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This Week in Hockey East: November 28, 1997

Man, I thought, I can’t wait for tonight’s game. Minutes later, I was padding over to the computer.

Although the UNH-Merrimack rematch that night proved to be a dud, this still is an exceptional year to be a Hockey East fan. The league is posting an unprecedented 25-7-1 record against non-league foes, four teams are in the top ten and additional dark horse candidates could legitimately cloud the postseason picture. Every team has at least one top-notch player to get its fans on their feet.

Heading the Hockey East list of players to be thankful of while wolfing down stuffing, mashed potatoes and a slab of turkey is UNH’s Jason Krog, the league’s KOHO Player of the Week. The multi-faceted forward, who led Hockey East in overall scoring last year, earned number one star honors in both games against Merrimack.

On Friday night, his game-winner, a real game-winner (unlike so many others that render that statistic meaningless), unknotted a 6-6 game with less than three minutes left. The clutch goal completed his first collegiate hat trick and cut off a string of three unanswered Merrimack goals.

On Saturday, he assisted on three first-period goals that took the Warriors out of the game early.

Northeastern’s Graig Mischler takes the Rookie of the Week award for his goal and assist leading to a 3-3 tie with UMass-Lowell.

This week, with the exception of a lone Northeastern at UMass-Amherst tilt and the Governors’ Cup, all other action involves games against the ECAC. The two leagues will face off against each other 10 times over the weekend.

To date, Hockey East has posted a 12-4-0 record against the ECAC, 4-1-0 against the CCHA, 5-1-1 against the WCHA and 4-1-0 against Independents. As such, this weekend gives the ECAC a shot at redemption while potentially giving Hockey East partisans more fuel for their "My conference is the best" bonfire.

No doubt, the interconference picks will see Dave "Homer" Hendrickson and Jayson "Homer" Moy each believing more in his league than the other guy. By late Saturday night, we’ll see who is muttering, "Duh-oh!" .

Last week’s record in picks: 10-3 Season’s record in picks: 52-19

Governors’ Cup No. 10 Maine (6-4-1, 4-3-0 HEA) vs. Vermont (2-6-2, 0-3-2 ECAC)

UMass-Lowell (6-3-1, 4-2-1 HEA) vs. No. 5 New Hampshire (8-3-0, 4-3-0 HEA)

All games at Whittemore Center, Durham, NH Friday, 5 & 8 p.m., Maine-Vermont & UMass-Lowell-New Hampshire Saturday, 4 & 7 p.m., Consolation & Championship games

After New Hampshire won a wide-open, up-and-down showcase of two of the league’s best offenses, 7-6 over Merrimack, the Wildcats came back to dominate the rematch 6-1.

"We played a solid hockey game tonight," said UNH coach Dick Umile on Saturday. "We played much better defensively away from the puck. We beat a good team."

Judging from the reactions of Umile and his players after the 7-6 shootout, they knew that a win was still a win, but that playing such a style would not be conducive to their long-term success. The 6-1 victory, although not as riveting from a fan’s perspective, was a significant step forward.

"It’s important [to play well defensively] just for feeling good about yourself as a team," said Umile. "It’s the kind of hockey you have to play in the playoffs. That’s a long way away, but that’s what we’re striving for."

Although the Wildcats seem tailor-made offensively for their Olympic-sized home ice, Umile dismissed any talk that his team faces a disadvantage when it has to adjust to smaller ice surfaces.

"We play better in smaller rinks," he said. "We’re a quick team, so smaller rinks are conducive to the way we play. We can transition quicker and it can be to our advantage, too. It’s not a disadvantage."

While scoring 13 goals on the weekend, UNH got offensive contributions from unexpected sources. In the 6-1 win, defensemen Christian Bragnalo, Eric Lind and Jayme Filipowicz all scored on shots from the point. The three goals marked UNH’s first from blueliners on the season, perhaps a fitting tribute to last year’s co-captain, Tim (Goose Egg) Murray, who scored not a single goal but totaled 37 assists on the way to an All-Hockey East berth.

"I don’t count on defensemen scoring," said Umile. "If they score, it’s a bonus. We’ve got guys who can score. I want our defensemen to play defense and stop the attack."

Also providing unexpected offense was senior Dylan Dellezay. Dellezay scored only three goals in his first three years, but scored twice on Friday to total five since Umile inserted the erstwhile role-player on a line with Mark Mowers and Tom Nolan.

"We knew this year it would be important for someone to step up where Eric Nickulas left off," said Umile. "Dylan is a very talented player. He hasn’t put up numbers [before], but he played very well for us last year. We were hoping that he’d take it to another level, and in fact he has.

"We knew what he did in practice every single day. Now he’s playing relaxed and isn’t worried about me being on his ass," said Umile, grinning. "Maybe that’s the secret. Don’t coach ’em; just let ’em play."

Jason Krog’s hat trick and three-assist games, of course, were no surprise, nor was his selection as the league’s Player of the Week. With Dellezay teamed with Mowers and Nolan, Krog has anchored a line with Derek Bekar, last week’s Player of the Week, and either Mike Souza or Rob Gagnon.

"All the guys I play with are talented," said Krog. "It doesn’t really make a difference whether I’m playing with Nolan and Mowers or Bekar and Souza. They all have as much talent as anybody.

"I’ve always been like that. I think I’ve been able to play with different kinds of players, small players, big players, fast and slow."

UNH now enters the Governors’ Cup as one favorite along with No. 10 Maine.

The Black Bears split two home games with Boston College, getting rocked 6-1 in the opener and then coming back to rock the Eagles back, 12-5.

"We showed the extremes of our inconsistency," said coach Shawn Walsh. "That’s typical of a young team. The second night we played with a lot more emotion. The first night, they had all the puck luck and the second night we had all the puck luck. So the reality of it is that both teams are pretty equal.

"I actually thought the first night we played much better than the score, especially five-on-five. Their specialty teams just killed us."

In that first game, BC built a 3-0 edge going into the third solely on power-play goals, while Maine’s rebound in the second game included five power-play goals in nine chances. The Black Bears still lead the league in man-advantage efficiency, scoring on 39.5 percent of their chances in league games and 38.6 overall.

"It certainly won the game for them the first night and probably won the game for us the second night," said Walsh. "That can happen in college hockey. If your power play is clicking, you’re going to win most of your games."

The series marked the second straight weekend in which Maine lost the first game, but, with its back to the wall, came back to get a split. Going back yet another week, however, it also was the third straight weekend in which the team dropped its first game.

"We’ve rebounded well, but I’m more looking at why we’re not getting anything done the first night," said Walsh. "Counting the BU game, which was really the only night but was the first night, it’s almost like we’re wasting five days of preparation the way we’ve played the first night.

"We have to find a way to play better this Friday night, because once we play a game, it seems like we make the necessary adjustments that it takes. So I have to look at my angle of coaching, the team’s ability of retention and just our overall execution the first nights."

This week’s tournament begins an extended road stretch for the Black Bears, who won’t return to Alfond Arena for game action until January 16. Although they are off for almost a month — not playing games from Dec. 13 to Jan. 9 — the stretch still includes eight straight road games.

"I’m looking forward to it," said Walsh. "Our team has always played well on the road. If not the [second] BC game, our best [performance] was the opening game at Minnesota. Over the years, we’ve been as good, if not better, a road team than a home team. I think it brings our team together. It’s going to be challenging, but it’s also going to help us out."

After weeks of juggling the lineup because of injury, Walsh now has some lines that, based on the second BC game at least, are healthy and clicking. Unlike past combinations which strove to spread the top scorers across several lines, Walsh has put Steve Kariya, Shawn Wansborough and Scott Parmentier together on an intimidating top line.

Freshman Anders Lundback centers Bobby Stewart and Cory Larose on the second line; two more freshman, Dan Kerluke and Mattias Trattnig, join sophomore power forward Ben Guite on the third.

"We’ve finally found some lines," said Walsh. "It’s taken us 11 games through big-time injuries to three of our best four forwards. Now, for two games in a row, we finally had the opportunity to have the same players in the lineup.

"We found something. Lundback had a breakthrough game on Saturday night. He won 80 percent of his faceoffs and just was dominant out there. And the line of Kerluke, Trattnig and Guite played the way they played against Minnesota.

"The only way that can work is if the freshmen step out. And they did. They played great. So maybe we can now use that to move forward."

UMass-Lowell currently stands second in Hockey East standings with a 4-2-1 mark. The River Hawks have been winning ugly, but it’s the W part there that counts.

This past weekend, they jumped out to a 3-0 lead over Northeastern and held on for a 3-2 win. They then had to come back to gain a 3-3 tie at Matthews Arena.

"The first time we played Northeastern [a few weeks ago], it was an honest win, [7-2]," said coach Tim Whitehead. "This time was ugly; it could have gone either way. We got a win in the first game and a tie in the second, but it could have bounced the other way very easily.

"But, hey, we’ll take them. Not all the weekends are going to be pretty."

Whitehead had emphasized reducing penalties as the season unfolded, but that came apart over the weekend. After being assessed 11 penalties for 23 minutes in the first game, Lowell then got slapped with 17 more for 46 minutes on Saturday. Although Northeastern had only one fewer trip to the penalty box, Whitehead still was unhappy about the development that now has his team first in the league with 22 penalty minutes a game.

"We were chipping away pretty well and had gotten into the middle of the pack," said Whitehead. "But this one weekend was a pretty hard-fought weekend, and unfortunately the penalty minutes for both teams skyrocketed. It’ll take a long time before the average will come down.

"No question, that something we want to improve. We had been pleased with the progress that we had been making, but we took a nosedive. The guys know that and we’ve addressed it."

On the plus side, statistically speaking, the River Hawks now rank third in Hockey East team defense, allowing 3.20 goals a game.

"There’s definitely room for improvement," said Whitehead, "but at the same time those numbers have come down quite a bit. We’re pleased with our progress. I don’t know where we’ll end up, but we’re definitely better than we were last year. We’re just trying to get better on it every weekend."

The River Hawks now face their second top ten team of the year, having lost 6-2 to Maine several weeks ago. Along with Maine, UNH ranks as a significantly tougher offensive team to corral than Lowell’s foes to date. How the River Hawks fare against the Wildcats will say a lot about where this team stands right now.

"People might look just at their forwards because that’s where the focus seems to go," said Whitehead, "but they’re a real well-balanced team.

"You have to be aware of the rink, you have to be aware of what their strengths are, and put together a solid game plan. Hopefully, it’ll give us every opportunity to win the game and if it comes down to the third period and the game is up for grabs, hopefully we can steal one from them."

Vermont, which had been 1-6-2, got a boost on Tuesday when it came back to defeat UMass-Amherst 3-2 in overtime.

The Catamounts still aren’t scoring much, however. They are led by freshman defenseman Andreas Moborg (6 points) and junior alternate captain Stephane Piche (5 points).

Goaltender Andrew Allen has played the lion’s share of the games, posting a 3.24 GAA and .891 save percentage.

(For a more detailed look at Vermont from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICKS: UNH and Maine advance to the championship game, UNH 5-3 over UMass-Lowell and Maine 5-1 over Vermont. UMass-Lowell will then beat Vermont 4-2 in the consolation game and UNH takes the tournament with a 5-4 victory.

(If there are any deviations in the first round, whichever of UNH and Maine makes the title game will win it, while the other takes the consolation.)

Clarkson (4-3-2, 2-2-1 ECAC) and St. Lawrence (3-5-1, 2-2-1 ECAC) at No. 2 Boston University (7-1-0, 3-1-0 HEA)

Friday, 7 p.m., Walter Brown Arena, Boston, MA WABU-TV68 Saturday, 7 p.m., Walter Brown Arena, Boston, MA WABU-TV68

St. Lawrence (3-5-1, 2-2-1 ECAC) and Clarkson (4-3-2, 2-2-1 ECAC)

at No. 8 Boston College (9-3-0, 5-3-0 HEA)

Friday, 7 p.m., Conte Forum, Chestnut Hill, MA Saturday, 7 p.m., Conte Forum, Chestnut Hill, MA

BC and BU act as travel partners this weekend, hosting Clarkson and St. Lawrence.

Clarkson encountered more of its historic early-season doldrums when earlier it could muster only a single point out of a four-game, two-weekend spell against Ohio State (two games), Princeton and Yale. The Golden Knights, however, showed signs of snapping out of the funk with a 4-3 win over St. Lawrence; a 3-3 tie to Union in which the Dutchmen had to score not one, but two, extra skater goals to steal a point; and a 11-0 humiliation of Rensselaer.

St. Lawrence made it two hot North Country teams with back-to-back shutouts over Rensselaer (1-0) and Union (7-0). Eric Heffler totaled 64 saves in the two wins, while forward Paul DiFrancesco upped his scoring to 6-8–14 in nine games, including two shorthanded goals.

(For a more detailed look at Clarkson and St. Lawrence from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

Boston University is heeding the words of coach Jack Parker to "get after it in the non-league games as well as the league games and make sure we’re ready to play." The Terriers jumped all over Brown en route to an 8-1 win and then outplayed Harvard by a large margin, taking a 5-3 victory.

The win over the Crimson was yet another one sparked by the top line of Chris Drury, Mike Sylvia and Tommi Degerman. The trio scored four of the five BU goals. Early in the season, especially during the several weeks that Chris Heron was sidelined, there was concern that perhaps the Terriers had placed all their eggs in one basket. Other than Heron, Albie O’Connell was the only other significant returning scorer up front.

"The philosophy of putting your three best players together isn’t a bad philosophy," said coach Jack Parker. "We wouldn’t be able to do it if I didn’t have so much confidence in our freshmen."

Although those freshmen haven’t yet shown the kind of flashes of greatness that Drury, Shawn Bates, Jay Pandolfo, Mike Pomichter, Tony Amonte and Shawn McEachern did in their rookie campaigns (not to mention blueliner Tom Poti last year), the freshmen forwards have still filled their secondary roles quite well. Last year, Heron didn’t begin to really show what he could do until the latter stages of the season.

"I remember my first home game," recalled Drury after the home opener earlier this year. "I couldn’t do anything. I felt like my legs were in mud.

"All the upperclassmen were talking on the bench after the game tonight, [saying,] ‘They look like players, not just freshmen.’ I thought they all looked great."

There may or may not be a future Drury or Amonte in the bunch, but, for now, continued solid contributions are the only expectations.

Although the Terriers only rank sixth in league standings, they hold at least three games in hand against everyone ahead of them, rendering that placement meaningless. A chance to use those extra games to begin leapfrogging teams, however, won’t begin for another week.

After Boston College Jekyll-and-Hyde-ed its way to a 6-1 win and a 12-5 loss at Maine last weekend, the Eagles returned home and on Tuesday night used four third-period goals to top Brown 6-3.

Perhaps Maine coach Shawn Walsh said it best, after facing the Eagles twice.

"I was terrifically impressed with BC," he said. "[Blake] Bellefeuille and [Brian] Gionta are just two guys who are tremendous players. They are already great college hockey players. And BC’s defense is mobile.

"They’re going to be around all year. They look to me like they’re going to be an NCAA tournament team."

This writer agrees, although it’s tough to make sense out of the weekend’s disparate results.

"The scores probably were not indicative [of how either team played]," said BC coach Jerry York. "I don’t think we were 6-1 better than Maine on Friday night, and I certainly don’t think they were 12-5 better than us on Saturday night.

"We had some great jump in our legs on Friday and won a lot of battles for loose pucks. Maine had the jump in their legs on Saturday and won those loose-puck battles.

"That’s a pretty hostile environment for a young team like ours. Give Maine credit. They bounced back and played very well."

Had BC completed the sweep over then-ninth ranked Maine, the Eagles likely would have vaulted even higher than their current No. 8 spot in the polls. Even so, York still saw a silver lining in the loss.

"I think our team matured a lot," he said. "We learned an awful lot over the weekend. Saturday night, we took way too many penalties and lost our composure late in the second. It was 4-2 with about eight minutes left [at that time], so it will be a good learning experience for us."

The Eagles stay atop Hockey East with a 5-3-0 league mark, although every team but Northeastern has at least one game in hand on them. They’ll stay there this week unless the Huskies bypass them with a win over UMass-Amherst in the only league action of the week.

"We look forward to [playing] two of the hottest teams in the ECAC, Clarkson coming off an 11-0 win over RPI and St. Lawrence with back-to-back shutouts," said York "Hopefully, we can carry the Hockey East banner in our ECAC week."

Like almost every successful team, the Eagles are receiving significant contributions not just from their stars, but from their role players.

"We feel pretty good about the play of a lot of different people on our team," said York. "Matt Mulhern and Nick Pierandri are doing an outstanding job for us and both are playing with a broken navicular bone in their wrist. They have a cast on and are fighting through that. That’s an interesting injury to play with."

PICKS: Both ECAC teams struggled earlier in the season, but have spanked their most recent opponents. If BU and BC weren’t playing so well themselves, it would be the classic case of "wrong place, wrong time."

Instead, BC bests St. Lawrence 3-1 and Clarkson 4-3. Similarly, BU beats Clarkson 3-2 and St. Lawrence 4-1.

Princeton (5-2-2, 2-2-2 ECAC) at Merrimack (5-6-0, 2-5-0 HEA)

Merrimack (5-6-0, 2-5-0 HEA) at Yale (6-1-0, 5-1-0 ECAC)

Friday, 7 p.m., Volpe Complex, North Andover, MA Saturday, 7 p.m., Ingalls Rink, New Haven, Conn.

enigma (ah nig ma), n. 1. a puzzling or inexplicable occurrence or situation (e.g., 1997-98 Merrimack hockey)

Will the real Merrimack hockey team please stand up?

Is it the one that has beaten Boston College and Maine, and put on a virtuoso offensive display in a 7-6 loss to UNH?

Or is it the team that got smoked by UNH on two Saturdays, 14 days apart, 11-4 and 6-1?

Survey says… "We’re confused."

In victory, UNH coach Dick Umile voted for the "good Warriors."

"We beat a good team," he said after completed the sweep. "You can take Porter, Kesselring, Cohen and Stringer and they can play with anybody…. I’m thrilled we got our three and we’re outta here."

In Friday night’s 7-6 thriller, the Warriors got big dividends from doing the little things well. Specifically, their performance on faceoffs, particularly on offensive zone draws taken by Rejean Stringer, proved a significant factor. Twice, Stringer won the drop cleanly and got the puck to super-sniper Kris Porter, who rifled shots past UNH netminder Sean Matile.

"If you can win faceoffs, you can do a lot of things," said Merrimack coach Ron Anderson. "We just happened to win a couple faceoffs in our [offensive] zone. A lot of times you get people in position, but you can’t get the puck to them…. We won a few faceoffs in a row there so we stayed with it."

Although ultimately Merrimack fell one goal short, the performance seemed like one more brick in the foundation, one more reason to see the Warriors as a potential player in the league. Not as a second-tier team, but one of the big boys.

Then came the Saturday night disaster.

"They played like the nationally ranked team they are," said Anderson. "We were tired and didn’t have much left."

Anderson had juggled his lineup heading into the rematch, moving Chris Halecki onto the second line with Martin Laroche and Casey Kesselring. Sandy Cohen dropped to the third line with Vince Clevenger and another new arrival on the line, Jayson Philbin. Ron Mongeau dropped to the fourth line and Mike Rodriques replaced Chris Silvestro on defense.

"We were trying to get a little more balance and become a little more defensive," said Anderson after the loss. "Obviously, we didn’t do a very good job at that again tonight. We’ve been giving up a lot of goals, so we’re trying to get some fresh legs in and trying to get some people in that we feel will be a little more defense-conscious for us as well."

Although Merrimack’s masochistic opening league schedule — UNH three times, Maine twice, BU once, Northeastern once, and BU still on the horizon — is bound to skew statistics to some extent, the stark reality is that the Warriors are giving up an average of 6.29 goals a game in the league and 5.27 overall, both more than a goal a game worse than the next-to-last Minutemen of UMass-Amherst.

Cris Classen, who was pulled after one period and three goals on Saturday, did not look particularly strong one night after playing very well, recording 39 saves. The defensive problems, however, go beyond the goalie and beyond the defensemen, according to Anderson.

"It’s not the defense, it’s team defense," he said. "We’re not a very physical team right now and we’re not playing very honest defensively. We sort of look to get the puck and go as opposed to making sure we’re in position to tie people up and cover people if we don’t get it. We’ve been cheating a little bit and hoping to get the thing, and when we don’t get it, it causes a lot of problems."

Anderson will be looking to turn that situation around against two strong defensive teams from the ECAC, Princeton and Yale.

"We’re playing a couple good non-league teams next week," said Anderson. "They’re doing pretty well, so we’ll be prepared as if they are any other team."

Merrimack will have to face Princeton, however, without Cohen, whose boneheaded spearing disqualification sends him to the stands.

If, in fact, Merrimack is as strong as it has looked at times this year, these non-league games won’t count in the standings, but could be a factor in a dark horse bid for an NCAA tournament berth.

"You address that at the beginning of the year," said Anderson, "and you address it every time you play [a non-league game], that every game is significant. It’s not something we overlook, but it’s not something we want to spend a lot of time dwelling on either."

Princeton comes in with a 5-2-2 record. The Tigers entered last weekend one of two undefeated teams in the country, but dropped games to Cornell and Colgate, 2-1 and 8-4, respectively. The loss to Colgate marked only the second time the Tigers have given up more than three goals. They did get back on the winning track, however, with a Tuesday night win over Army, 9-3.

Jeff Halpern (9 points) and Brian Horst (7 points) are the only Tigers to crack the ECAC top thirty scorers. Steven Shirreffs and Michael Acosta are two blue line standbys who have each added 5 points. Erasmo Saltarelli has posted a 2.99 GAA and a .905 save percentage.

Yale has stunned observers by jumping out to a 5-1-0 league record and 6-1-0 overall. This year, the Bulldogs have continued their recent trend of limited scoring, despite the presence of sophomore Jeff Hamilton (10 points). Their success has been fueled primarily by great goaltending and team defense.

Netminder Alex Westlund is standing on his head so far, boasting numbers of a 1.13 GAA and a .961 save percentage.

Protecting him on the blue line is Ray Giroux, one of the ECAC’s finest, and Daryl Jones. The two form an exceptional tandem.

Yale coach Tim Taylor is faced with an unexpected quandary. He has been playing only one freshmen, Ben Stafford, on a regular basis, but had expected to get some of his other rookies some experience in nonconference games such as this one. Additionally, Westlund’s backup graduated last year, so this game would also prove an ideal testing ground for other goaltenders.

But with a 6-1-0 start, NCAA tournament considerations arise. Teams with losing records can experiment in nonconference play, but teams that are part of the national scene cannot.

"It’s something I’m tossing around in my mind right now," said Taylor. "It is unique to find ourselves here with some serious concern about the RPI, and who to play….

"At the beginning of the year, I looked at these nonconference games as opportunities to [experiment]. Now, they’ve got added significance in terms of a national ranking. We have to be worried about that, so I can’t tell you how I’m going to deal with that."

(For a more detailed look at Princeton and Yale from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICKS: Merrimack sweeps, 5-3 over Princeton and 3-2 over Yale.

Yale (6-1-0, 5-1-0 ECAC) at

Providence College (7-3-0, 3-3-0 HEA)

Providence College (7-3-0, 3-3-0 HEA) at Princeton (5-2-2, 2-2-0 ECAC)

Friday, 7 p.m., Schneider Arena, Providence, RI Sunday, 5 p.m., Hobey Baker Memorial Rink, Princeton, New Jersey

Providence took two 5-3 games from UMass-Amherst on the weekend to extend its winning streak to six games. The Friars then, however, entered Thanksgiving with a 3-2 Tuesday night loss to Northeastern.

"It was great to win two," said coach Paul Pooley before the Tuesday downer. "At times we played very well; at times they outplayed us. Goaltending was big for us. Boyd [Ballard] played very well. Our specialty teams were also good. They were very close, competitive games that could have gone either way."

Mike Omicioli leads the Friar scoring with 11 points in the league and 17 overall.

"I knew coming in that it was his time to step to the forefront," said Pooley. "He worked very, very hard over the summer and was in the best shape of his life. He now realizes what he can do and how his game is based upon work ethic and being consistent. He’s done that for us so far and has obviously been our best player."

The 5-5 playmaker is one of just a couple players under six feet on a Providence roster dominated by redwoods.

"The thing is that he does not play small," said Pooley. "We have some guys who are six feet or above who don’t play as big as Michael. He’s strong, he gets in the corners, he’s good in traffic. When he’s playing his best hockey, he knows he’s six-two."

The Friars now prepare for Princeton and Yale.

"They are obviously very good teams with tremendous records," said Pooley. "I don’t know much about either one yet, but both play defensive hockey from what I understand. It’s going to be a very tough weekend for us."

(Yale and Princeton are profiled above and in greater detail in this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICKS: Providence 4-3 over Princeton and 2-1 over Yale.

Northeastern (5-5-1, 4-3-1 HEA) at UMass-Amherst (2-8-0, 0-6-0 HEA)

Saturday, 7 p.m., Mullins Center, Amherst, MA

Northeastern battled Lowell last week, dropping a 3-2 Friday night affair before getting a point with a 3-3 tie on Saturday.

"It was ugly," said coach Bruce Crowder. "We were very inconsistent. I don’t think we executed well. I thought Friday night was probably, all in all, our better game. We just fell asleep out of the gate, [falling behind 3-0,] and just couldn’t make up the ground."

Graig Mischler earned Hockey East Rookie of the Week honors for his goal and assist to secure the tie.

"We didn’t expect a lot out of him," said Crowder. "I think the reason that he’s coming hard out of the gate is because he’s a kid who wasn’t heavily recruited. He wants to show some people that Graig Mischler can play hockey at the Division I level.

"He’s a kid who maybe because he didn’t have high expectations from us, got overlooked at times. But he just keeps battling. He shows us that he deserves to play."

The Huskies headed into Thanksgiving with a Tuesday night 3-2 victory over Providence to even its overall record at 5-5-1. With a 4-3-1 league mark, they now are tied with UMass-Lowell for second place. They could even vault into first with a win on Saturday.

All of which could lead a young team into overconfidence against UMass-Amherst, currently in last place and winless in the league. Northeastern plays the Minutemen the next three games.

"If we were a team that had a lot more than eight wins last year, I think we could do that," said Crowder. "But I think we know that we’re going into a hornet’s nest.

"They’re looking for numero uno. It’s not going to be easy. We’ve got three games in a row [with them]. We can actually make it very, very tough on UMass-Amherst, or we can give them hope.

"All that I know, is that we’ve got to have our guys ready, whether it’s Amherst or BU."

UMass-Amherst dropped two 5-3 games to Providence on the weekend, and then suffered a 3-2 overtime loss at home to Vermont. The loss to Vermont was perhaps the toughest of the season since the Minutemen carried a 2-1 lead into the final two minutes. A Catamount goal with 1:41 remaining, however, put the game into overtime and another strike 1:29 into the extra session gave Vermont the win.

"I honestly think we aren’t playing that bad," said coach Joe Mallen. "We’ve just got to find a way to win those games instead of losing them. The last goal was a long shot, about a 65- or 70-foot shot that cost us the game. I thought that up to that point, even up to the last couple minutes, that we had played a solid game overall. It was just one of those things."

Considering that Tim Lovell’s arrival had heightened expectations in Amherst, a sense of discouragement could begin to creep in over the team’s tough start. At this point, however, Mallen doesn’t see that problem arising.

"I think the guys in the locker room feel that we can win any game on any given night," he said. "Unfortunately, we’ve had a lot of bad breaks early in the season. Hopefully, those will come back to us later in the season.

"The ideal thing now is just to keep our guys focused, so that night in and night out we’re ready to play because the way the league is right now, and even the way the non-league games are, we feel we can beat anybody on any given night. We just have to prove that."

This weekend opens the first of three games against Northeastern, the one team projected to finish lower than the Minutemen in the preseason coaches’ poll.

"Where they were predicted and where they are now are two different stories," said Mallen. "They’re more towards the middle of the pack right now. I just see the league as being extremely strong. I think that we have a good team and we know where we stand in the league right now.

"I see Northeastern as being a real good opponent. We’re in a situation where a win or a couple wins right now would turn us in the right direction. That’s what we have to look for on Saturday night."

PICK: The Huskies, as long as they don’t read their newspaper clippings too much, will prevail 4-3.

This Week in the CCHA: November 28, 1997

Well, no–and no.

Two of the top teams in the CCHA play in The College Hockey Showcase this weekend, and six other teams are engaged in conference play that will definitely have some bearing on the CCHA playoffs.

No. 1 Michigan State sits on top of the CCHA as well as the college hockey world this week. The Spartans took four points from Ohio teams last weekend, beating both Ohio State and Bowling Green. Michigan State is home for The College Hockey Showcase.

Second in the CCHA, the Northern Michigan Wildcats tied with Lake Superior on the road last weekend, their only game. With 14 points, the ‘Cats can regain first place in the CCHA with a win over the Buckeyes this week.

Michigan holds on to the third spot in the CCHA with wins over Bowling Green and Ohio State last week. With 13 points, the Wolverines are one point ahead of the No. 4 Miami RedHawks, who have the week off. Michigan, like Michigan State, is home for The College Hockey Showcase.

With seven points, Notre Dame is in seventh place in the CCHA. The Fighting Irish tied with and lost to the surprising Ferris State Bulldogs last weekend. The Bulldogs are in fifth place in the CCHA with 11 points. Notre Dame hosts Lake Superior State–just one point behind the Irish–for two this week.

Ohio State travels to Northern Michigan for two games this weekend. The Buckeyes dropped two close games last weekend, including heart-breaking overtime loss to Michigan with just 31 seconds left in the game. With just four points, the Buckeyes are actually having a good start to their year.

Anchoring the bottom of the CCHA are both Bowling Green and Alaska-Fairbanks, who meet for three in Fairbanks this weekend. The teams are separated by just one point; Bowling Green has three CCHA points, while Alaska-Fairbank has two. The Falcons dropped two games last weekend. The Nanooks took a break last weekend after a five-game road trip through Michigan.

Western Michigan sits this one out altogether.

Last week’s record in picks: 5-4 Overall record in picks: 38-35

The College Hockey Showcase

Minnesota (3-7-0, 4-8-0 WCHA) at Michigan (9-3-1, 6-2-1 CCHA) Friday, 7 p.m., Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor, MI No. 6 Wisconsin (7-1-0, 7-1-0 WCHA) at No. 1 Michigan State (11-1-2, 7-1-1 CCHA) Friday, 7 p.m., Munn Ice Arena, East Lansing, MI

Minnesota at No. 1 Michigan State Sunday, 2 p.m., Munn Ice Arena, East Lansing, MI No. 6 Wisconsin at Michigan Sunday, 4 p.m., Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor, MI

Fans can’t get enough of this yearly holiday showcase which pits four of the five Big Ten schools with Division-I teams, and gives former conference rivals a chance to meet for at least this event. This year the Showcase moves to the CCHA, with Michigan and Michigan State hosting Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Minnesota vs. Michigan

There’s a lot of history between these two teams. "It’s been good competition," says Michigan head coach Red Berenson. "It’s good in terms of traditional rivalries. Certainly Michigan and Minnesota are great rivals. We have played more games against each other than any two teams in the country."

Minnesota has the edge in the overall rivalry. The Golden Gophers are 118-109-5 against the Wolverines.

Neither of these teams is the team it was a year ago. Minnesota is a team that lost seniors to graduation, and other players to the pros. Last weekend, the Gophers dropped two games to Colorado College, 5-1 and 4-3. The two losses capped a five-game losing streak. "We’ve been struggling here," says Minnesota head coach Doug Woog. "We’ve lost five in a row for the first time in years."

There are a number of factors that contribute to the Gophers’ woes, and Woog says that special teams are part of the problem. "Our power play hasn’t done anything. I think we’re one for 1997," quips Woog. Still, the coach isn’t completely discouraged. "We’ve played some good teams, and we play well some nights."

Woog especially feels the loss of Brian LaFleur, Minnesota’s top scorer from the blueline last season. "What we’re going through is that we’re a little short on defense. We don’t have an offensive defenseman."

On the other hand, Michigan has a little bit of this, and a little bit of that, and seems to have some of what it takes to win.

The Wolverines earned four CCHA points last weekend by beating Bowling Green 4-2 and Ohio State 3-2 in overtime. While the Wolverines lost The Michigan Nine, they retained goaltender Marty Turco and senior forward Bill Muckalt who has 11 goals in 13 games this season. When the Wolverine defense looks sluggish, Turco comes through, having made an impressive 289 saves overall this season. And don’t forget that Michigan can score.

Still, the adjustment to new players and the loss of its senior class has made this a different Michigan team. Michigan has a good recruiting class, but Berenson says, "It’s too big. There’s no coach in college hockey that wants to have nine freshman playing every night."

Among those freshmen are two potential Rookie of the Year candidates, center Mark Kosich and defenseman Mike Van Ryn. In 13 games in overall play, Kosich has five goals and nine assists. Van Ryn is a defensive playmaker, one of the few standout players in the Michigan defense.

In this game, as in most Michigan games, Marty Turco will be the difference. His .909 save percentage and 2.36 GAA don’t tell the whole story of this goaltender, to whom the puck must sometimes seem as big as the moon this season. This is the guy you want for the big save, and don’t tell Turco that this team is any different than it was last year; he plays for all the world as though Michigan can go back to the NCAA Championship Tournament.

The Gophers, tied for sixth place in the WCHA with Minnesota-Duluth–and don’t think that doesn’t hurt–have allowed 42 goals to just 34 goals scored. Michigan has outscored opponents by the slim margin of 30-21, but the Wolverines keep winning those close games.

With a record of 4-8-0 overall, Gophers’ goalie Steve DeBus has a GAA of 3.58 and a save percentage of .884. Like Turco, these numbers don’t tell the whole story of a goaltender who has had little help out front. And that, ultimately, will be the undoing in this close game.

PICK: Michigan 3-1

No. 6 Wisconsin vs. No. 1 Michigan State

Can see only one game this weekend? Get your college hockey butt to this game.

This is the first time that the Badgers (and the Golden Gophers) visit Munn since the 1979-80 season–Ron Mason’s first season as Spartan head coach. The Spartans split the pair of games that weekend, just in case you’re wondering.

Both of these teams bring a five-game winning streak to this game. The Badgers just completed their third sweep of the season, beating the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs 3-0 and 4-2 last weekend. The Spartans beat a pair of Ohio teams last weekend. It was Michigan State 2, Ohio State 1 on Friday, and the Spartans beat up the Bowling Green Falcons 4-2 the following night, allowing just 10 shots on goal in the game.

The Spartans and the Badgers met early in the season, when Shawn Horcoff’s third period goal gave Michigan State the win in the Team Cheerios Ice Breaker Invitational. "When we played them," says Mason, "I was really impressed with their team. This is the kind of team that’s capable of winning anywhere. They’re good. I’m looking forward to this series."

Wisconsin head coach Jeff Sauer says that playing the Spartans early in the season was a definite advantage. "They’re not an unknown. I think the key the last couple of years for them has been the goaltender."

Indeed. Spartan goaltender Chad Alban sits on top of both the overall and CCHA stats for his conference, with an incredible 1.45 goals against average overall, and a save percentage of .919 in nearly 785 minutes of play.

The Spartan defense has been nearly impenetrable this season, seldom allowing more than five shots on goal per period. Leading the Spartan defense is Tyler Harlton, the quintessential stay-at- home defenseman. Before you can even get to Alban, you have to go through Harlton.

This is a team loathe to give up goals. In overall play, the Spartans have a collective plus/minus of plus 105. That’s not a misprint. This may be the stingiest team in college hockey.

Part of the fun of this game’s pairing will be the goaltending duel. If a team can’t have Chad Alban in net, they’d be happy to have Mike Valley, whose GAA is 1.84 and save percentage is .939.

The Badgers have also have an impressive defense, with perhaps one added advantage over the Spartans. Wisconsin has a blueliner who can score. Defenseman Craig Anderson leads the team in scoring with two assists and 10 goals for 12 points.

