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Minnesota earns 21 first-place votes, remains No. 1 in DCU/USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll

Minnesota’s Matthew Knies celebrates his overtime winner that beat North Dakota last Friday night (photo: Minnesota Athletics).

With 21 first-place votes this week, Minnesota is again the top-ranked team in the DCU/USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

St. Cloud State received 14 first-place votes and moved up from No. 8 to No. 2 in this week’s poll.

Denver took home seven first-place votes and jumped one spot to No. 3, while Michigan bagged six first-place votes to move up one notch to No. 4.

Massachusetts rounds out the top five at No. 5, getting two first-place votes this week.

North Dakota is up one to No. 6, Quinnipiac falls four to sit seventh, Minnesota State tumbles down six to No. 8, Boston University holds steady at No. 9, and Connecticut jumps up four spots to No. 10 in this week’s rankings.

DCU/USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll – Oct. 24, 2022

Ohio State moves up five to No. 11, Notre Dame is up one to No. 12, Providence falls two to No. 13, Harvard is up one spot to sit 14th, and Northeastern drops three spots to No. 15.

Penn State moves up two to No. 16, Western Michigan remains No. 17, UMass Lowell is up one to No. 18, Minnesota Duluth falls all the way from No. 10 to No. 19, and Cornell retains its position at No. 20.

In addition to the top 20 teams, 14 other teams received votes this week.

The DCU/USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll is compiled weekly and consists of 50 voters, including coaches and media professionals from across the country. Media outlets may republish this poll as long as USCHO.com is credited.

DCU (DCU.org), a not-for-profit financial cooperative owned by and operated for its members, is the sponsor of this poll. DCU serves more than 900,000 members and their families in all 50 states.

Epic weekend at Minnesota, big sweeps for St. Cloud, Wisconsin, Denver: Weekend Review Season 5 Episode 5

Hosts Jim Connelly, Derek Schooley, and Ed Trefzger look at the games of the past weekend and the news of the week in D-I college hockey.

This podcast is sponsored by DCU – Digital Federal Credit Union – at dcu.org

Topics include:

• Epic weekend series in Minnesota between the Gophers and North Dakota
• St. Cloud State improves to 6-0-0 with a two-game sweep of Minnesota State
• Denver sweeps Providence in regulation and OT
• Wisconsin sweeps Minnesota Duluth as Bulldogs lose four straight
• Big upset in Orono as Maine shocks Quinnipiac on Saturday night, 4-0
• Ivies will get underway this weekend
• Having video is great, but what about a package for all of college hockey?
• COVID is still quietly lingering in the background

Subscribe to this college hockey podcast on Apple podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Find our podcast archive at USCHO.com/podcasts

Women’s Division I College Hockey: Weekend Wrap October 24, 2022

(4) Minnesota Duluth at (1) Ohio State

Ohio State proved why they are the top-ranked team in the country this weekend with two wins over UMD. On Friday, Jenna Buglioni opened the scoring with a power play goal just 1:29 into the second period. Clara Van Wieren tied the game late in the third on an odd-player rush and shot that skittered under Amanda Thiele. Jenn Gardiner sent the Buckeyes to the 2nd intermission with the lead on a quick shot off a faceoff that Emma Soderberg did not have the time to react to. In the third, Maggie Flaherty turned a turnover into a goal to tie the game. In overtime, it looked like a shootout was imminent before Buglioni got a breakaway and she did not miss as she went in alone on Soderberg and gave OSU the 3-2 OT win. On Saturday, Minnesota Duluth got on the board first with Mannon McMahon getting credit on a Buckeye own-goal. Gabby Rosenthal tied the game late in the first on a tip-in from a pass by Sophie Jaques. Gabbie Hughes put the Bulldogs up 2-1 early in the second and that score held into the back end of the final frame before Gardiner’s shot from the slot tied the game at two. Less than five minutes later, Riley Brengman went top-shelf to score the game-winner.

(2) Minnesota at St. Cloud State

The Gophers scored four times in the opening frame of Friday’s game and were able to hold that lead for a 4-2 win. Abbey Murphy scored 1:05 into the game. Abigail Boreen scored a power play goal before five minutes had passed. Grace Zumwinkle scored her 90th career goal to extend the lead in the tenth minute and Taylor Heise lit the lamp in the 14th minute to give Minnesota the 4-0 lead heading into the first intermission. St. Cloud State scored twice in the waning minutes of the second to narrow the gap on goals from Klára Hymlárová and Olivia Cvar. In the second game, St. Cloud State took a lead less than a minute into the game when Emma Gentry knocked in a rebound of the turnover engineered by Courtney Hall. Madison Kaiser scored off a behind-the-back pass from Savannah Norcross to tie the game at 1. SCSU went 7-for-7 on the penalty kill and were looking to hold on to the tie late into the game before Zumwinkle buried a rebound with four minutes left to give Minnesota a 2-1 win.

(3) Northeastern at Maine

The Huskies lept out to a 2-0 lead early on Friday with goals from Megan Carter and Chloe Aurard. Morgan Trimper cut the lead in half for Maine, but Alina Müller got it back just before the end of the second to make it 3-1. Two goals from Katy Knoll and one by Lily Shannon put the game away in the third to give Northeastern the 6-1 win. Maureen Murphy had three assists in the win. On Saturday, Grace Heiting scored for Maine midway through the first period and that would prove to be the lone goal of the game as the Black Bears upset Northeastern. It was Maine’s first win over the Huskies in three years.

Bemidji State (5) Wisconsin

On Thursday, eight different Badgers found the back of the net as Wisconsin won 9-0. Kristen Simms had a goal and two assists and Laila Edwards added three assists in the win. On Friday, the scoring was once again spread out, as seven different Badgers scored in the 7-1 win. Caroline Harvey led Wisconsin with a goal and two assists. Gabbie Smith scored for Bemidji with 1:03 to go in the game to ruin the shutout.

(14) Vermont at (6) Colgate

Corinne McCool put the Catamounts on the board first with a goal midway through the first period. Kas Betinol responded just :33 later and from there, it was all Colgate. Allyson Simpson scored in the waning seconds of the first to make it 2-1. Danielle Serdachny made it 3-1 early in the third and Neena Brick added another in the final frame to give the Raiders the 4-1 win. Saturday’s win was coach Greg Fargo’s 200th at Colgate and ensured the team is off to their best start in program history. Dara Greig bookended the first period with goals to give the Raiders a 2-0 lead after 20. In the first two minutes and the closing seconds, she put away rebounds to give Colgate the lead. In the second, Serdachny had a breakaway down the ice in transition and cut in to the goalie to make it 3-0. Natálie Mlynková tried to carry Vermont back into the game with a power play goal in the second and a goal late in the third, but the Catamounts ran out of time and Colgate took a 3-2 win and weekend sweep.

Mercyhurst at (10) Cornell

Gillis Frechette scored a snipe from her knee in the slot to open the scoring in Cornell’s first game of the season. Georgia Schiff’s no-look pass made for the perfect set-up to Kaitlin Jockims’ second-period goal to make it 2-0 Big Red. Frechette got a stick on a deep Rory Guilday shot to re-direct it in the net for her second goal of the day to give Cornell the 3-0 win. Alyssa Regalado’s hat trick helped the Big Red take a 7-2 win on Saturday. Mercyhurst scored first as Sydeny Pedersen capitalized on the power play. But Cornell would go on to reel off seven straight goals to put the game out of reach. Regalado’s first was also on the power play and the teams went to the locker rooms tied at 1. In the second, the Big Red did not let more than a few minutes pass without lighting the lamp as Caroline Chan, Frechette, Izzy Daniel and Regalado all scored to put the game out of reach at 5-1. Regalado and Daniel both scored in the first half of the third to make it 7-1. Kylee Mahoney scored late for Mercyhurst to make it 7-2 but Cornell swept the weekend.

Syracuse vs. (11) Clarkson
St. Lawrence vs. (11) Clarkson at Adirondack Icebreaker

It was the third-straight time Clarkson faced Syracuse in the course of eight days and the third win for the Golden Knights as they took a 3-0 victory in Lake Placid. Darcie Lappan had two goals and an assist and Anne Cherkowski had a goal and two assists to lead Clarkson to the win. In the tournament title game against St. Lawrence, it was once again Lappan and Cherkowski leading the way. Lappan led the team with a goal and two assists while Cherkowski added two goals to carry the team to a 3-1 win.

Franklin Pierce at (12) Penn State

Six different Nittany Lions scored in Penn State’s 6-0 win over Franklin Pierce on Sunday. Alyssa Machado, Olivia Wallin, Maeve Connolly, Tessa Janecke, Eleri MacKay and Mallory Uiehlein each found the back of the net. The teams will play again Monday afternoon.

New Hampshire at (13) Providence

Kayla Kutes scored her first career goal and transfer Noemi Neubauerova scored her first as a Friar to help Providence to the 4-1 win on Friday. Rookie Reichen Kirchmair and grad student Hunter Barnett also scored in the win. Kira Juodikis’s power play goal was UNH’s only tally in the game. In the second game, the teams skated to a scoreless first before Kyla Bent’s power play goal on the rebound put the Wildcats up 1-0 early in the second. Kirchmair had an extra-attacker goal of her own on a snipe with fewer than 18 seconds left in the frame to tie it at 1. Continuing the theme, Sara Hjalmarsson won the game with 2.5 seconds left in regulation as Neubauerova fought for and won the puck along the boards behind UNH’s net. She dished it to the front of the net and Hjalmarsson had it in the back of the net before you could blink to earn Providence the win and sweep.

Dartmouth at (15) Harvard

Kristin Della Rovere, Ellie Bayard and Anne Bloomer all scored for Harvard to lead them to their first win of the season as they defeated Dartmouth 3-0.

 

Monday 10: Thrilling North Dakota-Minnesota split highlights weekend slate of top-20 college hockey matchups

St. Cloud State won a pair of one-goal games over Minnesota State on home ice this past weekend (photo: St. Cloud State Athletics).

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

1. North Dakota-Minnesota series goes both ways in OT

Fans at 3M Arena at Mariucci for either of the North Dakota-Minnesota games this weekend got more than they bargained for, both figuratively and literally.

Figuratively because each game was an intense back-and-forth affair that featured a rally by the home team to force overtime. Literally because the fans were treated to free hockey each night.

