckeyes travel to East Lansing for two games. To start the season, Ohio State is 7-2-1 and coming off a bye week after playing all of their first 10 games in October. Michigan State is 6-3-1 and is fresh off a home sweep of Wisconsin to open B1G play.

Rohlik, whose Buckeyes are a point ahead of the Spartans in early league standings, knows that Michigan State’s new head coach Adam Nightingale has a strong start to rebuilding in East Lansing.

“I’ve got a lot of respect for what Adam’s doing up there and where their program’s going,” said Rohlik, “and we’ve got to be ready for that. We expect tight games. We expect that every weekend and, again, we’ve got to be at our best.”

Nightingale said that the Buckeyes are “probably the toughest team” that the Spartans are facing so far this year. “They’re an older team, they’re well coached, and they have a really good goalie. They got some guys in the portal that have impacted their roster. We’ve got to get to our game early and often this weekend.”

Getting to their game is what Nightingale is all about right now.

“We’ve got to stay disciplined,” said Nightingale. “We’ve got a long way to go to where we want to get to as a team, so every time we play, every shift, we’ve got to play our game. Not that it’s always going to go your way, but so we’re perfecting being us.”

The Spartans outscored the Badgers 10-1 on the weekend but were outshot 89-61, in part because of the 48 penalty minutes they took – including major penalties each night – to Wisconsin’s 14. In spite of the lopsided shots, Michigan State goaltender Dylan St. Cyr made 88 stops on the weekend, registering his first shutout for the Spartans. St. Cyr had 10 shutouts in three years with Notre Dame and five last season with Quinnipiac.

“When you talk about being a repeatable winning hockey team, you don’t want to give up 44 shots a night,” said Nightingale. “Dylan played great. I really give him a ton of credit because when you go back to the Notre Dame game and we lost that game five-nothing, really there wasn’t anything he could do on four of their goals. They were backdoor. We need to clean that up. Dylan kept his head.”

Another Spartan who had a big weekend against the Badgers was forward Erik Middendorf, who scored his first four goals of the season in the 5-0 Friday win. Middendorf had 12 goals in 36 games last season.

“He’s a big part of our team, a guy who wants to do it the right way,” said Nightingale. “Everyone wants to have personal success, wants to score, wants to get a shutout or get an assist and that’s stuff’s all important, but our group of guys actually has an even more unique opportunity here to leave their fingerprints on a really proud program and turn it around, Middy’s done a really good job of being a leader, practicing hard.”

16 Feb 18: Steve Rohlik (Ohio State - Head Coach). The University of Minnesota Golden Gophers host the Ohio State University Buckeyes in a B1G matchup at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, MN (Jim Rosvold/USCHO.com)
Steve Rohlik knows his Buckeyes will need to be prepared this coming weekend against Michigan State (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Both St. Cyr and Middendorf were recognized by the Big Ten for their performances, St. Cyr as this the first star and Middendorf third.

Middendorf’s standout weekend aside, Nightingale is quick to point out that Michigan State has depth up front. “Our scoring’s been spread out. I think that’s something that’s really important for what we’re trying to build here, too, and I think it helps us in third periods, too, when you’re not riding a couple of guys. The guys have done a good job of buying into that. We have confidence in all four lines.”

Both the Spartans and the Buckeyes have done the proverbial scoring by committee. Each team has 14 players who have scored at least once. Five Spartans have three or more goals and Jagger Joshua leads the team with five. Michigan State is averaging 3.10 goals per game.
Ohio State is averaging 3.60 goals per game. Seven Buckeyes have scored three or more, five have four or more goals, and Kamil Sadlocha leads Ohio State with five.

Each team enters this series from very different angles. The Spartans have a three-game unbeaten streak, including a tie against Notre Dame Oct. 29. Prior to their bye weekend, the Buckeyes had a three-game win streak snapped by Minnesota Oct. 29.

“It’s never good coming off a loss,” said Rohlik. “You don’t dwell on it too long. You just really talk about today and then tomorrow and how do we continue to get better. That’s been our focus.”

Rohlik said that the break was good for Ohio State but that “it’s a mindset to get yourself back to where you need to be.” He added, “Obviously, it’s a very good Michigan State team. They’re on a roll. They had a great weekend.”

The Buckeyes have taken the last three matches from the Spartans and are 23-10-3 against Michigan State since the start of B1G Hockey play. The Spartans own this all-time series, though, 92-54-13.