Michigan State seems to get the better of Wisconsin lately, but not by much. The Spartans have won the last three games against the Badgers, and the last five of six. Michigan State won last year’s College Hockey Showcase game 3-1. The last nine meetings between these two teams have each been decided by two or fewer goals. That streak dates back to 1980.

Expect nothing different in this game. This is ground-’em-out, wear-’em-down hockey. Says Jeff Sauer of the Spartans, "They certainly know how to close people down. Friday night we have to wade through the trees to get to the goal, so to speak."

With all that green and white around, that’s not a bad analogy.

State has the advantage defensively, and with the Horcoff line can click.

PICK: Michigan State 2-1

Minnesota vs. No. 1 Michigan State

"Our fans are inundated with the Big Ten in all the other sports, and it [The College Hockey Showcase] satisfies their need for Big Ten exposure," says Michigan State head coach Ron Mason. "We just don’t take for granted the kind of fans we have who fill Munn night after night. We need things that they get excited about."

Here’s a thing or two that Spartan fans can get excited about:

Last season Minnesota ended Michigan State’s quest for an NCAA title. The final score was 6-3.

Oh, and the Gophers won the College Hockey Showcase last season, with a 5-3 win over Michigan State.

And Minnesota leads the series 96-38-6, and 40-23-2 in East Lansing.

And Michigan State hasn’t beaten Minnesota since the 1987 NCAA Championship Tournament, seven games ago.

Forget all that. Michigan State is going make it all seem like ancient history.

While the Gophers have lost six games by one or two goals and have beaten Wisconsin, North Dakota, and Maine, they have yet this season to play the terror that is Chad Alban, to meet the defense that allows well fewer than 10 shots on goal per period, on the average.

This is a Spartan team with a mission. Sean Berens has said that the only thing that matters this season is a banner in the rafters. Who cares if the two points that Michigan State will undoubtedly take from this game don’t count in the CCHA standings? A win here counts for something else, perhaps even something more.

Just as a loss here will count for much more than just no points overall for Minnesota.

"It would help if we could beat teams that are definitely going to be in there at the end of the season," says Minnesota head coach Doug Woog. "If we lose these games this weekend, we’ll have to take the conference to get a bid."

He means it. The Gophers are bringing a five-game losing streak into this Showcase, and for the first time in many years, the Gophers are not favored to take even a point.

Minnesota is a team that is a bit disjointed, a team that’s not functioning as a team. Says Woog, "We’re not doing little things together. There’s too much one-on-one hockey going on."

Woog explains that his upperclassmen, especially his forwards, are all trying to win games single-handedly. This has lead to mistakes and penalties that Minnesota has not been able to afford. "We can skate. The games will be good. We’ve made more errors, but we can move. If we couldn’t skate at all, I wouldn’t like that."

Woog says that his teams have always "had good games in the circumstance" of the College Hockey Showcase. One advantage his players have, he says, is that "they’ve become accustomed to playing this." A good showing in the Showcase could spur a Minnesota redux.

However, Woog admits, "In other years we’ve been more successful coming into these games than we are right now."

The Spartans are sick–literally. There’s a ‘flu that’s going around the team, and such illness could be a bigger factor in the Spartans’ second game of the weekend, rather than the first.

But don’t count on the upset. Michigan State is tough, solid, and not easily shaken. Such a strong front may lead to exactly what Woog doesn’t want his players to do–commit mistakes, take penalties, give the Spartans even more of an advantage.

PICK: Michigan State 4-1

No. 6 Wisconsin vs. Michigan

Both Jeff Sauer and Red Berenson know what this Showcase means to college hockey.

"Ever since the four schools split off into different leagues," says Sauer, "we’ve always looked for ways to get this back. Our fans are the same. They like to see Michigan and Michigan State."

Berenson says, "When you get to play those teams back to back, it’s great. It’s great for our fans. When you look at the last four years of this tournament, it’s been good competition."

While the Friday night game of Wisconsin vs. Michigan State tends to overshadow this game, don’t be mislead into thinking this one won’t be a show-stopper. The Badgers come to Yost for the first time since 1980, when they lost 3-1. But this Badger team is different; under head coach Jeff Sauer, the Badgers have never played at Yost.

There’s some history here. Wisconsin is 1-3-0 against Michigan in the Showcase. These teams have played 109 games between them, the first of which was way back in 1922 (Michigan won then, too). Overall, the Wolverines lead the series 55-47-6.

Usually, Yost Ice Arena is an advantage in itself for Michigan, but this season the Wolverines are 3-2-0 at home. Perhaps after this game, it will be 3-3-0.

The game between the Badgers and the Wolverines provides another outstanding goaltending duel. Rather than Wisconsin vs. Michigan, perhaps this game could be called Valley vs. Turco. Mike Valley brings his 1.84 GAA and his .939 save percentage to meet Turco’s .909 save percentage and 2.36 GAA.

Both teams are capable of scoring, with the Badgers led by Craig Anderson (2-10-12) and the Wolverines led by Bill Muckalt (11-9-20). Wisconsin plays a little rougher than does Michigan, racking up a total of 181 penalty minutes in just eight games played, to Michigan’s 119 minutes in 13 games played. However, both teams take more penalties than their opponents do, so the penalty stats may indicate absolutely nothing.

Sauer says that while his team will have to wade through a solid–almost immovable–defense against the Spartans, against Michigan, "we’ll see a much more wide-open style of hockey."

Michigan is still without Matt Herr, who’s been out since the beginning of October with a groin injury. The senior forward just started skating this week, but won’t return until December 5 or later.

Even without Herr, Michigan has offensive firepower enough to match Wisconsin. The Wolverine team may have dropped out of the polls, and they may owe their success in large part to three players–Turco, Muckalt, and Bobby Hayes–but what other three players would you rather depend upon?

This one is nearly too close to call. Could go either way.

PICK: Michigan 3-2

Bowling Green (2-10-1, 1-5-1 CCHA) at Alaska-Fairbanks (2-9-1, 1-8-1 CCHA) Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, 3 p.m. AT, Carlson Center, Fairbanks, AK

The Falcons head north and west for the big trip to Alaska for three over the Thanksgiving weekend, after a disappointing two games at home. The Falcons lost 4-2 to Michigan, and 5-2 to No. 1 Michigan State. "Against Michigan State, we made some big mistakes again. We had two turnovers and gave up two goals. With them, you get up the ice, you dump it in."

While Michigan State dominated the Falcons on Saturday, holding them to just 10 shots on goal for the game, the Falcons made a game of it with the Wolverines.

"We played a bad ten minutes against Michigan," says Bowling Green head coach Buddy Powers. Those ten minutes would be the second ten minutes of the first period, in which the Wolverines scored twice. After regaining their composure, the Falcons made it a back-and-forth game.

Although the trip to Alaska is long, Power says the road trip will take some pressure off of his young team. "I think our guys are feeling the heat at home. We’ve been ok on the road so far. We played well at Notre Dame and BC.

"We just need that goal when the game’s on the line. We haven’t had the guy to get the goal in the third period to get us ahead."

The Falcons’ biggest problems have been on-ice discipline. This is a frustrated team, one that tends to make mistakes or, well, brawl a bit when the scoring isn’t easy. And for the Falcons this season, the scoring is never easy.

Fairbanks, on the other hand, is happy to be home. The Nanooks played seven of their last nine league games on the road, and had last weekend off after a grueling five-game, mid-semester trip through Michigan during which the Nanooks went 1-4. The Nanooks look forward to this weekend to jump-start their quest for the playoffs. This Nanooks will be home for 10 of their next 12 CCHA games.

The Nanooks have an offensive edge in this series, with players like Jeff Trembecky (5-8-13), Sjon Wynia (6-6-12), and Kerry Hafele (3-8-11), each of whom can turn up the heat to make the difference in a game.

In a strange but definite advantage, Trembecky also likes to shake things up, which could prove ill for the Falcons, who seem to lack control in that department.

The Falcons have the edge in the net. Mike Savard is performing consistently. His stats aren’t great–a 3.85 GAA and a save percentage of .864–but he isn’t getting much help, and he is capable of making the big save.

In net for the Nanooks, Ian Perkins and Chris Marvel have a combined team save percentage of just .832–a liability in this league.

The Nanooks have rest and the Falcons’ ability to self-destruct on their side. The Nanooks also remember the last time the Falcons were in town–Thanksgiving 1995, a three-game sweep for Bowling Green that could be avenged this weekend.

PICKS: UAF 5-2, Bowling Green 4-2, UAF 4-1

Lake Superior State (3-6-2, 2-4-2 CCHA) at Notre Dame (6-5-1, 3-4-1 CCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., Joyce Arena, South Bend, IN,/P>

It was clear from last week’s results that neither of these teams may be what they at first appeared to be.

Lake Superior–in the "not-quite-dead-yet" category–tied first-place Northern Michigan 2-2 at home last weekend. Jason Sessa scored both goals in the game, his fifth and sixth of the season, with some help from Terry Marchant on both goals. Sessa and Marchant lead the Lakers in CCHA scoring.

Rookie goaltender Rob Galatiuk had 25 saves on the night. Galatiuk has done his part for the Lakers this season, with a tidy save percentage of .911 and a GAA of 2.64.

Inconsistency seems to be the Lakers’ biggest problem. This series, so early in the season, sees the Lakers fighting already for their playoff lives. With a record of 2-4-2 in CCHA play, the Lakers are keeping close company with other middle-of-the-pack teams Ohio State and Notre Dame.

Notre Dame stalled temporarily last week, skating to a 5-5 tie at home against the new contender Ferris State, then losing 4-3 at Ferris in their second game of the weekend. The weekend was the first one-point weekend in Notre Dame’s season.

Ben Simon is the big story for Notre Dame. Simon leads the team in overall and league scoring, with four goals and six assists in eight CCHA games. Simon is a break-away threat at any time, even shorthanded.

Goaltender Matt Eisler has put up some respectable stats for the Irish this season. With a save percentage of 90.6 and a GAA of 2.84, Eisler has proven that he can play with anyone in the league.

Both of these teams need these points to break away from what will certainly become the "bottom tier" of the league–the few teams that won’t make the playoffs. Notre Dame is playing more consistently than Lake Superior is, but the Lakers really, really want to win.

PICKS: Lake Superior 4-3, Notre Dame 4-1

Ohio State (5-6-1, 2-5-0 CCHA) at Northern Michigan (7-2-3, 6-1-2 CCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., Lakeview Arena, Marquette, MI

Neither of these teams is what anyone expected the season.

The perennial cellar-dwelling Buckeyes–always in danger of not making it into the playoffs, have showed some spirit, some offense, and some goaltending this season.

Led by The French Connection of Hugo Boisvert, Eric Meloche, and Jean-Francois Dufour, the Buckeyes now have the ability to break open a game, as No. 4 Miami discovered several weeks ago.

The Bucs are coming off a no-point weekend, their first of the season, dropping games to both Michigan State and Michigan. But Ohio State was in both of those games, losing by a goal to each team, in overtime to the Wolverines.

The loss against Michigan marked the first time this season that the Buckeyes have lost when The French Connection scored three points in any combination.

Solid for the Buckeyes in net is Jeff Maund, who seems to have moved into the starting position over Ray Aho. Maund lowered his GAA from over 4.00 per game to 2.97 last weekend. His save percentage overall is .908. Aho is no slacker, either, and can provide a different look in net if the Bucs need him.

Northern Michigan is getting outstanding goaltending from Duane Hoey, whose 2.20 GAA and .902 save percentage puts him fourth in the league among goaltenders who have played a full game, and second behind Michigan State’s Chad Alban among goaltenders with more than 100 minutes.

Northern appears to have the whole package, with solid defense and scoring ability. With 15 players with at least one goal, this is a team with depth–surprising when you consider that there are 20 freshmen and sophomores on this squad.

Both teams are unknown to each other. This is just the second long road trip for Ohio State, who has performed well on the road, taking three points from Clarkson after many hours on the bus. Northern Michigan has lost only to Michigan at home.

Ohio State has the distinct advantage of being underestimated by most opponents; also, these Buckeyes don’t yet know how good they are. The Wildcats have lots of advantages–goaltending, offensive depth.

The fine fans in Marquette will, doubtless, greet the Buckeyes with their "Oh How I Hate Ohio State" chant. Some may even dig out their buttons with the same slogan.

This series will be closer than Northern fans will expect.

PICKS: Northern 4-2, Ohio State 4-2

This Week in the ECAC: November 28, 1997

Clarkson gained three points this past weekend, with a tie against Union and a shellacking of Rensselaer. Rensselaer and Princeton were the big losers on the weekend, both getting swept on the road. Union, Vermont, and Dartmouth each gained one point on the weekend.

Most teams will take Thanksgiving and play outside the ECAC, but the focus in the ECAC is the 100th anniversary of the first meeting between Harvard and Brown.

Last weeks predictions: 6-8 (Tuesday night saved me from further embarrassment) Year to date: 43-27

Harvard (1-4-1, 1-2-1 ECAC, T-8th) at Brown (1-5-0, 1-3-0 ECAC, T-11th) Saturday, 4 pm, Meehan Auditorium, Providence, RI

This is the 100th annivesary of the first Harvard-Brown game, and it also kicks off the ECAC NESN television package. On January 19, 1898, the first Harvard-Brown game was played at Franklin Field in Boston. The Bears won the game 6-0 outshooting Harvard 21-2.

This year the teams are each struggling to get their seasons underway. The Crimson and the Bears each have one win, and both teams lost to Boston University this past week. The Bears lost a 8-1 decision on Friday, and the Crimson lost 5-3 on Tuesday.

The Bears have had John DiRenzo lead them in scoring this season, and currently he is the fifth-ranked scorer in the ECAC with three goals and five assists.

The Crimson on the other hand do not have a player in the leading scoring column in the ECAC or overall. The Crimson do have something that was hard to come by last year at this point in the season — power play goals. Trevor Allman and Brett Chodorow each have two power play goals.

PICK: Brown won in 1898 and the Bears will win Saturday. Brown 3 Harvard 2

Clarkson (4-3-2, 2-2-1 ECAC, T-5th) and St. Lawrence (3-5-1, 2-2-1 ECAC, T-5th) at Boston University (7-1-0, 4-2-0 Hockey East, T-6th) Friday – Saturday, 7 pm, Walter Brown Arena, Boston, Mass.

St. Lawrence (3-5-1, 2-2-1 ECAC, T-5th) and Clarkson (4-3-2, 2-2-1 ECAC, T-5th) at Boston College (9-3-0, 5-3-0 Hockey East, 1st) Friday – Saturday, 7 pm, Kelley Rink, Chesnut Hill, Mass.

St. Lawrence was one of the stories this past weekend. Actually, Eric Heffler was the story this past weekend. Heffler posted two shutouts, 1-0 against Rensselaer, and 7-0 against Union. The last time this happened in the ECAC was last season when the goaltender that he beat Saturday, Trevor Koenig, did it against Vermont and Dartmouth.

The two wins were the Saints’ first against Division I opponents this season, and the Saints are beginning to get towards their goal.

"We have come a long way since the opening weekend and we’ve been getting better each time out," said head coach Joe Marsh. "Heff was outstanding, the whole defensive unit played well both nights and the forwards were helping out as well. That’s just what we’re looking for, and to top things off we broke out offensively on Saturday and got it rolling a bit.

"We’ve got something we can build on and get some momentum going in the league," Marsh added. "We have two huge tests coming up this weekend at Boston College and Boston University, but I think we can learn something from them too. Playing the kind of teams we’ve played so far has helped us improve and mature and the upcoming weekend will be more of the same."

Clarkson broke out in a big way Saturday with a 11-0 shutout of Rensselaer, the fifth of goaltender Dan Murphy’s career. This came on the heels of a 3-3 tie against Union — a game in which the Golden Knights led 3-1 with 1:30 to go in the game.

"We outplayed Union for 58 minutes and to get a tie was a travesty," said head coach Mark Morris. "It was pretty darn close to the perfect game (against Rensselaer). (Dan) Murphy has been struggling big time. This was a huge confidence builder for him. Now that he’s got that out of his system, he can build on that."

Goals have been scarce for the Knights, and Morris is glad to have seen his team come through on Saturday evening.

"We knew we were going to explode at some point because goals were hard to come by," Morris said. "It was just a matter of time, and it’s been like passing kidney stones. We’ve hit posts, come up against hot goaltenders, and tonight we got bounces. We just kept rolling from there.

"You don’t ever want to run up the score on anybody, but we haven’t had any ourselves, and when you have it going you just don’t want to shut it off either because it’s very important for our team to know what it’s like to fill the net," added Morris. "We’ve gone through hell and to have a night like (Saturday) it’s a breath of fresh air."

The Boston duo of University and College have been impressive this season. The two teams are a combined 16-4-0, and both are ranked in the top ten.

For more on Boston College and Boston University, please refer to the Hockey East Preview.

PICKS: Clarkson at Boston University: The Knights got goals this past weekend, but they will be outscored by the Terriers. Boston University 5 Clarkson 3 St. Lawrence at Boston College: Heffler gets scored on this weekend. Boston College 4 St. Lawrence 2 St. Lawrence at Boston University: The Saints will try, but the Terriers get by. Boston University 4 St. Lawrence 3 Clarkson at Boston College: The North Country duo comes home winless. Boston College 3 Clarkson 2

Princeton (5-2-2, 2-2-2 ECAC, 4th) at Merrimack (5-6-0, 2-5-0 Hockey East, 8th) Friday, 7 pm, Volpe Center, North Andowver, Mass. Providence (7-3-0, 3-3-0 Hockey East, T-6th) at Princeton (5-2-2, 2-2-2 ECAC, 4th) Sunday, 5 pm, Hobey Baker Rink, Princeton, NJ Yale (6-1-0, 5-1-0 ECAC, 1st) at Providence (7-3-0, 3-3-0 Hockey East, T-6th) Friday, 7 pm, Schneider Arena, Providence, RI Merrimack (5-6-0, 2-5-0, Hockey East, 8th) at Yale (6-1-0, 5-1-0 ECAC, 1st) Saturday, 7 pm, Ingalls Rink, New Haven, Conn.

Princeton was hoping to get off to a strong start in the ECAC just as it did last year, but a sweep at the hands of Cornell and Colgate set them back a little bit. The Tigers are still in fourth place in the ECAC, and will take this opportunity to play games that don’t count in the conference.

"We really didn’t show up to play (this weekend) the way you have to in order to compete in this league," Princeton coach Don Cahoon said after the weekend’s games. "We’re not the first team to do this, nor [will we be] the last. Hopefully, these guys will learn from this. We just weren’t in it from the drop of the puck."

Yale is the surprise of the ECAC thus far in the young season, moving into first place in the league with a weekend sweep of Colgate and Cornell. The Bulldogs have five ECAC wins, just one shy of their total wins in the league last season.

Alex Westlund has been on fire for the Bulldogs. He has allowed just eight goals in seven games this season, posting a 1.16 GAA, and a .963 save percentage.

"The 1-0 win last season (in the ECAC playoffs against Colgate) really built some character and morale amongst our guys," Yale head coach Tim Taylor said. "These kids are playing some great hockey. Westlund is playing well, but you have to give a lot of credit to the senior defensemen, [Daryl] Jones and [Ray] Giroux. I try to keep those two defensemen out there as much as possible; that trio is doing a nice job.

"We had some good offensive opportunities (this weekend)," Taylor added. "But most importantly, we’re getting the puck to the right guys at the right time. That’s what the game is all about."

Merrimack got off to a hot start this season, but the Warriors have not started the Hockey East season like they started the non-conference schedule. Kris Porter has a nation leading 16 goals, and his partner Rejean Stringer is also pacing the Merrimack scoring.

Providence is surprising people with its start, and a lot of it has to do with strong balanced play. The Friars had a six game winning streak broken on Tuesday night with a loss to Northeastern.

For more information on Providence and Merrimack, please refer to the Hockey East Preview.

PICKS: Princeton at Merrimack: The tough Princeton defense gives it a close win. Princeton 3 Merrimack 2 Yale at Providence: The Bulldogs continue their hot play. Yale 4 Providence 1 Merrimack at Yale: Yale in a close one. Yale 3 Merrimack 2 Providence at Princeton: Another close game. Princeton 2 Providence 1

Union (1-7-1, 1-2-1 ECAC, T-8th) at Nebraska-Omaha (4-7-0, 4-6-0 vs. Major Division I) Friday – Saturday, 8:05 pm, Omaha Civic Auditorium, Omaha, Neb.

The Dutchmen were outplayed for the first 58 minutes of Friday’s game against Clarkson, and then they turned it on, scoring twice in the last 1:30 to tie the Golden Knights. The Dutchmen hoped to carry the momentum into Saturday’s game against St. Lawrence. Unfortunately for the Dutchmen, they were shutout 7-0.

"I’m not sure how (Saturday’s loss) will affect them," said head coach Stan Moore about his team. "But if ever there was a time to convince them that they had to play every second of every shift, and play every minute of every period, they can look at the game film and realize that this is one of those games that you can’t be off your game."

Consistency has been a word used all season long, and by every coach in the nation, and it certainly applies to the Dutchmen.

Nebraska-Omaha has been quite impressive in some of its outings, and unimpressive in its other outings. A sweep of Denver and wins against Air Force and UMass-Amherst have been sandwiched with sweeps by Princeton and Army, and losses to Air Force and UMass-Amherst.

The Mavericks like it at home, where they have scored 21 goals, as opposed to five goals on the road. They are led by Billy Pugliese, Derek Reynolds, Andrew Tortorella, Jason Cupp, and Vic Sharma offensively.

PICKS: This is a hostile environment, and Union is still very young. Look for a split. Union 4-2 and Nebraska-Omaha 4-1

Governor’s Cup Vermont (2-6-2, 0-3-2 ECAC, T-11th) vs. Maine (6-4-1, 4-3-0 Hockey East, T-3rd) Friday, 5 pm, Whittemore Center, Durham, NH Consolation/Championship Saturday, 4pm/7pm, Whittemore Center, Durham, NH

The going continues to be tough for the Catamounts, and after this tournament, the Cats will have to wait until after Christmas before they get a chance to hit the ice again.

If one scans the scoring leaders in the ECAC, not one single Catamount is listed. The only names to appear among the scoring leaders are freshmen Andreas Moborg and Jerry Gernander. Moborg leads the team in power play points with five (1-4), and Gernander leads the team with three power play goals.

Vermont is last in the league in scoring (15 goals in nine games, 1.67 goals per game), and has allowed the most goals in the league (35 goals in nine games, 3.89 goals per game).

Andrew Allen has taken a center role in between the pipes for the Cats, and has a save percentage of .894 (.892 ECAC), and a GAA of 3.25 (3.07 ECAC).

Maine is having an off-again, on-again time of it lately. A split with Merrimack and then a split with Boston College over the last two weeks has meant uneven play for the Black Bears. The 12-5 win over BC Saturday
was good news for Scott Parmentier and Cory Larose, each netting two goals,
and Shawn Wansborough had a hat trick.

The special teams for Maine were in top form on Saturday, scoring five power play goals on nine chances, and adding a short handed goal as well.

For more information on Maine, please refer to the
Hockey East Preview.

PICKS: Maine will get by Vermont, unless Vermont can put a few on the board. Maine 5 Vermont 1 Vermont will drop the consolation game to UMass-Lowell. UMass-Lowell 4 Vermont 2

Punch Imlach Memorial College Hockey Showcase Colgate (7-3-0, 4-2-0 ECAC, 3rd) vs. York (7-3-0, OUAA, 1st Far West Division) Sunday, 4 pm, Marine Midland Arena, Buffalo, NY Cornell (5-1-1, 4-1-1 ECAC, 2nd) vs. Niagara (3-1-0, 0-1-0 vs. Major Division I) Sunday, 7 pm, Marine Midland Arena, Buffalo, NY

The Red Raiders lost to Yale on Friday night 5-1, but responded with a 8-4 victory over Princeton on Saturday evening.

"I think the best part about (Saturday’s) win was the way our guys responded after the difficult loss last night," Colgate head coach Don Vaughan said. "I give a lot of that credit to the captains and the upperclassmen. They really led by example tonight. That’s all you can ask of them."

Rob Mara had a hat trick and Tim Loftsgard had two goals in Saturday’s win. Jed Whitchurch, the ECAC’s leading scorer, continued his run, and now has 17 assists. His assists are the only points that he has on the season.

Cornell got the power play going on Friday, scoring two power play goals in its win over Princeton. The next evening, the Big Red lost a squeaker in overtime to Yale 2-1. The lone Big Red goal was also on the power play.

"I think we’re far, far away from our capabilities. We’re just scratching the surface, but so are a lot of other teams," head coach Mike Schafer said. "God, we’re far from a dynasty or anything. We’ve got a lot of work ahead of us."

The Big Red continued to use four defensemen this past weekend, and fatigue is beginning to set in, but no one on the Big Red is using it as an excuse. Hopefully, the Big Red will get some of those injured defensemen back soon.

Niagara is getting set to play its second game against a major Division I opponent this weekend. In the Purple Eagles first game, against Rensselaer, they played the Engineers tough, but couldn’t come back from a three goal deficit.

Niagara is led by the line of Peter DeSantis, Mikko Sivonen, and Mike Isherwood. This combination is speedy, and has scoring capabilities. Goaltender Greg Gardner will probably get the start for head coach Blaise MacDonald.

The York Yeomen, ranked tenth in the CIAU, have outscored their opponents 54-32 in ten games this season. The Yeomen defeated Waterloo 3-0 on Saturday, and lost to Wilfred Laurier 5-2 on Thursday.

The leading scorers for the Yeomen are Johnny Brdarovic (8-17-25), Sasha Cucuz (10-14-24), and Mike Williams (9-15-24). In net, the Yeomen rely on Bobby DaCosta. DaCosta has played all ten games for the Yeomen, and has a GAA of 2.97.

PICKS: Colgate vs. York: The Red Raiders show their scoring. Colgate 7 York 2 Cornell vs. Niagara: A much closer game, but still a Big Red victory. Cornell 4 Niagara 2

The action in the ECAC dies down a bit because finals and the holidays are almost upon us. Next week in the ECAC, all games are within the league:

Friday, December 5: Brown at St. Lawrence Harvard at Clarkson Colgate at Rensselaer Cornell at Union

Saturday, December 6: Harvard at St. Lawrence Brown at Clarkson Cornell at Rensselaer Colgate at Union Yale at Princeton

Tuesday, December 9: Brown at Harvard

This Week in the CCHA: November 21, 1997

Appearances can be deceptive. While Michigan State is at the top of the USCHO poll, Northern Michigan is actually on top of the CCHA. At 6-1-1 in league play, the Wildcats have two more points than Michigan State. They’ve also played one more game.

Last week the ‘Cats beat Alaska-Fairbanks, 5-4 and 7-3. This week, Northern travels to Lake Superior for the one remaining game in its regular-season series with the Lakers. If Northern takes four points this weekend, the Wildcats will be assured of remaining atop the CCHA heap.

No. 1 Michigan State takes on a pair of Ohio teams this weekend. After sweeping Mankato State last weekend, the Spartans take it to the Buckeyes Friday night, then backtrack to Bowling Green on their way home Saturday.

The Wolverines have dropped out of the top ten after beating Ferris State 3-2 in overtime, then settling for a 2-2 tie last weekend. Like the Spartans, the Wolverines are playing Bowling Green and Ohio State this weekend. Like the Spartans, the Wolverines have played one fewer game than have the Wildcats.

At 4-5-1, Western Michigan hasn’t yet achieved .500 play in the CCHA, but the Broncos hang on to fourth place nonetheless. Western split with Lake Superior last weekend, and heads to Miami for two.

No. 4 Miami has played half the number of games Western Michigan has; yet the RedHawks are just one point behind Western in the standings. Miami took a game from Notre Dame last weekend, a 5-4 win that came down to the last thirty seconds of the game. With wins this weekend, Miami can significantly move up the CCHA ladder.

Ferris State and Notre Dame each have three CCHA wins, but Ferris State has played three more games than the Irish. Last weekend, the Bulldogs took a point from the Wolverines, and the Spartans beat the Buckeyes 3-2. Ferris State is ahead of Notre Dame in the standings by two points, so this crucial series could have playoff implications at the end of the regular season.

With just two wins in seven CCHA games, the Lakers are starting slowly. Last weekend LSSU split a pair of games with Western Michigan. This weekend, the Lakers hope to even up their series with Northern Michigan. The Wildcats have the edge in that season series, 1- 0-1.

Ohio State has just two wins in five CCHA games, but this is the best start the Buckeyes have had in a long, long time. Ohio State beat Bowling Green last weekend and lost to Notre Dame. This week, the Buckeyes will have to move mountains to get points. Michigan State visits Friday, and Michigan comes to Columbus Sunday.

Bowling Green lost a disappointing game to Ohio State last weekend. Trailing by three goals, the Falcons made it close in the third period, losing 5-4. This week, the Falcons have the same mountain to move as do the Buckeyes: Michigan Friday, Michigan State Saturday.

Alaska-Fairbanks — thankfully, and after a long mid-semester road trip — has the weekend off.

This is it, CCHA fans! The race for the playoffs begins — already — this weekend.

Last week in picks: 8-3 Overall record in picks: 33-31

Finally!

Ferris State (3-7-2, 3-4-2 CCHA) at Notre Dame (6-4-0, 3-3-0 CCHA) Thursday, 7 p.m., Joyce Center, South Bend, IN Notre Dame at Ferris State Saturday, 7 p.m., Ewigleben Ice Arena, Big Rapids, MI

Notre Dame took two points from Ohio State last weekend, but came very close to getting one or more from Miami in a 5-4 loss. "It was a good game, a good college game," says Notre Dame head coach Dave Poulin. "It was a disappointing loss for us, but we have to figure out how to win those games."

It was disappointing for Notre Dame because the Irish scored to tie the game in the middle of the third period before Miami’s Adam Copeland ended the game for Notre Dame when he scored with 20 seconds to go.

After playing Miami hard, Notre Dame dominated two periods of hockey against Ohio State less than 24 hours later. The Irish led the Buckeyes 3-0 going into the third, and let their guard down just enough to allow the Bucs to threaten. Still, Notre Dame won 3-2.

Poulin has said all along that winning breeds winning, that his players just had to get a taste of it before they learned how. "We’ve got a higher skill level. We’re able to compete at a higher skill level right now. We’re able to control the puck a little bit more than we were. And some kids have early confidence from a couple of wins."

The Irish face a tough Ferris State team that is experiencing a resurgence of its own. The Bulldogs beat Alaska-Fairbanks in a rare weekday game and took Michigan to overtime twice last week, losing 3-2 Friday, and gaining one point from a 3-3 tie Saturday.

"I have a great deal of respect for Bob Daniels and for the program he runs up there," says Poulin. "They swept us last year."

Helping the Bulldog effort this season is the outstanding performance of rookie goaltender Vince Owen, who has allowed just six even-strength goals in over 186 minutes of action. His league numbers are respectable — a 2.83 GAA and a save percentage of .891. For his play against the Nanooks and the Wolverines, Owen was named CCHA Defensive Player of the Week.

Leading the Bulldogs on offense are Kenzie Homer, Joel Irwin, and Kevin Swider. Homer has eight points, and Irwin and Swider each have seven. As a team, the Bulldogs have an impressive plus/minus rating of plus-17.

For Notre Dame, the name Ben Simon is nearly synonymous with offense. The sophomore center has four goals and three assists; two of the goals are shorthanded.

In net for the Irish, Matt Eisler looks solid with a 2.89 GAA and a .907 save percentage.

With the parity of the CCHA evident so early in the season, these two teams may very well be fighting each other for playoff position with this series. "We’re battling for it," says Poulin, "there’s no question about that."

But, in a season like this one, Poulin’s quick to add, "Every game is big, let’s face it."

This series is tough to call, but it’s hard to pick against Notre Dame with the way the Irish are playing.

PICK: Notre Dame 4-2, 4-3

Western Michigan (5-5-2, 4-5-1 CCHA) at No. 4 Miami (7-1-0, 4-1-0 CCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m. Goggin Ice Arena, Oxford, OH

Western Michigan brings its defensive brand of hockey to a Oxford, Oh., where offense can be explosive.

"They are a very, very good defensive team," says Miami head coach Mark Mazzoleni. "They may have the best defensive corps in the CCHA. Barnes does a very good job for them in goal. You’re not going to have a lot of high-scoring games with them. You have to be prepared to execute based on the way they’re going to play defensively, so that you can create some rhythms, create some tempo."

Pacing that Miami rhythm are seniors Tim Leahy and Dan Boyle. Forward Leahy leads the CCHA in league scoring with four goals and nine assists for 13 points, while Boyle, a defenseman, has six goals and five assists.

There’s a third Miami player in the top ten in league scoring. In fourth place is Adam Copeland, with five and five.

Clearly, this is a nice rhythm, a nice tempo — for the RedHawks, at least.

They face one tough netminder in Matt Barnes. Barnes has logged more time in net than any other CCHA goaltender this season, over 727 minutes. His GAA is 2.23, and his save percentage is .915.

While Barnes and the excellent Western defensemen are preventing goals, they’re getting spotty help on the other side of the puck. Frank Novock and Steve Duke lead the Broncos with seven points. Chuck Mindel, Brett Mills, and Joe Corvo each have six.

Mazzoleni says, "You’re going to play certain teams in our league that can really buckle it down defensively, and then it’s got to be who’s going to score the goals." That’s pretty much how this series will go. Western will try to shut down the ‘Hawks dangerous offense, and if they succeed, fans will see two low-scoring games in Goggin Arena.

Although Trevor Prior has been the RedHawks’ go-to guy in net for most of this season and last, Mazzoleni says he’s "leaning toward" playing Ian Olsen on Saturday.

"You’ve got to build for the future," says Mazzoleni. "We made a decision when we took Ian Olsen that he would have to sit out a year for major junior hockey. He sat out all last year without playing, and he’s our goaltender next year. If we don’t play him this year, he’ll sit out two years then. We have to get him in there and get him going."

This good defensive matchup will ultimately come down to who scores goals, no matter which goalie plays in net for Miami. When it comes to scoring goals, few in the CCHA are better than the ‘Hawks.

PICKS: Miami 3-2, 4-2

Northern Michigan (7-2-2, 6-1-1 CCHA) at Lake Superior (3-6-1, 2-4-1 CCHA) Friday, 7 p.m., Abel Arena, Sault Ste. Marie, MI

The Lakers have been struggling this season with a young-ish team, a rookie goaltender and an offense that’s still trying to find its legs. Last week, Lake Superior State split with Western Michigan, losing 4-3 in overtime of the first game, and winning 4-1 in the second game. Both games were on the road.

"It was disappointing Friday, and great on Saturday — one of those," says Laker head coach Scott Borek. "We had a 3-1 lead with 10 minutes to go Friday night. We weren’t able to finish them off. We had good chances in overtime, they had good chances in overtime, and they scored."

Borek is encouraged about the play he saw from his team against Western on the road. "I think we played pretty well both nights," he says. "We matched up pretty well, the both of us.

"We’re playing a lot better, but we’re not getting a lot of results right now. Hopefully that will come with time."

Northern Michigan swept Alaska-Fairbanks on the Nanooks’ last leg of a long U.P. road trip. The Wildcats needed overtime to do it Friday, winning 5-4 in OT. Northern came back strong on Saturday to beat Alaska-Fairbanks 7-3.

Borek knows how well this Wildcats team is playing, since his Lakers have faced them twice already this season. In October, the Lakers and Wildcats skated to a 2-2 overtime tie before the Wildcats beat the Lakers 5-3. Both games were in Marquette.

Borek welcomes this last regular-season meeting with Northern as an opportunity. "Playing a first-place team, you have a chance to move up the standings if you can get the win. They’re playing great hockey. They’re very physical. We’re going to have to try to keep it a very close, tight-checking game, and they’re probably going to try to open it up. If we can keep it tight-checking, then we’ll have success. But if both teams’ shots are over thirty, that won’t bode well for us."

Right now, the Lakers are having trouble producing goals. Tobin Praznik, Jason Sessa and Terry Marchant each have seven points, but only Praznik and Marchant are on the plus side of the plus/minus, each at plus-4. The team, as a whole, is minus-40.