On the first night, Matthew Knies was the overtime hero just 21 seconds into the extra frame as the top-ranked Gophers rallied late for a 3-2 win. The next night, No. 7 North Dakota got the OT winner from Mark Senden at the 2:21 mark. The two-game series attracted an announced crowd of 20,611, plenty of whom were wearing North Dakota garb.

“You could feel it go both ways,” North Dakota coach Brad Berry said of the atmosphere. “When they got a little momentum, their fans were yelling and screaming, and then obviously the chants that you hear constantly, not only at the Ralph, but you hear here, and we got some momentum too. It was great to hear, and I know our guys fed off that.”

2. St. Cloud sweeps Minnesota State on homecoming

St. Cloud, ranked No. 8 in the DCU/USCHO.com D-I poll, made it a memorable homecoming weekend with a sweep of No. 2 Minnesota State. The win put the Huskies at 6-0-0, their best start to a season since 2017. Minnesota State was swept for just the first time since 2018.

Grant Cruikshank scored twice for St. Cloud in the second game of the series, including his sixth of the season, which stood as the game winner with less than five minutes to go.

3. Denver takes two vs. Friars

Defending NCAA champion Denver, ranked No. 4 in the latest DCU/USCHO.com D-I poll, is now above .500 with a weekend sweep vs. No. 11 Providence. The Pioneers were swept the previous weekend at No. 6 UMass, and a win the week before against Maine puts them at 3-2-0 vs. schools from the six-state region.

On the night the 2022 national champions were celebrated, Denver’s Jack Devine scored the game winner at 1:16 of overtime before a crowd of 6.324.

“To go down and fight back and respond in the second (period) and to give up the late one and respond in the overtime with the big goal was awesome,” Denver coach David Carle said. “I think we sent a lot of happy people out of the building.”

4. Maine stuns No. 3 Quinnipiac, Bobcats get revenge next night

Quinnipiac escaped Maine with a weekend split, earning a 6-2 win on Sunday, one day after the Black Bears stunned the third-ranked Bobcats 4-0 at Alfond Arena.

Victor Ostman, who hails from Danderyd, Sweden, earned his first career shutout with 33 turnaways in the series opener.

5. Michigan takes two from Lake Superior State

A pair of freshmen helped lift No. 5 Michigan to a sweep in the U.P. over the weekend, as the Wolverines took wins of 5-2 and 5-1 at Lake Superior State. Adam Fantilli and T.J. Hughes led the way in Game 2, with Fantilli scoring a goal with three assists and Hughes lighting the lamp on back-to-back occasions.

Michigan improved to 5-1 on the season and will face intra-state rival Western Michigan (No. 17) next weekend before diving headfirst into Big Ten play the following weekend at No. 18 Penn State.

6. Six scorers pace UMass over Union

A well-balanced scoring attack led No. 6 UMass-Amherst to a pair of wins over Union. Six different players scored in a six goal scorers and 14 Minutemen notched at least one point in a 7-0 rout on Saturday. The win came on the heels of a 7-1 win the night before. Cole Brady had 31 saves for the shutout on Saturday.

“I think we can count on scoring throughout the lineup this year and that’s a nice relief for a coach,” said UMass coach Greg Carvel. “Depth in goaltending and depth in scoring hopefully (will) be consistent for us.”

7. Huskies, Terriers split in Boston

Boston University and Connecticut split a pair of contests between ranked Hockey East teams at Agganis Arena, with 14th-ranked Huskies taking Friday’s opener in overtime and the No. 9 Terriers earning a 5-2 win the following night, giving UConn its first loss of the season.

“Another good response from our team,” first-year BU coach Jay Pandolfo said. “We didn’t play our best (Friday) night and we expected to have a good response from our group. Our leaders led the way tonight.”

8. Wisconsin wins pair of road upsets for first wins of season

Unranked and previously winless Wisconsin snapped out of its early season slumber in a big way, sweeping No. 10 Minnesota-Duluth with wins of 5-2 and 3-0.

Despite the mismatch on paper, the weekend in Duluth might have been just the thing the Badgers needed, as they extended their unbeaten streak against the Bulldogs to eight games (7-0-1).

Despite the loss, Duluth led the Badgers with shots on goal 35-28.

9. UMass Lowell upends Northeastern

In another matchup of Hockey East ranked teams, No. 19 UMass-Lowell went to No. 12 Northeastern and earned a 3-2 win at Matthews Arena.

“It wasn’t a work of art tonight, but there were some positives — scored a shorty, ended up 100 percent on the PK and a couple of guys scored their first of the year,” Lowell coach Norm Bazin said. “There’s still a lot to be worked on. We’re a work in progress right now.”

Northeastern, which has yet to play a road game, finally will don the black jerseys with a pair of games at Maine starting Friday.

10. Two shutouts in Broncos-Irish series

No. 17 Western Michigan and No. 13 Notre Dame split a pair of shutouts over the weekend, with each team winning on their home ice. The Irish skated to a 2-0 win on Friday in South Bend, Ind., while Western won 4-0 the next night in Kalamazoo.

A pair of defensemen led the way for the Broncos — Cedric Fiedler and Zak Galambos both scored a pair. Cameron Rowe stopped all 22 shots to earn his first shutout as a Bronco.

Rankings roundup: How the top 20 NCAA hockey teams fared, Oct. 20-23

Connor McMenamin opened the scoring and closed the scoring with his overtime winner as No. 18 Penn State defeated St. Thomas 3-2 in non-conference action on Friday night at Pegula Ice Arena (photo: Steve Manuel).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the DCU/USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll of Oct. 17 fared in games over the weekend of Oct. 20-23.

No. 1 Minnesota (4-2-0)
10/21/2022 – No. 7 North Dakota 2 at No. 1 Minnesota 3 (OT)
10/22/2022 – No. 7 North Dakota 5 at No. 1 Minnesota 4 (OT)

No. 2 Minnesota State (3-3-0)
10/21/2022 – No. 2 Minnesota State 2 at No. 8 St. Cloud State 3
10/22/2022 – No. 2 Minnesota State 3 at No. 8 St. Cloud State 4

No. 3 Quinnipiac (2-1-2)
10/22/2022 – No. 3 Quinnipiac 0 at Maine 4
10/23/2022 – No. 3 Quinnipiac 6 at Maine 2

No. 4 Denver (4-2-0)
10/21/2022 – No. 11 Providence 1 at No. 4 Denver 4
10/22/2022 – No. 11 Providence 2 at No. 4 Denver 3 (OT)

No. 5 Michigan (5-1-0)
10/21/2022 – No. 5 Michigan 5 at Lake Superior State 2
10/22/2022 – No. 5 Michigan 5 at Lake Superior State 1

No. 6 Massachusetts (4-0-1)
10/21/2022 – Union 1 at No. 6 Massachusetts 7
10/22/2022 – Union 0 at No. 6 Massachusetts 7

No. 7 North Dakota (3-2-1)
10/21/2022 – No. 7 North Dakota 2 at No. 1 Minnesota 3 (OT)
10/22/2022 – No. 7 North Dakota 5 at No. 1 Minnesota 4 (OT)

No. 8 St. Cloud State (6-0-0)
10/21/2022 – No. 2 Minnesota State 2 at No. 8 St. Cloud State 3
10/22/2022 – No. 2 Minnesota State 3 at No. 8 St. Cloud State 4

No. 9 Boston University (3-2-0)
10/21/2022 – No. 14 Connecticut 4 at No. 9 Boston University 3 (OT)
10/22/2022 – No. 14 Connecticut 2 at No. 9 Boston University 5

No. 10 Minnesota Duluth (2-4-0)
10/21/2022 – Wisconsin 5 at No. 10 Minnesota Duluth 2
10/22/2022 – Wisconsin 3 at No. 10 Minnesota Duluth 0

No. 11 Providence (3-2-0)
10/21/2022 – No. 11 Providence 1 at No. 4 Denver 4
10/22/2022 – No. 11 Providence 2 at No. 4 Denver 3 (OT)

No. 12 Northeastern (3-2-1)
10/18/2022 – RV Boston College 3 at No. 12 Northeastern 3 (OT)
10/22/2022 – No. 19 UMass Lowell 3 at No. 12 Northeastern 2

No. 13 Notre Dame (3-2-1)
10/21/2022 – No. 17 Western Michigan 0 at No. 13 Notre Dame 2
10/22/2022 – No. 13 Notre Dame 0 at No. 17 Western Michigan 4

No. 14 Connecticut (6-1-1)
10/21/2022 – No. 14 Connecticut 4 at No. 9 Boston University 3 (OT)
10/22/2022 – No. 14 Connecticut 2 at No. 9 Boston University 5

No. 15 Harvard (0-0-0)
10/20/2022 – Brown 2 at No. 15 Harvard 5 (exhibition)
10/22/2022 – Guelph* 0 at No. 15 Harvard 9 (exhibition)

No. 16 Ohio State (6-1-1)
10/20/2022 – Bentley 2 at No. 16 Ohio State 9
10/21/2022 – Bentley 1 at No. 16 Ohio State 3

No. 17 Western Michigan (5-2-0)
10/21/2022 – No. 17 Western Michigan 0 at No. 13 Notre Dame 2
10/22/2022 – No. 13 Notre Dame 0 at No. 17 Western Michigan 4

No. 18 Penn State (6-0-0)
10/20/2022 – St. Thomas 2 at No. 18 Penn State 6
10/21/2022 – St. Thomas 2 at No. 18 Penn State 3 (OT)

No. 19 UMass Lowell (4-2-0)
10/22/2022 – No. 19 UMass Lowell 3 at No. 12 Northeastern 2

No. 20 Cornell (0-0-0)
10/20/2022 – Guelph* 1 at No. 20 Cornell 8 (exhibition)

RV = Receiving votes
* = Not eligible for poll

SATURDAY RECAP: No. 1 Minnesota downed in OT by North Dakota, St. Cloud State sweeps No. 2 Minnesota State, Maine upsets No. 3 Quinnipiac

Mark Senden celebrates his OT winner for the Fighting Hawks (photo: Jim Rosvold).

After losing in overtime Friday night to top-ranked Minnesota, No. 7 North Dakota turned the tables on the Gophers Saturday night.

Just a night removed from what many called an instant classic, the sequel proved to be even better for the crowd at 3M Arena at Mariucci as Mark Senden struck 2:21 into overtime to help No. 7 North Dakota upset Minnesota.