Ohio State is 14-5-1 in the last 20 times these teams have met, dating back to February 2018. In that span, six games were decided by a single goal, six were decided by two goals and the difference was three or more in seven contests. There was one tie, a 7-7 affair in East Lansing Jan. 4, 2019, and three overtime games – that tie and a win for each team. Michigan State’s last win against Ohio State was a 2-1 game in Columbus, Oct. 29, 2021.

In preparing his team for the series against Ohio State, Nightingale is looking more at the Spartans than the Buckeyes. That, he said, is key to developing the kind of team culture and lasting success he strives to build with Michigan State.

“Every time you put a jersey on,” he said, “you’re trying to perfect how we play,” adding that if the Spartans don’t play their own game, they’re “wasting an opportunity to grow as a team.”

This Week in Hockey East: ‘Difference maker’ Tverberg has UConn off to hot start with offensive outburst

Ryan Tverberg has been on an offensive tear this season for UConn (photo: Ainsley Keir).

Ryan Tverberg has, so far this season, done everything in his power to get Connecticut to its highest national ranking ever — seventh in the latest edition of the DCU/USCHO.com D-I men’s poll.

The scary thing for the rest of Hockey East? The junior forward might still have his best hockey in front of him.

“He just keeps getting better since he’s been here,” said UConn coach Mike Cavanaugh, shortly after his Huskies completed a weekend sweep of Maine. “He’s a difference maker. (He) affects the game in so many different ways — killing penalties, on the power play, 5 on 5. I’m glad he’s on our team.”

For his efforts in October, Tverberg was named Hockey East Player of the Month. The Richmond Hill, Ont., native scored seven goals and added four assists for 11 points, including three on the power play and one game winner.

In October, Tverberg led the league in scoring and recorded at least one point in all but one of UConn’s nine games. The Huskies are now 9-1-1.

“It just shows what this program is all about,” Tverberg said. “It’s climbing. It’s been real special how we’ve been able to do that and bring a new culture to the team and program. It’s competitive and hard-working. We’ve got, however many new guys, 16? Having them adapt to it, understand it, bring them into it so that everyone knows what to bring every day. Everyone brings their best.”

One of those newcomers is grad student and Yale transfer Justin Pearson, who scored the game winner for UConn over Maine last Saturday (a 3-2 win) for his first goal in a Huskies jersey. Pearson said Tverberg sets an example for him and every first-year player with his work ethic.

“He’s a committed player,” Pearson said. “Every practice, he’s always one of the hardest workers. So I look up to him in that regard.”

Pearson added that Tverberg is a fun player to watch.

“He’s got some of the best wheels in the league,” Pearson said. “He just flies out there and creates so much space for other players. It’s really just cool to see him excel.”

Another Husky garnering monthly honors from the conference was sophomore goalie Logan Terness, who got the bulk of the starts for his team and went 4-0-1 in October with only six goals allowed. He posted a 1.18 goals-against average and a .946 save percentage, second in the nation in both categories.

“Logan’s committed to being the very best goaltender he can be,” Cavanaugh said last week about Terness. “(He) does work — whether it’s off the ice throwing balls against the wall, doing different things (to) optimize his strengths as a goaltender and be the very best version of Logan.”

The Huskies will look to keep the good times rolling this weekend with a home-and-home series vs. No. 9 Providence.

“We know we’re a great hockey team,” Tverberg said. “We’re playing good right now. We just have to keep playing that way. Work on what we’re doing wrong — you can’t be satisfied with just wins. Just play better every day and work hard in practice.”

D-III Women’s West Week 2 Roundup: The competition gap is narrowing more and more

Concordia Wisconsin pulls off the upset win over #5 UW-Eau Claire defeating them 4-3 on Tuesday 11/1/22 (Photo by CUW Athletic Communications)

We had another exciting week of Women’s D-III hockey out west, with another top 5 team falling and some teams making a move in the rankings. Weeks such as this one just show how the skill levels are becoming more and more comparable in terms of competitiveness across all conferences, more than we’ve seen in the past. 

Concordia Wisconsin Pull off the Upset

The Concordia (Wis.) Falcons defeated #5 UW-Eau Claire 4-3 on Tuesday November 1, 2022. Eau-Claire led 3-2 entering the 3rd period until the Falcons tied it up 5:14 into the 3rd period, then Natalie Mackrell scored the game winner on the powerplay at the 17:29 mark of the 3rd period. This win marks the second loss to an unranked team for the top WIAC teams this season, as #6 UW-River Falls fell to unranked Augsburg in week 1. 

Head Coach Stephen Fabiilli (Concordia Wis.) when asked about what a win like this does for the program said: 

“It certainly gives our group some confidence moving forward with 16 underclassmen. It gave us an understanding of how hard it is to beat teams of that caliber and how important it is to be consistent and be locked in on details. For the program moving forward, perhaps it changes some people’s perception of who we are and what other programs are capable of outside of your perennial top teams.”