In contrast, Northern Michigan has an incredible overall team plus/minus rating of plus 90. There are 15 ‘Cats with at least one goal. Buddy Smith leads the team with nine points, and Fred Mattersdorfer is close behind with seven.

In order to beat the ‘Cats, Borek knows the Lakers have to keep the game close. "We’re not going to trade offensive chances with anyone in the league and be successful, just because we’re not really an offensive team. If we can slow the game down and make it twenty-five shots or under for both teams, that’s our kind of game. Then I think we have a legitimate shot of beating anyone. The minute you get a kind of end-to-end game, then we’re going to struggle."

The Lakers are hoping to get an offensive boost from Trent Walford, who has just been added to the lineup. "He’ll add offense shortly," says Borek. "[But] it will be a while before he can catch up." Walford sat out because he played major junior hockey.

The Lakers are getting good goaltending from rookie Rob Galatiuk. In league play, Galatiuk has a 2.79 GAA and a save percentage of .909. In the net for Northern, Duane Hoey has also been solid, posting a GAA of 2.26 and a .902 save percentage.

In order to salvage this season and move up in the standings, the Lakers need this game. Expect them to come out tough, but remember that Northern Michigan is first in the CCHA for a reason.

PICK: Northern 3-2

No. 1 Michigan State (9-1-2, 5-1-1 CCHA) at Ohio State (5-4-1, 2-3-0 CCHA) Friday, 7 p.m., Ohio State Ice Rink, Columbus, OH Michigan State at Bowling Green (2-8-1, 1-3-1 CCHA) Saturday, 7 p.m., Bowling Green Ice Arena, Bowling Green, OH

Michigan State regained the top spot in the country with a sweep of Mankato State at home. The Michigan State-Mankato State game was the only game involving a CCHA team that didn’t require overtime for a decision Friday night, as Michigan State won 5-2. The Spartans won convincingly again on Saturday, 4-0, as Chad Alban earned his eighth career shutout. "They’re a very good team," said Spartan head coach Ron Mason of Mankato State. "They surprised me with their overall skill level. We pretty much controlled their big line. That was a major reason for our victories. We killed penalties real well, and our power play was clicking. I think a combination of being at home and a good attention to detail by our team is the reason we won two, because you could very easily lose a game to that team."

Even though the Spartans are the top-ranked team after receiving 13 first-place votes in this week’s USCHO poll, Mason remains level-headed about Spartan hockey and the abilities of the team.

"We’re playing fine," says Mason. "I don’t think we’re going to kill anybody, but on other hand, basically, we’re a pretty hard team to play against. Then if we get some goals here and there, then we’re even tougher to play against."

Michigan State at Ohio State

With a 5- 4 win in Bowling Green, the Buckeyes gained two points and improved their record to 5-3-1, their best start since the 1990-91 season. The game in Bowling Green cost the Buckeyes, however; three Buckeye players received game disqualifications for a skirmish in the second period.

According to Ohio State head coach John Markell, the loss of those players — freshman forward Benji Wolke, junior forward Chris Richards and starting defenseman and team captain Taj Schaffnit — was a factor in Ohio State’s 3-2 loss to Notre Dame the following day.

"When we beat Miami, we had two lines going pretty good," says Markell. "That’s what you need in this league. When we lost our Wolke-Richards-Cousineau line, it affected our team."

Markell says his team is struggling mentally, and that he may have to shorten his bench to put an effective team on the ice. "Our guys need to focus more on what’s going on in this league and how competitive it is. We have to come to play with three lines. I have to be assured as a coach that I have three lines competing. I think you’re going to see in the rotation more three lines than you will four, because we’re not that deep physically and mentally right now to play four lines. That’s going to be one of our biggest adjustments."

Ohio State won the series against Michigan State last year, but, as Markell says, "That was a year ago."

Mason says that the size of the OSU ice rink may be a factor in this game. "We play Ohio State in that little box," he says, calling it "ping-pong hockey."

"There’s always an adjustment to that rink," says Mason, "and we’ll see how we do. So much depends on how comfortable our kids feel and how quickly. And of course Ohio State’s used to it, so they can go right after you. The biggest thing there is to make sure you don’t go behind early — they’ve been a good third-period team."

Each team plays a different opponent for the second game of the weekend, but each coach agrees that he has to focus on Friday’s game before thinking about who he’s playing next.

"Since we’ve started this format [playing two teams in one weekend], I concentrate on the Friday night game, and then change gears once it’s over," says Mason. "If you start thinking two games ahead you’ll forget about the next one, and that’s the most important. You’re concentration is primarily on the first night." Michigan State plays Bowling Green Saturday.

Ohio State takes on arch-rival Michigan on Sunday, a team they haven’t beaten in years, but Markell says, "If we look ahead to Michigan on Sunday, we’re making a serious mistake. We have to get past Michigan State first."

Both of these teams have solid goaltending, but no one has goaltending like the Spartans do this season. Chad Alban is the best in CCHA play, with a goals-against average of 1.57 and a save percentage of .916. For the Buckeyes, both Ray Aho and Jeff Maund are playing well, but the two couldn’t be having more different seasons. Aho’s numbers are better — a 2.71 GAA with a save percentage of .901, compared to Maund’s GAA of 4.00 and save percentage of .857 — but Aho is 0-4-1 while Maund is 5-0-0, a situation that Coach Markell himself has called "unfair" for Aho.

Defensively, the Spartans are stingy, giving up just 13 goals in eight CCHA games. That’s the same number of goals that OSU has scored in five CCHA games.

In spite of what Coach Mason says about the rink — don’t let him fool you — the only advantage the Buckeyes may have is on offense. The Buckeye first line of Hugo Boisvert, Jean-Francois Dufour and Eric Meloche is explosive, accounting for all five goals the Buckeyes scored against Bowling Green. For his two goals in the Bowling Green game and one against Notre Dame, Boisvert was named the CCHA Offensive Player of the Week.

It’s not so much a matter of how many goals this line scores, as it is that they score. When the Boisvert-Dufour-Meloche line gets three points, in any combination, the Buckeyes win. It’s that simple. When they’ve combined for three points between them, the Bucs are 5-0-0. When they don’t, the Buckeyes are winless.

Michigan State owns this series, 58-9-4. Keep in mind that two of those Spartan losses to Ohio State came last season. And the Buckeyes are at home…

Nah…ain’t gonna happen.

PICK: Michigan State 3-2

Michigan State at Bowling Green

Michigan State head coach Ron Mason calls this weekend’s games in Ohio a "tough trip." He says, "It’s not easy to go into to Ohio and play both of those schools. As much as Bowling Green’s up and down, Ohio State looks like they’re fairly consistent — and they’re always good in that rink. Yeah, I think we have our hands full."

Saying that Bowling Green is "up and down" may be an understatement. In a nightmarish repeat of a home game against Clarkson — when there were as many as five Falcons in the penalty box at one point — the discipline of the frustrated Falcons broke down once again when Ohio State came to town for Bowling Green’s only game last weekend.

Bowling Green lost 5-4, and both teams lost three players to game disqualifications after Falcon Adam Edinger hit Buckeye Benji Wolke after the whistle had blown and an altercation erupted. The disqualifications were questionable — no punches were thrown — but clearly the Bowling Green players were acting out in frustration at being down 5-2 against Ohio State, a team they don’t particularly like.

After the game, BG head coach Buddy Powers said he was disappointed that his team had, once again, essentially beaten itself.

There were some bright spots for the Falcons. Goaltender Mike Savard was playing like a man with a mission. Savard made 18 saves on 23 shots, many of which were at point-blank range and some of which seemed like volleys of gunfire. At one point, Savard stopped not one but three shots up close from Buckeye sniper Chris Richards, all while on his back.

Another bright spot for the Falcons is freshman Louis Mass, who played very well against the Buckeyes — until he was given a game DQ, that is.

There are plenty of little bright spots for Bowling Green, but nothing bright seems to be coming out of the big picture. Brad Holzinger leads the team with 11 points — but that’s one goal and ten assists. Dan Price has three goals, Dave Faulkner has six goals, but the Falcons aren’t scoring consistently, or enough.

The Spartans have found some offense with Bryan Adams and Mike York Adams leads the team with five goals and 13 assists for 18 points, while York has six goals and 10 assists for 16 points. The two are fourth and fifth, respectively, in CCHA in scoring.

PICK: Michigan State 4-1

Michigan (7-3-1, 4-2-1 CCHA) at Bowling Green (2-8-1, 1-3-1 CCHA) Friday, 7 p.m., Bowling Green Ice Arena, Bowling Green, OH Michigan at Ohio State (5-4-1, 2-3-0 CCHA) Sunday, 3 p.m., Ohio Expo Center, Columbus, OH

Last weekend, the Ferris State Bulldogs took the Wolverines to overtime twice, and Michigan paid for it by dropping out of the top ten. "We have a tough schedule," says Michigan head coach Red Berenson. "We’ve played two home games out of our seven league games, and obviously the next two are on the road as well. We’ll have two out of nine games on the road in the first part of the season. You look at Miami and Northern and some of these schools, they’ve hardly played on the road."

Right now, Michigan has three losses — the sum of losses suffered by the Wolverines in regular-season play last year. Not only has Michigan had a near-complete turnover in team personnel, but Berenson says that the road schedule and the loss of Matt Herr to a groin injury is troubling the team in the early season.

"We’re young and Matt Herr’s not playing. We’re doing pretty well when you look at the numbers. You have to see that we have ten freshmen, Matt Herr’s not playing, we’ve played most of our games on the road and we’re hanging in there. But that’s all. We’re not going to dominate anybody, I don’t think, at this point anyway."

Michigan at Bowling Green

Like most of the other coaches in the CCHA, Red Berenson finds it difficult to look beyond his next game, even when the Wolverines face two different opponents in the same weekend. "We’re going to play it like two one-game series, separate the two, so that we get a chance to prepare for both teams and hopefully get off to a good start," says Berenson. "I always concentrate on the first game of the road trip; that’s the most important one."

It’s a good bet that Michigan won’t have to concentrate very hard for their first one, as the Wolverines play an ailing Bowling Green team that can’t seem to. For this game, Bowling Green will be without three key players. Forward Adam Edinger and defensemen B.J. Adams and Louis Mass will miss Friday’s game because of game disqualifications in their game against Ohio State Nov. 15.

Berenson says that teams like Bowling Green, teams that are down, can be dangerous. "They’re struggling, and they’re unpredictable. Apparently they’ve got a couple of guys who are suspended. We don’t know really what to expect, except that they’re going to be a little desperate. If we can get off to a good start, that will be important."

There’s a good chance that the Wolverines will be able to do just that. With both Mass and Adams out, the Falcons will have trouble stopping Bill Muckalt and Bobby Hayes, who pace the Wolverines with five goals each.

Michigan scoring is averaging just over three goals a game, while allowing 19 goals in seven games. Bowling Green has also allowed 19 goals in league play this season, but in five games. The Falcons are having trouble scoring and defending.

Unless Bowling Green head coach Buddy Powers has a secret weapon, this one could be a long night for the Falcons, even if goaltender Mike Savard stands on his head.

PICK: Michigan 5-1

Michigan at Ohio State

Hey! Did you hear about the big matchup between Ohio State and Michigan this weekend? You know, the one not played at the Ohio State campus? The one played…at the Ohio State Fairgrounds?

Yes, we should nod to the football game being played in Ann Arbor this weekend, not necessarily because we care, but because that game — the one with the pigskin, not the puck — gives a more public face to the level of intensity of the rivalry between these two teams.

As much as Ohio State fans despise Michigan fans, the Ohio State hockey team hates the Wolverine hockey team.

For the record, Red Berenson once corrected the use of the word "hate" in that sentence, saying, "No, they really respect us."

Nice euphemism, Red.

Ohio State wants this game so, so bad. How bad, you ask? Ohio State hasn’t beaten Michigan — in 21 regular-season and six playoff games — since the 1990-91 season.

That bad.

When these two teams last met, it was at the Ohio State Fairgrounds Expo Center on March 2. It was the last game of the regular season for both teams, and it was Seniors’ Night for OSU. Senior captain Steve Brent responded by fighting with Bubba Berenzweig, kicking the Michigan player’s helmet across the ice just after saying something, um, respectful to Red Berenson and the Michigan bench, and just before leaving the game prematurely.

Ohio State led that game 4-3 going into the third period. That’s when Berenson decided to replace Greg Malicke with Marty Turco in the net to make sure his seniors didn’t lose their last-ever regular-season game to a team they’d never lost to before.

Michigan won, 7-4.

It’s a new season, and each team seems new, with The Michigan Nine gone, and a slew of new players for the Buckeyes. Each team is young. The Wolverines, however, are relying on veteran leadership to get them through their transitional period.

"Turco has continued to play well," says Berenson. "Billy Muckalt — every game is like a highlight film for him. Now, we don’t have the players to compliment him, not right now, anyway. And Bobby Hayes is playing really well. Turco and those guys are really carrying the team."

Unless something drastic happens, you’ll see Turco in net for the Wolverines for this game. His numbers in league play are good: a 2.46 GAA and an .898 save percentage. Those numbers look surprisingly similar to the numbers Buckeye goaltender Ray Aho has put up this season. Aho’s save percentage is a shade better than Turco’s at .901, and his GAA is 2.71. The difference is that Aho is winless.

The Buckeyes can’t seem to put any scoring up for the sophomore goaltender, who was instrumental in Ohio State’s season-ending seven-game unbeaten streak last season. With Aho in net, the Buckeyes are 0-4-1. With rookie goaltender Jeff Maund in net, the Buckeyes are 5-0-0, but Maund’s numbers tell a strange story — a 4.00 GAA, just 48 saves, and a save percentage of .857.

The goaltending stats alone tell the story of this season’s Buckeyes, a team that can’t seem to make up its mind whether or not it can play. This is a team that tied and beat Clarkson on the road, and came back from a 4-1 deficit to beat Miami 5-4. Yet the Buckeyes nearly threw their game away against Bowling Green, nearly blowing a 5-2 lead before winning 5-4. Then they played flat for two periods against Notre Dame, trailing 3-0 going into the third period before scoring two unanswered goals to make the final score 3-2.

Ohio State head coach John Markell is perplexed. "Either we’re going to be licking our wounds, or we’ll come back down to earth and play well."

Berenson says of the Buckeyes, "They’re at home, and they’re an improved team."

When the Buckeye first line of Hugo Boisvert, Eric Meloche, and Jean-Francois Dufour combines for three points, the Buckeyes are unbeaten.

They want this game, and they may get this game. It’s hard to pick a team to win in a place where the students toilet-paper their own campus before the big game — as OSU students do before the Michigan football game, no matter where it’s played — but, hey, those kids don’t go to hockey games.

Every streak has to end.

PICK: Ohio State 4-2

This Week in Hockey East: November 21, 1997

Okay, maybe only dinosaurs from the sixties can remember that phrase while wearing day-glow bellbottoms and saying, "Groovy!" But it sure fit last week’s action in Hockey East. Until the irresistible force met the immovable object last Sunday — in the form of Providence and UMass-Lowell facing each other after both teams won on Friday — not a single team avoided a split. Not BU taking on UNH. Not Maine hosting Merrimack. And not Boston College playing Northeastern.

Even on the national scene, the same trend held. The only top-ten team that won twice was new number one Michigan State, which swept Mankato State.

Maybe it’s that El Nino thing that CCHA Correspondent Paula Weston was writing about a couple weeks ago.

The Karhu Player of the Week was New Hampshire’s Derek Bekar, who returned from a hip pointer injury to score three goals and add an assist in the Wildcats’ series with BU.

Providence College’s Boyd Ballard repeats as the league’s Rookie of the Week, after winning both games and recording 38 saves against UMass-Lowell.

Last week’s record in picks: 8-4 New season’s record in picks: 42-16

No. 8 Boston College (7-2-0, 4-2-0 HE) at No. 9 Maine (5-3-1, 3-2-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Alfond Arena, Orono, ME Saturday, 7 p.m., Alfond Arena, Orono, ME No. 8 Boston College (7-2-0, 4-2-0 HE) at Brown (1-3-0, 1-3-0 ECAC)

Tuesday, 7 p.m., Meehan Auditorium, Providence, RI

Boston College almost kicked off an eight-games-in-16-days stretch with three wins. The operative word, of course, is almost. Sandwiched by a Friday night 5-2 win over Northeastern and a 4-3 comeback overtime victory over Harvard was the one that got away. On Saturday night, in the home half of a series with the Huskies, the Eagles outshot Northeastern 14-3, 13-3, 9-7 only to lose 5-4 on the only shot in overtime.

For BC goaltender Scott Clemmensen, surrendering five goals on 14 shots amounted to any netminder’s worst nightmare.

"The most difficult game for a goaltender to play in is one where you don’t face a lot of shots," said coach Jerry York. "It was a difficult game for Scott. The puck-luck was against him. There were some tips and some funny goals, but he’ll rebound and learn from that."

Of course, goaltending wasn’t the only factor in the loss.

"When you analyze the game, we made some critical mistakes, starting at about the middle mark of the third period when we took back-to-back penalties which enabled Northeastern to go on a five-on-three. That took what looked like an insurmountable 4-2 lead for us — based on the way the game was going — and put them right back in it at 4-3. Then we just had some puck-luck go against us.

"Northeastern hung tough and [their goaltender Marc] Robitaille kept them in the hockey game. It was very disappointing that we couldn’t secure a win in front of a very boisterous crowd here. But, all in all, I thought we played well in over 115 minutes of the series. So now we move on."

BC crowds, although irrelevant for this week, given two games in Orono and another in Providence, deserve mention. In recent years, Conte Forum has felt empty, with typically 2,000 to 3,000 in attendance (except for games against BU), leaving more empty seats than full. Not so anymore, it seems. Over 5,000 passed through the turnstiles on Saturday night.

"The crowds are reflecting the improvement in our team," said York. "We’re working awfully hard as a team and we have a lot of enthusiasm. We play a fun style to watch; we’re quick and we go end-to-end. I think as the winter goes on, we’re going to see significant improvement in the crowds."

The Eagles now stand atop Hockey East with eight points on a 4-2-0 league record, but three of the four teams at six points hold a game in hand. The fourth, BU, has two games in hand. Still, after the last few rebuilding years, "the first-place Boston College Eagles" is music to the ears of their fans.

"It’s certainly nice to be in the mix of teams," said York. "It’s very early in the year, but that’s our goal, to get in the mix of those top teams nationally. I think we’re well on our way to being there. We haven’t been there the last several years."

BC now travels to Orono for what used to be the toughest road trip in the league. With the Black Bears losing two of their last three home games, however, one has to wonder about the tarnished intimidation factor of Alfond Arena.

"Maine has certainly been a difficult team for us to match up with in past years," said York. "This particular year, I think going into it we feel we have a real good chance to do some things that we’ve never done against Maine before. It’s a tough test for any team to go up there and play, but we look forward to it more this year than we have in the past."

Maine lost the opener to Merrimack 5-4, before gaining the split 6-4.

After a poor performance by top goalie Alfie Michaud against BU one week earlier, coach Shawn Walsh started backup netminder Bryan Masotta on Friday, during which Masotta got a taste of Clemmensen’s medicine.

"In the second and third periods, we held [Merrimack] to 10 shots," said Walsh. "They got five goals and I couldn’t blame the goalie. They were just opportunistic."

Michaud, on the other hand, rebounded from his subpar performance one week earlier.

"Alfie played well on Saturday, especially when the game was close," said Walsh. "They were actually ahead 2-1 midway through the game, and we got three [goals] in a minute and seven seconds to break it open. But when it was 2-1, he made about three real good saves. If we’d gotten down by two, it might have gotten real difficult."

The goaltending picture for this weekend and beyond is unclear. "We’ll go on a week-to-week basis," said Walsh. "I’m not setting up a pattern yet."

After the Friday night loss, Walsh made some lineup changes and some of the new faces played well.

"We got a real lift from our fourth line [of Aaron Boone, Jim Leger and A.J. Begg]," said Walsh. "They’ll definitely be back in the lineup and Nate Ponitz played solidly on defense, which was something we needed."

Walsh hopes to get some of the walking wounded back this week, especially Cory Larose, who missed both Merrimack games. Regardless of who is in the lineup, however, Walsh is looking for stronger play.

"We have to play well defensively and really focus on our own game," he said. "We’ve just been uncharacteristically loose in our own zone. I would think it’s because of our inexperience, especially on defense, but both on defense and up front. It’s an area that we’ve just got to keep working on."

That defensive presence becomes even more important with BC’s Marty Reasoner invading Alfond Arena. Walsh doesn’t match lines, but will be aware of when Reasoner is on the ice.

"I’ll certainly have our best defensemen on the ice against him," said Walsh. "He’s a great player. What makes him a great player is not just his overall ability. It’s that he can finish himself. A lot of real good players aren’t natural finishers, but he seems to be."

After the big tilt in Orono, BC then travels down Route 95 for a midweek game against Brown, a team that has won just one of its first four contests, all one-goal games. The Bears could be a tougher opponent than their record would indicate, though, since all four teams they’ve faced have been among the ECAC’s hottest teams out of the chute.

Up front, they are led by Damian Prescott, Brown’s first 20-goal scorer since 1977. Prescott, however, has gotten off to a lukewarm start with only a goal and two assists. John DiRenzo (eight points) and Paul Giblin (five) have picked up the slack, while Jimmy Andersson and D.J. Harding are the top guns on the blue line.

Jeff Holowaty has played all four games in goal, posting a 4.17 goals-against average and a .877 save percentage.

(For a more detailed look at Brown from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICK: Either team could sweep, or there could be a split. How’s that for going out on a limb?

Hey, if meteorologists can predict a 50 percent chance of clear skies and a 50 percent chance of a foot of snow in your driveway, what’s wrong with a little college hockey equivocating?

In a choice that has been typed in, deleted and changed twice already, BC sweeps Maine, 5-4, 4-3. The Eagles then dominate Brown, 5-2.

Merrimack (5-4-0, 2-3-0 HE) vs. No. 5 New Hampshire (6-3-0, 2-3-0 HE) Friday, 7 p.m., Whittemore Center, Durham, NH

Saturday, 7 p.m., Volpe Complex, North Andover, MA

New Hampshire split its big series with BU, dominating at home 5-0 before Chris Drury proved the deciding factor in a 4-2 Terriers win.

"I figured they’d be ready to go after getting shut out last night," said Mark Mowers after the loss. "Playing down here is always tough. I think it’s the toughest rink in the league."

Fortunately for the Wildcats, they gave themselves the cushion of a win at the friendly confines of the Whittemore Center before entering BU’s lions’ den. A jubilant UNH crowd reveled in their team’s first shutout of the Terriers since 1934. If there’s a better advertisement in Hockey East for the exciting atmosphere of college hockey, this writer hasn’t seen it.

At BU’s Walter Brown Arena, tough rink that it is, the Wildcats played well, but simply couldn’t stop Drury, who scored on an end-to-end rush in which no one could even lay a hand him, and then added another great individual goal-scoring play.

"They’re a good team; we’re a good team," said coach Dick Umile. "We competed hard. We had an opportunity to get a jump on them of two games. Now it will come down to Dec. 12 [when the teams meet for the last time in the regular season].

"I’m just disappointed that we didn’t have a chance to win it…. but Drury won it with the big play. But I liked the way we competed."

Still, given UNH’s position going into the weekend, a split wasn’t exactly the worst thing in the world. They entered the weekend with a 1-2 league record and faced an undefeated team that had just smoked Maine 6-0 in Orono.

Now, the Wildcats take on Merrimack, a team they humiliated 11-4 one week earlier.

"We had the worst possible combination when we played them," said Merrimack coach Ron Anderson. "We played poorly and they played great. They’re a tough team to play even when you play at the top of your game. But we’ve regrouped and made a couple adjustments in game plan and strategy."

Those changes led to a Warrior split of their two-game set in Orono, winning 5-4 before dropping a 6-4 finale. Reflecting the thoughts of teams and fans throughout the region who fought through the snow and atrocious traffic to get to Friday night’s games, Anderson quipped, "It’s too early to have this much snow in the season."

Turning serious, he said, "I was happy to see us bounce back from a tough weekend. I thought we played pretty steady and I thought both games could have gone either way."

Among the changes made since the 11-4 debacle, Anderson shifted sophomore Chris Halecki from left wing on a line with Rejean Stringer and Kris Porter to center the third line with rookies Vince Clevenger and Ron Mongeau. Freshman Fred Nelson moved up to the Stringer line.

"We were trying to get a third line going," said Anderson. "Our third unit with Clevenger, Mongeau and another guy wasn’t working, so we wanted to try somebody else out there. I didn’t want to put Freddie there because I didn’t want three freshmen on a line.

"Chris played center and left wing for us last year, so the obvious move was to move Chris to center that line, moving Clevenger to right wing, which I wanted to take a look at anyways. He’s been playing center. So we put Chris in the middle and put Nelson with Porter and Stringer.

"There were three question marks. Could Clevenger play right wing? Would the line be effective with Halecki on it at center? And what would happen to our other line with Nelson on the left? So far, all three things have taken a turn for the positive."

The third line got going with a Clevenger goal while the Stringer line continued to flourish on the weekend: Nelson (one goal, two assists), Stringer (one goal, three assists) and Porter (three goals, one assist).

Stringer (12 points) and Porter (11 points) now lead Hockey East in league scoring, while their 17 points trails only Maine’s Steve Kariya (21 points) in overall scoring. Porter, perhaps the best-kept secret in Division I, leads the country in goals with 13.

Two names known to few outside the confines of the Merrimack campus — defensemen Chris Silvestro and Andrew Fox — combined to allow only one goal on the weekend.

"That’s another area that we were apprehensive about, in that we graduated two starters last year and didn’t bring anybody in," said Anderson. "But we also felt that we had ten in our program last year, which left us with eight, and we felt that of the eight there were certainly six that could play. It would just be a matter of which six would step to the plate.

"Chris and Andrew have been paired together all year and have played well for us. We’re reasonably satisfied with their performance and that held true again this weekend. They played pretty steady for us all weekend long."

Maine coach Shawn Walsh, for one, was very impressed with the Merrimack squad after the split with his ninth-ranked Black Bears. Having administered some of the worst beatings inflicted on the Warriors in past years, he offered this perspective on Merrimack’s apparent coming of age as a significant Division I program.

"I thought Merrimack was a very, very good team," said Walsh. "They are the most dangerous Merrimack team, and the best Merrimack team, I have seen in the league.

"They are extremely good up front. Oh boy, they are good. And they’re experienced. Any one of those six guys [on the top two lines] can score at any time. They showed it in the second and third periods the first night, when we held them to 10 shots and they got five goals, and I couldn’t blame the goalie. They were just opportunistic and they were good at it."

With wins over nationally-ranked Boston College and Maine, Merrimack has taken major strides toward becoming a legitimate factor in the Hockey East race.

"I thought we took a step forward last year about halfway through the year," said Anderson. "It took a lot longer than any of the coaches had thought it would take, but very seldom do you see any program take that step forward very quickly. It took us five or six years, but we think we’re getting there.

"It also is cyclical. All you have to do is look around the different leagues and see teams that have been at the top and aren’t there anymore. So you have to constantly be looking for today and tomorrow at the same time.

"But we’d like to think — we have our fingers crossed — that we’ve bridged that gap now and made ourselves a legitimate Division I program. Obviously, it’s up to us to keep it there now."

To keep the momentum rolling, the Warriors now need to pick up some points from the same UNH team that steamrollered them two weeks earlier.

"We’re hoping to have some real solid efforts this weekend," said Anderson. "It’s going to take a near-perfect performance by us to make a game of it because they are so powerful. But that’s the objective, to try to get perfect performances every night out."

PICK: This has all the looks of a split to it. Beating a team 11-4 acts as an open invitation to overconfidence. And Merrimack has proven it can take on the big boys and win.

However, some Merrimack fans have pointed out that the Warriors have performed best when this column has picked them to lose, while most of their disappointments have been in games they’ve been picked to win.

As a result, a generous donation to the Dave Hendrickson Slush Fund has prompted the following prediction: UNH sweeps, 11-4, 11-4.

I can’t be bought, but I can be rented.

P.S. Forget the money-back guarantee.

Brown (1-3-0, 1-3-0 ECAC) and Harvard (1-3-1, 1-2-1 ECAC) vs. No. 2 Boston University (5-1-0, 3-1-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Walter Brown Arena, Boston, MA

Tuesday, 7 p.m., Bright Hockey Center, Cambridge, MA

Boston University picked up its first loss of the season with a 5-0 stinker against UNH, but came back with a 4-2 win back at home, fueled by two outstanding Chris Drury goals.

"We were so out of sync [on Friday] that we didn’t change the lines and we didn’t want to blame anybody," said coach Jack Parker. "I don’t mean to take anything away from UNH. They played great. If we played real well, we would have lost 4-2 or 5-2. They played terrific, but we didn’t play, especially after our demise on the power play when they scored two shorthanded goals. We just didn’t seem to have our legs.

"We made one mistake. Unfortunately, we made it over and over again. We simply refused to hit anyone."

Parker had a simple message for his troops.

"Boys," he told them, "Put this one behind you. You had a lousy night. Don’t think it was somebody else’s fault. Look in the mirror. You didn’t play well."

The Terriers, as a whole, rebounded and Drury came to the rescue.

"When you see him game in and game out," said Parker, "you realize that this kid is really special because of skill coupled with unbelievable work ethic and competitive spirit.

"If you could watch him in practice, he pisses everybody off in practice because he works so hard…. If you woke him up at three o’clock in the morning and said, ‘We’re going over to the skating club for a pickup game,’ he’d beat you to the loose puck there. And if he didn’t, he’d bounce you and then he’d take it away. That’s just the way he is."

Drury also drew plaudits for his work in his own zone.

"Chris played fabulous defensively," said Parker. "He got two goals tonight, but his best plays were defensive plays."

Parker also singled out Drury’s left wing for strong play on Saturday.

"Tommi Degerman had an unbelievable night," he said. "He played great defensively and played great killing penalties. He was snakebitten when [UNH goaltender Sean] Matile made some great saves off him, but he made a couple fabulous passes as well."

Another Chris, Chris Heron, returns from a shoulder separation suffered in the Ice Breaker Invitational. With Heron an integral part of the up front depth, his injury worried many BU fans who wondered if the Drury line alone could carry the team, with a goal or two tossed in by the kids. Although BU’s resulting 5-1-0 record is none too shabby, his addition to the lineup is a welcome one.

"Even though he’s still the youngest guy on the team — younger than all our freshmen — he gives us a year’s experience, he gives us a lot of skating ability and he’s a lot stronger this year," said Parker. "He’s an important player and we’ll get some ice for him. He’ll kill some penalties, he’ll play some power play and we’ll play him on a regular line."

BU now takes on nonconference foes Brown and Harvard.

"This time last year," said Parker, "we really fell on our face with a tie at Yale and losses at Clarkson and St. Lawrence. We’re trying to impress upon the guys to get after it in the non-league games as well as the league games and make sure we’re ready to play. That will be the theme for this week’s practices as we get four straight against the ECAC."

Brown is profiled briefly above.

Harvard is coming off a tough 4-3 overtime loss to BC on Tuesday. The Crimson held a 3-1 lead going into the third, but gave up two power-play goals to knot the score. BC won it with 29 seconds left in overtime.

Trevor Allman, Henry Higdon and defenseman Ben Storey lead the Crimson offense, but freshman left wing Chris Bala is the hot hand with two goals against BC.

Senior captain and defenseman Jeremiah McCarthy has missed several games with an injury.

Goaltender J.R Prestifilippo’s stats are off from last year’s stellar numbers that earned him ECAC Rookie of the Year honors. He is now posting a 3.69 goals-against average and an .871 save percentage.

(For a more detailed look at Brown and Harvard from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICKS: No letdown here. BU 5-2 over Brown and 4-2 over Harvard.

Northeastern (4-4-0, 3-2-0 HE) vs. UMass-Lowell (5-3-0, 3-2-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Tully Forum, Lowell, MA

Saturday, 7 p.m., Matthews Arena, Boston, MA

UMass-Lowell traveled to Amherst, but didn’t arrive until after game time due to the inclement weather and driving conditions. Unfazed, the River Hawks jumped out to a 4-1 lead after the delayed start. The Minutemen came back to tie it in the third, but a Mike Nicholishen goal with 33 seconds left in overtime squeaked out the win.

The win gave the school its first Alumni Cup, bestowed on the winner of the season’s series between the two sister schools. UMass-Amherst won the Cup the first two years.

Lowell continued to get big contributions from rookies Jeffrey Boulanger, who scored twice, and Brad Rooney and Nick Carso, who both assisted on two goals.

"We came into the season knowing that we were going to have a lot of freshmen and sophomores," said Nicholishen. "We wanted them to feel like part of the team right away. There were no class differences and now a lot of our freshmen are contributing."

Boulanger, in particular, is hot, having scored five goals in the last two weeks.

"He’s doing real well," said coach Tim Whitehead. "I’m really pleased with how he’s coming along. Anyone who had any questions about his skating [could see how he did on] the Olympic-sized sheet. We’re very happy with the way he’s come around."

The River Hawks then faced off against Providence in a Sunday afternoon battle. Last year, PC swept the regular season series only to fall to Lowell in the Hockey East quarterfinals.

"There’s a little bit of a rivalry between us and Providence," said Nicholishen. "Year in and year out, one team seems to dominate the other. Last year, they had our number, but we came back pretty well in the playoffs.

"I think they remembered. You don’t forget things like that.

"It’s never a pretty game between Providence and us. Both teams play the same style. We have to be defensive-minded at all times and that slows it down."

Special teams pushed this contest in the Providence win column, as the Friars jumped out to a 5-0 lead and coasted to a 5-3 win. The Friars scored on three of their five power play chances, while Lowell only scored twice in 12 chances.

"The difference in the game is that they capitalized on their power play and we didn’t," said Whitehead. "It doesn’t take much to figure that one out. We had a ton of opportunities. They took quite a few penalties…. We moved the puck reasonably well, but just couldn’t seem to get it past the goal line."

The River Hawks next play a home-and-home series with Northeastern, but will have to play the first game without reigning Rookie of the Year and top scorer Greg Koehler, who received a dubious major disqualification in the loss to Providence.

The Northeastern Huskies have mastered the fine art of winning games in which they are outshot by a large margin. They did it two weeks ago against Merrimack (outshot 48-27) and they did it again to Boston College last week (outshot 36-14). As a result, the Rope-a-Dope experts have fashioned a 4-4-0 record after being predicted to finish in the cellar.

"[That win] gave us an idea of what we’re all about," said coach Bruce Crowder. "It was a great learning experience, a great growing-up experience. It was one of those games that, to win in overtime no matter how ugly it was from the video standpoint, it was still a win. That’s great for our kids.

"For forty minutes, they totally outplayed us and it was basically [goaltender Marc] Robitaille keeping us in the game. Things were a little more even in the third period and we did make the most of our opportunities."

Chief among those made opportunities was scoring three power-play goals in six chances. Prior to the game, the Huskies had scored in only five of 39 man advantage chances, and even with the three goals, rank at only a 17.8 overall percentage, next to last in the league. Is the power-play unit coming around?

"It’s too early to tell," said Crowder, "but at the same time, it’s nice to see a little success in what we’re working on. It’s an area that still needs drastic improvement."

Northeastern’s top three freshman defensemen, John Peterman, Mike Jozefowicz and Arik Engbrecht, are making significant contributions in both ends. Peterman and Jozefowicz each scored a goal and added an assist in the win over BC.

"We knew they had some offensive skill when we brought them in here," said Crowder. "As I’ve said before, all in all, we’re not going to be successful scoring two goals a game.

"It was nice to see us explode a little in the third period against BC and we also did that against Merrimack a week ago. So three out of our four wins we were able to pull out in the third period. We didn’t do that at all over 36 games last year."

The Huskies now have an opportunity for revenge against a Lowell club that used five third-period goals to dismantle them two weeks ago, 7-2.