The goal was Senden’s second of the night, capping off a night that saw both teams rally from a two-goal deficit. The captain now has four goals in seven career games against Minnesota, with all four coming in the last two wins for North Dakota.

Trailing 2-0 midway through the middle frame, Jackson Blake started a scoring barrage for the visitors with his fourth of the season to pull the Fighting Hawks within a goal. Less than a minute later, Riese Gaber scored the second power-play goal of the night for the green and white to quickly pull the Hawks level at 2-2.

The scoring continued when Senden potted his first of the night 18 seconds after the Gaber goal when he drove to the net and bunted a shot out of the air and past Owen Bartoszkiewicz to quickly put North Dakota in front 3-2.

UND made it four goals in under four minutes with its third power-play goal of the period, with Jackson Kunz deflecting a Cooper Moore shot off his body and in, chasing Bartoszkiewicz from the game and increasing the lead to 4-2.

Minnesota pulled to within 4-3 late in the second before tying the game at 4-4 less than seven minutes into the final frame, but Drew DeRidder kept the game level with nine of his 37 saves in the period to send the game to overtime for the second straight night.

In the extra session, Gaber blew past the defender and threw the puck towards the crease where Senden was able to out-work all three Gophers and tally the overtime winner.

Bartoszkiewicz and Justen Close combined to make 15 saves for Minnesota.

No. 8 St. Cloud State 4, No. 2 Minnesota State 3

Grant Cruikshank scored two goals and Micah Miller added a goal and an assist as the Huskies swept the Mavericks at the Herb Brooks Hockey Center Saturday night.

Chase Brand also scored, Kyler Kupka notched two assists, and Dominic Basse made 34 saves for the win in goal.

For Minnesota State, Josh Groll and David Silye each had a goal and an assist, Sam Morton scored, and Alex Tracy took the loss in goal with a 17-save outing.

Maine 4, No. 3 Quinnipiac 0

The Black Bears scored all four goals in the third period to knock off the third-ranked Bobcats at Alfond Arena.

Cole Hanson, Ben Poisson, Matthew Fawcett and Nolan Renwick scored in the final frame and Victor Ostman made 33 saves for the shutout.

Yaniv Perets stopped 30 in goal for QU.

No. 4 Denver 3, No. 11 Providence 2 (OT)

Jack Devine netted the game-winning tally 1:16 into overtime to lead Denver over the Friars at Magness Arena Saturday night.

Carter Mazur and Massimo Rizzo added goals for DU, while Rizzo had an assist for a two-point game and Sean Behrens chipped in two helpers to back Magnus Chrona’s 29 saves in goal.

For Providence, Taige Harding and Jaroslav Chmelar scored, Riley Duran and Liam Valente each had two assists, and Philip Svedebäck turned aside 22 shots between the pipes.

No. 5 Michigan 5, Lake Superior State 1

Adam Fantilli (goal, three assists) and T.J. Hughes (two goals) led the Wolverines to a 5-1 victory over Lake Superior State on Saturday night at Taffy Abel Arena.

With the win in a penalty-filled game, Michigan extended the program’s win streak over the Lakers to seven games.

Erik Portillo was stellar once again between the pipes, turning aside 23 of the 24 shots the Lakers put on goal en route to earning his 40th career victory as a Wolverine in just his 53rd start.

Mackie Samoskevich and Dylan Duke each went for a goal and an assist in the win.

Timo Bakos scored the lone LSSU goal and Seth Eisele kicked out 33 shots in getting the loss in goal.

Miami 2, Canisius 0

Ludvig Persson recorded the fourth shutout of his career as Miami blanked Canisius 2-0 to finish off a road sweep Saturday afternoon.

Persson made 25 saves, several of the highlight-reel variety down the stretch, to keep the Golden Griffins at bay.

Brothers Ryan Savage and Red Savage each collected a goal for the RedHawks, who improved to 8-0-0 all-time against Canisius.

Goaltender Jacob Barczewski gave the host Golden Griffins a chance, turning aside 26 of the 27 shots he faced.

The RedHawks’ last non-conference road sweep was Jan. 2-3, 2015 at Rensselaer.

Sacred Heart 5, Niagara 1

The Pioneers erased a 1-0 deficit with five straight goals to grab a 5-1 win and split the weekend series at Dwyer Arena.

Sacred Heart got goals from five different players – Blake Humphrey, Aidan Connolly, Ryan Steele, Kevin Lombardi and Neil Shea – and 24 saves from goalie Luke Lush.

The Purple Eagles, who took the lead almost five minutes into the game on a Carter Randklev goal, had a 25-23 edge in shots but could not hold the early lead.

In goal, Jake Sibell stopped 18 shots for Niagara.

Minnesota Duluth’s Kaiser suspended one game by NCHC for high sticking major penalty against Wisconsin

KAISER

The NCHC announced Saturday that it has issued a one-game suspension to Minnesota Duluth junior defenseman Wyatt Kaiser, in accordance with the conference’s supplemental discipline policy.

The suspension stems from a stick infraction during the Bulldogs’ game against Wisconsin Oct. 21 at Amsoil Arena.

During Friday night’s game, Kaiser was assessed a major penalty for high sticking and given a game misconduct penalty at 3:48 of the third period, following a video review.

Kaiser will be required to serve the one-game suspension during UMD’s series finale Oct. 22 against Wisconsin. He is eligible to return for Minnesota Duluth’s series opener against Cornell on Oct. 28.

FRIDAY RECAP: Top-ranked Minnesota rallies late to topple North Dakota, St. Cloud State downs Minnesota State, Denver upends Providence, Fantilli’s hat trick lifts Michigan past Lake Superior State

Minnesota celebrates Matthew Knies game-winning goal in overtime on home ice over North Dakota (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Matthew Knies was the overtime hero as No. 1-ranked Minnesota rallied late for a 3-2 overtime victory against No. 7 North Dakota Friday night at 3M Arena at Mariucci.

Playing in front of an over-capacity crowd of 10,418, the Gophers tied the game with the goalie pulled when Mason Nevers jumped off the bench and found the back of the net from the high slot as the clock hit 1:24 remaining in regulation to force overtime.

“Nevers was our best player tonight,” Minnesota coach Bob Motzko said. “Just working his tail off and we reward him putting him out there and he scores right away. I couldn’t be happier. There is an upperclassman stepping up.”

Friday night’s announced attendance of 10,418 ranks seventh all-time at 3M Arena at Mariucci.

Jackson LaCombe also scored for the Gophers and Justen Close finished with 16 saves.

For North Dakota, Drew DeRidder made 35 saves while Jake Schmaltz finished with two points, scoring the game’s opening goal before adding an assist on Riese Gaber’s power-play goal late in the second period for his eighth multi-point game of his career.

No. 8 St. Cloud State 3, No. 2 Minnesota State 2

Second-ranked Minnesota State took a one-goal lead midway the second period but could not hold on as No. 8 St. Cloud State claimed a 3-2 victory over the visiting Mavericks Friday night at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center.

St. Cloud State led 1-0 after the first period of play when Zack Okabe’s shot found the back of the net at 13:30.

Minnesota State took a 2-1 lead during the second period on goals from Sam Morton and Tony Malinowski.

The Huskies knotted things up on a goal from Grant Cruikshank right before the end of the period and the two teams entered the locker room tied at 2-2 after 40 minutes of action.

Kyler Kupka tallied a power play goal 35 seconds into the third to take 3-2 lead and the Huskies held on the rest of the way.

Jaxon Castor made 30 saves for St. Cloud State and Keenan Rancier stopped 25 shots in the game for the Mavericks.

No. 4 Denver 4, No. 11 Providence 1

No. 4 Denver defeated the No. 11 Providence 4-1 on Friday night to open the weekend series at Magness Arena.

DU used three power-play goals to give Providence its first loss of the season, as Rieger Lorenz scored his first collegiate marker midway through the first period and Carter King and Massimo Rizzo also found the back of the net with the man advantage in the middle frame. Casey Dornbach also scored for the Pioneers.

“We showed a lot of maturity, especially in the third period,” said DU coach David Carle. “I thought the special teams were excellent in the second. Obviously, three power-play goals were a huge factor in the win. We spent a lot of time in their zone on the power plays because of our puck support and winning battles to extend in zone time. I thought the kill was good. On the opposite side, we made them break a lot of puck zones. Our special teams were huge.

“We didn’t win the special teams battle last weekend and then you talk about the maturity in the third period, it was a total team effort to be able to close it out.”

Shai Buium led the Pioneers with three assists while Mike Benning (two assists) and Dornbach (one goal, one assist) also posted multi-point performances. Goaltender Magnus Chrona made 25 saves in the victory.

Parker Ford tallied Providence’s only marker on the power play with 2:51 remaining the second period, cutting the deficit to 3-1 at the time.

No. 5 Michigan 5, Lake Superior State 2

Freshman phenom and top NHL draft prospect Adam Fantilli recorded a three-goal game to lead No. 5-ranked Michigan to a 5-2 victory over Lake Superior State on Friday evening at Taffy Abel Arena.

Erik Portillo had 26 saves in goal while Jacob Truscott recorded a four-point night, scoring once and adding three assists. Kienan Draper also scored for the Wolverines.

Jordan Venegoni and Brandon Puricelli scored for the Lakers, Jacob Bengtsson assisted on both, and Ethan Langenegger registered 35 saves in suffering the loss.

No. 6 Massachusetts 7, Union 1

No. 6 UMass had six different goal scorers and 13 different players record at least one point in the squad’s 7-1 victory over Union on Friday night at the Mullins Center.

“I got a lot of questions this week about if I was worried about a letdown after last weekend and I wasn’t going into tonight,” said UMass coach Greg Carvel. “I thought the kids practiced really hard all week and I’m impressed with this group. They’ve been very consistent. Tonight was a really solid 60 minutes other than a little bit of puck mismanagement, I didn’t think we gave up a lot. The special teams are outstanding. It’s great that we were able to get Henry Graham in there, but that was a really good follow up game after the highs of last weekend.

“It was a really solid game for the group.”

Minutemen goalie Luke Pavicich made 17 saves over the first 51:59 and Graham turned aside all five shots he faced over 8:01 between the pipes, his first collegiate action.

Kenny Connors scored twice with an assist and Ryan Lautenbach added a goal and a pair of helpers in the win. Ryan Ufko chipped in two assists and Cole O’Hara notched a goal and an assist. Single goals came from Linden Alger, Taylor Makar and Jerry Harding.