Coach Fabiilli also talked about what he said to his team after the game and the overall response from the team as a whole: 

“I told them they should be proud of themselves. We drove 4.5 hrs to play a game, were down twice and down heading into the third. They found a way to climb back and capitalize on the opportunities that we got. They were obviously in a great mood after the game and they talked about using this momentum moving forward and to continue working hard for more success.”

Concordia Wisconsin heads to Trine November 11/12 for a pair of games at 7pm / 2pm CT. 

Adrian Stays Undefeated, Gets a Pair of Ranked Wins 

#7 Adrian hosted (former #13) Augsburg for a pair of home games this past weekend, winning both with shutouts of 4-0 & 1-0 to improve to a record of 4-0. Goalie Sophie Goldberg recorded her 3rd straight shutout victory on Saturday and has given up only one goal on 87 shots (.989 save percentage) this season. When Goldberg was asked about her solid start to the season, she said:

“I don’t believe I’ve approached this season any differently than the others. Nothing has really changed in my physical or mental approach to the game. We have an experienced group of returning players combined with a promising freshman class that has already begun contributing and we will work hard to continue playing at this level of cohesiveness throughout the season. Last year we had an untimely exit from the national picture and as seniors we are determined to finish what we started and return the program to national prominence.”

Sophie Goldberg records her 3rd straight shutout victory as the Bulldogs defeated Augsburg 1-0 Saturday (Photo by Carly Costello)

Coach Shawn Skelly had glowing remarks about his goaltender’s performance so far: “Sophie has been simply incredible so far this year. She has been the rock of our team and has really shown her confidence in the net! Her play is not a surprise at all since she was able to get 15 games in last season and during one span she had 5 shutouts in 6 games so her starting off with 3 shutouts in a row is fantastic and shows how much work she has put into it. These shutouts over the last 3 games were some tough ones for sure, we gave up breakaways, 2on1s, and lots of rebounds in front that she just continued to stop. We are excited to see where she can take us this season!”

As mentioned in the preseason article, look for Adrian to continue to climb up in the rankings and contend for an NCAA title. Adrian’s next contests are a pair of home games vs Marian University on November 12/13 at 7:30pm & 1pm ET.

UW-Superior Stays Unbeaten

UW-Superior has begun the season 3-0 after a big 5-3 victory over Hamline University this past weekend. Coach Daniel Laughlin says commitment to the process is a key factor in their early success: “I think the main reason for our early success Is that this group is committed to who we are and how we play. We have a long way to go, but we focus on the here and now and keep moving forward every day.” 

UW-Superior defeats Hamline 5-3 to improve to 3-0 on the season (Photo by Holden Law – Yellowjacket Athletics)

UW-Superior has two huge games ahead next week as they host #8 UW-Eau Claire on Saturday 11/12 & visit #2 Gustavus on Tuesday 11/15. Coach Laughlin had this to say: “Our focus will be on preparing for this weekend, getting better in all areas of our game and continuing to build momentum, always moving forward.” 

Bethel Gets a Ranked Win

Bethel defeated #15 Aurora on 3-2 Saturday after falling to them 2-1 on Friday. Head Coach Brian Carlson attributed a few key factors in the difference between the two games this past weekend. “Jumping off to a two goal lead, spent a lot less time in the penalty box, and another solid performance from our goaltender.” 

A win like this is huge for the Bethel program as they look to string wins together as the season goes on. 

Bethel’s next test is a home-and-home matchup with St. Olaf College on Friday 11/11 & Saturday 11/12 at 7pm & 2pm CT. 

Other Ranked-Team Results 

#2 Gustavus swept Lake Forest, winning 7-0 & 1-0.

#7 UW-River Falls defeated Saint Mary’s 5-2. 

Upcoming Ranked-Team Games

#2 Gustavus vs St. Scholastica – Nov. 10/12 at 7pm CT.

#6 UW-River Falls vs UW-Stevens Point – Nov. 11 at 7:05pm CT & Nov. 12 2pm CT at Northland.

#7 Adrian vs Marian – Nov. 12/13 at 7pm & 1pm ET.

#8 UW-Eau Claire at Northland – Nov. 11 & Nov. 12 at UW-Superior, both games at 7pm CT.

#14 Augsburg vs St. Catherine – Nov. 11/12 at 7pm & 2pm CT.

#15 Aurora vs Finlandia – Nov. 11/12 at 7:15pm & 4pm ET.

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