"The biggest thing is that we went in there and got embarrassed," said Crowder. "So the key factor is having a little pride and showing better than we did the last time we were in there."

PICKS: Both teams win at home, 5-3 at Lowell and 5-4 at Northeastern.

Providence College (5-2-0, 1-2-0 HE) vs. UMass-Amherst (2-5-0, 0-4-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Mullins Center, Amherst, MA

Saturday, 7 p.m., Schneider Arena, Providence, RI

Providence was the only Hockey East team to win two games in the Splitsville weekend. After opening the season with losses in two of the first three Friar games, they have rebounded with four straight wins. Until Sunday’s game against Lowell, however, none of the wins came in Hockey East contests.

"This was a huge game for us, because we were 0-2 in Hockey East," said Mike Omicioli, whose four assists earned him number-one star. "To pull this one off was a real confidence-builder. We’re 5-2 now, we’re looking strong, and we just have a lot of confidence. We’re a young team, and that’s what we need."

The Friars remembered that Lowell had put them out of playoffs last year, a time of the year when they had grown accustomed to success.

"You always think about that because that hurt last year," said Omicioli. "We know they’re a team just like us. Not a powerhouse, but a good team. A steady team. We knew that if we came out flat, we’d be in trouble."

Freshman Boyd Ballard, who earned his second straight Rookie of the Week billing, made 38 saves, holding Lowell off the board until the third period when PC had a 5-0 lead. For Ballard, who also tended the nets in a 5-4 win over Army, it has been a relatively smooth introduction into Division I college play.

"It’s a little faster," he said, making a comparison to his days in junior hockey, "but most of all it’s the traffic. Against UMass-Lowell, it seemed like their forwards were huge and they were always in front of the net. It seems like you’re fighting to see every point shot out there."

Pooley had originally intended to play incumbent Mark Kane in goal against Army, and hasn’t conceded the job to Ballard yet.

"I have a lot of confidence in Mark Kane and I have a lot of confidence in Ballard," he said. "We’ll take it week-to-week, but Boyd certainly has elevated himself into being a goalie that can win the games. He hasn’t lost yet this year and he seems to find a way to win hockey games."

The Friars’ next face UMass-Amherst in a home-and-home series, during which they’ll miss freshman defenseman Jay Leach for the opener because of a borderline disqualification in the game against Lowell.

The Minutemen suffered a frustrating loss at home to UMass-Lowell, falling behind 4-1 only to rally back to send the game into overtime. With 33 seconds left in the extra session, however, Lowell got the game-winner.

"We didn’t come out very strong in the first period," said coach Joe Mallen, "but we played a heckuva game after that. We came back from being down three goals and tied it up and had a great chance to win it late in the game, but it didn’t happen."

The Minutemen rebounded with a non-league 4-1 win over Union.

"I thought we did a nice job coming back the next night and being ready to play," said Mallen. "It was a good win to bounce back with."

In both weekend games, Mallen played seven rookies who gave solid contributions, as did Dean Campanale, who scored twice against Union.

"We infused some freshmen into the lineup," said Mallen. "They played with a lot of enthusiasm and a lot of energy. That helped to open up some other opportunities and Dean Campanale, who scored a fair number of goals his sophomore year and kind of was snakebitten his junior year, came out with two goals and just looked like a different player."

In facing Providence, UMass-Amherst takes on a team it beat two out of three times last year.

"They’re always a good team and a good program," said Mallen. "They’re well-coached. I’m sure it’s going to be a grudge match. They’re getting scoring from a variety of people and with the scores being the way they are in Hockey East right now, every game is a 50-50 battle, no matter who’s playing. This weekend should be about the same."

PICKS: Watching Omicioli and Tim Lovell do battle on the Olympic sheet at the Mullins Center should be a treat. Providence ekes out a 5-4 win on the road and completes the sweep at home, 4-2, for its sixth straight win.

Providence College (5-2-0, 1-2-0 HE) at

Northeastern (4-4-0, 3-2-0 HE)

Tuesday, 7 p.m., Matthews Arena, Boston, MA

(Both teams are profiled above.)

PICK: The two hard-nosed teams go toe-to-toe. Robitaille steals another one for the Huskies, 3-2.

Vermont (0-3-1, 1-6-1 ECAC) at UMass-Amherst (2-5-0, 0-4-0 HE)

Tuesday, 7 p.m., Mullins Center, Amherst, MA

Vermont took it on the chin last week, losing 7-0 to Colgate before stopping the bleeding with a surprising 1-1 tie against No. 6 Cornell.

Goaltender Andrew Allen, who had a brutal game before getting yanked against Colgate, stopped 22 of 23 Cornell shots.

Freshman defenseman Andreas Moborg, Stephane Piche and Eric Lundin lead the scoring for the rebuilding Catamounts.

(For a more detailed look at Vermont from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICK: The Minutemen all the way, 4-1.

UNH Honors Former Stars Fontas and Patten

Former hockey stars Jon Fontas and Ray Patten were inducted into the University of New Hampshire’s Hall of Fame by the UNH 100 Club in ceremonies on Nov. 14.

Fontas, a Wildcat from 1974 through 1978, is one of UNH’s top all-time forwards. He ranks as UNH’s sixth-leading career scorer, with 174 points in only 107 games. Fontas captained the Wildcats his senior year, and in his four years was a key component in an offense that continues to hold numerous school scoring records.

Patten, who played for New Hampshire from 1937 through 1939, still holds a share of UNH’s record for most goals in a game. He scored six against St. Anselm on Feb. 12, 1938.

“It’s a great honor to be recognized and considered in a group of individuals who made outstanding contributions to the university’s athletic program,” Fontas said. “That alone is a huge thing for me.

“The other thing was having the opportunity to play for Charlie Holt. He was a real teacher of the game — I was proud to be a student of his. He taught you more than just hockey skills; he taught you lifetime skills. It was really a privilege to play for him.”

This Week in the ECAC: November 21, 1997

Roger Grillo won his first game on Friday night when Brent Hoiness scored in overtime to give the Brown Bears a victory over Yale. The next evening, overtime bit Grillo and the Bears as Princeton took the sudden-death victory.

Harvard tied Princeton and lost to Yale, while Princeton took three points on the weekend with that tie and a win.

Cornell also skated away with three points, a victory over Dartmouth and a tie with Vermont. That tie gave Vermont its first ECAC point of the year, while Colgate swept a pair this weekend, winding up with wins over Vermont and Dartmouth.

In the North Country rivalry, the Golden Knights of Clarkson took a 4-2 lead in the third period of round one and held on to defeat St. Lawrence for their first ECAC points of the season.

Every team in the ECAC now has a point in-conference, and play continues this weekend with some key matchups: Rensselaer and Union travel to the North Country, and Princeton and Yale face Cornell and Colgate.

Can anyone pull away in this conference?

Last week’s picks: 5-6 (BC) Overall for the year: 37-19 (I’ve had fewer games to predict than my colleagues)

Rensselaer (6-2-0, 2-0-0 ECAC, 5th) and Union (1-6-0, 1-1-0 ECAC, T-7th) at St. Lawrence (1-5-1, 0-2-1 ECAC, T-11th) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Appleton Arena, Canton, NY

Union (1-6-0, 1-1-0 ECAC, T-7th) and Rensselaer (6-2-0, 2-0-0 ECAC, 5th) at Clarkson (3-3-1, 1-2-0 ECAC, T-7th) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Cheel Arena, Potsdam, NY

The Engineers looked like they were sleepwalking in their win over Niagara last Saturday evening, something that head coach Dan Fridgen did not like one bit.

"From a team perspective, we played just well enough to win," he said. "We could have done a better job of taking care of our own end.

"I hope it wasn’t a case of complacency," he added. "Maybe some of the guys were taking (Niagara) too lightly. It doesn’t matter who you are playing, you have to take care of your own end."

This coming weekend the Engineers are going to have to be at their best, because the North Country lies ahead. This is a weekend that the Engineers have traditionally not played very well; the last time they took more than two points was five years ago. The Engineers have not swept a weekend in the North Country in 13 years.

"There’s no doubt we have to play better in the North Country," said Fridgen. "It doesn’t matter where you’re playing, we’re looking for consistency, and you can’t get that if you don’t take of your own end."

The Dutchmen have been enrolled in the school of hard knocks thus far in the young season. The biggest key with a young squad is development: how that squad is learning. It’s real tough to learn when you’re losing, and the Dutchmen are losing.

"I think a little of the problem is inexperience," said head coach Stan Moore. "We’re probably just not as good as we were last year, in terms of our personnel, at this time. [The players] trying to learn these systems, whereas the fellows last year had played a lot of different systems. They pretty much knew how to make adjustments.

"We knew we were going to have our ups and downs."

The Dutchmen continue to have one problem widely perceived before the season began — a lot of trouble scoring. Union has scored 13 goals this season in seven games, and in the last four, the Dutchmen have five goals.

"Our offense has been dwindling," said captain Charlie Moxham. "We don’t want to push the panic button yet, because we have such a young team. But we have to change something here in order to get things done. I hate to say we have a lack of intensity, but we weren’t fighting though things (Saturday)."

The Saints finally get to play at home this weekend, and they open up against Rensselaer and Union. Not an easy task, according to head coach Joe Marsh.

"It doesn’t get any easier," said Marsh. "RPI is the preseason favorite to win the league and has been putting up some impressive offensive numbers, and Union has great goaltending and has shown that it can play with anyone.

"We need to continue to get the kind of effort we saw Saturday and capitalize on a couple of bounces. We are maturing as a team and doing a lot of things better than we did at the start, but we need to earn some rewards from our efforts to help us from a confidence standpoint."

On Saturday, the Saints lost a close one to Clarkson. St. Lawrence was unable to close the gap in the third period and dropped a 4-3 decision.

"We turned in a pretty good effort at times," said Marsh. "We endured some adversity during the game, but battled back and stayed right in the thick of it. I think Clarkson has some experience in winning the close games, and it helped them. That is something we need to learn to do."

On the upside, it looks like the Saints will not lose the services of Bob Prier. He went down hurt during the Clarkson game, but the training staff at St. Lawrence expects that he will play this weekend.

Clarkson has started the season slowly, but the Knights picked up their first ECAC points of the season with their victory over St. Lawrence. It was mentioned here last week that the Knights usually go on a tear after defeating St. Lawrence at home, something that may now happen again.

Dan Murphy continues to give Clarkson stellar goaltending, but that has been one of the few bright spots for the Knights so far this season.

A lot of attention is being focused on captain Chris Clark. Last season, Clark had his share of points playing with Todd White. This season, Clark is without White, and critics are suggesting that Clark is not the same player. Even though it’s early, the pressure is clearly on.

PICKS: Rensselaer at St. Lawrence: The first home game will give the Saints some help, but Rensselaer is clicking, and Heffler will have to come up big. Rensselaer 4, St. Lawrence 3 Union at Clarkson: The Dutchmen are young, and the Knights will pick up ECAC win number two. Clarkson 4, Union 1 Union at St. Lawrence: The Saints gain ECAC win number one. St. Lawrence 4, Union 2 Rensselaer at Clarkson: Rensselaer has not swept in the North Country since 1984-85, the Engineers’ last NCAA championship season. It happens this year (the sweep, that is). Rensselaer 5, Clarkson 3

Princeton (4-0-2, 2-0-2 ECAC, T-2nd) and Yale (4-1-0, 3-0-0 ECAC, T-2nd) at Cornell (4-0-1, 3-0-1 ECAC, 1st) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Lynah Rink, Ithaca, NY

Yale (4-1-0, 3-0-0 ECAC, T-2nd) and Princeton (4-0-2, 2-0-2 ECAC, T-2nd) at Colgate (6-2-0, 3-1-0 ECAC, T-2nd) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Starr Rink, Hamilton, NY

Colgate continues to score. The Red Raiders put 14 goals on the board last weekend, and Jed Whitchurch was named ECAC Player of the Week for his efforts.

The offense that the Red Raiders are putting up is a surprise to a lot of people, but it is exactly what head coach Don Vaughan needed. Balance in scoring was one of his keys before the season began, and it looks like that goal is being met.

"We’ve certainly spread it out," he said. "That’s something that we were hoping for, and you have to expect other guys to step it up."

It all seems to go back to that opening two-game series at Michigan, where the Red Raiders defeated the Wolverines — Michigan’s first home loss in over 30 games — and then played a close game in losing the next night.

"Those two games in Michigan helped us out," said Vaughan. "[They] gave the guys confidence that they could play with anyone."

Cornell remains undefeated in the ECAC, with a 3-0-1 mark after a win over Dartmouth and a tie against Vermont. The Big Red continue to shuffle players in and out of the lineup, and forwards continue to move back to the blue line as injuries strike defensemen.

"We had to make some moves with different guys, shuffling them around," said head coach Mike Schafer. "I thought all the freshmen did a good job in their first hostile environment (at Vermont)."

On Friday evening, the Big Green came up with the first goal of the game, but the Red came back with four unanswered goals to take the win.

"It’s obviously not what you want to do (allowing the first goal)," he said. "But our team has good character; they don’t give up when that first goal is [scored]."

Cornell has to hope that some of its injuries will heal, because undefeated Princeton and once-beaten Yale come calling this weekend.

Princeton comes in with a record of 4-0-2. The Tigers started strong last year, hovering around first place in the ECAC at this time. This year, they are in the same position. One of the last unbeaten teams in the nation, the Tigers are getting timely scoring, scoring from a number of players.

Seven different Tigers scored this past weekend, including Jeff Halpern, who scored the game-tying goal on Friday against Harvard, and Joey Pelle, who lit the lamp in overtime to defeat Brown.

The Yale Bulldogs have been a surprise with their strong start, but perhaps that shouldn’t be. First, goaltender Alex Westlund ended last season with a .916 save percentage and a 2.99 goals-against average; thus far, he has been showing that those numbers were not a fluke. In five games played, Westlund has allowed six goals. Not bad for a goaltender that many believed couldn’t be as strong this season.

The strong start has Yale off the right way — with confidence. "We feel that we have a lot of confidence as a team, and that we can skate with anybody," head coach Tim Taylor said.

PICKS: Princeton at Cornell: Princeton comes through with a win at tough Lynah Rink. Princeton 3, Cornell 2 Yale at Colgate: Can Westlund stop the offense of the Red Raiders? Colgate 3, Yale 2 Yale at Cornell: Cornell rebounds. Cornell 4, Yale 3 Princeton at Colgate: The Tigers continue their winning ways at Starr Rink. Princeton 4, Colgate 2

Vermont (1-6-1, 0-3-1 ECAC, T-11th) at Dartmouth (2-3-0, 1-3-0 ECAC, T-7th) Saturday, 7:30 pm, Thompson Arena, Hanover, NH

The Cats are still struggling to find a combination that might work, though some things seemed to come together against Cornell Saturday. The Cats fought to a 1-1 tie after being whitewashed by Colgate, 7-0, the night before.

In the last four games — all league contests — the Cats have had a lot of trouble scoring: three goals in those four. That’s a big cause of concern in Burlington. Worse yet, of those three goals, two were scored by Jason Hamilton against Rensselaer, and of those four games, two were shutouts against Vermont.

Saturday, netminder Andrew Allen played a spectacular game, holding Cornell to one goal. With James Tierney still uncertain with a back injury, it looks like Allen may get some more time in net.

Dartmouth gave up four goals and seven goals in two games last weekend. In four ECAC games, the Big Green have admitted a total of 18 goals, which is to say that defense is something that Big Green fans have found missing (except for one game, a shutout of Union).

Offense may also be a concern for the Green. In those same four games, eight goals have been scored. 18-8 is not a very good scoring ratio, and it’s one that has led to three losses in the young ECAC season.

In net, Eric Almon continues to get the starts, but Jason Wong has recovered from his injury, and the platoon system in Hanover may begin anew.

PICK: Dartmouth wins its first game at home. Dartmouth 4, Vermont 2

Brown (1-3-0, 1-3-0 ECAC, T-7th) at Boston University (5-1-0, 3-1-0 Hockey East, T-2nd) Friday, 7 pm, Walter Brown Arena, Boston, Mass.

The Brown Bears got their first win of the season against Yale on Friday evening, 3-2, and in the process earned Roger Grillo his first career victory as a head coach.

The Bears seem to be a different team this year: although they sport a 1-3-0 record, the Bears’ three losses have all come by one goal.

One of the main differences this year is that the Bears are scoring. Last year, the Bears were outscored by a total of 40 goals. This year, the Bears are only two goals behind their opponents.

Meanwhile, the Terriers split a weekend series with New Hampshire in an early-season Hockey East showdown. After getting shut out on Friday, the Terriers came back to double up the Wildcats, 4-2, on Saturday.

For more on Boston University, please refer to the Hockey East preview.

PICK: The Terriers. Boston University 6, Brown 2

Boston College (6-2-0, 4-2-0 Hockey East, 1st) at Brown (1-3-0, 1-3-0 ECAC, T-7th) Tuesday, 7 pm, Meehan Auditorium, Providence, RI

The Eagles continue their strong run, seeking to add to their win total against Brown. Last weekend, the Eagles split a series with Northeastern, winning the first of the pair, then losing in overtime.

For more information on Boston College, please refer to the Hockey East preview.

(Brown is previewed above.)

PICK: The Eagles. Boston College 6, Brown 2

Boston University (5-1-0, 3-1-0 Hockey East, T-2nd) at Harvard (1-2-1, 1-2-1 ECAC, 6th) Tuesday, 7 pm, Bright Hockey Center, Cambridge, Mass.

The Crimson of Harvard are a different team this year, and they showed it Friday.

"We battled back," said Harvard coach Ronn Tomassoni after Friday’s 3-3 tie with Princeton. "I think a year ago, we probably wouldn’t have tied this game up. It was a good one for us to come back like that and tie it up so late."

There is also a better attitude on the bench.

"I don’t think that there was any panic on the bench [when the Crimson were down late], which I think is a good sign," Tomassoni said. "We’re young, but I think that we have a little more experience, and it was like ‘OK boys, roll up the sleeves and keep working and it’ll come’."

One thing that has not changed is the outstanding play of goaltender J.R. Prestifilippo.

"As badly as we had played, it was still a 2-1 game going into that third period," Tomassoni said after a 3-1 loss to Yale. "We thought that we could win, and they took it to us in the third period. The only reason we had a chance at the very end was because of J.R."

For information on Boston University, please refer to the Hockey East preview.

PICK: The Terriers. Boston University 5, Harvard 3

UMass-Amherst (2-5-0, 0-4-0 Hockey East, 9th) at Vermont (1-6-1, 0-3-1 ECAC, T-11th) Tuesday, 7 pm, Gutterson Fieldhouse, Burlington, Ver.

The Minutemen took some time off from their Hockey East schedule the last two weeks, splitting a series at Nebraska-Omaha, and defeating Union last Saturday on the road. In between there was a game against archrival UMass-Lowell, which the Minutemen lost in overtime.

For more information on UMass-Amherst, please refer to the Hockey East preview.

(Vermont is previewed earlier.)

PICK: The Cats. Vermont 5, UMass-Amherst 3

Army (3-5-0, 0-5-0 vs. major D-I) at Princeton (4-0-2, 2-0-2 ECAC, T-2nd) Tuesday, 7:30 pm, Hobey Baker Rink, Princeton, NJ

In the five games that the U.S. Military Academy has played against conference-aligned Division I teams, the Cadets have not won, but have shown a good, concerted effort. One-goal losses to Colgate, UMass-Lowell (both in overtime) and Providence go along with a two-goal loss to Rensselaer thus far.

The Cadets play a rigid, protective style of hockey, based on defense and forechecking — much like the Princeton Tigers.

These two teams should play it very close, with a lot of work deep in each other’s zones. The Tigers are known for their aggressive forecheck, based on speed and size, and that formula has the Tigers undefeated on the young season.

PICK: The Tigers. Princeton 3, Army 1

There’s only one league game next week, so some teams play non-conference games, while others get a week off. ECAC games are in bold:

Friday, Nov. 28 Clarkson at Boston College St. Lawrence at Boston University Princeton at Merrimack Yale at Providence Union at Nebraska-Omaha

Saturday, Nov. 29 Harvard at Brown Clarkson at Boston University St. Lawrence at Boston College Merrimack at Yale Union at Nebraska-Omaha

Sunday, Nov. 30 Providence at Princeton Punch Imlach Tournament Colgate vs. York Cornell vs. Niagara

Friday-Saturday, Nov. 28-29 Vermont — Governor’s Cup

Official Hockey East Website Debuts

The Hockey East Association has announced its official online presence, located at http://www.hockeyeastonline.com. The Web site, which debuted on Monday, is still under development, but currently carries weekly press releases, standings and statistics.

“Our audience wants information on Hockey East with greater speed and convenience than we’ve been able to provide,” said commissioner Joe Bertagna. “This will allow us to be more responsive to our fans and opens doors to even greater use of today’s technology in the future.”

Over the next few weeks, graphical enhancements and new areas such as league and tournament histories will be added. Plans are under way to develop Internet broadcasts of Hockey East games, and to provide an interactive forum for college hockey fans.

“Our long-term goal is to develop the finest college hockey site on the Internet,” said Dan Parkhurst of Global Solutions Providers, developers of the website.

Just Like They Never Left

Rick Comley pauses to think before he answers a question. Why did Northern Michigan leave the CCHA for the WCHA in the first place? Comley laughs. “I’m sure for lots of good reasons, when you think back.”

The cover of this year’s Wildcats’ media guide says, “Charging back into the CCHA.” Maybe it should read, a la Jack Nicholson in The Shining, “We’re baaAAAaack!”

The ‘Cats are proving this season that you can go home again, and with a vengeance.

Northern Michigan is tearing up the CCHA in early-season play, behaving not at all like a team with 20 underclassmen, a team new to a conference.

“Tearing up is probably an overstatement,” says Comley, entering his 22nd year as Northern Michigan’s head coach. “Obviously, we’re playing pretty well.”

“Pretty well” may be an understatement.

Through the third week of CCHA play, the Wildcats were 4-1-1 against conference opponents. For their first series, the ‘Cats tied and beat Upper Peninsula rivals Lake Superior; then they swept Western Michigan in two games on the road. In the third week, they split a pair with nationally-ranked Michigan at home.

This success shouldn’t be surprising to hockey fans in the CCHA. It’s certainly not surprising to fans of Northern Michigan, who have watched their ‘Cats succeed in post-season tournament play any number of times, both in the WCHA and the CCHA. As recently as 1991, the Wildcats were national champions.

From 1977 until jumping conferences in 1984, the Wildcats were members of the CCHA. As members of the CCHA, Northern Michigan enjoyed both league and NCAA success. During the 1979-80 season — in just their fourth season of hockey — the Wildcats went 34-6-1; their CCHA record of 17-3-0 was good enough for the regular-season title. The ‘Cats went on to take the CCHA championship, and to advance to the final game of NCAA tournament play, where they lost to North Dakota, 5-2.

Then in 1980-81, the Wildcats again took the CCHA title and advanced to the NCAA tournament, where they lost 5-1 to Wisconsin in the first round, and 5-2 to Michigan Tech in the consolation game.

After joining the WCHA, the ‘Cats again reached the NCAA playoffs in 1988-89, losing a first-round series to Providence. After missing a year of NCAA postseason play, Northern Michigan reached the NCAA tournament three consecutive years, beginning with the 1990-91 season, when the ‘Cats defeated Boston University for the national championship, and followed by consecutive quarterfinal appearances.

For all of that history, Rick Comley has been the head coach.

“When you like what you’re doing, you stay with it,” says Comley. “It’s just like anyone else who stays in a job for a long time. Working with new kids can keep you interested as well.”

Comley says his goal when he started coaching was the same as it is now, two decades later. “We want to be successful.”

One step toward success is a new arena with an Olympic-size ice sheet, to be completed for the 1999-2000 season. Comley says it wasn’t difficult to convince the University that a new facility was needed. “They’ve always been supportive.”

Construction on the $9.5 million Events Center is scheduled for the spring of 1998. The Center is to be paid for with a combination of bond proceeds, private contributions and money from the university’s general fund. When complete, the Center will seat approximately 4,000 for hockey, and 5,000 for other events, such as concerts.

The renewed dedication to hockey and the move back to the CCHA are both a part of Northern Michigan University’s plan to attract more students. In both of these matters, Comley says, “Our president was a leading force. It was enrollment driven…our overall enrollment was down.” The university thought that students would be attracted more to a school that competed with in-state rivals like Lake Superior and Western Michigan, and the two in-state Big Ten schools, Michigan and Michigan State.

It’s part of a plan to “reestablish our presence in the state of Michigan,” says Comley.

That reestablishment is apparent already this season. Fans in Marquette, particularly, have embraced the move back to the CCHA. “The positive thing is the reception,” says Comley. “The people in this town are very excited here about the team rejoining the CCHA.”

Comley says the university and the hockey team have more in common with schools in the CCHA than with the WCHA.

“It’s not that our fans didn’t care about the WCHA teams we played, but places like Colorado College aren’t as real to them as Lake Superior State. The names of teams in the CCHA are familiar. Lake and Ferris are Great Lakes Conference intense rivalries in other sports at Northern. The two Big Ten schools, the fans read about day in and day out.

“Certainly our fans are the reason this move is so successful.”

In addition to his duties as head coach, Comley has served as athletic director for the university for the past 11 years. Of his job as AD, Comley says, “You’re involved with everything. I enjoy a lot of different sports, [but] being both [coach and athletic director] is time-consuming. You try to go to as many different games as you can.”

“The hardest thing in the beginning is working against the perception that you’d tend to favor hockey over everyone else.”

Comley remembers a time when the WCHA and Hockey East shared teams and schedules. “It’s kind of interesting technically. We’ve participated in the WCHA-Hockey East affiliation. We played as many as 16 games interconference a season. When the WCHA expanded, then it wasn’t possible to do it any more.

“Technically,” says Comley, “the only conference we haven’t played in is the ECAC.”

Given the way the Wildcats are playing, one can only assume that the ECAC is happy about that.

The Wildcats finished 13-24-3 overall last season, with a WCHA record of 9-21-8 — hardly the kind of record that foreshadows what they have done so far in the CCHA. Comley says there are many intangibles that contribute to Northern’s triumphant return.

“It’s always a combination of things. We’re not making too much of it. We’re happy that we’re getting off to a good start. Does that mean that we’re a top-five team? No, it just means that maybe the league is a little bit more balanced than people thought.

“You look at Ohio State, you look at Notre Dame, you look at Northern Michigan and Ferris — those are four of the teams that were picked to be at the bottom of the league, and all of a sudden they’re beating teams that are picked to be at the top of the league.

“It creates great balance.”

A good deal of credit for the early-season success of the Wildcats belongs to their young goaltender, sophomore Duane Hoey. In his rookie season, Hoey appeared in 15 games, with a 3.47 goals-against average and a save percentage of .873. This season, through 12 games, Hoey’s numbers have improved remarkably: a 1.97 GAA and a .918 save percentage.

“He’s played very, very well,” says Comley. “The best goaltending we’ve had in a while. And just an awful lot of hard work. Good goaltending and hard work — it’s a young team that plays with a lot of enthusiasm.”

While the season is young, and Comley doesn’t want to sound too gleeful about the Wildcats’ success against CCHA opponents, he says there are signs that Northern’s record isn’t just early-season luck. “The real encouraging thing for me, without making too much of it, is the ability to go on the road and win. That’s a sign of whether a team is a decent team or not.”

With the return to the CCHA, the Wildcats renew old, old rivalries, some bitter — or at least comical.

On Jan. 30, 1981, with the Ohio State Buckeyes in town, the ‘Cats and the Bucs fought to the point of the ridiculous, amassing 185 penalty minutes, 98 of which belonged to the Buckeyes. The rivalry between the two teams resulted in a button that was popular among Wildcat fans in the ’80s; it read, “Oh, How I Hate Ohio State.”

College hockey has changed since then, and such roughness is no longer tolerated. But you can bet that longtime Wildcat fans — mollified for years by play in a league where the geography didn’t contribute as much to rivalry — will be pleased to reintroduce a few rink chants that even the Yost faithful haven’t made famous.

And when Ohio State visits Marquette later this month, will the spirit of the holiday season and the renewal of old CCHA friendships surround the Buckeyes in warmth and welcome? Well, sure, since residents of Marquette are a friendly bunch.

All the Buckeyes will have to do is look past those buttons, painstakingly kept for over 15 years, and dusted off for the occasion.

Where Is The ECAC Headed?

Joe Bertagna believes it when he says he works for all of college hockey. He believed that when the ECAC was signing his paychecks, and he believes it now that he is the commissioner of Hockey East.

People who believe that ECAC hockey is a glorious conglomerate of 12 teams — worthy of praise over ridicule, admiration over indifference — had better hope Bertagna doesn’t forget his friends in the ECAC. And not the friends from the home office on Cape Cod, but the coaches and the hockey programs themselves.

That’s because the ECAC’s hockey programs need his help, and that of many others. Help they are not getting under their current administrative structure. Help they must get, or else slip into a background that would make the perception of the ECAC as a weak sister become a reality.

Help they may only be able to get by leaving.

When Bertagna was allowed to leave as the commissioner of the ECAC after 15 years of service, it sounded a troublesome alarm. At first Bertagna played it cool publicly, saying he just thought Hockey East was a better situation for his family. But beneath the surface was indicated the ECAC’s continued unwillingness to recognize that men’s ice hockey is the sport that butters its bread.

With those worries already in place, we waited for the naming of a new commissioner. A respected coach perhaps, like a Joe Marsh, or a former player with a background like Hobey Baker winner Lane McDonald. Those were the guesses, not that those guys actually applied.

The naming of 26-year old Jeff Fanter in July raised a lot of eyebrows and confirmed some suspicions — the ECAC administration has no concept of the importance of hockey, and the chance it has — if done right — to keep up with the other three conference powers.

Fanter is a hard worker and a good guy. He is organized and has the chance to grow into the job, and he’s sincere when he says he’s fallen in love with hockey. But, to be honest, if Fanter had applied for the commissioner’s job at any of the three other conferences, with a total of two years experience in hockey (as an assistant SID at Colgate), he would have had no chance of being hired. WCHA commissioner Bruce McLeod has been an athletic director; CCHA chief Bill Beagan is a longtime hockey guy with a lot of years as a referee; Bertagna is a former Harvard goalie, Boston Bruins goalie coach, head of the American Hockey Coaches Association and director of a popular goaltending camp.

Even Jack McDonald, who spearheaded the creation of the new MAAC hockey conference, is an athletic director at Quinnipiac whose family has been in hockey for years, and a former athletic director at the University of Denver.

Consider the job description posted for the soon-to-be-vacant CCHA commissioner’s position:

“Responsibilities include oversight and management of: a) league finances; b) activities of staff members; c) playing schedules; d) CCHA and college ice hockey promotion on a regional and national basis; e) a television contract for the league and its members; f) the league’s policies and procedures as outlined in the CCHA Code of Regulations and Articles of Agreement; g) all league meetings (prepare necessary reports, materials, minutes, lodging, meals, etc.); and h) other duties as assigned by the CCHA Executive Committee. The Commissioner is the league’s primary liaison with other ice hockey organizations, NCAA, corporate sponsors and partners, and media representatives. The Commissioner works directly with a small support staff.

The CCHA is seeking candidates who possess superior leadership, management, and collaborative skills, and the vision needed to enhance the CCHA’s premier leadership role in collegiate ice hockey. Minimum Qualifications: bachelor’s degree with significant experience in intercollegiate athletics administration or related managerial field. Knowledge and experience with intercollegiate ice hockey as an administrator, coach or student-athlete is desirable. Demonstrated marketing, promotions, public relations, and event management; television and media relations; strong interpersonal, organizational and supervisory skills; effective oral, written and automated communications are preferred; and commitment to intercollegiate athletics and academic integrity are required.” (Emphasis mine)

Colgate athletic director Mark Murphy and head coach Don Vaughan made the big push for Fanter, having worked with him from 1993-95, and I respect both of those men very much.

But the questions are numerous. Were there other strong candidates? Is this an indication that ECAC higher-ups, John Garner and Clayton Chapman, really are the ones who want to pull the hockey management strings and make Fanter a de facto ECAC SID only? Did the ECAC just show yet again the reason why it has a hard time being taken seriously?

The ECAC reportedly interviewed John Weisbrod, a former player and current Executive Vice President and Director of Operations for the Albany River Rats, a very successful AHL team. Another known applicant was former Harvard hockey SID Mike Jackman. Perhaps Jackman wasn’t qualified by CCHA standards, either, but he graduated from Princeton and spent five years as a hockey SID in the league. He wasn’t interviewed.

Fanter, a graduate of Indiana, spent the last two years at his alma mater. He has always been good with his publications and publicity. But does he have what it takes to go toe-to-toe with people like Bertagna, McLeod and Beagan?

As one longtime ECAC devotee said, “When (Cornell coach) Mike Schafer gives it to a referee, is Fanter going to be able to call and tell him to cool it?” Will Fanter have clout within the league? Does the league hierarchy want him to?

Did the ECAC use hockey-playing schools solely on the search committee? Of course not. Included on the committee, in addition to Murphy, were the athletic directors at Tufts and Adelphi.

Garner acknowledges the concerns of others, but affirms Fanter as a solid choice.

“It’s probably a legitimate concern,” Garner said. “He holds his own. He’s energetic. From a public relations standpoint he’s great; administratively he’ll have to learn. Learning comes with maturity. He’ll also have the ECAC commissioner (Chapman) here to bounce things off of, and [12 ECAC] athletic directors.

“He has energy, enthusiasm and vision.”

Fanter has been okay so far, working out an agreement with the New England Sports Network to carry additional ECAC games this year. The ECAC already had an agreement with the Empire Sports Network, only seen in upstate New York and on satellite systems, but when NESN dropped Hockey East, Fanter seized the chance to get them into the ECAC fold. NESN doesn’t have to worry about as much production cost, and it was worth it to them.

“The guy’s doing a quality job,” said Mike Schafer. “He’s earned the coaches’ respect.”

“I supported him,” said Vaughan. “He’s strong in marketing and pretty creative. He’s super-organized. He’s young, but he’s way ahead of his years. There’s no concern where our league is at from the hockey end.”

But this was never about Fanter anyway. No one’s blaming him. Heck, I shouldn’t be hired for the commissioner’s job either, but if someone offered it to me, I might take it.

So let’s not lose sight of what the issue is — that the ECAC hierarchy just doesn’t get it.

No one in Centerville will admit it, but the departure of Bertagna and the hiring of Fanter smells a lot like a power play on the part of the ECAC administration. It looks very much like the ECAC higher-ups wanted to have more control over hockey, and therefore purposefully downsized the hockey commissioner’s role (despite the pretense of naming the first full-time commissioner) and instead hired what is in essence an ECAC hockey Sports Information Director.

It’s not like the ECAC doesn’t have a history of backwards thinking.

Listen to Bertagna, and the frustration in his voice:

“I asked the ECAC for a full-time assistant or to absolutely change things,” he says. “I was a little naive. I thought that I’d established myself so much that I would get a lot of the things that I asked for.

“But they did an internal study of how we did things, and concluded that the problem wasn’t that I didn’t have any help. The problem was that we had two offices. If I moved down on the Cape and used their staffing, the problems would go away. Well I wasn’t going to move after 15 years.

“And to be very blunt, they had this huge office, but some of the people there were not assets. They didn’t know hockey. They were upset that hockey was getting preferential treatment. I said, ‘It’s because it’s the only sport that raises the ECAC flag at a national level and makes money for you. You guys should bow down and give hockey the extra attention. No one else cuts you a check like the hockey tournament in Lake Placid does.'”

Internal study? Does that sound like government bureaucracy at its finest, or what?

If Bertagna wasn’t able to get things done there, what makes anyone think Fanter will be able to? The answer is: The ECAC doesn’t want Fanter to. The higher-ups will try … and fail. Or, even more scary, they don’t care to try.

The ECAC as a concept is a complete dinosaur. Not the hockey conference, but the conference as a whole. In other sports, the member schools don’t answer to the ECAC. They have their own conferences, and the ECAC just chooses players of the week and hosts some postseason tournaments. Hockey is the only sport where the ECAC has any jurisdiction. It’s also the only sport that makes them money.