Bram Scheerer netted the lone Union goal and Connor Murphy stopped 32 shots in taking the loss between the pipes.

No. 14 Connecticut 4, No. 9 Boston University 3 (OT)

The 14th-ranked Huskies took down No. 9 Boston University Friday night on the road at Agganis Arena, 4-3 in overtime on an Andrew Lucas goal at the 56-second mark.

Lucas also had an assist for a two-point performance.

Nick Capone, Tristan Fraser and Ryan Tverberg also scored, Justin Pearson contributed two assists, and Logan Terness finished with 24 saves in getting the win in net.

For the Terriers, Jamie Armstrong went for a goal and an assist, Jeremy Wilmer and Case McCarthy added goals, and goalie Vinny Duplessis kicked out 26 shots.

Wisconsin 5, No. 10 Minnesota Duluth 2

Wisconsin overcame an early deficit to defeat No. 10 Minnesota Duluth 5-2 on Friday at Amsoil Arena.

NHL draft prospect Charlie Stramel scored his first NCAA goal for the Badgers, to go along with a goal and two assists from Jack Gorniak, a goal and a helper from Cruz Lucius, and single goals from Ty Smilanic and Owen Lindmark.

In goal, Jared Moe made 38 stops for the Badgers and Zach Stejskal turned aside 31 for the Bulldogs.

Luke Loheit and Blake Biondi scored the goals for UMD.

Bemidji State 5, Michigan Tech 2

Bemidji State defeated Michigan Tech 5-2 in the CCHA opener Friday at the MacInnes Student Ice Arena.

The Huskies led 2-0 before the Beavers responded with five straight.

“I thought we were pretty good in the first 5:00. Blake kept us in the game, but they brought it to a level that we may not be capable of getting to,” MTU coach Joe Shawhan said. “The goal getting called off was a big turning point, but the reality of it is, throughout the game, we were hanging on.”

Logan Ganie opened the scoring just 2:08 after puck drop for the Huskies and Michigan Tech scored again early in the second period when Ryland Mosley scored.

Lleyton Roed and Eric Martin scored two goals each for the Beavers and Mitchell Martan added a solo in the win.

Blake Pietila made 37 saves for the Huskies and Mattias Sholl stopped 17 for the Beavers.

RIT 4, Air Force 2

RIT’s Carter Wilkie tallied a goal and an assist while goaltender Tommy Scarfone stopped a season-high 36 shots in a 4-2 victory at Cadet Ice Arena Friday night to split the series.

Simon Isabelle scored a goal in his third consecutive game. Cody Laskosky assisted on Isabelle’s goal to extend his season-opening point-scoring streak to six games.

Gianfranco Cassaro registered two assists and leads the team with seven points on two goals and five assists over the Tigers’ last five games. Tanner Andrew and Tyler Mahan added goals for the Tigers.

For Air Force, Guy Blessing made 30 saves and Luke Rowe posted a goal and an assist. Parker Brown also scored.

USCHO Edge: After difficult week to handicap, oddsmakers limit number of heavy favorites among top-ranked teams

Riese Gaber has posted three goals and an assist through four games this season for North Dakota (photo: Mark Kuhlmann).

Last Friday’s games, which featured five matchups of nationally-ranked opponents, proved pretty difficult to handicap.

Of the eight USCHO staff, only four were above .500 and just one didn’t take a loss (nice job Jack Hittinger). For the first time in the two seasons of writing this column, we also had non-conference games that featured ties. Most sportsbooks will grade a non-conference tie as a push (conference play uses a shootout that counts towards standings, thus sportsbooks will use the shootout to determine the winner of the bet).

Once again this week, all 10 teams featured tonight are nationally ranked. You’ll notice on this week’s lines that favorites aren’t very heavily favored by the books. In fact, two of the five games are pick ’em and one has an even money (+100) underdog.

The reason for this? After three weeks it’s likely that the oddsmakers are getting smarter. When you’re talking the top 20, the difference between 1 and 20 is usually razor-thin (Quinnipiac’s tie and win last weekend at North Dakota is a good example as DraftKings had the Fighting Hawks a -180 favorite going into last Friday.

For bettors who like to hit the heavy underdogs hard, this hurts you as you can’t make as much. If you tend to like favorites, you won’t have to spend as much to win a single-unit bet.

Advice: don’t let this change your betting strategy. If you’re up 4-5 units through two weeks, keep on keeping on. Only alter a betting strategy when you can identify problems, like underestimating certain teams.

Here are this week’s breakdowns:

All odds courtesy of DraftKings Sportsbook:

No. 14 Connecticut (-115) at No. 9 Boston University (-115); o/u 5.5

UConn continues to be an early-season darling of the oddsmakers, and for the second straight Friday the Huskies are a pick ’em, this time against Boston University on the road.

BU has been the more unpredictable team through the first few weeks, none more than last weekend. After Friday’s game went off the rails at Michigan, a 9-2 loss, BU responded with a gut-check, 3-2 victory against the Wolverines on Sunday.

The question you need to ponder is which BU team shows up. You can expect a consistent effort from UConn. But if you get the best of BU, is consistent enough for the Huskies?

Jim
Ed
John
Dan
Chris
Jack
Matt
Paula
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AHA
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B1G

No. 7 North Dakota (+120) at No. 1 Minnesota (-150); o/u 6

Minnesota and North Dakota is one of the best rivalries in college hockey. While these are non-conference games as opposed to the old WCHA days, that doesn’t change the intensity.

The Gophers ascended to the top position in the USCHO poll this week despite not playing a week ago. North Dakota dropped from 3rd to 7th after the disappointing weekend against Quinnipiac.

So which team should be more motivated? A lot of this might come down to which team starts strong. If Minnesota comes out guns blazing, the atmosphere at 3M Arena might be enough to propel the Gophers. If North Dakota takes the Gophers faithful out of the game early, it could be advantage Fighting Hawks.

The one bet I like here is the over. I’d prefer for it to be 5.5 as the over/under which would produce a winner at 6, but alas 6 is a the number which slightly favors as push.

Jim
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No. 17 Western Michigan (-130) at No. 13 Notre Dame (+100); o/u 6

Notre Dame is an underdog… which pays even money. It seems counter-intuitive.

But that is the world of sports betting we’re dealing with these days. Sportsbooks want their edge and that’s the best way to guarantee a few bucks for the books if they take equal action.

The price for Notre Dame isn’t exactly appealing given how inconsistent the Irish have been this season. But I’m also not sure what we know about Western Michigan having faved Alaska Anchorage, Ferris State and Bowling Green to date.

Even the over/under in this game feels dangerous. The Broncos seem to always dance right around that 5-6 goal total. Notre Dame’s defense has been suspect all season, which would tend to favor the over. But this is Notre Dame’s first test since a 5-2 loss to Denver to start the season.

Jim
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Paula
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No. 11 Providence (+170) at No. 4 Denver (-210); o/u 6

Providence is the heaviest underdog this week (and conversely, Denver is the heaviest favorite), but this one doesn’t surprise me.

Denver has to be hungry after being swept on the road last weekend by Massachusetts. And while Providence is coming off an impressive 2-1 victory over Northeastern, long travel combined with a Pioneers team that should be seeking blood early makes the Friars a difficult pick here.

That said, there is a formula for a Friars win: Frustrate the Pioneers early. Last weekend, Denver scored just two goals, both coming with an extra attacker late in Friday’s game. If Denver isn’t able to score early, you could see them begin to grip their sticks a little tight and make create the opportunity for Providence to pull off the upset.

Jim
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No. 2 Minnesota State (-115) at No. 8 St. Cloud State (-115); o/u 5.5

Minnesota State might be the most battle-tested team in the country thus far, and St. Cloud State as the next opponent won’t change that much.

And while the host Huskies are one of the few remaining teams that are unbeaten and untied, their four wins have come across St. Thomas and Wisconsin, not exactly world beaters.

That’s why I like the experience of a Mavericks team that has faced current number one, Minnesota, as well as Minnesota Duluth, going 3-1-0 in that stretch.

I wouldn’t be surprised if this was a low-scoring series, thus the 5.5 over/under is well set. This could easily be a 2-1 or 3-1 game as neither of these clubs surrender too many goals.

Jim
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UConn-BU, Minnesota State-St. Cloud are tossups, Denver’s a heavy favorite: USCHO Edge podcast Season 1 Episode 3

USCHO Edge hosts Jim Connelly, Dan Rubin, and Ed Trefzger analyze five games among top 20 D-I college hockey teams, looking at money lines and over/under as well as giving an in-depth look at the matchups. We also discuss how much of a home ice advantage there is and whether distractions at home help the visiting team.

This week’s games:

• No. 14 Connecticut at No. 9 Boston University

• No. 7 North Dakota at No. 1 Minnesota

• No. 17 Western Michigan at No. 13 Notre Dame

• No. 11 Providence at No. 4 Denver

• No. 2 Minnesota State at No. 8 St. Cloud State

This college hockey podcast is sponsored by DCU – Digital Federal Credit Union – at dcu.org.

Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Check out all of USCHO’s podcasts, including USCHO Weekend Review and USCHO Spotlight, plus our entire podcast archive.

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Home ice proving to be integral part of winning recipe early on for Bentley

Connor Hasley has shown steady play between the pipes so far this season for Bentley (photo: Bentley Athletics).

Bentley, like many Atlantic Hockey schools, expects to feel some growing pains early in the season.

It will take time to gel with 13 new players on the roster.

The Falcons took a big step last Saturday, defeating Maine 5-1 at Bentley Arena in front of a packed house. The impact of new players was on display with rookie goaltender Connor Hasley winning his first collegiate start with 33 saves, and goals by three new players: senior Josh Latta (a transfer from UMass Lowell) as well as freshmen Stephen Castagna and Nicholas Niemo.

Sophomore Harrison Scott scored two goals, getting the Falcons on the board in the first period, and adding an insurance goal in the second.

After opening the season with losses on the road at Boston University and Union, home ice provided a welcome pickup.

“It was great to see this new group get the win,” said Bentley coach Ryan Soderquist. “Getting back to our home environment and getting the energy and support of our fans.”

Hasley, in his first start, played well.

“He did a really nice job of playing simple and squared to the puck,” said Soderquist. “He had a lot of pucks hit him through traffic because his positioning was good. He stayed very poised throughout the game.”