The ECAC remains the only major hockey conference with a hierarchy above hockey, which gets in the way much more than it helps. The hockey programs have to answer to another authority, and the ECAC takes in more money from its highest money-maker than it gives back.

The ECAC higher-ups have to open their eyes and realize that hockey is the sport that butters its bread. It must give ultimate hockey power to an autonomous commissioner in order to keep up with the other leagues.

The system in place now is hurting hockey, plain and simple. And it does nothing to dispel the notion that the ECAC is college hockey’s black sheep.

So what does this all add up to?

It’s time for the schools of the ECAC to leave. Not just RPI, which has threatened to head to Hockey East on and off for 13 years. Or the same for Clarkson or Vermont.

No, the entire conference must leave as a whole. Form a conference outside of the structure of the ECAC. Everything else about the league stays the same, there’s no need for it to change. The time has come for this to happen.

The only thing preventing any of this from happening is the quality of human nature that naturally resists seemingly radical change. But is it really radical? How would anything be different except the name of the conference and who — or what — it answers to?

Unless there’s something I don’t know, it seems as easy as saying, “Let’s form a new conference, call it the Eastern Collegiate Hockey Association, and rubberstamp it.”

You get a pretty clear feeling the coaches would love it. They are tired of seeing a multi-headed bureaucratic monster getting in the way of the league’s advancement. They are tired of seeing the conference take in more money from hockey than it gives back. They are tired of being the black sheep. They are tired of not having their own say in matters of marketing, television and anything else that relates to the improvement of the conference in terms of its relation to the overall hockey community. Tired of a leadership that doesn’t know how to lead, and won’t let those who do, do so.

The ECAC is a dinosaur, and it doesn’t necessarily have to do with the people running it. An independent conference consisting of the exact same setup — scholarship rules, academic index and schedule — but without the bureaucratic ECAC cloud hanging over it, could be just what the doctor ordered.

Don’t think it hasn’t been considered. Unofficial discussions have gotten quite serious in this regard — but it’s hard to get too far.

If you want to get really radical, an even better scenario would have ECAC teams actually joining Hockey East. Just pick up and leave, en masse. Again, nothing really has to change, except that a commissioner would already be in place: Bertagna, working once again with all of his comrades from the ECAC. Same schedule, same everything, but just play in their own 12-team division under the Hockey East auspices.

C’mon Joe, make it happen. Do what’s best for college hockey.

But for now, root hard for Fanter. It does no good to wish him badly. Perhaps he can grow on the job, find his niche, and find a way to fend off that bureaucratic monster above him.

Can he do it? I don’t know. Despite all the questions brought up, it’s not fair to make that assessment. We’ll give him a shot and hope for the best — the ECAC deserves it. But if not, the ECAC could be left in the dust when college hockey makes the big leap that’s on the horizon.

This Week in the CCHA: November 14, 1997

Consistency: n.1. firmness or thickness, as of a liquid 2. agreement; harmony 3. conformity with previous practice. How many CCHA coaches can use this word — in any of its forms — in this week’s preview?

John Markell says, "We’re still trying to establish respect, and we do that by playing more consistently."

Red Berenson says, "Our defensive play has been inconsistent. Our penalty-killing has been inconsistent. Our power play has been inconsistent. And offensively we’ve been inconsistent. So, I guess you could say we’ve been inconsistent."

"Inconsistency," says Buddy Powers.

Inconsistency is a word that could easily apply to the entire Central Collegiate Hockey Association. Who, other than Northern Michigan and Notre Dame, is playing consistently? In what way is this league constant? From what we’ve seen of the first four weeks of play, can anyone predict what will happen from one week to the next?

No. 3 Michigan State proved that there is a master plan of the Cosmos be defeating Notre Dame 3-1 at home last weekend. It was the last time the two teams will meet in the regular season, meaning the Spartans have taken this series. MSU hosts Mankato State for two this weekend.

Second in the CCHA is Northern Michigan. The Wildcats upset the natural order of things last week by splitting a series with Michigan, losing 5-3 Friday and winning 1-0 Saturday. This week the ‘Cats host the exhausted Alaska-Fairbanks Nanooks, who are finishing up a five-game road trip through Michigan.

The Nanooks are at the bottom of the league, splitting a pair of lopsided games with Lake Superior last weekend, winning 6-2 Friday and losing 8-2 Saturday. The Nanooks also dropped a game to Ferris State on Tuesday, 7-2.

The resurgent Western Michigan Broncos hold tight to the third spot in the CCHA this week after a victorious sweep through Ohio. The Broncos beat Ohio State 3-1 Friday and Bowling Green 8-3 Saturday. They host Lake Superior — which split with Fairbanks — this week.

With a record of 3-3-1, Ferris State is still in fourth place in the CCHA after dropping two to Mankato State last weekend and beating the Nanooks Tuesday. This week the Bulldogs travel to No. 10 Michigan, which is in sixth place in the CCHA after splitting with Northern last weekend.

No. 5 Miami lost its only game to Ohio State, 5-4 in Columbus. The RedHawks have another single-game weekend when they host Notre Dame on Saturday.

Notre Dame, meanwhile, beat Bowling Green 2-1 Friday before losing to Michigan State Saturday. The Irish travel up the road to Ohio State for a Sunday matinee game.

Before playing ND, Ohio State faced Bowling Green Saturday night. Last week the Bucs split, losing to Western but topping Miami. Bowling Green lost two games last weekend.

Consistency. At least you can find consistency in these picks, which have been consistently bad.

Last week’s record in picks: 4-7 Overall record in picks: 25-27

Your bookie loves me.

Notre Dame (5-3-0, 2-2-0 CCHA) at No. 5 Miami (6-1-0, 3-1-0 CCHA) Saturday, 7 p.m., Goggin Ice Arena, Oxford, OH,/P>

Miami had one game last weekend, a 5-4 loss to Ohio State, the RedHawks’ first loss of the season. Miami watched a 4-1 lead dissipate in a matter of minutes — the first five minutes of the third period, to be specific.

"Neither team played well for two periods. It wasn’t a good game," says Miami head coach Mark Mazzoleni. "Then in the third period, they came out and got the initial goal, which brought their emotion level to a different state, and our kids stayed the same. Then when they came back in five minutes and popped those two goals, they took it to another level that we couldn’t. You have to give them credit for it. They were deserving of the victory, and we were not."

The game wasn’t a total wash for the ‘Hawks, says Mazzoleni. The loss to Ohio State — and the way it happened — may be something Miami can learn from.

"It was something, I think from a coaching standpoint — and this takes nothing away from Ohio State — that we’ve been trying to preach certain things to our team, but a lot of things have come easy the first part of our season, even though we could have conceivably lost a game against St. Lawrence. But it was camouflage in a victory.

"Sometimes you need to get kicked in the head hard to understand that the margin between victory and defeat at this level is so small. Any team on any given night is going to clip someone. We are usually a much more tenacious, hard-working team, and we didn’t bring that element with us on Saturday night.

"I have confidence in our kids. We have real good leadership, and they understand now what we’re trying to tell them. I think this will help us not only for Notre Dame, but down the road."

In addition to being a "tenacious, hard-working team," the RedHawks are, seemingly, a charmed one. After the loss to unranked OSU, Miami actually went up, from seven to five, in the USCHO poll.

Notre Dame travels to Oxford to play a Miami team determined not to repeat mistakes from last weekend. Notre Dame is one of the CCHA’s "teams of the moment" (sharing that bit of spotlight with Northern Michigan). The surprising Irish are playing hard, competitive hockey.

Notre Dame split last weekend, a 2-1 win at Bowling Green, and a loss at Michigan State. The game at Munn was a rematch of play from the weekend before, when Notre Dame split with Michigan State, losing at home and winning on the road.

"We did play well," says Notre Dame head coach Dave Poulin of last week’s game against the Spartans. "I was encouraged by the way we played, walking into a situation where they were sitting, waiting — we had played the night before, and then traveled….It was 1-1 with three minutes to go."

The Irish are getting some impressive offense from sophomore Ben Simon, who with three goals and one assist — including a shorthanded goal–is just behind team leader Brian Urick, who has a goal and four assists.

Irish goaltender Matt Eisler has played particularly well this season. He’s fourth among goaltenders with significant time in net, with a goals-against average of 2.35 and a save percentage of .926.

Mazzoleni says that Miami will have to be at the top of its game to beat the Irish. "They have a very balanced team. They have very, very good young talent on their team. Eisler’s been as good as anyone’s goaltender so far. They’re a team that’s gaining confidence all the time, and I’m sure they feel very good about themselves. We know what we have to get done, and we respect our opponent."

In spite of the loss to OSU — and it has been just one loss — the RedHawks are an immensely talented team. Five of the top 12 scorers in CCHA league play are RedHawks, including three of the top five league scorers. In goal for the ‘Hawks, Trevor Prior has been very tough, allowing just 2.08 goals per game, and saving shots at a .915 clip.

Miami has been flawless at home.

PICK: Miami 6-3

Ohio State (4-3-1, 1-2-0 CCHA) at Bowling Green (2-7-1, 1-2-1 CCHA) Saturday, 7 p.m., Bowling Green Ice Arena, Bowling Green, OH

Emotionally, these two teams couldn’t be further apart.

On Friday, the Buckeyes lost a game they should have won, a 3-1 loss to Western in which they outshot the Broncos 38-25. On Saturday, they came back from behind to beat No. 7 Miami 5-4.

Buckeye head coach John Markell says of his players, "They have the ability to play with these big clubs, but they have to be on top of their game, mentally. I think they’re learning the mental part of the game. They know that they can’t always come back like that, and they know that they have to be ready for the first period, and not just when they’re down.

"They also have to take it to the teams that we think we’re the equal of, before they even start. They have to play with emotion and confidence."

Ohio State is consistently outshooting — but not outscoring — its opponents. In their three CCHA games the Bucs have scored six goals and allowed ten. New to this Ohio State team is the ability to shoot, and sometimes to score. Leading the scoring for the Buckeyes is the all-Quebec line of sophomores Eric Meloche and Hugo Boisvert, and freshman Jean-Francois Dufour, younger brother of former Buckeye Pierre Dufour.

When this line clicks, the Bucs click. When these three score at least three points between them, the Buckeyes are 4-0-0. When they don’t, Ohio State is 0-3-1.

The Buckeyes travel to Bowling Green, a tough place for any team — but especially the Bucs — to play. There is no love lost between these two: Bowling Green owns this series, 31-56-4, but the last time these two teams met, they skated to a 3-3 overtime tie in Columbus in a memorable, physical game.

Last weekend, Bowling Green lost 2-1 to Notre Dame in South Bend and 8-3 at home to Western. "We didn’t score goals," says Falcon head coach Buddy Powers. "We didn’t take enough shots. It’s hard to win games on one goal, and then things fell apart. Some veteran guys had a bad night on Saturday night, and that really hurt us."

Powers speaks in clipped sentences. "Big mistakes on Saturday. Gave them easy goals. They only got twenty-two shots. Eight-three — you’d think we got run out of the barn, but it wasn’t that way at all. We play fine, and then make a big mistake — shot, goal."

The young Bowling Green team has been bedeviled by the same thing troubling other CCHA teams lately. "Inconsistency," says Powers. "It’s not discipline anymore, unless you want to call it mental discipline. Some of the things that [Dan] Price and [Dave] Faulkner did in the game Saturday night…their minds just weren’t on the present. They were either in the future or in the past, but they weren’t on the present. Those two guys were minus three and minus four.

"I have no qualms with the effort at all at Notre Dame. They got a power-play goal off a rebound, a shorthanded goal where they got a line change and [Ben] Simon just got a step on them and cut in alone. We had ample chances to score in the game, and just didn’t get it done."

In spite of a rough weekend and a start that’s less than what the Falcons expected, Powers is not unhappy with his team, and he knows what needs to be done for Bowling Green to turn it around.

"Our forwards have to start enjoying the game more, wanting to do things with the puck, instead of handling it like a hot potato," he says.

"It’s two things. One, we have veteran guys who are trying to step up and play big-time roles, and are putting too much pressure on themselves to handle those roles. Two, our young guys are just getting their experience. They’re not finishing.

"With the combination of things, we don’t have a really big-time, veteran player. You’re taking role players and casting them into to starring roles, and they’re getting nervous about it, not handling it well. Then they’re starting to think, ‘I gotta do this, I gotta do this, and I gotta do this.’ When you get in that mindset, nothing happens.

"Guys are playing hard, they’re working hard. I don’t have any qualms with that.

"So many of our games have been close in the third period, they could’ve gone either way. But they haven’t gone our way."

Powers also has a healthy respect for Ohio State. Put simply, he says, "They have the better club.

"They really blew Western out on Friday night but couldn’t score. To do that and to lose, and to come back the next night and be down four to one — to me, that’s a turning point game right there for them. They blow a game they should’ve won Friday night, then they’re down four-one going into the third period Saturday night and they turn around and win the game. That says to me that there’s a team, I think, that could be going in the right direction.

"We went the other way. We played a tough game on Friday night that could go either way. We lose it, we come back home. And we just give it away at home."

John Markell knows that Saturday’s game won’t be easy. "I think Bowling Green’s going to work hard — they always do. If we come in and work equally hard, hopefully we can come out on the top end. We’re in their arena. There are a lot of factors, things that have to go right, in order to work for us. If our guys come in with the attitude that we think we’re better and we don’t have to do it on the ice, we’ll be in trouble."

With a record of 4-3-1 — the best Buckeye start since the 1990-91 season, Markell can afford to be a little optimistic. "We’ve got some things to build on. I think we’ve got twenty-five guys headed in the right direction. Let’s hope that comes out of them on Saturday and Sunday."

PICK: Ohio State 5-3

Notre Dame (5-3-0, 2-2-0 CCHA) at Ohio State (4-3-1, 1-2-0 CCHA) Sunday, 3 p.m., Ohio Expo Center, Columbus, OH

Ohio State head coach John Markell effectively uses a form of this week’s vocabulary word in a sentence: "We’re still trying to establish respect, and we do that by playing more consistently. That’s what we’re striving for."

Consistency. Respect. With the first, Ohio State can surely earn the second.

The Buckeyes have knocked off two top-ten teams in the last two weeks. They took three points from then tenth-ranked Clarkson in Potsdam, and Clarkson dropped out of the top ten. They beat No. 7 Miami at home last Saturday, an exciting come-from-behind win, and Miami moved up two spots in the poll.

Some respect. Respect won’t come until the Buckeyes can prove to the hockey world that they’re for real.

"You have to go through character-building situations in order to do that," says Markell. "Learning how to win is a lot of hard work, and they’re starting to do that."

Learning how to win is something this Buckeye team has in common with Notre Dame, another team that has something to prove.

Last week Notre Dame beat Bowling Green 2-1 at home, and lost the deciding game of the season series to Michigan State, 3-1 in East Lansing. "I’m encouraged, no question. We kill penalties very well. We’re playing better in our end. We’re scoring the opportune goal, particularly the opportune power-play goal early in the game."

Both teams will be playing on short rest, both having played the night before, something each coach anticipates will be a factor in the game. "You’ll be using your bench a little more than you would," says Poulin. "It is a turn-around."

If OSU looks for some fresh legs on Sunday, Craig McKechnie and Neil Rech may get a chance to play again. Both played in the Miami win last Saturday, and Coach Markell is pleased with what he saw. "I want to compliment Craig McKechnie and Neil Rech for what they did. They came in and gave us a spark. We’re going to rotate them in and out, along with other guys, and try to get it done every night."

Both teams are getting good-to-terrific goaltending. For the Irish, Matt Eisler is solid. He’s fourth among goaltenders with significant time in net, with a GAA of 2.35 and a save percentage of .926. Ohio State has two netminders who can play well. Sophomore Ray Aho and freshman Jeff Maund have been splitting time. Maund is undefeated at 3-0-0. Combined, the goalies have a 2.85 GAA and a .899 save percentage this season.

Don’t think that Ohio State is cocky after beating Miami for the first time in three seasons. Markell says his Buckeyes are well aware of the challenge of this game against the Irish. "They know that Notre Dame is a pretty good hockey club. We’re going to have to be very aware of Ben Simon.

"We have them in our building, and we have to take care of business ourselves."

PICK: Ohio State 4-2

Lake Superior State (2-5-1, 1-3-1 CCHA) at Western Michigan (4-4-2, 3-4-1 CCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., Lawson Arena, Kalamazoo, MI

"I thought for the first time, since our first game of the year, that we actually played some poor hockey. We played poorly both nights, actually."

Lake Superior head coach Scott Borek says the Lakers didn’t play up to expectations last weekend in their split with Alaska-Fairbanks in Sault Ste. Marie.

"In most ways, I was extremely disappointed that we weren’t able to continue to play well."

The Lakers lost to the Nanooks 6-2 on Friday, and won 8-2 Saturday. According to Borek, there were a number of things that prevented the Lakers from playing up to their potential. "We probably underestimated Alaska a little bit. It was parents’ weekend, and that was kind of distracting.

"We didn’t get great defense or goaltending, team defense. At a couple of critical points in the game [Friday] we didn’t do what we needed to do defensively….[Then] we didn’t play well offensively on Saturday, even though we scored eight goals."

With a record of 1-3-1 in CCHA play, the Lakers have struggled this season, so far falling far short of preseason polls that placed Lake Superior fourth overall. Borek says that, in spite of their slow start, the Lakers had been playing really good, competitive hockey, and he hasn’t been displeased.

Until last weekend.

"Losing that game on Friday was a major loss. That’s a team we’re going to have to pass at some point. That’s where we are. We’re not in the group of people that needs to climb over each other. We’re not in the group — as the preseason polls had us — with Michigan, Miami and Michigan State. We’re not in that group. And I don’t expect we will be in that group all year. But we’d better do well in the group we’re in.

"We’re not as healthy as we could be, and we’re still trying to find ourselves a little bit emotionally."

Borek hopes that this weekend’s series with in-state rivals Western Michigan will give the Lakers the jump-start their season needs.

"Now we need to get it going this weekend. Hopefully, going on the road will help us. Western has kind of healed their woes. Western’s getting outstanding goaltending and outstanding defense. They’re in every game they play.

"We are certainly the underdogs going into this weekend. We’re trying to steal some points away from a pretty good hockey team, on the road."

The Lakers will have a difficult time taking points from Western Michigan, a team that flexed its collective muscle last weekend on a swing through Ohio. Western earned four CCHA points last weekend, beating Ohio State 3-1 and Bowling Green 8-3.

Before last weekend, Western head coach Bill Wilkinson said that his offense was "missing in action." He still believes that defense will determine the Broncos’ success.

"The key to the defense is goaltending. Matt [Barnes] is seeing the puck pretty big these days. The defense is playing pretty well, not allowing too many shots against him, but the defense is not infallible. You have to make a good shot to beat him."

Barnes made 37 saves in the Broncos’ win over the Buckeyes. His GAA is 2.36, and his league save percentage is .922.

These two teams play tough — sometimes rough — defensive hockey, and Wilkinson expects nothing less. "[The Lakers] are struggling right now, and sometime that’s the worst kind of team to get. They’re going to come in here clawing and digging for points. It’s always a physical series."

Western is 1-3-0 at home, but unless the Lakers can turn things around in a week, Western will even up that record.

PICKS: Western 4-2, 5-2

Ferris State (3-6-1, 3-3-1 CCHA) at No. 10 Michigan (6-3-0, 3-2-0 CCHA) Friday, 7 p.m., Yost Arena, Ann Arbor, MI Michigan at Ferris State Sunday, 2 p.m., Van Andel Arena, Grand Rapids, MI

The Michigan Wolverines have taken six points from their last four CCHA game, but they’ve had to travel to do it.

"We had the two longest trips of the year back to back," says Michigan head coach Red Berenson. "We went to Alaska one weekend, and the next weekend we went up to Northern. Well, I don’t think [the traveling] helped the team. I can’t say it’s an excuse for not playing better, maybe, but it’s a tough trip."

Michigan took one of two games from the Wildcats in Marquette last weekend, winning 5-3 Friday, and losing 1-0 Saturday.

"Actually, both games were close games," says Berenson. "The Friday game was 3-3 going into the third, and we scored two goals — a power-play goal and a shorthanded goal. On Saturday night, it was 0-0 until three minutes left in the game, and they scored. Both teams had chances to win it, and I thought they played a little better than we did defensively, but they couldn’t put the puck in the net offensively. And Turco played well for us defensively as well."

Friday’s game was Wolverine goaltender Marty Turco’s 100th career win.

Berenson says that although the Wolverines are ranked in the top ten, this Wolverine team is still adjusting to personnel changes, and it may be some time before Michigan is at the top of its game.

"I think we’re improving every weekend. The one real concern that I have is the absence of Matt Herr. He’s still out, and he won’t play again this weekend. It’s a groin thing that’s just not going away. It’s something we all have to be patient with, but I expected him back maybe two weeks ago — now maybe this coming week. I don’t know when he’s coming back.

And no question, he’d be our number-one centerman. It’s tough to have a player of that stature out that long, and we’re not that good a team that we can just keep surviving without him." The coach looks forward to Herr’s return also to take some of the pressure off of senior Bill Muckalt, who, according to Berenson, has assumed all team leadership.

According to Berenson, hockey fans should no longer expect that easy win or blowout game that they saw from Michigan teams of the recent past. "Our defensive play has been inconsistent. Our penalty killing has been inconsistent. Our power play has been inconsistent. And offensively we’ve been inconsistent. So, I guess you could say we’ve been inconsistent."

In this home-and-home series against Ferris State, Berenson is taking nothing for granted. "They’ll come in and play us close. They always check us well, and they play pretty well against us. I expect it to be a closer checking game than you might think on paper."

The Bulldogs are coming off a short week, having beaten Alaska-Fairbanks 7-2 on Tuesday in Big Rapids. Last weekend, Ferris State lost two games to Mankato State, 5-2 and 7-5. The Bulldogs were competitive in both games, coming back from behind in Saturday’s game to tie before Mankato put the game away in the third.

After a decent start to the season, the Bulldogs seem to be searching for what Berenson says the Wolverines are lacking — consistency. Ferris State is struggling on special teams, eighth in the league in power play, and dead last in penalty-killing. Offensively, nine Bulldogs have multiple points, but just one player, Ed Kowalski, has as many as four points in league play.

The Bulldogs have seen some good goaltending from Vince Owen this season. The rookie has a 2.98 GAA and a very respectable save percentage of .894.

Rookie Mark Kosick is leading the Wolverines in league scoring, with seven points. Michigan is also seeing excellent play from another rookie, defenseman Mike VanRyn.

Michigan may have graduated their snipers, but they’re still deeper than many teams in the CCHA, including Ferris State. Both teams need to overcome inconsistency to play good hockey in this series.

PICKS: Michigan 5-2, 4-2

Alaska-Fairbanks (2-7-1, 1-6-0 CCHA) at Northern Michigan (5-2-2, 4-1-1 CCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., Lakeview Arena, Marquette, MI

Northern Michigan is one of the CCHA’s "teams of the moment." This is a squad doing better than anyone expected. With a less-than-stellar performance in the WCHA last season, and with 20 underclassmen, few people thought the Wildcats would make the CCHA playoffs, let alone beat top CCHA teams.

While it may be too early in the season to speculate about the playoffs, the ‘Cats are playing with a fire and a — dare we say it? — consistency that’s made everyone stand up and take notice. Last week the Wildcats split at home with Michigan, in a series that head coach Rick Comley predicted would be "fun." Michigan won 5-3 Friday night, but the Wildcats won 1-0 Saturday, with Fred Mattersdorfer scoring the lone goal at 15:41 of the third.

This week the ‘Cats welcome the Nanooks — although Alaska-Fairbanks may feel a bit less than welcome, playing its last road games of a season tour of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

The Nanooks are winding up a punishing middle-of-the-semester swing through Michigan. After playing Lake Superior two games last weekend, they traveled downstate for a game at Ferris; now they’re back in the U.P., facing a Marquette team that’s receiving attention in the national polls.

For all of their efforts, Fairbanks has earned just two points on this trip, winning 6-2 over Lake Superior Friday night. The Nanooks dropped their next two games, an 8-3 loss to the Lakers on Saturday, and a 7-2 loss to Ferris State on Tuesday. The Nanooks scored the first two goals of the Ferris game; the Bulldogs scored the next seven.

It’s hard to imagine that Alaska-Fairbanks will have the legs to get a jump on Northern, and for this weekend they may simply be outmatched. The Nanooks lead the league in the power play, and they have some players capable of producing points, most notably Sjon Wynia with three goals and four assists, and Jeff Trembecky with two goals and five assists. And it’s worth noting that Northern Michigan has the league’s worst power play.

However, as a team, the Wildcats are plus-55, while the Nanooks are minus-90. Lots of ‘Cats can score. Few Nanooks can.

Expect Northern Michigan to continue its winning ways, adding fuel to the debate about why the ‘Cats are not yet nationally-ranked.

PICKS: Northern 6-2, 4-2

Mankato State (5-3-1) at No. 3 Michigan State (7-1-2, 5-1-1 CCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., Munn Ice Arena, East Lansing, MI

Ron Mason summarizes the Spartans’ 3-1 win over the Fighting Irish last weekend like this: "We’ll take it. Hard-fought victory. Notre Dame’s playing very well. We played very well, too."

The only game the Spartans played last weekend was the rubber match of the series with Notre Dame, and Mason wasn’t taking anything for granted going into that one. As it turned out, the Spartans had to score twice in the third period to win the game, giving them the series for the season.

This weekend, the Mankato State Mavericks travel to Munn, and, again, Mason is taking nothing for granted.

"We’re going to have our hands full because they’re a good team," says Mason. "They’re trying to prove they’re good, which means that these games are very, very important to their program, less important to ours. But on the other hand, we have to win the games."

Mason says he knows what it’s like to coach a team like the Mavericks, a team fighting for respectability and recognition.

"I’ve been on the other side of the fence many times as a coach, when I was at Lake State and Bowling Green, looking at upward teams and hoping I could have an opportunity to be as good as they are going into games like this. You have everything on your side, and quite often you win them because your kids play so hard and you get the breaks.

"We have to play our game and hope that our kids have the inner fortitude to play our best game."

Mankato State is coming to Michigan after sweeping another CCHA team, Ferris State, 5-2 and 7-5 at home. And, for the first time in Mankato State hockey history, the Mavericks received a vote for a national poll — one in the USCHO poll.

The Mavericks certainly have a chance against the Spartans, and there’s no telling what a team with nothing to lose can gain. However, it’s hard to ignore the awesome Spartan defense and goaltending. Netminder Chad Alban leads the CCHA in goaltending among players with more than a handful of minutes. Alban’s GAA is 1.57, and his save percentage is .916.

The Spartans are allowing few opportunities for opponents to score, and Michigan State has outscored CCHA opponents 23-13 in seven CCHA games.

PICKS: Michigan State 4-3, 3-1

This Week in the ECAC: November 14, 1997

League action kicked off this past weekend, and three teams came out perfect.

Rensselaer, Yale and Cornell all swept their weekend series, while Princeton won one and tied one. The Engineers disposed of Dartmouth and Vermont, 7-1 and 7-2; Yale dispatched Clarkson and St. Lawrence, 2-1 and 3-0; Cornell took care of Harvard and Brown, 5-2 and 4-3. Meanwhile, Princeton and St. Lawrence tied, 2-2, before the Friars came back to top Clarkson, 3-2.

This time around, some teams continue their league play, while others take a week off before heading back into ECAC action.

The road to Placid has kicked off…

Colgate (4-2-0, 1-1-0 ECAC, T-5th) and No. 7 Cornell (3-0-0, 2-0-0 ECAC, T-1st) at Vermont (1-5-0, 0-2-0 ECAC, T-10th) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Gutterson Fieldhouse, Burlington, Vt.

No. 7 Cornell (3-0-0, 2-0-0 ECAC, T-1st) and Colgate (4-2-0, 1-1-0 ECAC, T-5th) at Dartmouth (2-1-0, 1-1-0 ECAC, T-5th) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7:30 pm, Thompson Arena, Hanover, N.H.

Vermont knew that it would be missing some of its offense this year, including two All-Americans up front. The past ECAC weekend was the exclamation point on that thought, as the Catamounts were shut out by Union, and scored only two goals against Rensselaer.

"We’ve had a lot of trouble scoring five-on-five," said head coach Mike Gilligan. "The two goals that we got (Saturday) were two of six goals that we’ve [gotten] at even strength all year long. We have to learn to go to the net a little bit stronger than we have been."

The Cats have been outscored so far by a margin of 25-12, and before last weekend, only seven Cats had scored — two of them defensemen. The only Cat to score on the weekend was Jason Hamilton, and he got his first goals of the season.

Dartmouth rebounded from a dreadful game against Rensselaer to shut out Union on Saturday, 4-0. Eric Almon got his first career shutout and Tom Ruzzo scored two goals on the weekend for the Big Green.

The win was Bob Gaudet’s first ECAC victory at his alma mater, and he was plenty relieved after Saturday’s game.

"We didn’t have our `A’ game on Friday night," he told Ken Schott of the Schenectady, N.Y., Gazette. "Out guys gutted it out and really wanted it….We needed something to get going."

Almon will continue in the nets, especially after his strong showing on Saturday night. Jason Wong will continue to sit as his knee heals, but if Almon continues to play like he does, it could be a long time before Wong sees the ice.

Colgate came from behind to defeat Brown on Friday evening, but could not repeat that accomplishment against Harvard on Saturday. Each time, the Red Raiders fell behind by three goals in the early going.

"It’s tough to keep coming back when we spot a team three goals," Colgate coach Don Vaughan said. "We did it against Brown, but we can’t do it every time and expect to win."

The Red Raiders continue to put goals on the board — including four from Dru Burgess — but three power plays against them in the Harvard game has Vaughan concerned.

"The penalty kill is something we need to work on," Vaughan said. "We did a good job with it on Friday, but we can’t continue to take bad penalties and get away with it."

The Big Red of Cornell started defense of their ECAC championship with a sweep of Harvard and Brown. One of the unusual things on the weekend was that the Big Red played with only four defensemen, due to injuries.

"It’s tough with only four defensemen, trying to play catch-up hockey all night long," head coach Mike Schafer said. "The whole team showed a lot of character at the end, especially Jason [Dailey], in terms of executing."

While the games were not pretty, they were still wins, and the Big Red seem to be growing stronger with every game that they play.

PICKS: Colgate at Vermont: Vermont continues to struggle. Colgate 4, Vermont 2 Cornell at Dartmouth: Gaudet’s home debut does not end well. Cornell 4, Dartmouth 2 Cornell at Vermont: The Big Red need defensemen on this sheet, but they get it done. Cornell 3, Vermont 1 Colgate at Dartmouth: Ah, that home win for Gaudet. Dartmouth 5, Colgate 3

Princeton (3-0-1, 1-0-1 ECAC, 4th) and Yale (3-0-0, 2-0-0 ECAC, T-1st) at Harvard (1-1-0, 1-1-0 ECAC, T-5th) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Bright Hockey Center, Cambridge, Mass.

Yale (3-0-0, 2-0-0 ECAC, T-1st) and Princeton (3-0-1, 1-0-1 ECAC, 4th) at Brown (0-2-0, 0-2-0 ECAC, T-10th) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Meehan Auditorium, Providence, R.I.

The Brown Bears debuted a new head coach this past weekend, and almost pulled two victories out of the hat. New coach Roger Grillo had the Bears playing well, something that will be capitalized on in the future. Brown had leads late in both games, but just could not close it out.

"You never want to give up goals late in the period," Grillo said after Friday’s game. "This is a game of huge momentum, and we gave them too much there at the end of the first period."

Colgate came back from a three-goal deficit to defeat the Bears on Friday. On Saturday, the Bears held a one-goal lead over Cornell with less than five minutes to play, and the Big Red scored three goals to win that game as well.

The Crimson of Harvard started the season with a loss to rival Cornell but came back to defeat Colgate on Saturday. In the win, Trevor Allman netted a hat trick, and the Crimson special teams came up with three power-play goals and a shorthander.

Harvard also put up a power-play goal against Cornell, and a shorthander as well. The Crimson have scored eight goals on the season, six of them on special teams. Last season, HU did not start out particularly well on special teams, especially the power play, so this could be an early indication that the Crimson are going to have a better season.

Harvard lost both games last season to Princeton, and split the series against Yale.

Princeton remains undefeated after four games, at 3-0-1. The Tigers got goals from freshmen Shane Campbell and Chris Corrinet. All told, the Tigers had goals from five different players on the weekend

Erasmo Saltarelli played both games, making 25 saves on Friday against St. Lawrence and 27 against Clarkson. Princeton is hoping to match last year’s hot ECAC start of 6-2-1, and it seems like the Tigers are on their way.

The Bulldogs of Yale have surprised a few people with their 2-0-0 start in the ECAC. That’s a surprise to some, but not to others — this Bulldog team is their best since the 1992 season, according to head coach Tim Taylor.

ECAC Goaltender of the Week Alex Westlund picked up both wins last weekend. He allowed only one goal, including his second career shutout, against St. Lawrence on Saturday. Westlund has only allowed two goals so far this season.

Jeff Hamilton, Cory Shea, Ben Stafford, Mark Turco and Geoff Kufta scored on the weekend, giving the Bulldogs a solid attack.

PICKS: Princeton at Harvard: That Princeton defense gets it done. Princeton 3, Harvard 1 Yale at Brown: Grillo continues to wait. Yale 4, Brown 2 Yale at Harvard: Harvard earns the split. Harvard 3, Yale 2 Princeton at Brown: That defense is tough. Princeton 2, Brown 1

St. Lawrence (1-4-1, 0-1-1 ECAC, 9th) at Clarkson (2-3-1, 0-2-0 ECAC, T-10th) Saturday, 7:30 pm, Cheel Arena, Potsdam, NY

St. Lawrence tied Princeton on Friday and then was shut out by Yale on Saturday in its ECAC season-debut weekend. One of the big questions facing the Saints was the goaltending. Last week head coach Joe Marsh said that Eric Heffler would start against Princeton, and Heffler stood tall against the Tigers.

"Heff really came up big for us," said Marsh. "It was a good hockey game that both teams probably thought they should have won. I know we had some outstanding chances that came up empty, and Heff robbed them a few times along the way as well."

On Saturday Marsh went with freshman Jeremy Symington. He played well also, but Marsh pointed to other factors that played a role.

"You have to give Yale a lot of credit," said Marsh. "We didn’t play as well as we are capable of playing, but a good part of that was due to Yale’s forechecking and backchecking. They won a lot of the little battles. It was a good lesson for us, and hopefully it’s one we will put to use."

Clarkson opened the season with two losses to Yale and Princeton, leaving a lot of fans in Potsdam scratching their heads. The Golden Knights scored only three goals on the weekend, from three different players. Balance in scoring is what the Knights were looking for, but more volume is what they really need.

Dan Murphy was solid in net once again — allowing only four goals — but that was not enough to bring his team to victory.

This matchup is one that is eagerly anticipated between the athletes, fans and communities. With the close proximity of the two schools, there is a huge rivalry between the two teams. Clarkson has had the better of the series, leading 94-47-6 all-time. St. Lawrence dealt the Knights their first loss ever at Cheel Arena in 1991, but since then Clarkson has won every game between the two at Cheel.

Clarkson has traditionally come on strong after playing St. Lawrence at home. Looking at the last five years, after the Knights have beaten the Saints at home, the next ten games are pretty impressive. In 1993, the Knights went 8-1-1, and in 1994, 6-2-2. Then it’s 7-2-1, 6-2-2, and last year, 9-1-0. That’s a combined record of 36-8-6.

PICK: Clarkson always gets it together for the Saints. Clarkson 6, St. Lawrence 3

Niagara (2-0-0, 0-0-0 against major Division I) at Rensselaer (5-2-0, 2-0-0 ECAC, T-1st) Saturday, 7 pm, Houston Fieldhouse, Troy, NY

Niagara head coach Blaise McDonald has put together a tougher schedule this year, with six Division I conference-aligned opponents. Rensselaer is the first on the list of teams to face the Purple Eagles.

That’s not an easy task for the Eagles to take on., but this is the first step in becoming a fully-aligned D-I club, and playing ECAC and Hockey East teams will only benefit Niagara in the future.

The Rensselaer Engineers are on a roll. They blew out Dartmouth and Vermont in their first two ECAC games, and outplayed Union in a non-conference game on Tuesday.

"No matter who you have on your schedule, you want to put your best foot forward," said Engineer head coach Dan Fridgen. "We’re looking for consistency; we don’t want to be complacent at all."

The Engineers have gotten massive numbers from their top line over the last four games. Alain St. Hilaire, Eric Healey and Matt Garver have put up 31 points over their last four games, including 22 in the two ECAC games. St. Hilaire was named ECAC Player of the Week for his efforts.

"With the way they started, people wondered about them," said Fridgen. "But you just have to stay confident and work hard, and sooner or later you’ll get your chances."

It looks like the Engineers are beginning to get the wheels going, and seem to be showing people why they were picked first in the ECAC.

PICK: Blaise wonders who put these guys on the schedule. Rensselaer 9, Niagara 2

UMass-Amherst (1-4-0, 0-3-0 Hockey East) at Union (1-5-0, 1-1-0 ECAC, T-5th) Saturday, 7 pm, Achilles Rink, Schenectady, NY

Union got in the win column Friday evening, with a 1-0 victory over Vermont. Unfortunately for them, the Dutchmen were shut out the following evening against Dartmouth. The Dutchmen also lost on Tuesday evening to the Rensselaer Engineers in a non-league game.

Union was outshot 50-20 in Tuesday’s game, and inexperience showed on the game-winning goal, which came with just 21 seconds left on the clock after freshman Bryant Westerman lost his man. After the game, Westerman stood up in the locker room and "paid the piper" to head coach Stan Moore. Moore was thoroughly impressed with his young forward.

"If I can get every player to take that kind of responsibility for their play, or if every worker in every factory, or every teacher in every school stood up and said `my bad’ when the time came it would be a better world to live in and you would have people committed," he said.

"You would also have staff and supporters say, ‘Okay, let’s see if we can do it better.’ If other people buy into the way Bryant buys into it, we’ll have a better team for it."

Moore knows that there is a lot of work to do with his young team, and doesn’t want to give them any false pretenses.

"We don’t want them to walk away with the false impression that we played with a nationally-ranked team," he said after Tuesday’s game. "I don’t want them to get [that idea], because it impedes the learning process, and I want them to get better — and they will."

The Minutemen of UMass-Amherst have had a rough go at it in the beginning. The Minutemen have not won a Hockey East contest (0-3-0), and dropped a decision to Nebraska-Omaha this past weekend. The Minutemen now have the dubious distinction of being the first D-I conference-aligned team to fall to the Mavericks.

For more information on the Minutemen, please refer to this week’s Hockey East Preview.

PICK: Union wins a low-scoring game. Union 2, UMass-Amherst 1

Harvard (1-1-0, 1-1-0 ECAC, T-5th) at No. 9 Boston College (5-1-0, 3-1-0 Hockey East) Tuesday, 7 pm, Kelley Rink, Chestnut Hill, Mass.

For information on Harvard, please refer earlier in this preview.

The Eagles of Boston College are currently ranked ninth in the USCHO Poll after back to back wins over New Hampshire. They are led by junior Marty Reasoner, a Hobey Baker candidate, and are letting their youth do the talking.

For more on the Eagles, please refer to this week’s Hockey East Preview.

PICK: The Eagles are soaring. Boston College 5, Harvard 2

Welcome Back To The ECAC

Who says the hockey offseason is boring?

It certainly wasn’t that way in the ECAC, where upheaval has been the buzzword and a complicated labyrinth of movement had the wheels spinning and everybody talking.

But with the season finally in full swing, it’s time to reflect upon those changes.

It wasn’t just the usual array of big names that are gone — Harder, St. Louis, Perrin, Thomas. No, commissioners and coaches were also on the merry-go-round. In fact, other than Air Force, the ECAC saw the only two head coaching changes in the nation among major Division I teams.

It began before the end of last season, when ECAC Commissioner Joe Bertagna resigned to take the same job with Hockey East. On July 7, Jeff Fanter became the new commissioner of ECAC hockey. It’s a move that, for better or worse, everyone in the league is talking about.

It was at the Final Four in Milwaukee that USCHO broke the story of Bob Gaudet leaving Brown to become the head coach at his alma mater, Dartmouth. He took assistant Jamie Rice with him, while former Brown assistant and longtime friend Brian McCloskey left New Hampshire to join Gaudet’s staff.

The search for Brown’s replacement became tumultuous when Brown AD Dave Roach took a long time to make his decision, partially because he was turned down by his first choice, former NHL and Brown defenseman Tim Bothwell.

Brown eventually hired Vermont’s top assistant, Roger Grillo, in a move that seemed to come out of nowhere. Not that Grillo was a bad choice, but he was never considered a candidate until very late.

Lately, the ECAC has even felt the unexpected sting of departed undergrads. Princeton’s all-rookie defenseman Dominique Auger decided to forego his last three seasons to play one year of major junior hockey in his native Quebec. And St. Lawrence junior-to-be goalie Clint Owen decided to leave school after he and head coach Joe Marsh concluded it was in everyone’s best interests — which leaves Marsh with two freshmen and an inexperienced junior in nets.

Other departed undergrads include Harvard’s Craig McDonald, who left to join the Canadian national team, and Clarkson’s Mike Bushaw, who had his scholarship revoked by coach Mark Morris for an offseason incident, the same one that got sophomore Matt Reid suspended until mid-season.

And even the higher-ups in the ECAC office are feeling the winds of change.

The hiring of Fanter — or at least the approval of that hiring — was the last major move by ECAC Commissioner Clayton Chapman, who will retire after this school year.

Chapman replaced Scotty Whitelaw (for whom the regular-season hockey championship trophy is named) in June, 1990. Prior to being commissioner of the ECAC, Chapman was an assistant to the commissioner, and an assistant athletic director at Cornell, where he is a member of the Sports Hall of Fame.

Grillo Takes Over

Roger Grillo was known as a top-notch recruiter as an assistant at Vermont. Now we’ll see if he can recruit Ivy Leaguers.

Grillo was named the new coach at Brown in June, a surprise to some who thought the job would go to someone with more Brown and/or Ivy League connections. But Grillo beat out people like Boston University’s Brian Durocher and New Hampshire assistant Brian McCloskey.

One applicant who was never interviewed was Stan Moore, Union’s top man and the 1997 ECAC Coach of the Year.

It may surprise some that Moore, at Union for just one year, would seek to leave the Schenectady for the Ivy League, but it shouldn’t. The situation at Union is far from ideal, and it goes past the simple, everyday difficulties of recruiting at a small school.

Schools like Clarkson, St. Lawrence and RPI are Division III institutions that give scholarships for hockey. Vermont is a full-fledged Division I school, and Colgate, while not giving scholarships, is also D-I. The other six schools have the attraction of being Ivy League institutions.

Union doesn’t even allow preferential aid.

This puts the Dutchmen in a near-impossible situation, and if you listened closely to Moore over the past year, it’s clear he wants to make Union as quick a steppingstone as possible — and good for him, because he deserves it.

The message to Union’s administration is: if you want to play ball with the big guys, you’ve got to pay the price.

Jamie Rice, the assistant to Bob Gaudet at Brown for five years, was a minor-level candidate for the head coaching position with the Bears. He was interviewed more out of courtesy than anything else.

With Grillo getting the job, Rice has decided to join Gaudet at Dartmouth, where the pair will try to relive the success they enjoyed for most of their time together in Providence. They are joined by Brian McCloskey, another Dartmouth graduate, who had been an assistant at New Hampshire and before that also with Gaudet at Brown.

Word association: Bertagna, Hockey East, TV…

It didn’t take long for former ECAC hockey commissioner Joe Bertagna to secure a new cable television deal for his new conference, Hockey East. Bertagna took over July 1. The deal was announced July 9.

Bertagna called SportsChannel from his hotel in Milwaukee while at the Final Four in March. The Hartford Whalers had just announced they’d be leaving for Carolina, and SportsChannel was without hockey. Bertagna, forever opportunistic, didn’t hesitate to call.

Sticking to his philosophy that he works for all of college hockey, Bertagna tried to include his old friends in the deal.

“In my first meeting, I tried to sell them on a college hockey game of the week with both leagues,” Bertagna told USCHO. “It was part of what I’ve told the athletic directors here. I want to do things in general for both sides. Every once in a while they remind me that I’m not working for those other guys anymore — ‘Don’t worry about doing things for all of college hockey. Remember who’s paying you.’

“But I did what I thought was right. Personally, I believe a college package with as many games for both leagues would be terrific, but SportsChannel was quite blunt. ‘With all due respect to your old league,’ they said, ‘we’re interested in Hockey East because it’s a definable package. It’s all in our audience’s geography. We’re not interested in the other guys.’ Having done that, I could take the dual hats off and zoom in.”

He knows who signs his paychecks, but he also knows what’s good for the sport is good for his league. Everyone should take a page from his book.

We can only dream that one day he can realize his goal of a national TV contract. College hockey is underexposed in relation to the money it brings in and fans it attracts.

That day is coming, brother. I don’t know when, but the sport will get its due. Bertagna and friends are moving it in the right direction — let’s just hope the ECAC doesn’t fall on its face trying to get on the bandwagon.

Cornell hockey stays on the air — barely

Cornell was almost off the air for the first time in decades this coming season. What is probably the nation’s most popular college hockey program was apparently not enough of a money-maker for the company that owns the station which has aired the games.

Play-by-play man Grady Whittenberg, who worked full-time in sales for Q104, was fired.

The management situation of the Ithaca station was in flux over the last few years, but the one constant was Whittenberg, the consensus as best play-by-play man in the league.

You’ll have a hard time convincing people that Cornell hockey broadcasts don’t make money. That’s like Peter Angelos trying to convince people the Baltimore Orioles don’t make money.

The Big Red finally got back onto Q104 thanks to a last-minute change of heart, but not before flirting with a new home on WVBR, a quasi-Cornell home (hence VBR: “Voice of the Big Red”). But the latter’s signal was never strong enough to be a legitimate contender ’til now.

Incidentally, the games are on AudioNet this year, too, thanks to a monetary contribution from an alumnus.

St. Louis and Perrin: reunited

Martin St. Louis and Eric Perrin are together again. The tandem was separated this fall as each went to separate NHL training camps — St. Louis to Ottawa and Perrin to Montreal.

The former All-Americans had deals with Cleveland that prohibited any other IHL team from using them. So if Ottawa and Montreal didn’t want them, then that’s where they would go.

It’s been a good start. St. Louis is third on the team in scoring, while Perrin has two goals in the recent week, the first two of his pro career.

At 5-foot-8 apiece, they may get discriminated against for a while. But keep playing well, and the NHL will have to take them seriously.

Tim Thomas has had a tougher time. He was released outright by Colorado, the team that had his rights through college. Thomas was faced with an organization that was deep in goal, with a couple of younger prospects in the organization. And reportedly, the former Vermont standout displeased Colorado management with some comments in the press.

Thomas is a good kid, but he has been known to run his mouth, so it’s no surprise. He landed on his feet in Houston with the IHL’s Aeros, replacing another former Vermont All-American, Christian Soucy, who broke his wrist.

Also, congratulations to Todd White, the Clarkson standout and Hobey Baker finalist, who has made the Chicago Blackhawks’ roster. He’s wearing No. 49.

Undergrads fly the coop

Players are disappearing from the North Country.

St. Lawrence goalie Clint Owen, who last year got into hot water and was suspended for half the season, has left the school. Saints coach Joe Marsh called it a “mutual understanding” that the two sides would part ways, and Owen is now plying his trade in the West Coast League.

Meanwhile, SLU’s neighbor 10 miles to the north, Clarkson, lost promising forward Mike Bushaw when the school revoked his scholarship. Bushaw and fellow sophomore forward Matt Reid, both North Country natives, got into some trouble over the summer. Bushaw won’t play at all, and Clarkson coach Mark Morris suspended Reid for several games, though he is now back in action.

In addition, freshman forward Erik Cole was suspended for the Ice Breaker Invitational by Morris for disciplinary reasons.

Already hurting offensively with the loss of top scorers White and Houle, Clarkson is scrambling, hoping Devils draftee Willie Mitchell can step in and provide some offense, and Buddy Wallace and Philippe Roy will play offense full-time this year.

Clarkson is off to its usual slow start. The Golden Knights usually follow an eerie pattern: rough start, scorching hot in January and February, fall short of an ECAC tournament title, and lose in the first round of the NCAAs. But unless things improve, perhaps Clarkson won’t get that far this time around.

This Week in Hockey East: November 14, 1997

Freshmen netminders Boyd Ballard of Providence and Scott Clemmensen of BC shared league Rookie of the Week honors.

On a more depressing note, this column’s 1-900-FAT-HEAD Pick of the Week phone line has been changed to 1-900-CLU-LESS after last week’s 3-6 debacle. After taking the weekend off to be in Ottawa — during which a lowlight was watching Eric Lindros attempt to log 30 minutes of ice time without once breaking a sweat — my return was marred by the copious amounts of egg found on my face. 3-6! Ouch!

Season’s record in picks before last week: 31-6 Last week’s record in picks: 3-6 New season’s record in picks: 34-12

U.S. College Hockey Online Game of the Week

No. 2 Boston University (4-0-0, 2-0-0 HE) vs. No. 7 New Hampshire (5-2-0, 1-2-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Whittemore Center, Durham, NH Saturday, 7 p.m., Walter Brown Arena, Boston, MA

Boston University took a major step in asserting its preeminence, both in Hockey East, and nationally with a 6-0 shutout of Maine.

One key to the win was another spectacular performance, particularly in the first-period, by goaltender Michel Larocque.

"He played extremely well," said coach Jack Parker. "He made some miraculous saves, but in general he was very, very steady. When a team like Maine gets six power plays, you need great goaltending.

"I don’t think there’s any question that his overall play was a major factor in the win. There was a big difference between our goaltending and their goaltending on this particular night."

The previously noted honors bestowed on Larocque and Noble won’t surprise any stathounds. Both can boast of 1.00 goals-against averages, with Larocque weighing in with a .968 save percentage and Noble at .952.

No goaltender can achieve those numbers without a stellar defense in front of him and BU’s rotation of All-American Chris Kelleher, All-American-in-waiting Tom Poti, Jeff Kealty, Dan Ronan, and freshmen Joe DiPenta and Colin Sheen certainly qualify.

"We think our forte should be, and will be, overall team defense and winning games 4-2, and not 6-5," said Parker.

Up front, the Terriers received encouraging contributions in the Maine game from freshmen Juha Vuori (two goals), Carl Corazzini (one goal), Russ Bartlett (two assists) and Nick Gillis (one assist).

After their first major Hockey East test against Maine, the Terriers now look to a home-and-home with UNH to potentially distance themselves from a top opponent. Although BU took all four games from the Wildcats last year, there’s no guarantee for the Terriers that last year’s success will continue this year.

"If you look at the track record over a long period of time, it should be UNH’s turn," said Parker. "But the bottom line is that it’s like flipping a coin. It’s 50-50 every time. I think that in a lot of those games that we’ve won, the games could have gone either way and we were just fortunate.

"We’ll begin a new series and a new era this year and we’ll see what comes out of it. They certainly are a solid team and they’ve got plenty of firepower up front. We’ll have our hands full, especially up in the Whittemore Center with that big ice surface."

While BU cruised last week, New Hampshire stumbled twice against Boston College,

losing 6-4 in a Tuesday night road game

and again

4-1 on Friday at home,

before bouncing back with an

impressive 11-4 win over Merrimack.

"BC is playing a little better [than us]," said UNH coach Dick Umile, "but Friday night we played well enough to win, believe it or not. We just had a couple major breakdowns in the third period. Combined with our inability to score, that resulted in them getting the three goals [plus an open-netter] to our one.

"I’m not going to take anything away from them playing better. They’ve got some real skilled hockey players there, but we kept them to 18 shots. But then we just let them walk to the net on [Brian] Gionta’s goal. It was poor coverage on our part.

"Then, in four-on-four play, we left the front of the net to run and get the puck and they passed it out in front and tipped it in. That’s pathetic coverage on our part."

As a result, UNH entered the Merrimack game with an 0-2 league record, in danger of digging itself a huge hole in the standings with another loss. Instead, the Wildcats rebounded with four goals in the opening 1:32 of the second period to blow open a 1-1 game in a style reminiscent of last year’s detonators.

"We responded the way I wanted us to respond after Friday night’s loss," said Umile. "We played well on top of Merrimack not playing as well as they’re capable of playing."

The explosion included eight different goal scorers, including two by Dylan Dellezay, a senior with only three prior goals in 39 career games. Breaking up the Mark Mowers-Jason Krog-Tom Nolan line, Umile put Dellezay on a wing with Mowers and Nolan. In one of the sport’s great I’ve-died-and-gone-to-Heaven moments, the unsung hero made a strong bid to keep the experiment alive. "He had a very, very good weekend," said Umile. "He was in the lineup because he’s worked hard and he’s played well in practice. He gives us another player we can use up front there."

Now Wildcat eyes turn to Boston University, who handed them four of the 11 losses they suffered last year.

"I expect BU to do exactly like they’ve done every single year," said Umile. "They’re a solid team from the net out. We’ll have to play well to compete with them."

PICK: BU sweeps, 5-4 and 5-3, not because the Terriers have any magical hex over UNH, but because BU is simply playing so well right now.

Merrimack (4-3-0, 1-2-0 HE) at No. 6 Maine (4-2-1, 2-1-0 HE)

Friday, Saturday, 7 p.m., Alfond Arena, Orono, ME

The league’s most eagerly anticipated game of the year turned into a dud, at least on the scoreboard, when

BU shut out the Black Bears 6-0.

The loss marked Maine’s worst home thumping in 11 years and served as a dramatic counterpoint to last year’s dominating

3-0

and

7-2

Maine sweep.

"It was actually a surprising kind of game," said coach Shawn Walsh. "I thought we played perhaps our best period of the year in the first period, had nine good scoring chances to their three and were down 2-0. Hockey can do that sometimes.

"Then BU’s talent, experience and defense just took over. They played very well with the lead after the first period. We had some terrific chances, but Larocque was outstanding. That happens in single games."

Two Terrier goals, in particular, combined to sink the Black Bears. A Greg Quebec shot from near the red line eluded Maine goaltender Alfie Michaud early in the game to establish a 2-0 BU lead. Then, in the closing minutes of the second, Chris Drury scored a shorthanded tally to widen the gap to 3-0 and diminish chances of a comeback.

Especially surprising was BU’s 0-for-6 shutout of Maine’s previously-lethal power play. In their previous games against U.S. Division I clubs, the Black Bears had scored on 48 percent of their man-advantage chances.

"I don’t think we executed well at all and they executed terrifically well," said Walsh. "We had probably too much of our share of puck luck in the first six games and it came back to haunt us. We had nothing — no luck at all — in this game. That happens. You have to look at it over a long period of time."

They now host Merrimack, the only team that beat them in the final 17 games last year. The Warriors not only defeated them, they did so twice.

"I’m sure our guys realize how good Merrimack can be," said Walsh. "They were the best team we played in the second half last year. They didn’t surprise us. They just played well. We’ll work hard this week and just keep trying to get better."

In Merrimack, Maine faces the one team with potentially an even more deeply wounded pride than its own. The Warriors, picked in last week’s column to beat Northeastern and then upset New Hampshire, instead dropped both,

getting stoned by NU goaltender Marc Robitaille, 6-4,

before

being blown out 11-4 at UNH.

Based on their 4-1 record that included a win over Boston College — a team that has now moved into the top ten — the Warriors had appeared primed for such a move themselves. Instead, the loss to Northeastern effectively canceled out the BC win. With their next four games against Maine and New Hampshire, they could very easily stand 1-6 in the league in two weeks with miles of ground to make up.

Despite that bleak prospect, the Friday night loss to Northeastern, ironically enough, gave some hope that the Warriors could take some points in the next four games. In that loss, they outshot the Huskies 48-27, only to be stymied by Robitaille.

"I thought we played very well," said coach Ron Anderson. "We had 48 shots, but hit a really hot goaltender. We made a couple mistakes and they capitalized on them. We could have won that game and still had a 1-1 weekend.

"Saturday night [against UNH], we were just a team out of gas. We used up so much energy on Friday night trying to win, especially when we fell behind. We really pressed late in that game, so we were just running on empty Saturday night. And UNH played very well."

Nonetheless, the 11-4 loss was hardly the pick-me-up that Anderson would have wanted going into two very tough weekends.

"We’ve just got to make sure that we don’t psychologically take a blow," said Anderson. "It’s up to the coaching staff to make sure that doesn’t happen.

"We expect to be back playing well again this weekend. We’ll reorganize and be ready to go again. Our goal has to be that game in and game out we play our best and give it our best effort."

One obvious key to the game will be to control Maine’s potent power play. The Black Bears had been scoring at a 48 percent clip going into the BU game, only to have BU shut them out.

"Right now, we don’t know what they’re doing on the power play," said Anderson. "We haven’t seen them yet, so we can’t say how we’ll kill penalties. The best way for us to kill them is not to take any."

PICK: Maine won’t allow a repeat of last year. Black Bears 6-4, 5-4.

No. 9Boston College (6-1-0, 3-1-0 HE) vs.

Northeastern (3-3-0, 2-1-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Matthews Arena, Boston, MA Saturday, 7 p.m., Conte Forum, Chestnut Hill, MA Harvard (0-1-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at Boston College (4-1-0, 2-1-0 HE)

Tuesday, 7 p.m., Conte Forum, Chestnut Hill, MA

Boston College vaulted into the top ten on the heels of its

6-4

and

4-1

sweep over UNH and now ranks higher than it has since Feb. 24, 1991.

"We’re very excited about the start that we’ve had to our season," said coach Jerry York. "We’ve won six of our first seven games. The two most recent ones against New Hampshire certainly met key objectives for us, and that was to beat those upper-echelon teams that we really have had some problems with the last number of years.

"I thought our two wins were keyed by the exceptional play by Scott Clemmensen in goal, and Marty Reasoner and Brian Gionta, who were significant offensive contributors. They had the puck an awful lot all during the series.

"I also thought our defense played well, especially Kenny Hemenway and Brendan Buckley, who really did a nice job for us."

Now the Eagles must focused against a team that has already proven it can knock off strong opponents. At times, young BC teams of recent vintage have taken such games for granted. How well the Eagles fare in this series will show a lot about the mental toughness of a team that could be tempted to re-read last week’s headlines.

Northeastern

upset Merrimack, 6-4,

before coming back to Earth with a 7-2 loss to UMass-Lowell.

"We got some really good goaltending both games, especially against Merrimack on Friday," said coach Bruce Crowder. "We were able to explode and make the most of our opportunities. Unfortunately, it was like a different team showed up the second night. We didn’t compete real well and Lowell handed to us pretty good.

"With the youth that we have," — frequently skating only three juniors or seniors — "we’re going to have rollercoaster weekends. We played decent on Friday night, though not real great, but then Saturday night I didn’t think we played well at all. It’s a matter for us as coaches eliminating the ‘not playing well at all’ and getting that to more of ‘playing pretty good’ or ‘real good.’"

For the third time this season, the Huskies won a game in the third period.

"That’s nice to see," said Crowder. "We’re only six games into the season, but we’ve come from behind or won three games in the third period. That never happened last year, so that’s a big positive."

Crowder is getting strong contributions from his two transfers, forward Bobby Davis, who came in from Northern Michigan, and defenseman David Dupont, who made the switch from Michigan Tech.

"They’re both playing well," said Crowder. "They’re obviously real hungry because they haven’t played in a year. In our situation, even though they practiced with us last year, they’re still a little bit like freshmen. We’ve got to utilize their talents to put them in situations where they can be successful."

The host of freshmen have also gotten off to strong starts.

"Most of our freshmen have gotten on the scoreboard early here," said Crowder. "It’s nice to get that off your back a little and realize that, ‘Hey, I can play at this level!’ and then hopefully get stronger and better."

The Huskies now face Hockey East’s latest top ten team, Boston College.

"Lucky us!" said Crowder with a laugh. Then, getting serious, he added, "Whenever the Boston schools play each other, anything can happen. We’re going to have to be pretty much error-free on the weekend. We can’t get overly excited, but stay within the system.

"BC is getting some good goaltending and some great offense from guys that should be giving them the offense. If anything, their defense is young, but going against one of the best offensive teams in the country [in UNH] definitely didn’t show that it was their Achilles’ heel."

Following the weekend, BC takes on Harvard in a Tuesday night clash. Last week, the Crimson split their first two games of the season. Reigning ECAC Rookie of the Year, goaltender J.R Prestifilippo, allowed an uncharacteristic five goals each game. In the more egregious performance, he allowed them on only 23 Cornell shots, leading to a 5-2 loss.

The Crimson bounced back with a 6-5 win over Colgate with Prestifilippo this time turning away 37 of 42 shots.

(For a more detailed look at Harvard from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICK: If the Eagles take the NU series for granted — something easy to do, sandwiched between the twin UNH upsets and next week’s two against Maine — they will only split. It looks from here, though, that BC will be ready. BC 5-4, 5-2.

BC then completes its tripleheader sweep with a 4-1 win over Harvard.

UMass-Lowell (4-2-0, 2-1-0 HE) at UMass-Amherst (1-4-0, 0-3-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Mullins Center, Amherst, MA

Providence College (3-2-0, 0-2-0 HE) at Army (2-4-0, 0-4-0 vs. aligned D-I)

Friday, 7 p.m., Tate Rink, West Point, NY

UMass-Amherst (1-4-0, 0-3-0 HE) at

Union (1-5-0, 1-1-0 ECAC)

Saturday, 7 p.m., Lawrence H. Achilles Rink, Schenectady, N.Y.

UMass-Lowell (4-2-0, 2-1-0 HE) at

Providence College (3-2-0, 0-2-0 HE)

Sunday, 2 p.m., Schneider Arena, Providence, RI

After flirting with disaster in a

2-1 overtime win over Army , UMass-Lowell came back with a more impressive 7-2 win over Northeastern.

"It was definitely a good team effort," said coach Tim Whitehead. "A lot of people contributed. Specifically, it was great to get production from our so-called second power-play unit, which," Whitehead added laughing, "is now our first power-play unit."

That group, which includes freshmen Jeff Boulanger and Brad Rooney, sophomores Chris Bell and Kevin Bertram, and junior Anthony Cappelletti, exemplifies the contributions the River Hawks are getting from their youngsters. They scored twice on the man advantage and Boulanger added an even-strength and a shorthanded goal. Another rookie, T.C. Harris, added another goal, his first as a collegian. Freshmen and sophomores recorded all seven tallies.

Now, Lowell travels to Amherst to play its rival sister school. The two met in the season opener, with

UMass-Lowell winning 6-4 at home.

Few rinks, however, offer a bigger difference than Lowell’s small ice surface and the Olympic sheet in Amherst.

"They’re very strong in their own rink there," said Whitehead. "We have an advantage in our rink and they have one in theirs. We’re aware of that. We just have to be careful of turning the puck over in the neutral zone, making sure that we support the puck offensively and defensively. There’s so much space there that you kind of get lost if you don’t support each other."

UMass-Amherst traveled to the Midwest where it split with the upstart Nebraska-Omaha Mavericks, getting its first win of the season, 3-2, before dropping the back end, 5-1.

"I tell you one thing," said coach Joe Mallen. "They get the place going. They get 8500 people every night. They are a very hard-working team. They’ve got a lot of transfer students, so they don’t exactly have the same sort of makeup that we had a few years ago with an all-freshman team.

"I thought we played very well the first night and wound up at least breaking the ice and getting into the win column. The second night they got a lead on us and the crowd got into the game."

One positive did come out of the loss, however. Mallen installed freshman goaltender Marcus Helanen in the nets for his first official game action. Helanen, who stopped 31 of 36 shots, is expected to succeed senior Brian Regan next year.

"We decided to give him a shot and see what he could do after Brian Regan played the night before," said Mallen. "He looked real good. He’s a big 6-4 kid. He’s got good hands, good feet, and he handles the puck well. He definitely showed some real good signs."

There’s no start of a netminding controversy here, though.

"Regan is definitely my number one guy," said Mallen. "There’s no doubt about that."

Like Whitehead, Mallen points to his home ice advantage as substantial.

"Playing at Lowell and playing at UMass are just two different scenarios," said Mallen. "They have a real, real small rink and we’ve got a real, real big rink. We’re looking for it to be a different game. Playing at their home is an advantage to them and playing at our home is an advantage to us. We’re looking to utilize our speed on our big ice surface.

The Minutemen will then go on to play Union, a team that still features All-American goaltender Trevor Koenig, but graduated 13 seniors last year.

"They’ve got a young team, a hard-working team," said Mallen. "They block a lot of shots. With Koenig, like against any good goalie, you’ve got to work on the stuff that’s going to beat him, maybe not the first shot but the rebounds, the tip-ins and the screens. Those are things that we’ll have to work on this week in practice."

(For a more detailed look at Union from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

Last week, Providence ventured to Minnesota-Duluth and came away with a

6-5 win in overtime

and

a 3-0 shutout.

The sweep marked the first time a nonconference foe has swept a weekend in Duluth since 1986.

After conference losses to Northeastern and Maine sandwiched a 5-4 overtime win over Union, the trip proved the perfect elixir for the Friars.

"It was a good experience for us," said coach Paul Pooley. "We really pulled together the first night after coming out a little sluggish, and maybe needed a little confidence boost."

After falling behind 2-0, the Friars bounced back and held the lead into the final minute only to have Duluth knot the game on a penalty shot. Despite the deflating goal, PC scrambled back for the win in overtime on a shot that went in with a fraction of a second remaining.

"We’ve shown resilience the last couple years to fight back through things like that," said Pooley. "We were down 2-0 in the first five minutes of the game and fought back too. I think our team may just be growing up a little bit, in the sense of trying to keep things in perspective. It was a real good confidence-builder."

Saturday’s shutout earned freshman goaltender Boyd Ballard co-Rookie of the Week honors and gave the Friars their first winning record of the year.

"One of the things I liked," said Pooley, "was that after the first period we were up 2-0, and I said, ‘Listen, we’re not playing that well. How many guys think we’re playing well?’ Not one guy raised his hand. Everyone said that we could do better. We went out and played a really good second and third period."

Now the Friars travel to West Point for a game against an Army team that is playing close-but-no-cigar hockey. Last week, the Cadets

fell 2-1 in overtime to UMass-Lowell,

its second overtime loss of the young season. Their top line of 6-3 Andy Lundbohm, 6-1 Greg Buckmeier and 6-3 Jon Toftey is always a threat and goaltender Daryl Chamberlain has stolen more than a couple games in his four years.

Although Division I independents frequently get little credit, Pooley is not about to let his team be lulled into overconfidence.

"Look at what Mankato State is doing," he said, referring to the independent that now sports a 4-3-1 record against teams from the four major conferences. "They’re beating up on some teams that just say, ‘Hey, we’re going in for our two points and then get out of here.’

"Going down to Army is a big test because they play with so much emotion and hard work. We have to really make sure that we’re ready to play."

PC then returns home to host UMass-Lowell on Sunday afternoon. Providence swept last year’s regular season series with the River Hawks, only to see Lowell pay them back with interest with a Hockey East quarterfinal sweep to get to the FleetCenter.

"That’s a dangerous hockey club," said Pooley. "They’ve got some really good players, they play well as a team and their goaltending is solid. It’s going to be a Hockey East battle where we have to make sure that we’re ready to play, work hard and execute what we want to do."

>From Lowell’s perspective, Whitehead definitely noticed what the Friars achieved in Duluth and knows his team is catching a hot opponent.

"It’s a good job any time you make a Western swing and win two in somebody else’s rink," he said. "Obviously, they’ve got it going and they’re a strong team. It was a real good rivalry last year, so I’m sure it’ll be a hard-fought game."

PICKS: UMass-Lowell takes two on the road, 4-3 over both UMass-Amherst and Providence. The Minutemen gain a weekend split, defeating Union 3-2, as do the Friars, 5-2 over Army.

Back In The Saddle

Before the season started, Joe Mallen was realistic. One year earlier, he’d recruited Tim Lovell from Maine after NCAA sanctions put the Black Bears out of postseason action. Lovell had practiced with the Minutemen all year long and been the best player on the ice, but a year without any game action was certain to leave its mark.

“As the rust wears off, I think he’s going to do some great things for us,” said Mallen.

"When I think about him, I just smile. He’s going to make things happen."

— UMass-Amherst coach Joe Mallen

However, in performances that belied Mallen’s cautious optimism, Lovell either assisted on, or scored, all eight Minuteman goals in the opening games of the UMass season.

His play prompted opposing coaches like BU’s Jack Parker to remark, “Tim Lovell gives them a whole new look offensively.”

So much for the rust.

Lovell’s return to the form that earned him All-Hockey East honors in his junior year came as no surprise to his former mentor, Maine coach Shawn Walsh.

“He’s a terrific on-ice competitor,” said Walsh. “He can generate offense five-on-five, which is unusual in this day and age of college hockey. He certainly makes players around him better. He’s the kind of guy who can put up huge numbers if he’s got real talented offensive people playing with him.”

Walsh saw first-hand Lovell’s contributions during the 5-10, 170-pounder’s first two years with the Black Bears, highlighted by Maine’s 1994-95 run to the national championship game.

The following year, however, Maine’s self-imposed penalties kept the Black Bears out of the NCAA tournament. When a year ago last August, the NCAA added another lost postseason, the exodus began.

“The team we would have had there would have been an incredible team,” said Lovell. “But the sanctions came down and we really weren’t going to be playing for anything. That had happened in my junior year, so when I found out in August I wouldn’t be playing for anything except for myself again, I decided to make a change. I wanted to play playoff hockey.”

While teammates Blair Allison and Jeff Tory left for the Canadian national team, Brett Clark for major juniors and Brad Mahoney for a significantly larger role at Northeastern, Lovell’s transfer to UMass-Amherst caused the most head-scratching.

Why would an All-Hockey East player, unhappy at being denied a playoff berth, opt for a program still in its early developmental stages, a school likely to have a brief postseason? Why not go to one of the teams already at the top of the league?

“My credits didn’t transfer to a lot of schools,” said Lovell. “That was a big problem. UMass took my credits and they were one of my top choices in the first place. I liked the idea of going to a new, up-and-coming program.”

“The key thing I sold him on,” said Mallen, “was the fact that he could get a terrific education and he could get his degree. Sitting down with his mom and his dad, we basically set a course for him on a two-year program. We thought it might be one, but it wound up being two years in which he could get a degree from the University of Massachusetts. As a Massachusetts kid, I think he feels very proud about that.

“He also felt that he could be a big part of a program on the upswing. At Maine, he was an outstanding member of the team, but they have a lot of outstanding players. For us, I thought he could really be a big fish in a small pond.”

With the Minutemen, he planned to either join the team in the second semester when he became eligible, or sit out the entire year. The latter option begged the question: why not turn pro rather than lose a whole year?

“I saw a lot of kids my age going and playing in the pros right away,” said Lovell. “That kind of gets you deep inside. But I looked at it from the point of view that if I ever got hurt, I wouldn’t have graduated. I thought I could graduate and still go on a year later and probably be a better player because I would have matured physically.”

So Plan A became that if the Minutemen, led by Rob Bonneau and Warren Norris, got off to a great start, Lovell would join them after the holidays. Unfortunately, that plan fell by the wayside.

“We went 1-6 at the start,” said Lovell. “I knew right after that that I’d rather wait the whole season and have a fresh year coming out and trying to make the team a lot better from the start.”

In the meantime, Lovell put a lot of sweat into improving his game.

“I worked on my strength,” said Lovell. “I worked in the weight room extra hard. And I tried to fine-tune my game to get smarter at what I was doing, looking at the game as a whole.”