Bentley is in the midst of a stretch of seven non-conference games to open the season. Soderquist says he expects to evaluate his team over that stretch, including goaltending.

“It’s been planned over the course of the first seven games to see multiple goalies,” he said. “We recruited Connor knowing that he can be a starter in Division I. He showed that.”

Bentley is among several Atlantic Hockey teams to play the majority of their non-conference games early in the season. While that gives coaches an opportunity to tinker with lineups without league points on the line, they must strike a balance between the important PairWise implications of out-of-conference games.

“I do like to have at least four (non-conference games) to start the year,” said Soderquist. “We knew when scheduling this season that we’d have a big turnover, with nine freshmen and four transfers. We had the chance to slip in some additional non-conference games early.”

As far as the importance of non-conference games to the league overall, Soderquist said, “My job is to give Bentley the best advantage. We are always trying to win, but these games also give us a chance to see what we have. With new guys, it’s a two-way street. New players are adjusting to us, and coaches have to adjust to new guys to see how they play, who they play best with, and find their roles.”

Next up for the Falcons is a Thursday-Friday series at Ohio State. Football tends to drive the athletic schedule at schools like OSU, and there’s a home game for the football Buckeyes on Saturday.

“I don’t mind the Thursday-Friday,” said Soderquist. “Ohio State is a veteran team with skilled forwards who are pretty tenacious. It’s a great opportunity for us to show who we are.”

Around the league

– You hear it all the time for Atlantic Hockey coaches: “Anyone can beat anyone in this league”. An example was this past Tuesday when visiting Holy Cross defeated American International, 7-3. The Crusaders were picked to finish tenth in the pre-season coaches’ poll; the four-time regular season champion Yellow Jackets were picked to finish first.

– Attendance is up across college hockey this season, and we saw some good crowds in AHA barns this past weekend. Rochester Institute of Technology played its annual Brick City Homecoming game at downtown Rochester’s Blue Cross Arena, defeating Union on Saturday, 8-5, in front of 8,766 fans. Mercyhurst drew 1,100 (85 percent capacity) at the Mercyhurst Ice Center for a 4-1 loss to Penn State. And Bentley’s win over Maine was in front of 1,600 fans at Bentley Arena.

– The league went 4-6 in non-conference play last weekend, not spectacular but better than the previous two weekends. Canisius’ 3-2 win over Rensselaer on Tuesday also helps. Non-conference games this weekend include Bentley at Ohio State, Miami at Canisius, Mercyhurst at Clarkson, Lindenwood at AIC, Holy Cross at Vermont, and Army West Point at New Hampshire.

This Week in CCHA Hockey: Staying in Minnesota for first few series means Minnesota State enjoying a ‘great challenge’

Cade Borchardt had a goal and two assists in Minnesota State’s 6-0 win over Minnesota Duluth last Friday (photo: Wisch/LPH).20

Minnesota State did the CCHA double a year ago, winning both the regular season and tournament title.

The Mavericks were also 20 minutes away from their first NCAA Division I title.

While all three of those are certainly in MSU’s sights this season, there’s another, more unofficial title the Mavericks can win this season: Minnesota state champion.

Granted, this is not in any way an official title. But consider this: For the first time since the breakup of the old WCHA in 2013, the Mavericks are playing all five of their instate rivals in two-game regular-season series.

MSU went 1-1 against Minnesota in a home-and-home series on opening weekend, swept Minnesota Duluth last week in Mankato and now plays their third-straight series against a Minnesota team this weekend in a road series against St. Cloud State. And if a pesky Oct. 28-29 series with Bowling Green wasn’t in the way, it would be four straight games against instate teams – the Mavs take on St. Thomas in the first of two CCHA series in the first weekend in November.

In other words, you might as well just bring the North Star College Cup out of whatever closet the UMD Bulldogs shoved it in when they won the final edition of the tournament in 2017.

“It’s a little unique. Last year we go out to UMass, we’ve got some different opportunities in the nonconference, so for us to be able to string together these three series with University of Minnesota, Duluth and then now St. Cloud, I know I haven’t seen that previously, or I can’t recall it, and I don’t see it happening down the road, so it’s a unique opportunity,” MSU coach Mike Hastings said.

The Minnesota schools have played one another on a rotating basis since realignment, but due to the nature of nonconference scheduling it doesn’t always line up this way for the teams to play every season. The Huskies, for instance, played St. Thomas to start the year and take on Bemidji State in a home-and-home next weekend.

“It’s a great opportunity, not just for our players but for our fans,” Hastings said. “Obviously we share a lot with our sister school in St. Cloud. For myself, there’s guys at every program I have a lot of respect for that I consider my peer group, also being my friends. Having an opportunity to compete against them, some of our guys here from the state of Minnesota, playing against teams that have a lot of guys from our state. So we’re just embracing it.

“It’s been a good journey here for the first two weekends, and it’s a great challenge for us. We’re not having to travel coast to coast, we’re not having to get on a plane, we’re getting on a bus within a couple hours. I think [many people] in the state of hockey wouldn’t mind seeing there being a little bit more of this and having it be a little more of a norm rather than an outlier when it comes to us being able to play within our borders.”

The Mavs and Huskies split their series in Mankato last season, and the year before that they met in the 2021 Frozen Four semifinal in Pittsburgh, with St. Cloud winning 5-4.

The major difference between the two teams in their previous meetings? Dryden McKay. The 2022 Hobey Baker Award winner graduated this spring, and so far Hastings has played two different goalies back-to-back in their two weekend series so far. Sophomore Keenan Rancier played both games against the Minnesota Gophers, giving up five goals with a save percentage of .902. Freshman Alex Tracy was in the net for the series against UMD; he gave up just one goal and made 31 saves on the weekend, picking up CCHA rookie of the week honors in the process. Also on the roster is freshman Andrew Miller.

Hastings isn’t sure yet if any of the three had done enough to earn the title of “Unquestioned starting goaltender;” instead, it seems like the Mavericks are taking it game-by-game.

“We’re going to hopefully let those three guys sort it out through their play,” Hastings said. “If I rewound the last two weeks, I didn’t know I was going to go back-to-back with Rancier, I didn’t know I was going to go back-to-back with Tracy. Those guys, with their play, influenced my decision. So I think I’m going to stay with that right now until somebody really steps forward and takes the ball.”

As MSU’s final nonconference series until January at Artizona State, this will be the last chance the Mavericks have to really earn some quality Pairwise wins until then. The Huskies are 4-0 after sweeps of St. Thomas and Wisconsin.

“If you’re going to go win a hockey game in that building, you’re going to have to go earn it, and that’s the challenge that faces us this week,” Hastings said.

This Week in NCHC Hockey: Omaha gaining early-season steam with focus on commitment, character

Matt Miller, Cameron Berg and Jack Randl will be relied upon this season to be leaders at Omaha (photo: Omaha Athletics).

Not only is sixth-year Omaha coach Mike Gabinet one of the most experienced people on the Mavericks’ bench, but his history with the program also goes back longer than most.

He spent four seasons (2000-04) at UNO, played 30 games as a freshman in only the Mavericks’ fourth year of existence and then captained them as a senior. As an alumnus from nearly the beginning, even Gabinet sounded taken aback that it wasn’t until Saturday’s 4-4 tie at Lake Superior State that UNO, for the first time in the program’s 25-year history, erased a four-goal deficit.

“It’s a testimony to the character and work ethic of our group, and in particular our leadership group,” Gabinet said Wednesday, looking back on a series where UNO won and tied against one of its olden-days CCHA rivals.

“The energy on our bench and the mindset of our players was pretty extraordinary, especially with such adversity so quickly and early in the game. To be able to battle back and ultimately tie the game, and I thought we had multiple chances to actually win it, as well, it speaks to the commitment and character of the group we have.”

One of UNO’s alternate captains, senior forward Jack Randl, scored Saturday’s tying goal and helped create the Mavericks’ third goal of the night.

Lake State’s 4-0 lead after 20 minutes came thanks to two power-play goals and another one shorthanded, but Kirby Proctor and Tyler Rollwagen halved the deficit with goals six minutes apart early in the second. Randl and Matt Miller, another Mavericks alternate, provided assists on Berg’s snapshot that found its way into the LSSU net.

Randl then tipped home an initial shot from Berg with 6:55 left in regulation. The Mavericks couldn’t find a winning goal, but they minimized LSSU’s chances. The Lakers had outshot UNO 12-7 in the first period, but only managed five more shots on target over the rest of the game.

A tie that felt like a win for the visitors came one night after UNO beat the Lakers 3-1 in Friday’s season opener. Randl and Tyler Weiss scored in the third period, breaking a tie that LSSU forced after canceling out Ty Mueller’s opening goal in the second.

Gabinet saw the Mavericks’ unbeaten weekend in Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., as a good response following UNO’s two 4-3 home losses to Niagara on Oct. 7-8. UNO had hammered preseason No. 3 Minnesota State 7-2 in the teams’ exhibition game Oct. 1, so many were surprised to see the red Mavericks get swept by a Niagara team picked to finish ninth in Atlantic Hockey.

“I thought we did some good things against Niagara and weren’t rewarded for it, but if you look at it analytically, we probably should’ve came away with better results than we did,” Gabinet said. “With a young team, it’s important that you remind them they’re doing a lot of right things, and there’s no systems for turnovers or things like that, so we have to clean up a couple crucial mistakes, but we’re doing a lot of right things and we have to make sure the players still believe in themselves and understand that sometimes the games go that way.

“The most important thing is, ‘What are you doing on a day-to-day basis?’ That was our message out of Niagara, just to stick with it. We have to focus on our rate of learning, and how fast we can learn and develop.”

Gabinet’s Mavericks play at home this weekend to another old CCHA foe, Alaska.

This Week in ECAC Hockey: With huge win over North Dakota, Quinnipiac looking to play with ‘that passion every game’

Quinnipiac players celebrate a goal at North Dakota last weekend (photo: Russell Hons).

There’s a certain level of required dissatisfaction that exists with national championship contenders in college hockey.

They exist on a plane that other teams aspire to reach, but their ability to annually compete is built around an idea that winning, while expected, is never taken for granted. It sounds basic enough to fulfill a cliche, but the notion is designed to help even the most experienced winner disarm an ego while simultaneously reteaching the requirements of how to start a season at the ground level.

That entire, basic belief is how Rand Pecknold and Quinnipiac have been able to rediscover their groove on an annual basis, and this past weekend, the Bobcats took a giant step forward when they claimed a dominant 6-2 win during a non-conference weekend series at North Dakota.

“For October games, I don’t think I’ve ever been involved in anything that’s had that kind of emotion on both nights from both teams,” Pecknold said. “It was a big-time atmosphere, and I wouldn’t even say it felt like a regional; it felt like the Frozen Four. There was a great build-up by both teams and by both coaching staffs to get their teams ready.”

The win on Saturday answered a number of early season questions that surrounded Quinnipiac and, to a degree, the ECAC Hockey conference at large by stoking the fires around an opponent that was ranked third in the nation. The Fighting Hawks had only played two games against Holy Cross, but the weekend came on the heels of a surprising 2-2 tie against LIU.

The Bobcats additionally had squandered two, three-goal leads in Friday’s game against North Dakota. There was a 3-0 lead in the first period and a 4-1 lead in the second period, but four unanswered goals by four different goal scorers over less than 15 minutes of game clock turned the score on its head before the halfway point of the third period. Needing to rally, senior CJ McGee’s third career goal tied a 5-5 result that eventually saw North Dakota win a shootout for posterity.

“The Friday game was emotionally a roller coaster,” Pecknold said. “They dominated, and we really struggled. We had some players that, for whatever reason, weren’t playing well, and we weren’t managing the puck well. North Dakota just kept coming, and it was crazy. But then Saturday was a huge win for us.”

It didn’t start dominant after North Dakota built a 2-1 lead in the first period, but the way Quinnipiac engaged and imposed its will over the next two periods likely raised some eyebrows among future headlining opponents. The offense scored three goals in four minutes, including two in 19 seconds, to build a 4-2 lead, and Desi Burgart added some flair when his first goal of the season capped an exchange that undressed the North Dakota defense with passing wizardry.

“My disappointment on Friday was our puck management,” Pecknold said. “We’d have a one-on-four and try to toe-drag a kid. That would lead to a turnover, and then we’d spend 25 seconds in the defensive zone. That’s not how we play. We want to defend by having the puck, and we defend by playing offense. That’s our big thing, and that’s my big sell to our players, and we didn’t do a good job of that. North Dakota, on Friday night, was [playing] dump-and-chase the entire game.

“It works, but the reason they had the puck so much was because we just weren’t managing it in the neutral zone.”

The win once again merged Quinnipiac into the national conversation and staked a claim to the No. 1 national ranking after the Bobcats moved into the No. 3 slot in the weekly poll with a road trip to Maine on the horizon. Having now beaten Boston College and North Dakota as a visiting team, the highest-ranked undefeated team vaulted over Denver, which lost to UMass while occupying the top slot, and earned three first place votes behind Minnesota and Minnesota State while simultaneously establishing a foothold for an ECAC Hockey league still fighting its way out of last year’s doldrums.

“Anytime you have two top-10 teams playing, it elevates the [profile],” Pecknold said. “What I’ve noticed over the last little while is that pretty much everybody we play and everywhere we go, home or away, we’ve been a top-10 program, but players get excited to play a top-10 game. When you have both teams that are top-10, it just escalates the emotions and passion. Every play matters [and] we want that passion every game. I think that’s a strength of ours that we typically have in most games. Certainly, last year, we had it a lot. We’d go play a team that we were supposed to beat, and we were excited to play them and respected them. We had to grind out of a lot of wins last year.”

“We talk a lot as a team about attacking adversity. That’s what’s created when you go on the road. Sometimes it’s even going to play a weaker opponent on the road, where the rinks are not great or there aren’t fans. That’s adversity when you don’t have an atmosphere to get you fired up. Anytime you go on the road, you need that adversity early in the season because you’re going to face a lot of it come playoff time. Even among the players, you need to learn how to deal with it, and even your veteran players have to re-learn it because they’ve dealt with it before. It’s just a maturation process, so anything you can get in a situation at BC or North Dakota, it’s an outstanding learning experience.”

No. 3 Quinnipiac plays at Maine this weekend with a 7 p.m. start on Saturday and a 4 p.m. start on Sunday. Following this weekend, ECAC Hockey play opens with a home series against Colgate and Cornell on Nov. 4-5.

UMass head coach Greg Carvel on this year’s Minutemen, staying at the top: USCHO Spotlight Season 5 Episode 3

Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined by Massachusetts head coach Greg Carvel, talking last weekend’s sweep of then-No. 1 Denver, staying at the top of D-I college hockey, this year’s Minutemen, and this coming weekend’s games with Union.

This college hockey podcast is sponsored by DCU – Digital Federal Credit Union – at dcu.org.

Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Check out all of USCHO’s podcasts, including USCHO Weekend Review and USCHO Edge, plus our entire podcast archive.

This Week in Big Ten Hockey: Winless Wisconsin not getting discouraged as Badgers have ‘lots of things to build off of’ going forward

Dominick Mersch is serving as Wisconsin’s captain this season (photo: Greg Anderson).

Everyone in the Big Ten has played at least four games.

Every team in the Big Ten, with one exception, has at least two wins to start the season.

That exception is Wisconsin, which is 0-4 to start the season.

The Badgers opened 2022-23 with 3-1 and 4-3 road losses to Ohio State. In each game, Wisconsin gave up late third-period power-play goals, including the game-tying marker in Ohio State’s come-from-behind Saturday win.

After that series, coach Tony Granato acknowledged that his team played better as the weekend progressed but made it clear that Wisconsin was going into its nonconference series against St. Cloud State last weekend with an imperative to win.

“Those moral victories, they don’t mean anything to our team right now,” said Granato. “We’ve got to get victories. Learning from what just happened and now applying it is the most important thing. We’ve got to apply the lessons that we’ve learned, immediately. It’s not a month or so down the road [that] we’ve got to be better. We’ve got to be better.

“We can’t wait 10 games to see what kind of team we have. We’ve got to get that going and be our best real fast.”

At home against St. Cloud last weekend, the Badgers didn’t get the results that they wanted, but Granato said that the games did bring noticeable improvement. After losing to the Huskies 5-1 Friday, the Badgers dropped Saturday’s rematch 2-1.

“We had a really solid game Saturday,” said Granato. “We thought we played really well, deserved a little better. That doesn’t make anybody feel any better, but it gives us a little focus heading into the weekend. If we can play the same game and repeat the consistency we had in that game, we’ll get our results. That’s the way we have to stay with it. We played well. We just didn’t win.”

The last time Wisconsin began a season with four losses was in 2014-15 when the Badgers went 1-8-1 through their first 10 games, the first eight of those being losses. That ninth game was a 1-1 tie against Ferris State, and through those first nine starts, Wisconsin was held to one or fewer goals five times, averaging 1.33 goals per game through that opening stretch.

The Badgers went on to win just four games that season, which was the opening act to the end of Mike Eaves’ career behind the Wisconsin bench. Under Eaves, the Badgers had eight wins in 2015-16, Eaves’ last season.

There is nothing to suggest that Wisconsin will suffer a similar fate this season, and Granato was justifiably optimistic about the way the Badgers responded to Friday’s loss to St. Cloud with a solid effort Saturday. One especially bright spot from Saturday’s game was the play of junior goaltender Kyle McClellan, who made 25 saves in his first game as a Badger after transferring from Mercyhurst. Another was the way that Wisconsin responded to allowing yet another third-period power-play goal.

“I thought individually, our performances were outstanding,” said Granato. “I thought the way we worked together as a group was outstanding. I thought that even though some things happened in the game that could break a team didn’t. We kept going. Even after they scored on the late power-play goal, I thought the last four minutes of the game, we went back after. We had our chances to get even.

“There were lots of good things from our end.”

Kyler Kupka had the game winner on the power play for the Huskies at 13:58 in the third Saturday, just over five minutes after defenseman Corson Ceulemans earned his first goal of the season, an even-strength tally that evened up the game at 1-1. Wisconsin outshot St. Cloud 9-4 in that third period, marking just the second time this season that the Badgers bested an opponent in shots in a given stanza.

Trailing 3-1 in the third period of Friday’s loss, the Badgers allowed a power-play goal at 15:11, a little over two minutes after scoring themselves. The Huskies added an even-strength goal 1:16 later.

“In general, the big thing in the first four games is our power play and penalty kill,” said Granato. “We’ve got to get better in those areas. I think our five-on-five play has been really solid, our coverage in D-zone with the exception of a few minutes at the end of the [Friday] St. Cloud game has been pretty solid, so there’s been lots of things to build off of, but the special teams have to produce for us and win us games.”

Wisconsin is 1 for 12 on the power play (83.3 percent) and has allowed five power-play goals on 15 opponent chances (66.7 percent).

Granato said that one area that is rock solid for Wisconsin is the core leadership on the team, including three fifth-year players. Captain Dominick Mersch and alternates Brock Caufield and Jack Gorniak are now all graduate students at Wisconsin. They’re joined by alternate captains Mattieu De St. Phalle and Anthony Kehrer, both juniors.

“I will compliment those guys in a big way because they’ve been that way for the last year plus,” said Granato. “Last year, everyone expected us to follow up that Big Ten season, that championship season, with a good year.”

The Badgers were the regular-season B1G conference champions for 2020-21 with an overall record of 20-10-1. Wisconsin finished the 2021-22 season tied for fifth in the Big Ten with an overall record of 10-24-3.

“Last year was a struggle, but the one thing you can say is that our team stayed together and battled through it and guys understood that part of the process is dealing with tough times,” Granato said. “If you can stick together through those, eventually, you’ll get out of it.”

After the season-opening losses to Ohio State, Granato said that the returning veterans have a sense of urgency this year.

“We’ve got great older players,” said Granato. “We’ve got three fifth-year guys that are all part of our captaincy group. Those guys know that. This is their last chance to get 35, 40 games left as Badgers, and they want to make the most of it.”

The Badgers travel to Minnesota Duluth this weekend, or as Granato put it, “Big-time program, big-time team.” Granato said that while Wisconsin’s early schedule is challenging, the Badgers have “another opportunity to get on track and we’ll try to do that Friday night.”