This year, he faces new challenges. For the first time, he is now the big fish in a pond that doesn’t have teammates of the stature of Chris Imes, Dan Shermerhorn and Steve Kariya.

“I realize that,” said Lovell. “Teams may try to key on me, but I’m ready for it. I’ve just got to manage my frustrations. If I don’t feel I can get the puck to other people, I’ll just put the puck in the net.”

In addition to providing the Minutemen with their most potent scoring punch since the program’s rebirth in 1993, he also brings several intangibles to the table.

“I think I bring a winning tradition to the University of Massachusetts,” he said.

Additionally, and in the long run most importantly, he has also brought a credibility that any new program needs to bootstrap recruiting. In the first couple years, the Minutemen attracted athletes like Rob Bonneau, for whom the UMass full scholarship was their only such offer. Building a winning team through hidden jewels and developing second-tier prospects is a slow process.

This year’s incoming freshmen, however, mark a major step forward. Jeff Turner, the United States Hockey League’s number-two scorer, and Kris Wallis, the third-leading scorer in the British Columbia Junior Hockey League, both arrived on campus as the school’s strongest recruits since the program’s resurrection.

Lovell factored into recruiting both players.

“We were able to say that they’d be able to play a year with Tim Lovell,” said Mallen. “His name and the way he plays the game with passion [are] going to attract other players, even when people come in to visit this year and watch him play. You always try to parlay and use a positive with a positive in recruiting. I think for Tim to choose to leave a program like Maine and come to UMass was a huge statement about where our program is going.”

Lovell endorsed this approach fully.

“They told me they were going to use my name and that’s great,” said Lovell. “I know when I went to the University of Maine, I looked at guys like Paul Kariya who were there. You’re going to use your top players to help recruiting.”

And to help just about everything else, too. Mallen has Lovell on the penalty kill, the power play, a regular shift and an occasional double-shift, too.

“A player of that ability, you’ve got to go with him,” said Mallen. “Ray Bourque is the first guy over the boards no matter how old he is. He’s on the power play, penalty kill and plays his regular shift. There are some guys that are the keys to your team and they’ve got to be prepared to play those kind of minutes because they can do it all.”

On the power play, Lovell can now be found on the point. His career statistics show almost as many goals (51) as assists (57), which might argue for more of a close-to-the-net sniper’s role on the man advantage than as playmaker from the point. But there’s no arguing with his success there to date.

“He can shoot the puck a ton for a little guy,” said Mallen. “He sees the ice better than any other guy we have, so he’s a good quarterback. As time goes on, it’ll be interesting to see how we can move him around to try to change the look, but for right now I like to see him run the show up top.”

Although every game he’ll play for the Minutemen this year will be important, Lovell has already mentally circled the weekend of February 13 and 14 as something special. And that has nothing to do with Valentine’s Day.

That weekend, UMass-Amherst travels to Maine for a two-game set. It will be Lovell’s first return to his old haunts. Many of the Maine fans still feel betrayed by Lovell’s defection and are likely to let him know it.

“I just want to get that behind me,” he said. “I’m part of a new team now. It’ll be kind of like getting traded. I know I’ll hear the boos, but I hope they respect my decision.

“I have a lot of friends up there and I really respect that school a lot and I respect the coaching staff. But it’s the move that I made and I’m proud of it.”

Shawn Walsh, though obviously disappointed when Lovell left, wishes him well.

“I’ve talked to Timmy since then,” said Walsh. “From what I can gather, now he’s going to get his degree, so I’m happy for him.”

Perhaps, then, Black Bear fans will remember Lovell upon his return for his three great years at Maine, rather than the one he’s spending this season in another uniform.

Whether they do or not, in future years UMass-Amherst fans are likely to look back fondly at Lovell as the “recruit” that helped take the Minutemen to the next level.

One Last Shot At Glory

As the clock ticked down in last March’s season-ending setback at the hands of eventual national champion North Dakota in the NCAA Tournament, the seniors on the Cornell hockey team savored their last moments wearing the Red uniform. The underclassmen watched the third period come to an end and started to think about next season.

One player, however, wasn’t sure what to think. Forward Vinnie Auger awaited a decision on whether he would be granted a medical redshirt, giving him an extra year of eligibility. When the final horn sounded in Grand Rapids, Mich., Auger didn’t know whether his career was over, or if he’d be back for another campaign.

“In the beginning of the season, I thought everything was going to be fine,” Auger said. “And at first everything was fine. But, then I was denied the redshirt because I didn’t have enough classes left to take. I had to go through an appeals process that took awhile, so I didn’t know if I’d be back or not until late May or June.”

The senior was eventually granted the additional season because of a variety of injuries — mainly to his back — that have kept him out of action for parts of his last three campaigns, including virtually all of his sophomore season.

For Auger, who is, according to junior co-captain Kyle Knopp “probably our most talented player,” the ailments have limited his ability to build on the big numbers and the incredible potential that earned him Ivy League Rookie of the Year honors in 1994, and induced the Quebec Nordiques (now the Colorado Avalanche) to select him in the National Hockey League draft that year.

“It’s been really frustrating,” the forward said. “Sophomore year was really hard and last year was also hard because I had a broken thumb and my back went back and forth, feeling good and feeling bad. I never really got comfortable out there on the ice for too long.” This season has brought changes for Auger. Instead of lining up at center, as he has in the past, Auger has been playing left wing on a line with Knopp and sophomore center Ryan Moynihan.

The combination has looked potent thus far, as all three members tallied in the Red-White scrimmage and Auger and Moynihan lit the lamp against Ryerson in exhibition action.

“Vinnie has definitely stood out so far,” said sophomore forward Doug Stienstra. “He’s playing really well, and it looks like he’s playing with a lot more confidence out there.”

“I like playing left wing a lot,” Auger said. “I really like playing with Ryan and Kyle, and I think we’re doing well. It’s not really a big adjustment for me. It took a couple of practices to get comfortable, but now I’m fine with it. I think this line can be really effective and we can put points on the board.”

The changes for Auger have not only come on the ice, however. Thanks to all his experience, he has taken over the role of elder statesman.

“Vinnie’s a leader both on and off the ice,” Knopp said. “People see when he’s turning things up a notch and they get excited and play harder themselves. In the dressing room, he relaxes people because he knows how to deal with things. He’s been around for four years, so he knows not to get too excited or too emotional. Vinnie is laid back in the dressing room, and guys feed off that.”

The fifth-year performer agrees that he has become a team leader.

“I think the younger players look up to me because I’ve been here so long and they expect me to know more about school and hockey. I try to teach the other guys what I’ve learned.”

After watching ex-teammates such as P.C. Drouinand and Brad Chartrand continue their careers after leaving Ithaca, Auger hopes he can follow in their footsteps, whether it be in the Colorado system or abroad.

“I’ve been talking with them [the Avalanche] for the past few years,” Auger said. “They really haven’t had the chance to see me play because of all the injuries, so this year will determine what happens for me. If I get hurt again, I can put a cross through a career with them. But, if I put up good numbers and stay healthy, I can still play. Europe may be an option, or the IHL or AHL. I really haven’t decided yet, but Europe is probably my best option.”

Where would he like to play?

“Anywhere,” Auger said with a laugh. “It doesn’t matter. Wherever I can get a job is where I want to play.”

But right now, the forward is not looking ahead to next year. He is focused on the 1997-98 campaign — particularly on staying injury-free.

“I hope this year will be different,” he said. “I think I’ve gotten off to a pretty good start. I’ve been working out every day with the team, lifting with the team, and I haven’t missed a practice yet, so I’m just feeling great. This has to be the year that I get it done. It’s my last year — I don’t think they’re giving me any more.

“I’d better make it a good one.”

Leading By Example

Jason Dailey has seen it all.

Three years ago, he came into a program mired in mediocrity as the only freshman defenseman. Now, he is co-captain of the two-time defending ECAC champions.

How times have changed.

Along the way, the senior has become a key to the Red defensive unit. Dailey has a reputation as a player who can do damage on both ends of the ice, and has 10 goals and 20 assists in his career to prove it. Last season, Dailey scored five tallies and picked up 16 helpers, and got his share of post-season accolades, earning ECAC All-Tournament honors.

In short, offensively and defensively, Dailey is a threat.

He has also earned a reputation as the big man on the blue line, an enforcer of sorts. And though Dailey has seen it all, he realizes that the view isn’t as nice from the penalty box. That’s the place where he spent a team-high 61 minutes last season.

“I definitely want to tone down the penalty minutes,” Dailey said with a chuckle.

And even though the Pittsford, N.Y., native loves to smash the boards, he doesn’t really see himself as the team hitman.

“I love the one-on-one battle,” Dailey explained. “Ever since I was little, I’ve loved to mix it up. But I definitely don’t think of myself as a tough guy.”

The importance of Dailey’s role as a leader has escalated this year, as he is the only senior blueliner, with the graduation of Steve Wilson, Chad Wilson and Jason Kendall. Dailey hopes his influence on his teammates hasn’t been altered.

“I’d like to think it hasn’t changed. When I came in I was the only freshman. The group of older guys — the Wilsons, Kendall — they really taught me a lot,” the senior explained. “I’ve always kind of hoped that I would be that type of guy. I hope I can kind of give advice.”

Head coach Mike Schafer agreed.

“I don’t think the responsibilities from being a captain changes things at all. Jason was elected as a captain by being voted by our team to be a captain. You just keep doing the things you’ve always been doing,” Schafer said.

“Obviously, he now has an added role of being a liaison between the coaching staff and the players, and Jason will do a fine job with that,” Schafer added.

The defenseman has certainly earned the respect of his teammates.

“I think he’s a great captain — I look up to him — everybody has respect for him. He’s not a really vocal guy, but he leads by example,” junior defenseman Jeff Burgoyne said earlier this week.

As noted above, Dailey has seen the Red program transformed from mediocrity back to national prominence. Cornell was 11-15-4, and ninth in the ECAC, when he was a rookie — times were bad. But now, the icers’ recent success gives the senior a certain perspective that can be essential to keeping things stable.

“When I was a freshman, they struggled,” Dailey explained. “The program experienced a rough spot. Then [with the entrance of Schafer] the attitude changed.

“From a coaching standpoint, I’ve learned a lot of stuff since I’ve been here that I wish I had known before,” Dailey said. Now, as captain of the two-time defending ECAC champions, Dailey, along with junior co-captain Kyle Knopp, has the responsibility of leading the Red as they face the high expectations that goes along with winning.

“There’s pressure to a certain extent. People expect us to do well,” Dailey said. “We know what it takes to win.”

Whether coming up from the blue line to light the lamp or putting a hit on an opposing forward, Dailey’s leadership and ability will be key in maintaining the Big Red’s prowess. But above all, he has earned the admiration of his peers.

“He has so much respect on the team,” sophomore David Adler said. And that’s what gives Dailey the tools to keep the Red defense running smoothly.

This Week in Hockey East: November 7, 1997

Not surprisingly, Merrimack and Maine — last year’s two hottest teams down the stretch — garnered the league’s weekly awards. Merrimack forward Martin Laroche earned Karhu Player of the Week honors for his three-goal, seven-assist weekend. Maine forward Matthias Trattnig got the Rookie of the Week nod for his two power-play goals against Lowell that wiped out an early 2-0 deficit.

This week, BU travels to Orono in Hockey East’s first clash between nationally-ranked teams. UNH also hosts Boston College and Merrimack, two teams looking to make inroads on the BU-Maine-UNH triad.

Last week’s record in picks: 9-2 (pending UMass-Lowell vs. Army) Season’s record in picks: 30-6

No. 3 Boston University (3-0-0, 1-0-0 HE) at No. 6 Maine (4-1-1, 2-0-0 HE)

Saturday, 7 p.m., Alfond Arena, Orono, ME

After opening the season with three of four games against ranked nonconference teams, the Maine Black Bears turned their sights to Hockey East last week,

beating UMass-Lowell 6-2

and

Providence 6-3.

"I think what’s helped us is our schedule," said Maine coach Shawn Walsh. "Having played Colorado College and Minnesota twice [apiece] has been a real blessing."

Maine also owes much of its success to its specialty teams. The Black Bears led the country last year with a 30.2 percent power play. This year, they’re making 30.2 look like chopped liver, entering last weekend with a 33 percent rate in three games against two top-ten teams from the WCHA (not to mention five power-play goals against St. Thomas). The Bears then abused Lowell and Providence to the tune of 4-for-7 and 4-for-5, respectively.

They can now point to an unconscious 48-percent conversion rate on the man advantage.

"We’ve really just been fortunate," said Maine coach Shawn Walsh. "It’s not that we’ve been creating a lot of chances, as much as the chances are going in the net. That kind of thing is going to even out at some point, but right now we’re happy with it."

That level of success, though certainly unsustainable, is no accident.

"We work on special teams every day," said Walsh. "We always have. The key is that you’ve got to have the right personnel. We’re fortunate to have a point man of David Cullen’s ability."

Matthias Trattnig, the 18-year-old power forward from Graz, Austria, scored twice on the power play against Lowell, earning Hockey East Rookie of the Week honors. This followed right on the heels of teammate Adam Tate being honored one week earlier.

Walsh had originally expected Trattnig to take some time before making an impact because of the freshman’s youth and power-oriented style, but could be ready to alter that opinion.

"He’s coming on maybe quicker," said Walsh. "[Anders] Lundback is as well, [and he] had a nice night on Saturday. Our freshmen are really coming on for us. But we’re still just young. We dressed 15 first- or second-year players both nights this weekend."

This weekend, the Black Bears host Boston University in what is easily the Hockey East matchup of the young season.

"They’re a quality team," said Walsh. "They’re going to be no different than Colorado College and maybe better, or no different, than Minnesota. It’s going to be a game that really tests our inexperience. Historically, we’ve played very, very well against them over the years. We’re going to do our best and see if it’s good enough."

Boston University defeated UMass-Amherst 5-2 in its only action last weekend.

"I was very pleased with the way that we played technically, and as the game progressed, we got more into it emotionally," said coach Jack Parker.

"They are a much improved team. From the defensive point of view, they were really solid. Tim Lovell gives them a whole new look offensively. They were a threat whenever he was on the ice, and it was hard for us to become threats because they played so hard defensively."

The Terriers may have scored three power-play goals against UMass-Amherst, but will have trouble matching Maine’s success rate on the man advantage. As a result, the usual dictum about staying out of the box applies doubly here.

"Their power play is real simple," said Parker with a laugh. "They pass it once to the point and they shoot it at the net.

"I don’t think Shawn Walsh and his staff get enough credit, because people just look at the good players and the depth that they have, but the reason why they are real good on the power play is the reason they’re real good every place else. That’s because they just outwork the opposition. They don’t do anything fancy. They just outwork you.

"Whether they are home or away, they have a tendency to make things real difficult, more because of their work ethic than their overall skill. They have as much skill as anybody else, but they’re so good because they just work so hard.

"Our process is to do the same. Talent isn’t going to win this game. Work ethic is going to win this game. One of the things that we learned last year from Maine is that when we went up there for games that we didn’t think counted and they did, they just outworked us in every phase of the game. From that game on, we didn’t lose a game until the national championship because we took a page out of their book.

"Hopefully, we can take a page out of their book before the game starts, instead of afterwards."

Michel Larocque will be in the BU nets as Parker follows the evenly split rotation between Larocque and Tom Noble.

"Goaltending is always a key," he said. "Your goaltender has to play well, because they’re going to put traffic in front of him. They’re going to make a mess out of it in the crease, so he’s got to stay focused and kick out the long shots with traffic coming in.

"At the same time, you’ve got to get to their goalie [Alfie Michaud], because he’s a great goaltender. He played really well in the second half of last year and thus far this year. He’ll be a problem that we have to solve. The best way to solve goaltending problems is to make traffic in front of their net. They’re really good at keeping the traffic away from the net, so we’ll have to really work hard to get to their net."

PICK: One could easily make a case that no one in the country is playing better than the Black Bears right now. BU may be undefeated and ranked higher, but look for that to end this week. Maine 5-3.

Boston College (4-1-0, 2-1-0 HE) at No. 5 New Hampshire (4-1-0, 0-1-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Whittemore Center, Durham, NH

For Boston College, its three games began with the downer of a 5-4 loss to Merrimack. It seemed eerily reminiscent of last year, when the Eagles would elevate their play against BU, in particular, and then lose to teams it was expected to beat. Would this year be a rerun of last year’s disappointing season?

A 3-1 win over UMass-Amherst got BC’s ship righted and its Tuesday night

6-4 upset of fifth-ranked New Hampshire

wiped away all but traces of Friday’s disappointment.

Against UNH, the Eagles battled back from a 4-3 third-period deficit, scoring three unanswered goals for the big win. "I liked the way we played in the whole game," said coach Jerry York, "but particularly the way we came back from going down 4-3. New Hampshire is a good club, we were tied and all of a sudden, bang, they were ahead 4-3. I thought we showed good poise. That’s a great sign for our club."

Although a more mature team than last year, BC still relies on major contributions from six rookies. Brian Gionta has teamed nicely with Marty Reasoner on the top line.

"He’s going to be a great player," said Reasoner. "He’s 5-7, but he plays like he’s 6-4."

While not making as big a splash as Gionta, Mike Lephart is also playing well up front and scored the game-winner against UNH.

Of even greater significance, however, are the four freshman whose main job is defensive: goaltender Scott Clemmensen and defensemen Bobby Allen, Marty Hughes and Rob Scuderi.

"We have to be patient with these four players," said coach Jerry York. "Those are difficult positions — goaltender and defense — to break in at this level, but they’ve done a good job for us."

Clemmensen played the bookend games of the three-game set while Andy McLaughlin took the nets against UMass-Amherst. Statistically, Clemmensen didn’t shine, since the Eagles allowed only 27 shots against Merrimack and 20 against UNH, while he allowed a total of nine goals. Even so, the goals that were scored were all quality opportunities. Steady, but unspectacular, isn’t a bad start.

"He’s real solid," said York. "I think he’s playing well."

For New Hampshire, this past week gave the Wildcats a chance to prove how good they really are. Defeating a rebuilding Vermont team and Alaska-Anchorage were good wins to start the season, but how they fared against stronger teams like Rensselaer and Boston College, both of which are flirting with the top ten, would carry more weight.

The Wildcats topped Rensselaer in the final minute, 5-4, but then

fell to BC.

In both games, a disturbing trend emerged. The top line of Mark Mowers, Jason Krog and Tom Nolan scored all but one of the nine goals. Mowers earned his third career hat trick in the BC loss. The second line of Derek Bekar, Mike Souza and John Sadowski scored only once after matching the top guns against the lesser teams in the first three games.

A hip pointer sidelined Bekar for the BC tilt; he has only a 50-50 chance of playing this weekend. Jason Shipulski replaced him on the second unit, reuniting last year’s freshman "S" line.

So to what extent will UNH be expecting the top line to continue to carry the scoring load?

"Hopefully not a whole lot," said coach Dick Umile after the Tuesday night game. "[But] they did all right. They got four goals, didn’t they? When we get Bekar back, we’ll be a different team, and then, who knows? Souza and Sadowski scored a nice goal in the third period. Bekar isn’t going to turn the whole thing around, but it’ll be nice to get him back."

Mowers added, "Lately, I guess it has been a little [dependent on our line]. Hopefully, it’s not going to be like that. We’ve got some other good players. In the first couple games, it was Souza, Sadowski and Bekar that were producing and a freshman got a goal in our home opener. We don’t want it to be [just one line.]"

The other top concern that emerged from the BC game was the penalty kill. The Eagles scored three power-play goals.

"They did better a job in the specialty situations than we did," said Umile.

One can expect a lot of practice time spent on the PK before Friday.

PICK: UNH gets its revenge at home, 5-4.

Northeastern (2-2-0, 1-0-0 HE) at Merrimack (4-1-0, 1-0-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Volpe Center, North Andover, MA

Merrimack (4-1-0, 1-0-0 HE) at No. 5 New Hampshire (4-1-0, 0-1-0 HE)

Saturday, 7 p.m., Whittemore Center, Durham, NH

In past years, an automobile commercial claimed, "This is not your father’s Oldsmobile."

A similar slogan could be adopted for this season’s Merrimack Warriors. After a long struggle for respectability since entering Division I play, they now boast a 4-1-0 record, six of the top 10 Hockey East overall scorers, and even received a vote in the USCHO poll this week.

After opening the weekend against Northeastern, the Warriors then run the gauntlet of three games against New Hampshire and two against Maine leading into Thanksgiving. Ouch!

"You’ve got to play them sooner or later," said Merrimack coach Ron Anderson.

Sophomore Cris Classen (3-0-0, .911 SV%, 3.33 GAA) is erasing many of the question marks everyone scribbled between the Merrimack pipes as the season opened. He not only backstopped the 6-4 win over BC, he also came back the following night to again play well in

a 5-4 win over Union.

"We wanted to find out if he could play back-to-back games," said Anderson. "I thought he played very well…. We’re still trying to find out exactly what he’s got since he didn’t play much last year, but he’s given us real solid efforts. We feel nothing but good things for him right now."

Freshman Tom Welby played in the nets for the

9-1 win over Air Force.

The defense is also playing better than expected, although Classen’s play probably has rendered the blue line Merrimack’s biggest concern.

"I think our defense is playing a little better than I thought we’d be capable of because some of those guys didn’t play a lot last year," said Anderson. "We’re obviously happy to see that."

It’s the offense, though, that is really carrying the day for Merrimack, which is averaging six goals a game. And aside from Air Force, it is accomplishing this against primarily good defensive teams. Ohio State held Miami to only two goals (and an empty-netter), and last week kept Clarkson, ranked tenth at the time, to only three goals in two games. Meanwhile, Merrimack scored 10 in two games against the Buckeyes.

Similarly, going into its midweek game against UNH, BC had allowed only five goals in three non-Merrimack games, but surrendered five to the Warriors. Even against Union, a rebuilding team that is struggling, Merrimack had to beat All-American goaltender Trevor Koenig in scoring five times.

The top line of Casey Kesselring, Martin Laroche and Sandy Cohen is kicking butt and taking names. Members of this line figured in on three of the goals against BC, all five against Union and three more against Air Force.

Laroche’s 10 points on the weekend earned him Hockey East Player of the Week honors, one week after Kesselring won that distinction. The duo’s 13 points place the two of them behind only Maine’s Steve Kariya in the league’s overall scoring race. Trailing his linemates by only two points is Cohen, whose nine goals on the season apparently leads the country.

"They’re playing real well right now," said Anderson. "They seem to be finding each other real well and working hard. That stuff happens when you get on a roll."

Last year’s top line of Rejean Stringer, Kris Porter and Chris Halecki (who replaces the graduated Rob Beck) scored four times — all by Porter with a "Texas hat trick" — against Air Force to put them in a tie for sixth place in league scoring.

"It’s been a long time since we’ve had two or three lines that were a real threat when they went onto the ice," said Anderson. "Right now we’ve got two that are real productive for us. You don’t always get a lot of good scoring opportunities, so you want to make sure you’ve got some people who can put it away."

That they do.

Last week, the Northeastern Huskies fell to .500 after a 6-3 loss to Colgate and a tough 4-2 loss to Cornell.

"The Friday night game [against Colgate] is one we really didn’t deserve to win," said coach Bruce Crowder. "It was 3-3 with 12 minutes to go, but it probably should have been a lot worse.

"In Saturday’s game we just ran into a little hard luck. The kids really played well, but we just had a lot of adversity. We had a guy out for five minutes for hitting from behind, but about two minutes later our guy gets hit from behind. No call. He’s coming to the bench, he can’t get there and one of our players hops over to help him get to the bench. Too many men on the ice.

"So we’re in Cornell, having to kill off almost two minutes of a five-on-three. We did a good job. They scored with like one second to go.

"It was one of those things that maybe it just wasn’t in the cards. Their tying goal was one where they just threw the puck in front and it just went in off one of our guy’s skates. On the winning goal, our guy put it off the glass in our end, which is the play you want, and it hit an upright and went right into the middle of the hash. And the fourth goal was an empty net.

"We didn’t get the W, but as a coaching staff, we could pull a lot out from that game as improvement. We worked hard and obviously it wasn’t good enough, so it means we’ve got to work a little harder."

The Huskies now face another two games on the road, but unlike their trek through New York last week, will have short jaunts to Merrimack and Lowell. They’ll have to do it without impact rookie Bob Haglund, who injured his shoulder in the Cornell tilt and will be out 2-5 weeks.

Three other freshmen — Kevin Welch, Graig Mischler and Matt Keating — will be hoping to duplicate their feat of scoring just 12 seconds into the Cornell game.

"Their enthusiasm and the excitement that they bring is fabulous for us," said Crowder. "They gave us a big jump in that game."

(New Hampshire is profiled above.)

PICK: So who is the Merrimack wise guy that rang one off the post with 14 seconds left against Air Force last week to spoil what could have been a perfect 10-1 prediction? Off with his head!

Merrimack stays hot against Northeastern, winning 5-2.

That sets up a shootout against UNH, which will be playing its third game in five nights, including an emotional rematch against BC. Merrimack really opens eyes with a 5-4 win.

Northeastern (2-2-0, 1-0-0 HE) at UMass-Lowell (2-2-0, 1-1-0 HE)

Saturday, 7 p.m., Tully Forum, Lowell, MA

In both their 6-2 loss to Maine and their 4-1 win over Union, the UMass-Lowell River Hawks spent significant time in the penalty box. Maine made them pay for their wayward ways, going four-for-seven on the power-play, while Union could not, mustering only one goal in 10 man-advantages.

"We’re not the best skating team right now, and we’re taking some penalties because we’re out of position defensively," said Lowell coach Tim Whitehead. "We’ve got to improve our skating and we’ve got to improve our defensive positioning. Those are the penalties we’re taking… It’s not like our guys are taking two-handers to people."

In the Union game, Whitehead introduced a freshman line of Jeff Boulanger, T.C. Harris and Brad Rooney which scored and played well. It marked the first collegiate game for Harris, who had been recuperating from mononucleosis.

"They got better as the game went along," said Whitehead. "I started giving them more ice time because they earned it. I was pleased with how they played as the game went on. All three of those kids have good hockey sense."

Whitehead experimented with Craig Brown — a forward last year who also has recovered from a bout with mono — on defense, where he played well.

(Northeastern is profiled above.)

PICK: Northeastern could surprise in this battle of two very young teams, but Lowell will pull it out, 3-2.

Providence College (1-2-0, 0-2-0 HE) at

Minnesota-Duluth (3-3-0, 2-2-0 WCHA) Friday, Saturday, 7 p.m., Duluth Entertainment and Convention Center, Duluth, MN

Providence lost its lone game last weekend,

6-2 to Maine.

"I thought we played very well," said Providence coach Paul Pooley. "Five-on-five we executed what we wanted to do. We broke down a couple times, but they had 22 grade-A chances and we had 22.

"We didn’t have that many turnovers. We played really well five-on-five. We did some good things, cycled the puck, played pretty good defensively. Specialty teams is what makes Maine so good."

Maine, which now sports a 48 percent power-play success rate, scored on four of its five advantages.

"We were in position a couple times," said Pooley. "We should have had the puck out a couple times. [They got] a couple lucky bounces, but we definitely have to work on our PK.

"If you get the puck on your stick, it’s got to get out somehow. Instead of hitting somebody, it’s off the glass. If it hits Kariya, next thing you know, it’s in your net."

The Friar man advantage scored once in five opportunities, but gave up a shorthanded goal.

"I thought our power play did pretty well for the most part," said Pooley. "The shorthanded goal we gave up, we had them running around, but we made an errant pass. But that’ll come. You can always work on specialty teams."

Providence now takes on the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs, a team that returned six of its top eight scorers and WCHA Rookie of the Year goaltender Brant Nicklin (18-15-4, .897 SV%, 3.25 GAA last year).

"It looks like they’re scoring some goals," said Pooley. "So we have to play good defense.

"It’s obviously a different environment. Our kids haven’t been out there. We have a couple Minnesota kids that will educate our other guys about it, but it’s a big challenge for us.

"We always play well going out West. We played well against Western Michigan" — splitting a two-game set two years ago — "and now we’re playing Duluth, a new opponent that our guys don’t know much about. So I’m excited. It’s a great time for it."

(For a more detailed look at Minnesota-Duluth from a WCHA perspective, check out this week’s WCHA Preview.)

PICK: The Bulldogs have split all three series so far this year, and it looks like Providence will make it four. Minnesota-Duluth 4-2 on Friday; Providence 4-3 on Saturday.

UMass-Amherst (0-3-0, 0-3-0 HE) at University of Nebraska-Omaha (1-4-0, 0-2-0 vs. aligned D-I) Friday, Saturday, 7 p.m., Civic Auditorium, Omaha, Nebraska

UMass-Amherst dropped two this week, 5-2 to Boston University and 3-1 to Boston College.

"I thought it was a really well-played hockey game," said coach Joe Mallen, echoing the words of BU coach Jack Parker above. "We were looking at 3-2 [going into the third] after surviving a five-minute major. I thought it was a good showing for us and I didn’t think the score was indicative of the overall game."

Tim Lovell scored both Minuteman goals, giving him a piece of all eight that the Minutemen had scored on the season through that game.

"He certainly is an important cog in the wheel and his production is really helping us, but we really need to get production from other people now," said Mallen.

The Minutemen then played to another close-but-no-cigar loss against BC.

"It was a real evenly played game," said Mallen. "The shots on goal were within one. The penalties were even. It was just a turnover late in the game up the middle that wound up in the back of the cage.

"We hit the post twice in the game. We did a good job killing penalties. They were 1-for-6 and we were 1-for-6, so we made some improvement there [after giving up three power-play goals against BU]."

Mallen’s squad now travels to the Midwest to taking on the fledgling Nebraska-Omaha Mavericks, Division I’s newest program. The Mavericks have a roster loaded with bushels of USHL graduates and have been surprisingly competitive this year. Last weekend, they outshot Princeton both games, including 35-22 in the second game, but lost and 5-2 and 5-3.

Prior to that, they split a two-game set with Air Force, losing 4-2 after outshooting the Falcons 38-12, and then winning both the shots battle (37-29) and the one on the scoreboard, 6-1.

This would seem to point to either a throw-everything-on-the-net philosophy which renders shot totals meaningless, or problems in the net with the Maverick tandem of Jason Mitchell and Rodney McLeod.

>From UMass-Amherst’s perspective, two wins are a must, no matter how competitive UNO has been.

"The key is that we’ve started with three Hockey East games and we have three Hockey East losses," said Mallen. "That’s nothing to be embarrassed about. We played real hard in all three games.

"Now it’s up to us to see if we can go out to Nebraska-Omaha and see if we can get a couple wins and come back the next weekend against Lowell and Union and see if we can get a couple more and get back to .500."

PICK: It won’t be a cakewalk, but the Minutemen take two, 5-3 and 4-2.

This Week in the ECAC: November 7, 1997

So far this young season — not counting exhibitions, games against independents and games against non-Division I opponents — the ECAC is 7-13-1. Of those seven wins, Clarkson has two of them over Bowling Green; Rensselaer defeated UMass-Lowell; Vermont beat Lake Superior State; Colgate and Cornell both upended Northeastern; and Colgate has the upset of the season thus far, at Michigan.

But then again, the ECAC started last season with a 10-11-0 nonconference record (same rules as above) going into the first weekend of the regular season. The ECAC wound up having its best-ever season against nonconference opponents.

A sign of things to come, or at least the ECAC hopes so.

But this week the ECAC regular season gets underway. All 12 teams are in the mix, and each gets a pair of games underneath its belt.

As our good friends from the world of Ultimate Fighting like to say, "Let’s Get It On!!!"

Harvard (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) and Brown (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at No. 10 Cornell (1-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Lynah Rink, Ithaca, NY

Brown (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) and Harvard (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at Colgate (3-1-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 5 pm, Starr Rink, Hamilton, NY

The Big Red of Cornell open up defense of their ECAC championship this weekend with a win over Northeastern already in hand. A 4-2 win is good news, isn’t it?

"I told our team that’s the worst game I’ve been associated with since I’ve been here," head coach Mike Schafer said. "We didn’t play very well and it was a situation where we got very lucky against a team that was very good."

Ryan Moynihan and Vinnie Auger both had good games, coming up with the tying and go-ahead goals for the Big Red against the Huskies.

"They came up big for us in the third period," said Schafer. "But that’s the only blessing of the weekend — the win."

That brings us to this weekend, and the beginning of the ECAC season. If you are Cornell, who better to start the season with than rival Harvard?

"The start of the season is even moreso important when you play a rival such as Harvard," said Schafer. "We had some success against [the Crimson] lately, and they’ll look to come in and play well."

The next night the Big Red face Brown — the head man there is former Vermont assistant Roger Grillo.

"They’ll probably have a lot of the characteristics that Vermont has," said Schafer about Brown.

There has been a concerted effort on the part of Schafer and Cornell to "clean up" Lynah Rink. Schafer and the university has asked that the Lynah Faithful dump five chants considered obscene. Saturday was the first night for the "new" Lynah Rink.

"We’ve been successful with it so far," said Schafer. "We’ve gotten rid of the profane chants, and we’ll hope it continues. But Harvard will be the true test."

Colgate has done some impressive work in its four non-conference games thus far: an upset of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and wins over Army and Northeastern.

"We’ve had a couple of decent outings," said a modest Don Vaughn. "We’ve been able to gain a little confidence that we needed because we graduated a lot of good seniors."

What has been impressive is the fact that the Red Raiders have gotten goals from seven different players, a balance that was in question before the season began.

"We have spread it out offensively," said Vaughn. "That is something that we were hoping for, and you had to expect that a few guys would step it up, especially guys like Dru Burgess and Andy MacDonald."

Burgess is tied for the league lead in goals with five, and MacDonald is riding a four-game scoring streak.

Another impressive factor has been the play of Dan Brenzavich. He had been questioned as the season was coming closer, but a 3-0-0 record so far has silenced a lot of critics.

"It was important for him to get off on a good note," said Vaughn. "He worked hard all summer, and he thought a lot about his game. In August you could tell that he was ready. In the immediate future, Danny has established himself."

As ECAC play starts, it’s a whole new ballgame, something that Vaughn echoed.

"The stakes are a little bit higher," he said. "There’s more pressure, for lack of a better word, so the games take on a whole new meaning."

The Red Raiders begin with Brown and Harvard this coming weekend. "Roger (Grillo, Brown’s head coach) has got great potential there," said Vaughn. "It’s hard to tell what you’re going to get with Brown because they haven’t played a game yet, who knows?

"Harvard’s got one o the best teams on paper," he added. "And Ronn (Tomassoni, Harvard’s head coach) is going to have them coming at us."

Speaking of Harvard, the Crimson also play their first official game this Friday at Cornell. The Crimson defeated McGill in an exhibition on Saturday, 5-2.

The Crimson scored three times in the second period, with goals from Geordie Hyland, Jamin Kerner and Graham Morrell. J.R. Prestifilippo made 15 saves in his two periods of action.

The Crimson are a team that is very young; they only have five seniors, but plenty of experience.

"We were in an old league last year with a young team," said Crimson head man Ronn Tomassoni. "This year we’re in a young league with a young team that’s old."

One of the seniors Tomassoni is counting on is captain Jeremiah McCarthy. The defenseman is a veteran of not only Harvard, but some international teams as well.

"McCarthy is an outstanding player," he said. "No one works harder than him, and he’s going to have a big year."

Everyone sees the talent that the Crimson have on their team, but it has yet to gel on the offensive side. It has been chronicled before, but the Crimson need to score more often this year than they did last year. Along the same lines, the special teams have to get going as well. A well-documented 0-for-57 stretch on the power play early in last year’s season still is embematic of an Achilles’ heel for the Crimson.

The Bears of Brown have a new head coach, and are looking for a better position in the ECAC standings. It’s actually the only way that they can go — the Bears finished last in the standings last year.

"There’s a quality group of players here," said head coach Roger Grillo. "We’re just trying to get things going in an upward position."

It’s a difficult road for Grillo because he did not recruit any of his players, and just finding out about them is a tough adjustment. "It’s a situation where we are getting to know them as hockey players," he said in Brown’s season preview. "When I was at Vermont, we didn’t cross over much in recruiting circles."