NCAA Division I Women’s Hockey: Wednesday Women with guest Lindsay Glavan – Chatting CHA, rookies and early impressions

Nicole: Hi friends! Welcome to the first Wednesday Women of the 2022-23 hockey season. Arlan informed me at the end of last season that he was ready to fully retire, so these will have a slightly different look this season. But before I get into that, let me say a hearty and sincere thank you to Arlan for all he has done for me and for women’s college hockey. Not only has he been an amazing advocate for the sport with his coverage for so many years, but he has been a great mentor and friend to me who was always willing to answer questions and share his vast knowledge. Folks on the Fan Forum know he is always sharing what he’s learned and giving historical context. We’re all smarter about this sport because of him. 

The plan for this season with Wednesday Women is for me to bring on guest writers every few weeks who can share some unique insight. I’ve always loved the ability to drill down into teams, schedules and stats through this column so I started off looking for people that could talk in depth about a specific conference. 

Lindsay (Dellow) Glavan played in 139 games at Mercyhurst from 2001-2005. She’s an active Fan Forum poster, adding her unique perspective as a former player. It was a no-brainer to ask her to join me for a few Wednesday Women’s this season. The plan is to talk about whatever makes sense in the moment, but with a focus on the CHA. 

Welcome, Lindsay and thanks for joining me! Is there anything you think people need to know about you?

Lindsay: Hi Nicole! Thanks for the welcome and the invite to participate. I echo your gratitude to Arlan for his contributions to women’s hockey coverage and encouragement to all who enjoy talking about the game. 

I’m a women’s hockey fan based out of northeast Ohio. As a proud former Laker, I naturally follow the Mercyhurst Lakers and the CHA, but enjoy following the national scene as well. My ‘why’ for being a fan is simply that hockey makes me happy and is part of who I am. My playing days are long over but there is no need to leave the game. Thanks to coverage that has evolved over the years led by people like yourself and Arlan and technology to stream games it makes being an out of town fan possible. So here I am! 

Being a fan is a way for me to celebrate something good in my world. I savor the chance to rest and watch a game, to take time to appreciate the opportunities the student athletes are getting, and to enjoy how they continue to push the upper limits of on ice skill and speed. 

Nicole: Awesome! Let’s jump right in. Which CHA team has stood out to you so far?

Lindsay: Conference play has yet to start in the CHA so the focus has been on what each team is doing in non-conference play. Penn State’s start has been the biggest story so far.

The details of their 3-4-1 record reveal a program that is playing a challenging schedule and is on the rise. The losses are one each to University of Minnesota Duluth and Wisconsin and a pair to Colgate, all top ten ranked teams. The win over then ranked #3 Wisconsin and  at St. Lawrence and the win and tie at then #14 Boston College were all program firsts for Penn State. Penn State has had non-conference success before under Coach Jeff Kampersal; what stands out this year is how quickly they banged out each of these milestones, the higher ranking of the opponents, and how they’ve continued to become a better skating team with better team speed.

In a crowded top ten it’s not clear where Penn State (or anyone) exactly fits in the polls, but the early results indicate the team is better than they were last year. For now they are ranked 12th in the USCHO poll.

I’ll get to Tessa Janecke shortly, but first want to mention Penn State’s transfer players: Courtney Correia from Boston University, and Eleri MacKay from Colgate. Both are fifth years and have assumed roles on the top two lines. Correia, who led BU in goals last year, scored a hat trick in the win over St. Lawrence. The experience of both players should help the Nittany Lions throughout the season.

Through eight games, freshman Tessa Janecke leads the team in points with seven, as well as shots with 31. Most recently, she had a two goal game against BC including a short handed goal. Junior captain Kiara Zanon is close behind Janecke with 6 points and 29 shots, second on the team in both categories.

The 4-1 season opening win against Wisconsin is in the rear view mirror, but Tessa Janecke’s first college game has to be the most impressive college debut I’ve ever seen. For starters, Coach Kampersal played her in all situations right from the first puck drop. Janecke scored Penn State’s first goal of the season, and later got a power play goal. Kampersal relied on her in the final minutes of the game to help defend the six on five when Wisconsin’s net was empty. Janecke responded by assisting Julie Gough on an empty net goal. 

In her first ever college game, Tessa Janecke led the Nittany Lions in points, shots, blocked shots, face off wins, and even penalty minutes. All of this against a Wisconsin team featuring five players with senior US Women’s National Team experience, including two Olympians. Wisconsin resoundingly defeated Penn State the next day, but Janecke and the Nittany Lions shone on opening night.

I recall big season opening upsets in previous years; in 2008 unranked Robert Morris stole a win at Minnesota, and in 2017 unranked Merrimack did the same, also against Minnesota. What I don’t recall is a freshman making their college debut being the one to lead their team to victory against one of the best teams in the country. Since the Wisconsin series Janecke added four more points, all against ranked teams. It’s very early and undoubtedly she’ll experience adversity at some point this year but the future is bright for the freshman from Orangeville, Illinois. The challenge for the coaching staff will be to develop her game alongside the rest of the team so that she can elevate the play of those around her, helping the team be greater than the sum of its parts rather than a team that relies on a few players to carry the load.

Next up the Nittany Lions host the 1-2 Franklin Pierce Ravens. Depending on the outcome of game one of the series, I wonder if Penn State will start a goalie other than Josie Bothun in game two. Bothun has been critical to Penn State’s success in recent years, and has started 62 consecutive games for the team. I’m interested to see if Kampersal feels the team has progressed to a point where Bothun can get a rest. 

I wrote a lot about Janecke as I’ve been watching her in the CHA. Are there other freshmen nationally that you’ve noticed are off to a great start?

Nicole: I’ve been really impressed with Penn State. I was amongst those that were sad not to see them carry over their pandemic year success last season. It seems they just needed a year to put it all together. I spoke with Kampersal after that first weekend on his philosophy with his non-conference schedule and I really like that he’s thinking about this and having a long-term plan. He absolutely wants the path of least resistance with a CHA tournament win and the auto-bid, but with the expanded tournament, there is an additional option and he wants to put his team in the best possible place for both. The tough non-conference schedule elevates their game early and should help them through the conference schedule and gives them some national clout when it comes to calculations and poll positioning. 

I’m glad you went long on Janecke and how truly impressive her opening weeks have been. I think a few other U18 team players had some more hype coming into the season, but she’s done the best job of transitioning and being immediately impactful. I think her choice of Penn State might have surprised people, but it’s exactly this that shows why it would be appealing. She’s not on a third line. She’s not trying to scratch out a role. She’s the focus of the offense. Time will tell if that translates to end of season success. 

It feels a little unfair to talk about KK Harvey (I know much of the international broadcasts were spent calling her Caroline, but she goes by KK) when we’re talking about other interesting and impressive rookies, since she just turned 20 and has two IIHF Women’s World Championships and an Olympics under her belt, but she is only eight games into her collegiate career. She leads the country with 11 assists and her 14 points are tied for second overall. Wisconsin’s early schedule has certainly helped, but for me it’s not necessarily the overall gaudy numbers, but the fact that she’s tallied points in six of the team’s eight games. She’s also scored in each of their last three. 

Other standouts have included Josefin Bouveng at Minnesota and Thea Johansson at Mercyhurst (each with 3g, 4a), Madison Chantler at Quinnipiac and Reichen Kirchmair at Providence, each of whom have five goals, which is tied for 9th best in the country. I also want to mention RIT’s Lexi Sung, who’s tied for second in the CHA in assists per game. 

One of my favorite parts of this conference is how close the teams have been historically and how no one can assume a weekend sweep. We’ve focused on how good Penn State is, but which team do you think gives them the most competition for the conference crown? 

Lindsay: Right now I believe Mercyhurst gives Penn State the most competition for the conference crown because of the key players Syracuse lost to graduation. 

Mercyhurst returned their top two point scorers in Vanessa Upson and Sara Boucher, and freshman Thea Johansson is making an immediate impact. The 5-3 Lakers look like a typical Laker team so far. They’ve won the games they should win, picked up a split with then #10 Clarkson, and took some lumps against Colgate. They play well positionally, play motivated, and will try to grind out wins. They aren’t likely to be prolific scorers, but historically Penn State hasn’t been either, which will help the Lakers contend if they can find a way to contain Penn State’s speed.

Meanwhile, Syracuse lost three of their top five point scorers at the end of last season, including two time CHA Defender of the Year Jessica DiGirolamo. You noted in your season preview that DiGirolamo led shots on goal for the Orange by a wide margin last year. Sure enough Syracuse’s shots per game this year have declined from 32.3 to 20.4. The Orange have faced quality opponents so far so their 1-6 record doesn’t faze me too much as it relates to conference play, but they’ll need to find a way to get more shots if they want to repeat as conference champions. On the positive the Orange have a power play clicking at 20.3% and have scored 6 power play goals, the most of any CHA team. While the team scored 3 goals total in their first 4 games, they’ve scored 7 goals in their last 3 games. It’s possible that the shots will resolve itself once they are playing in conference and as first year head coach Britni Smith gains experience each week, but the decline seems drastic enough that it might be a red flag. 

What are your thoughts on which CHA team will challenge Penn State? Are you sticking with your prediction that Syracuse will finish second in the league for now? As you said the teams are quite close historically, so it’s hard to predict.

Nicole: I just really want to use your reasoning of it’s too early and we haven’t had any conference matchups to get out of this question, to be honest. I definitely don’t feel like I have a handle on any of these teams yet.

It has been a rough go of it so far for Syracuse, with their only win coming in overtime over Merrimack. They’re averaging just 1.4 goals per game so far, which isn’t really going to get it done no matter the opponent. Yes they’ve played some tough, ranked teams early on, but I have to rethink my rankings right now. 

You’ll be happy to note that I basically never think we can count Mercyhurst out. But that feels especially true now that they’ve seemed to follow up one standout rookie with another in Thea Johansson. In addition, their sophomores have really stepped it up in their second year so far. I think we were all so focused on Upson that we didn’t appreciate the young group around her. Now they’ve got some experience and there doesn’t seem to be any transition for them to be comfortable this season. Most importantly, in my opinion, is that their production is spread out. There’s a depth that we haven’t seen from the Lakers in the past few seasons and that makes them much more dangerous. I expect we’ll become more familiar with Chantal Ste-Croix and Marielle Parks, among others. 

You might be able to give more analysis here, but Mike Sisti seems to always have his teams peak at the right time. One thing I feel like I can count on from Mercyhurst is visible improvement from the beginning of the season to the end. The fact that I feel like I really like how they look right now bodes well for what they can accomplish come February and March. 

Earlier we focused on Janecke and rookies, but have any other players stood out to you? Let’s ask specifically in the CHA and then also nationwide? 