The first game in Grillo’s career as head coach will come at Colgate, and the Bears are just hoping to do what they can.

"We’re going to shoot for as high as we can," said Grillo. "The league is so competitive, and anyone can finish from first to last. The coaching’s too good, the recruiting is too good, and the quality of players is too good.

"Our league is as tough as any other league," he added. "We want to play quality teams, and we are playing quality teams in this league."

PICKS: Brown at Colgate: Grillo will have to wait for win number one. Colgate 5, Brown 2 Harvard at Cornell: The new and cleaner Lynah Rink. Against Harvard?! Cornell 4, Harvard 2 Harvard at Colgate: Colgate’s balanced scoring is the winner. Colgate 4, Harvard 2 Brown at Cornell: Grillo will have to wait for win number one. Cornell 6, Brown 2

Vermont (1-3-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) and Dartmouth (1-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at Union (0-3-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Achilles Rink, Schenectady, NY

Dartmouth (1-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) and Vermont (1-3-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at Rensselaer (2-2-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Houston Fieldhouse, Troy, NY

Bob Gaudet is the new man at the Dartmouth helm, and before the season began he stressed that he did not know his players very well, especially their hockey skills.

"It takes awhile to learn about them," said Gaudet after his team played one game. "They guys played hard (against Army on Friday), and we played a real solid game. We’re getting to know them, and we’ve definitely seen some good senior leadership."

One of those seniors is Jon Sturgis. Sturgis scored the first goal of the game against Army — shorthanded — and then he added another one to seal the 7-1 victory.

"He’s a quality hockey player and he shoots well from anywhere on the rink," said Gaudet. "He’s one of the most underrated players out there. He’s deceptively strong, and he’s a bigger kid than I thought he was."

Eric Almon started in goal and got the win. He was expected to share the goaltending load with fellow sophomore Jason Wong, but Wong has a twisted knee that is keeping him out of action. So it looks like Almon for now.

"Eric’s our goalie now," said Gaudet. "I don’t think I’ll play two goalies this weekend, but it will definitely be Eric on Friday and then we’ll see."

The Big Green open up against preseason number-one Rensselaer on the road, and then travel to Union. Playing the first ECAC game of the year against the league’s top-ranked team does not faze Gaudet.

"Well, you have to play them sometime, so why not now," he said. "RPI is tremendously skilled and experienced and they have great coaching. It’ll be a real tough test for us.

"That Union team is another team that is well coached," he added. "It’s tough (at Achilles Rink) because things happen very quickly. I don’t know what it is about that rink but it seems like (Union) is right on top of you."

Starting the season at 1-3-0 can get anybody down, but as any coach will tell you, there is always something that you can take away from games, even losses. It’s no different for Vermont head coach Mike Gilligan.

"I like what I’ve seen with some of the new guys," he said. "I also feel a lot better about our goaltending situation."

At the beginning of the season, Gilligan’s biggest worry was in the net. James Tierney started the first two games for the Catamounts before suffering a back injury, so last weekend freshman Andrew Allen and transfer Marty Phillips saw time in net. Allen picked up the first victory of the season for the Cats in a 3-2 win over Lake Superior State. This weekend, Tierney is still out, leaving Allen and Phillips in between the pipes to start the ECAC season.

"I hope to keep rotating three goalies until I find two that will platoon," said Gilligan.

Some of the new guys that Gilligan was referring to are Andreas Moborg, the ECAC Rookie of the Week, and Jerry Gernander. Moborg had a hand in all three Vermont goals on Friday, while Gernander picked up two goals on the weekend.

In all, five different Cats that scored on the weekend, which Grillo likes to see. "We’ve ground it out a little bit," he said. "We’ve got four lines that can compete out there. We don’t have one line that will blow you away like last year."

This weekend the Cats play their fourth and fifth games on the road of the young season, against Union and Rensselaer.

"It’ll be a good chance to see where we are, since league play is starting," said Gilligan. "We’ve been on the road for a lot of the games at the beginning, and the guys are excited.

"(Union and RPI) are two different types of teams and both will give us all we can handle."

Head coach Stan Moore knew that there would be growing pains with his young Union squad. With 13 freshmen, what else could one expect? After losses to Merrimack and UMass-Lowell this past weekend, the Dutchmen are still searching for their first win.

"Sure, we made strides in the third period, but the end result is still a loss," said freshman center Sheldon Pietrzykowski to the Schenectady (N.Y.) Gazette’s Ken Schott after Saturday’s loss to Merrimack. "We want that win, and we want it soon."

The Dutchmen are still searching for that combination that will give them their first wing. Moore has changed his lineups and still has not had success yet.

"We didn’t feel we were getting play at both ends from the lines," Moore said. "We had given up five goals in our first two games each, and really felt that we had to do something that would allow us to have some offensive ability, but at the same time, perhaps have some great presence down low in our end."

Changes were also made in goal against the River Hawks. Leeor Shtrom started instead of All-American Trevor Koenig, and not just because it was a non-conference game.

"I would do it in a league game if it helped our team play better," Moore said. "The idea is to put the best players you have on the ice. We’ve identified that with our team [and] let them know that we’re going to try and go with the best kids we have.

"It isn’t a head game. It isn’t a decision to try and get someone to learn to play well," he added. "Maybe they need a break, get a chance to evaluate, and come back to us stronger and more competitive for the next game."

And that also means in goal. Moore was pleased with Shtrom’s effort, and he will have a decision to make as to who starts the ECAC opener Friday against Vermont at Achilles.

"We’re just making sure that we have the right guy in the net," Moore said about starting Shtrom against the ‘Hawks. "I think Leeor has shown us that he deserves consideration for the next game. It’s always a delight for a coach to have a tough decision as to who you start in the net."

Over in Troy, the goaltending situation was in question, too, when Joel Laing started on Saturday against Army. Laing also started the previous game against New Hampshire, which meant that for only the second time in the last two years, the same goaltender started both games of the weekend for the Engineers. But there was no controversy there, just one simple thought.

"I thought that in this situation that we had to get Joel going," said head coach Dan Fridgen. "I wanted to get him a victory."

Laing picked up that first victory of the season against Army, 4-1, after a 5-4 loss the night before.

Other good signs for the Engineers came in the form of Eric Healey and Alain St. Hilaire’s first goals of the season.

"I believe it was good for them to get their first goals," said Fridgen. "Because when you start pressing you get frustrated, and when you get frustrated you start thinking about the little things, and you stop thinking about being successful. And one of the things that makes you successful is taking care of your own end and playing defensive hockey. Hey, when you’re pressing, you’re not playing defensive hockey.

"You have to get in there and make things happen," he added.

Fridgen is also stressing another theory — keeping things simple. "You have to try to keep the game as simple as you can," he said. "You try to take care of your own game. You have to simplify the game, [because] sometimes we’re our own worst enemy."

PICKS: Vermont at Union: Can Union find a combination? Vermont 3, Union 2 Dartmouth at Rensselaer: There’s a new attitude in Hanover, but the attitude in Troy is "win." Rensselaer 6, Dartmouth 2 Dartmouth at Union: The first ECAC win for Gaudet at Dartmouth. Dartmouth 4, Union 1 Vermont at Rensselaer: Only a shadow of what last year’s games were like. Rensselaer 5, Vermont 1

Clarkson (2-1-1, 0-0-0 ECAC) and St. Lawrence (1-3-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at Yale (1-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Ingalls Rink, New Haven, Conn.

St. Lawrence (1-3-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) and Clarkson (2-1-1, 0-0-0 ECAC) at Princeton (2-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 pm – 7 pm, Hobey Baker Rink, Princeton, NJ

The Bulldogs scored two victories this past weekend, a 7-1 win over McGill and a 5-1 win over Air Force. The players of emphasis were the Jeffs — Jeff Glew, Jeff Brow and Jeff Hamilton.

In the win over Air Force, the three of them, along with captain Ray Giroux, scored four of the five goals, and have 11 of the 13 points scored by the Bulldogs so far on the season.

"We’ve got kids with great potential," said head coach Tim Taylor.

Taylor is hoping for some of his players to be in the 30-40 point range, and it looks like he has some off to a start to reach those goals.

A good start to the ECAC season would be nice, too.

"I think we’ve been through some tough times," said Taylor. "Compared to 1993, in terms of wins and losses and rankings and the prospects, and what everybody predicted last year, we hope to have some good times."

Princeton opened the season in Omaha, Neb., against the UNO Mavericks, and the Tigers swept the series 5-2 and 5-3. Matt Brush had two goals on Friday and Jeff Halpern had four points in Saturday’s win. Both were named to the ECAC Honor Roll this past week.

Casson Masters and Brian Horst also contributed to the scoring this past weekend. "We haven’t had a prohibitive scorer since I’ve been here," he said. "We have a nucleus of people back that will at least give us some type of competitive edge."

Erasmo Saltarelli was named the ECAC Goaltender of the Week for his two wins, making 26 and 32 saves in the games.

"He’s part of the same group back there," said Cahoon. "Saltarelli brings experience and he got a lot of experience last year."

The Saints of St. Lawrence dropped a pair of one-goal games to Miami this past weekend, but head coach Joe Marsh saw a lot of good things.

"I think we learned a lot of positive things about ourselves," he said. "We played two pretty good games against a good, nationally ranked team, and honestly had a shot at winning either one of them. We obviously would have liked a win, but the way we played and kept competing will help us down the road.

"These games were a good springboard to the start of our ECAC season at Princeton and Yale next weekend," Marsh added. "We can continue to build off the improvement we showed in just a week, and hopefully get the league season off to the right kind of start.

"I certainly feel a lot better today than I did a week ago."

The goaltending situation at St. Lawrence is something that continues to be discussed in Canton and around the ECAC. Marsh has now seen all three of his goaltenders, and has some decisions that he must make.

"Eric Heffler has had the best outing so far," said Marsh on the 2-1 loss to Miami. "He was really on in that game. Jeremy Symington played well in the second game against Miami, and we wanted to give him some time after he struggled so much against Colorado College (in the J.C.Penney Classic), that we wanted to get him out there again. But then again we threw him to the wolves against CC. And Sean Coakley played well in his time."

It’s a tough decision, no question.

"I really haven’t made a decision, but Heffler will definitely get one start," he said. "He will get the start against Princeton."

Meanwhile, the road warriors continue their swing against Yale and Princeton this weekend.

"We knew that the first three trips would be the longest ones of the year," said Marsh. "But a lot of times being on the road can bring you together. I really worried about the kids missing classes the most.

"Yale’s had a good start, and they are a lot like us in terms of talent…Princeton is top four, and they have great team speed."

Marsh has yet to get his first win of the season, but he still remains optimistic. "It’ll be tough this weekend," he said. "But the guys have worked hard and that’s all I can ask for."

The Golden Knights of Clarkson tied and lost to Ohio State this past weekend. Some consider that an upset, but not head coach Mark Morris.

"Ohio State is definitely an underrated team," he said. "They played two great games, and beat us.

"We were out of sync and with a lot of inexperience in positions that you have, you just want to gain knowledge," he added. "We had some injuries and we had to move a forward back to defense. These things happen when you’re not a deep hockey team."

Defenseman Nicholas Windsor has tendinitis and is day-to-day. The Knights have eight defensemen on their roster, and four of them are freshmen.

"We certainly are thin back there," Morris said. "And you want to work to make sure that you take full advantage of your opportunities, and it’s harder to."

The Knights’ ECAC season starts this weekend at Yale and Princeton.

"It’s hard to tell what to expect," said Morris. "We want to work and play our system against Yale. We certainly didn’t play our system at all last week. We can’t worry about our opposition right now."

PICKS: Clarkson at Yale: Tougher than one might imagine, but Clarkson pulls one out. Clarkson 4, Yale 3 St. Lawrence at Princeton: St. Lawrence gets it together here. St. Lawrence 3, Princeton 2 St. Lawrence at Yale: The Bulldogs get in the ECAC win column. Yale 4, St. Lawrence 2 Clarkson at Princeton: Princeton wins one at home. Princeton 4, Clarkson 3

The Capital Skate Classic II Rensselaer (2-2-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) vs. Union (0-3-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) Tuesday, 7:30 pm, Pepsi Arena, Albany, NY

The Capital District rivalry renews itself on Tuesday with a non-conference game at the Pepsi (nee Knickerbocker) Arena. It’s a lot different than it was last year. But is it really a rivalry?

"I’m from Massena, N.Y. What do I know about this rivalry?" said Union head coach Stan Moore last year during the ECAC quarterfinal series between the two teams.

There is a commercial playing on local television that has both Moore and Dan Fridgen stating that there is no rivalry between the two teams — each while wearing the other’s sweater.

Rensselaer and Union compete in the same conference in all other sports at the Division III level. A season is made when one team beats the other at any sport.

No rivalry? Right.

PICK: Too much of Rensselaer’s offense, and Union’s defense is not the same. Rensselaer 5, Union 2

Next week, some teams continue their ECAC seasons, while others go back to nonconference action. Here’s next week’s schedule:

ECAC Games: Friday, November 14 Colgate at Vermont Cornell at Dartmouth Princeton at Harvard Yale at Brown

Saturday, November 15 Colgate at Dartmouth Cornell at Vermont Princeton at Brown Yale at Harvard St. Lawrence at Clarkson

Nonconference Games: Saturday, November 15 UMass-Amherst at Union Niagara at Rensselaer

Tuesday, November 18 Harvard at Boston College

This Week in the CCHA: November 7, 1997

Further proof that something mysterious is taking place in the CCHA: Northern Michigan head coach Rick Comley says that this week’s series in Marquette against Michigan will be "fun."

Fun. And did you know that Comley takes fillings without anesthesia and regularly rents the movie Camille Claudel, just for fun?

All funning aside, there’s some serious hockey being played in places like Marquette and East Lansing — although you may be a little surprised by just who is being serious with whom, and where.

Still on top in the CCHA is No. 4 Michigan State, but not because of the Spartans’ stellar play at home. Last weekend, Michigan State split with — drum roll, please — Notre Dame, winning in South Bend 5-1, but losing at home 6-1. The Spartans haven’t won at home yet, but they hope to remedy that this weekend when the Irish come back to town for game three of this series.

Northern Michigan graces the number-two spot in the CCHA, beating Western Michigan 3-0 Friday and 4-2 Saturday in Kalamazoo last weekend. This weekend, the Wildcats welcome the Wolverines for a weekend that’s sure to be, well, fun. No. 8 Michigan returns from Fairbanks four points richer.

The undefeated No. 7 Miami RedHawks dispatched the visiting St. Lawrence Saints 2-1 and 6-5 last weekend. On Saturday, the ‘Hawks travel up the road to Ohio State for their only game of the weekend. The Buckeyes went to Clarkson last weekend where they — drum roll, please — beat the then-tenth-ranked Golden Knights, 6-2. They also tied Clarkson, taking home a three-point souvenir package from Upstate New York.

Ferris State came back to earth last weekend while visiting Bowling Green, tying BG 3-3 in the first game, and dropping the second 3-1. This weekend the Bulldogs travel to southwest Minnesota for some tough competition at Mankato State.

Bowling Green is relieved at winning — finally — a Division I game. This weekend the Falcons head to Notre Dame on Friday and host Western on Saturday.

Western Michigan should take out a personal ad: "Very nice hockey team with witty head coach seeks players who can score goals. Defensive skills not necessary. Goalies need not apply." All the Broncos need is offense, but Western dropped two games to Northern at home last week. This week, the Broncos swing through Ohio, stopping at Ohio State Friday before backtracking to Bowling Green Saturday.

Lake Superior hosts Alaska-Fairbanks for two this weekend. Last weekend the Lakers split with Vermont, 2-3 and 7-4.

Last week’s record in picks: 7-7 Overall record in picks: 21-20

Can somebody pass me some of what Rick Comley is drinking, please?

No. 8 Michigan (5-2-0, 2-1-0 CCHA) at Northern Michigan (4-1-2, 3-0-1 CCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., Lakeview Arena, Marquette, MI

Northern Michigan is a team flexing its CCHA muscle. With an overall record of 4-1-2 and a CCHA record of 3-0-1, the Wildcats are making some noise that they’re not the doormats many people expected of a young team just returning to CCHA play.

"It’s always a combination of things," says Northern head coach Rick Comley. "We’re not making too much of it. We’re happy that we’re getting off to a good start."

The Wildcats swept Western Michigan last weekend, shutting out the Broncos 3-0 Friday, and winning 4-2 Saturday. "For the first time against Western, we had our lineup. We were able to have our Smith line back together, with Trudeau and Vigier, and that’s a critical element for our success. And that line — when they’re together — is as good as any line that anybody has."

The "Smith line," junior center Buddy Smith and sophomore wingers Roger Trudeau and J.P. Vigier, which solidified late last season, has been hampered by injuries early on this season. In Friday’s game, Trudeau had the first goal, assisted by Smith; he also picked up an assist on the last goal of the game, scored by Vigier.

Also playing well for Northern is senior defenseman Curtis Sheptak, who earned CCHA Defensive Player of the Week honors for the Northern series with Western. For the weekend, Sheptak had two goals and was +5.

Comley said his team is happy with their start, especially with taking three points from U.P. rival Lake Superior, but the coach wants to see his team remain grounded — at least for the time being. His job this week?

"Just trying to make [the players] realize that it’s great to go and win on the road; it’s great to beat Lake Superior, but don’t forget now it’s back to work. Michigan is the best team we’ll play yet and it’s another test for us."

For its part, Michigan is coming off the successful, long road trip to Alaska-Fairbanks. The Wolverines beat the Nanooks 6-3 and 4-3. The last goal of the Friday game was an empty-netter, completing a hat trick for Michigan rookie Mark Kosick — the first three goals of his collegiate career. Kosick is the CCHA Offensive Player of the Week.

Kosick is also the only Michigan player among the top ten league scorers in the CCHA. While it’s still early in the season, this statistic alone tells a big story about the turnover in Michigan personnel from last year to this.

"Obviously," says Comley, "they’ve had a great turnover in people, but they’re a good team. They work hard. Muckalt is one of the elite players, Turco is one of the elite goaltenders. They work tremendously hard, and they’re very talented. They’re one of those schools that gets the cream of the crop when it comes to recruiting, so they’re very talented, and they’re the best team that I see so far for us."

As mentioned above, Comley says this series against Michigan will be "fun," and that his team is eager to host the Wolverines.

"One of the main reasons we came back into this league was the interest people had in seeing us play Michigan and Michigan State. The University of Michigan is never going to be in Marquette unless it’s hockey, and only in this situation. People are very excited about this series."

While the Wildcats are coming on strong — and it’s difficult to pick against them — the Wolverines are not to be underestimated. In addition to Kosick, Bill Muckalt has been lighting up the board offensively, and Michigan’s defense remains one of the best in the league.

Are the Wolverines beatable? Yes. Are the Wildcats beatable? Yes, even at home. This will be tremendous test for both teams.

As tough as it is to call this one, common sense says that experience will win over youth, even if that youth is the most enthusiastic youth in the league.

(For the accuracy of this girl reporter’s common sense, just look at last week’s predictions for the Northern Michigan-Western Michigan series.)

PICKS: Michigan 5-3, 6-3

Western Michigan (2-4-2, 1-4-1 CCHA) at Ohio State (3-2-1, 0-1-0 CCHA) Friday, 7 p.m., OSU Ice Rink, Columbus, OH No. 7 Miami (6-0-0, 3-0-0 CCHA) at Ohio State (3-2-1, 0-1-0 CCHA) Saturday, 7 p.m., OSU Ice Rink, Columbus, OH

The Ohio State Buckeyes surprised Clarkson — and the rest of the college hockey world — by taking three points from the then-top-ten Golden Knights in Potsdam last weekend. The Buckeyes held the Knights to just three goals on the weekend: a 1-1 Friday tie and a 6-2 Saturday win.

"We played a very patient game, a very defensive game that still gave us opportunities, and that’s what we were encouraged about," says OSU head coach John Markell. "I was very proud of our team, the way they competed. Everybody, to a man, competed, and that’s what you need to do to win.

"Both goaltenders played well," added Markell. Sophomore Ray Aho got the tie Saturday, while rookie Jeff Maund registered his second win in as many starts Saturday.

The results of the weekend got the attention of ESPN and USA Today. ESPN had a blurb on the team Monday morning, while the Monday edition of USA Today carried a piece with the headline, "Ohio State Making Waves in the CCHA."

All the attention is nice, but as Markell says, "Accolades are only good until your next game."

The attention would be even nicer if it were completely accurate. The Bucs are not exactly "making waves in the CCHA." Two weeks ago, Ohio State lost its only CCHA game of the season to Miami, 3-0. From this weekend on, Ohio State plays only CCHA teams for the rest of the regular season.

Western Michigan vs. Ohio State

"Western has a very big, physical team," says Markell. "We respect them. We know that they have a good team and this is CCHA action, and it’s going to be a tough game."

Western visits central Ohio after a losing two at home to Northern Michigan, 3-0 and 4-2. Western head coach Bill Wilkinson says his offense is "missing in action."

"We don’t have anybody putting the puck in the net right now. It’s killing us. We’re playing well in our own end, but we’re giving up way too many opportunities at the other end." In eight games played, no Bronco has more than three goals, and no one has more than five points total. And there are only five Broncos on the "plus" side of the plus/minus.

There are two bright spots for Western. One is defense. While the Broncos have scored just 14 goals in eight games, they’ve held their opponents to just 18 goals. That’s in overall play. In league play, the ratio is 10-17.

The second bright spot for Western is goaltender Matt Barnes. Barnes is allowing just 2.48 goals per game; his save percentage is an impressive .917.

As concerned as Wilkinson is about the offense, it’s still too early to say the problem is chronic. "We haven’t really panicked with it, but hopefully somebody can come through here as [the season] goes along."

Against Ohio State, Wilkinson says, "We’ll see a pretty good brand of goaltending. Probably another low-scoring game, if we play our style. It better be, for us. It’s hard for us to get into a run-and-gun type of game, because our guns are pretty empty."

No single player on the Buckeye squad has more than five points, either, but that’s five points in six, not eight, overall games. And the Buckeyes are spreading the scoring around. Eleven Buckeyes have at least one goal, and more than half the team has a point. Two of the Buckeyes’ potential big guns — Tyler McMillan and Brandon Lafrance — have yet to score this season, but it’s just a matter of time before they do.

Like the Broncos, the Buckeyes have a solid defense and good goaltending. The Buckeye defense isn’t as experienced as the Broncos’, but what they lack in experience, they seem to be making up in whatever it takes to get the job done.

In net for the Buckeyes is a pair of young but confident goaltenders, Ray Aho and Jeff Maund. Aho is picking up where he left off at the end of last season, with a 2.41 GAA and a save percentage of .899. Maund’s rookie record is 2-0-0, with a 2.57 GAA and a .927 save percentage.

As evenly matched as these teams are defensively, the difference may be the offense that Wilkinson continues to seek, and the confidence that Ohio State brings to this game with its best start in over a decade.

PICK: Ohio State, 4-2

Miami vs. Ohio State

Miami fended off a strong St. Lawrence team at home last weekend, narrowly escaping with four points as they beat the Saints 2-1 and 6-5.

"St. Lawrence was a very good hockey team," says ‘Hawks head coach Mark Mazzoleni. "I thought they had two excellent lines, a good young defensive core, and their goaltending was excellent.

"They were very competitive, hard-fought games. They play a very aggressive style of offense, and because of that, it forced our team to play at a very high level against a good hockey team."

This is the only game the RedHawks play this weekend, and it’s their first road game of the season. When these two teams played three weeks ago, Miami was on the winning end of a 3-0 game, the last goal of which was an empty-netter.

"I expect Ohio State to throw everything at us," says Mazzoleni. "They believe that they’re in a position to beat us. I’m expecting — and I’ll convey this message to our team — a very hard-fought hockey game."

Ohio State may have an advantage in its tiny rink, where the corners are tight and the lines of sight short. "In their smaller rink, things are going to happen very quickly," says Mazzoleni, "and we’re going to have to be very attentive to our defensive responsibilities against them."

Even though it’s been 11 games and four CCHA seasons since the Buckeyes last beat Miami, and the last loss is still fresh in the collective memory of his team, John Markell says he can’t see beyond Friday’s game with Western until after that game is over. Says Markell, "Right now — like we treated the Clarkson games — we have six periods. We have the first period against Western to worry about, then we’ll worry about Miami."

Markell does say one thing about Saturday’s game. "We’re going to definitely approach the game like we can win it."

With half of the CCHA’s top 12 scorers, the RedHawks will not easily give up their first loss of the season. Leading the league in overall scoring is defenseman Dan Boyle, with six goals and 12 assists; right behind him is Tim Leahy, with seven goals and six assists. In league play, Miami’s Adam Copeland has eight points, second-best in the CCHA, while Boyle and Leahy are next with seven points each.

Let’s not forget Miami goaltender Trevor Prior, whose league play has been astounding. In three CCHA games, Prior’s GAA is 1.05, and his save percentage is .946. And one of those three league games was against this tough, new Ohio State.

This one should be the proverbial barn-burner.

PICK: Miami 4-2

Bowling Green (2-5-1, 1-0-1 CCHA) at Notre Dame (4-2-0, 1-1-0 CCHA) Friday, 7 p.m., Joyce Arena, South Bend, IN

Bowling Green head coach Buddy Powers says this weekend of hockey will be "two grind-them-out games. Notre Dame’s got a pretty big club and they’re feeling good about themselves. They’re playing well."

Playing well may be an understatement. Notre Dame is off to its best start in years and years, and the Irish split a series last weekend with Michigan State, beating the Spartans in Munn Ice Arena.

Notre Dame head coach Dave Poulin says this winning is the rewarding result of working hard with a young team. Beating Michigan State at home is "a very small step…yet it’s a big step for the program, winning in there."

The Irish lost to the Spartans 5-1 in South Bend, then returned the favor by winning 6-1 in East Lansing the next night. Those were Notre Dame’s first CCHA games of the season.

"It was sort of weird having the four nonconference games before we played the conference games," says Poulin. "Some teams, it seems, had played five and six conference games.

"Playing good nonconference teams helped us. Playing St. Cloud and Boston College really helped us in our preparation."

Poulin is not fooled by Bowling Green’s early season record. "I put that all aside. Bowling Green is going to be Bowling Green. They’re going to be a Buddy Powers team. They’re going to play really hard. I think it will be a terrific game."

Playing particularly well for Notre Dame are sophomore Ben Simon, with a total of eight overall points, and junior Aniket Dhadphale, with seven points overall. In net for the Irish, Matt Eisler is playing solid hockey, with a GAA of 2.39 and a save percentage of .924.

Notre Dame’s on a streak, but Bowling Green finally, finally has a taste of victory. With all the guns on the ice, Bowling Green is going to look to even up those CCHA standings.

PICK: Bowling Green 3-2

Notre Dame (4-2-0, 1-1-0 CCHA) at No. 4 Michigan State (6-1-2, 4-1-1 CCHA): The Grudge Match Saturday, 7 p.m., Munn Ice Arena, East Lansing, MI

These two teams beat each other up last weekend, with Michigan State taking the first game in South Bend 5-1, and Notre Dame taking the second game in East Lansing 6-1.

Now the Irish and the Spartans meet in East Lansing for their last game of the regular season. "It’s kind of unusual," says Spartan head coach Ron Mason. "As a coach, you’d rather have any team in the league both terms — before and after Christmas. We’ve done this in the past, and I don’t think it’s quite right, but at this point it’s probably good that we meet each other again."

Good for Michigan State, that is, before Notre Dame really gets rolling this season. The Spartans haven’t won a game at home yet, and they’re eager to prove that they’re better than the 6-1 beating they took last weekend. But don’t tell Mason you think the Spartans are out for revenge.

"I don’t think there’s such a thing, really — revenge. Technically, what are you revenging? It’s early in the season, both teams are playing as hard as they can, and it’s just a question of who’s going to win the game."

With their loss to Notre Dame, the Spartans dropped a few points in the national polls, and received no first-place votes in the USCHO poll. But Mason says that his players don’t pay attention to the polls, and they certainly weren’t distracted by their ranking and overconfident when they met the Irish last weekend.

"We never even talked about it. In fact, ever since we beat Michigan at Michigan, our guys were losing some of their interest," says Mason. "We scored a lot of goals in the next two games. Then all of a sudden in the game here, the puck didn’t go in as easily and consequently we ended up losing.

"But I don’t think there’s any thought on anybody’s mind here about where we’re ranked, because whether you’re one or whether you’re ten, it’s going to be decided in January and February, probably."

Although the Irish are encouraged by having won in Munn last week, head coach Dave Poulin says he has no delusions of an easy victory this time around. "I’m sure they’ll come out. They always come out. It’ll be no different. It’ll be interesting."

The Irish are off to a great start on the season, the best in years, but the season is young. Poulin says, "You also know the long battle is ahead. It’s cautious optimism from our standpoint. You know how tough this league is every single night."

If the Spartans don’t make this game their first home win of the season, the Irish will prove that they have more than just luck on their side.

PICK: Michigan State 5-2

Western Michigan (2-4-2, 1-4-1 CCHA) at Bowling Green (2-5-1, 1-0-1 CCHA) Saturday, 7 p.m., Bowling Green Ice Arena, Bowling Green, OH

The small city of Bowling Green, Oh., breathed a collective sigh of relief last weekend as the Falcons finally earned some CCHA points, and their first Division I win of the season. In a back-and-forth game, Bowling Green tied Ferris State 3-3, then beat the Bulldogs 3-1 in the recap. Both games were in Bowling Green.

"Three points is better than no points," says Bowling Green head coach Buddy Powers. "We played a lot more disciplined than we did against Clarkson, staying out of the penalty box. We got really good goaltending and some timely goals."

The good goaltending came from junior Mike Savard, who allowed only four goals on 58 shots for the weekend, raising his save percentage from .901 to .910.

Six different Falcons scored on the weekend. B.J. Adams and Dan Price each scored their first goals of the season, a welcome sign from an offense that has been struggling.

Powers says he expects a physical, defensive game from Western. "Western never changes — it’s always going to be a grind with Western."

These two teams met earlier in the season for nonconference play, with Western winning that game 3-0. "We had them early here," says Western head coach Bill Wilkinson, "but they were missing a lot of kids."

Indeed, every Falcon will be able to play this weekend, the first time that’s happened for this injury-plagued team since the 1995-96 season.

Wilkinson says that Bowling Green is a dangerous offensive team that likes to open an early lead. "That’s what they like to do, so we’ll have to shut them down, not give them any opportunities. BG really likes to open it up with their skating."

In spite of good goaltending and excellent defense, Western has struggled lately because of an overall lack of offense.

A healthy Bowling Green team is a scary Bowling Green team, even a full week after Halloween.

PICK: Bowling Green 5-2

Alaska-Fairbanks (1-5-1, 0-4-0 CCHA) at Lake Superior (1-4-1, 0-2-1 CCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m. Abel Arena, Sault Ste. Marie, MI

Who could have predicted that an early season battle for the basement would take place between the Nanooks and the Lakers? Both teams have yet to win a conference game, and neither has shown much reason why, lately, it should win a conference game. Well, unless both of these games end in ties — a distinct possibility — someone has to win this weekend.

Laker head coach Scott Borek says, "It’s probably a decent time for us to play them. The nice thing for them coming in is that they’ve been playing at a very high pace in the two series that they’ve lost. Three out of the four games have been pretty close. They’re playing at a really nice pace right now. I’m sure they come in with a lot of confidence."

Alaska-Fairbanks dropped two games to Michigan at home last weekend, but the scores were respectable — 6-3 and 4-3. Jeff Trembecky leads the Nanooks in scoring with seven points, but Jim Lawrence and Sjon Wynia have four goals each.

"They’ll be a very difficult opponent," says Borek. "I think they’re very opportunistic. They’re very offensive when they get the puck. They’re not real big, so hopefully we can use our size. They’re very talented offensively."

Alaska-Fairbanks needs offensive talent, because the Nanooks are struggling defensively. In league goaltending, Chris Marvel and Ian Perkins have a combined save percent average of. And in league play, the Nanooks have been outscored 45-20 so far this season.

The Lakers are also having difficulty finding the net, having been outscored 19-9 in three league games, with a team plus/minus of -51. Lake Superior is finally finding its feet in the net, however, relying heavily on freshman Rob Galatiuk. This past weekend, in a split with Vermont — losing 2-3 Friday and winning 7-4 Saturday — Laker Shawn Greene logged his first win.

"We actually played better on Friday than we did on Saturday," says Borek. "I thought we played very well on Friday night. It was probably one of our best efforts in a long time. We just played big. We controlled the puck a lot. We possessed the puck a lot. They didn’t get very many good scoring opportunities except on their power play.

"That was the difference in the game. We took a couple of bad penalties back to back, and let them back into the game. Then they scored three on the five-minute major. Those were the only they got, but it was enough."

Borek says his upperclassmen, especially, have been frustrated with this season’s slow start, and Saturday’s win was a very welcome change of pace. "We needed it badly. I thought we were playing pretty good hockey for two weeks. We just couldn’t get over the hump; we couldn’t score. Against Vermont the second night, we got down three nothing, and it was kind of like, ‘Oh, gosh.’

"But we stayed with it and just kept playing and got a bounce, which might have been the first one of the year, and things started rolling our way. We got a short-handed goal by Joe Blaznek — it was three-on-five, and that got us going and slowed them down and got the crowd into the game."

This series could be decided on anything from special teams to whose offense decides to show up and play. Fairbanks has one of the better power plays in the league, while the Lakers have one of the better penalty-killing units. The Nanooks have three players among the top 20 scorers in the CCHA while the Lakers have none, but Laker players like Blaznek, Jason Sessa and Bryan Fuss may be on the verge of producing.

Buoyed by a win last Saturday, with both games at the Soo, the Lakers have the edge here.

PICKS: Lake Superior 5-3, 5-4

Ferris State (2-4-1, 2-3-1 CCHA) at Mankato State (3-3-1) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m. CT, Civic Center, Mankato, MN

Ferris State came out on the short end of a trip to Ohio, taking only a single point from Bowling Green last weekend. Friday’s game was a back-and-forth affair that ended in a 3-3 tie, while the Bulldogs lost 3-1 on Saturday.

Assistant coach Drew Famulak says the results don’t tell the whole story of both games. "We played pretty well this weekend We played better Saturday than we did Friday. What it came down to Saturday is that they played better on the specialty teams than we did."

Bowling Green goal Saturday was shorthanded, and another was on the power play. Special teams is an area where Famulak says the Bulldogs need to improve. "They took a five-minute penalty early, and we just couldn’t get anything going. We need to get our power play on track. We’re holding teams to 25, 26 shots a night, three goals or less, but we’re not generating anything on our power play. It’s frustrating right now for our guys."

Adding to the frustration has been a shoulder injury sustained by captain Brett Colborne.

"He’s our captain, and our quarterback for our power play, so I think that’s had an effect on us as well," said Famulak. "He’s going to be out now — we’re going to sit him for about two weeks. He’s on the way to recovery."

Colborne has no goals and three assists in six games played.

Famulak says the Bulldogs — enjoying their best start in a many years — know that Mankato State will offer some very tough competition this weekend. "They’re a legitimate Division-I team, there’s no doubt about that. They’re coming off a split with Denver, so obviously, they’re pretty high about that." Mankato won the first game of that series 5-3, and dropped the second game 4-1.

To prepare for the game, Famulak says the Bulldogs are working on their power play. And, because it’s nonconference, a few Ferris State players who haven’t seen much time may be on the ice. "We’re going to give some other kids some chances to play some different roles — maybe some of the freshmen. We may look at our goaltending situation with [Jeff] Blashill and [Mike] Szkodzinski maybe getting some ice time this weekend."

So far this season, the Bulldogs have relied on rookie goaltender Vince Owen, whose .894 save percentage is considerably higher than last season’s team save percentage of .840. Owen’s GAA is 2.98.

Mankato State, gearing up to join the WCHA, could be all that Ferris State can handle this time out.

PICKS: Ferris State 4-3, Mankato State 4-3

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