Lindsay: That’s the spirit Nicole! Never count Mercyhurst out. I smiled when I read that because never counting your team out is half the fun of this whole endeavor of being a fan. I also smile because I know come conference tournament time anyone can win, as we’ve seen with three different CHA tournament champions in the past three years.  

Two other Lakers who have impressed me are sophomore defender Sydney Pedersen, and freshman Makayla Javier. Pedersen is offensive minded as far as Laker defenders go and she’s having a great start with six points in eight games. Javier is a freshman who is getting significant minutes on the blue line, something else we don’t always see with Mercyhurst rosters.

Morgan Neitzke of the Lindenwood Lions is a player I noticed within the context of that team. She finished third in points for the Lions last year as a freshman, and kicked off this season with a four point weekend at Bemidji. The Lions graduated their program all time points leader Sierra Burt last year, and will look to Morgan Neitzke to lead the offense this year. 

RIT has picked up Amy Dobson as a fifth year transfer from Penn State. Dobson leads the Tigers in shots with 29, almost double the next highest player, and has 5 points in eight games. Dobson will play a role in any progress this team makes this year for sure.

Syracuse is still getting going as we discussed above, so we’ll see who breaks out on that team. Sarah Marchand and Madison Primeau were both on the CHA All-Rookie team, fifth year forward Lauren Bellefontaine and senior defender Mae Batherson are also ones to watch.

I don’t think there are any other surprises so far in the CHA. Kiara Zanon had a good start as expected, as did Vanessa Upson for the Lakers. Sara Boucher got going last weekend for the Lakers with two game winners at RPI. The next time you and I do this column there will be some conference play that has occurred and we can see which players are starting to separate themselves from the pack.

Nationally, I’ve been impressed with Colgate forwards Danielle Serdachny and Kristýna Kaltounková, and with Colgate’s team defense in general. I’m interested to see Colgate play Vermont this weekend to see how they look against Hockey East and to check in on Vermont’s Natálie Mlýnková, who I enjoyed watching play for Czechia in the World Championships. 

What do you make of Quinnipiac’s start? I’m not too familiar with their program and am interested in any insight you have on them. I assumed they would regress this year after graduating goaltender Corinne Schroeder, the team’s MVP last year. They haven’t missed a beat though, starting the season 7-0. 

Nicole: I feel like I’ve been higher on Quinnipiac than a lot of people over the past year or so. I have been voting them fourth in the polls this season and they’ve done nothing to show me they don’t deserve that respect. I liked the rookies they brought in last year and those players proved those instincts right. 

I agree with you that I thought there would be more of a transition or growing pains at goaltender since Schroeder was just so solid and nearly unbeatable for them, particularly down the stretch and in that NCAA game against Ohio State. But when I asked Cass Turner about it, she pointed out that Logan Angers was the Bobcats’ starter before last season. Schroeder took the bulk of the starts, but Angers still played last season and having the competition for time only pushed her to become better. A ton of teams have goalie questions and are splitting time, but Quinnipiac graduated a great goaltender and had an experienced goalie to step into her place. That is such a huge advantage for them. 

With the U18s in Madison and available for a lot of folks on TV, we got to know this year’s U18s a lot better than we’ve been able to in recent tournaments. But I think Chantler got a little lost in our excitement over some of these players joining the NCAA this season. She was tied as Canada’s top goal-scorer and was one of the best forwards in the tournament. You spoke well of how quickly Janecke transitioned to the college game and the same could be said of Chantler. And she’s currently only the fifth-highest scorer on their team.

The thing is, I feel like the ceiling is so high for this team and they haven’t really reached their full potential. I just think that there’s a lot of talent here that is still developing, meaning they’re only going to get better. They have a mostly intact roster from last year’s NCAA tournament run and then added an innate goal-scorer like Chantler. 

It feels like a fool’s errand to make any definitive statements about the ECAC, especially since so many of the expected best teams haven’t even played a game yet. But I also feel like the Bobcats were long known for their defense and that’s a point of pride for them – they are so good at interrupting the flow of the game, stopping the puck in transition and not allowing opponents to get set up or take high-probability shots. And now they’ve shown themselves to be a top-tier offense, as well. They play a great possession game, making it really difficult to break them down in any part of the ice. Even if you can hold them to one or two goals, good luck getting any prolonged time with the puck to generate any offense of your own. 

Of course, I feel like I could easily write as many fawning paragraphs about Yale, Princeton and Colgate, at a minimum. And Cornell this year reminds me of Quinnipiac last year. After my not-so-great preseason picks in the CHA, maybe I’ll leave the prognosticating behind and just wait until we see these teams play each other before I try to rank them again. 

Is there anyone else who’s hot start has made you want to pay them some extra attention?

Lindsay: Thanks for the rundown on Quinnipiac. With Colgate and Quinnipiac having piqued my interest I’ll be sure to pay attention when they meet on October 29th. We’ve talked about a team that looks better than they were last year in Penn State, and we’ve talked about the best two teams in the ECAC this year so far, who may eventually be top five in the polls. We haven’t talked about the current top five in the polls. 

These teams get a lot of attention generally so I don’t know that this is extra attention but I’ll note that Ohio State, UMD, and Northeastern, three of the four 2022 Frozen Four participants all have perfect records so far. They are beating teams soundly, and they’re taking care of business so I don’t have any reason not to consider them potential Frozen Four returnees at this early point. UMD and Ohio State meet up this weekend, so one of those perfect records will go away, and we’ll know more about both teams.

Then there’s Wisconsin. They’ve had an interesting start in that they’ve had a loss to Penn State and needed overtime to beat St. Cloud State, but they’ve also scored more goals in the nation than anyone with 48, good enough for second best goals per game in the nation. Despite the early loss and OT, with their deep roster it’s not a stretch to have them in the conversation for who may be in the Frozen Four.

Lastly, Minnesota. Nicole, they scored twenty goals in one weekend! Who does that? Teams with a hot start, that’s who. Similar to Wisconsin, Minnesota also gets the adjective of interesting because they let Minnesota State climb back into the 2nd game of the series twice, before finally putting the game away. But with the leading offense in the nation, averaging 7.5 goals per game through four games, with another roster so deep it’s absurd, they too are worthy of fans’ continued attention.

The last team to talk about is Stonehill. The Stonehill Skyhawks aren’t going to win a national championship this year, and they aren’t better than they were last year because they didn’t even exist last year. The brand new program led by Head Coach Tara Watchorn has gotten off to a hot start though, and the newest NEWHA team is 4-2 in its first ever season. Their roster has 18 freshmen and 4 transfers, and although they are picked to finish fifth in the NEWHA, I will not be surprised if they finish higher. 

If I can end this on one final CHA note, I’ll say there’s something appealing to me about Tara Watchorn arriving as a new builder in women’s hockey the season following Coach Paul Flanagan’s retirement at Syracuse. There are programs that elevate to Division I from preexisting campus teams, and less frequently a new coach is tasked with building a Division I program from the ground up. Even more rare, the inaugural coach finds success and stays many years really building out the program. As head coach, Flanagan ushered the St. Lawrence Saints into the NCAA era, and later built a brand new program at Syracuse. He had success at both programs, leading both programs to NCAA tournaments, and twice left healthy programs when he said goodbye. He made a significant and unique contribution to women’s college hockey in western New York in both the ECAC and the CHA over two decades. For longtime women’s college hockey fans his retirement marks the end of an era. 

I like to think of Tara Watchorn as picking up where Flanagan left off. She has joined the club of program builders and is doing the work of growing opportunities in women’s college hockey, this time in the NEWHA at Stonehill College in Easton, Massachusetts. We’ll see where the Skyhawks’ hot start goes from here.

 

This Week in Hockey East: New 2022-23 college hockey season one of transition for Boston College, new coach Brown

Greg Brown is in his first season as head coach for Boston College (photo: Rich Gagnon).

No, Greg Brown does not feel like he has to win four NCAA championships anytime soon.

It would be somewhat understandable if he did.

The first-year coach of the Boston College men’s hockey team knew what he was getting into last spring when he was hired to replace the legendary Jerry York — he of 656 career wins and four national titles in 28 seasons with the Eagles.

“I hope people aren’t thinking we’re going to do that,” Brown said with a chuckle last weekend after securing his first career win as a head coach, 4-2 over New Hampshire at the Whittemore Center.

It’s safe to say matching York’s numbers right out of the gate is not something on the front-burner of the rookie coach’s mind.

“Luckily, (York’s) accomplishments are so far out there that it doesn’t even become part of the equation,” Brown said. “You just try to stay focused on the job at hand right now.”

The Eagles fell 4-0 to Quinnipiac (then ranked No. 6 in the DCU/USCHO.com D-I poll) at home in their season opener on Oct. 7, which made them particularly hungry for a win eight days later at UNH.

“We lost pretty handily,” said Brown about the shutout in his head coaching debut. “You never want to start 0-2, so it was important for us, just for our psyche, to get a win under our belts.”

There will, undoubtedly, be many more wins in Brown’s future, if his pedigree is any indication. Brown spent 14 years on the Eagles’ bench as an assistant to York, including three of BC’s NCAA title runs. He recently spent time in the pro ranks, serving as an assistant with the New York Rangers of the NHL, then one year at Dubuque of the USHL.

As a player for the Eagles from 1987 to 1990, he was twice Hockey East player of the year and was a first-team All-American as well as a Hobey Baker Award finalist.

The experience and depth of knowledge of the game are a direct result of Brown’s lengthy career as a player and a coach, something that’s not lost on his current crop of players.

“It’s been pretty seamless,” said BC senior defenseman Marshall Warren. “We had a good culture here, and I think Coach Brown is building on that. Overall, all the boys are excited to play for Coach. He’s such a good guy.”

Warren called Brown an “offensive wizard” and also had high praise for his new coach’s defensive acumen.

“He knows so much about the game,” Warren said. “I think we’re all really absorbing it. He just knows what he’s doing, especially on the defensive side. He played D and knows everything about that.”

While a coaching change can prove challenging for college athletes midway through their careers, regardless of the school or sport, Brown said he’s felt nothing but support from his staff, players and the administrators at BC.

“The team has been great,” Brown said. “From the leadership right on down, they’ve really been supportive. (They’re) buying in to everything we’re trying to do.”

WIAC Hockey Season Preview: Blugolds, Pointers top contenders for title

Ty Readman was one of the Blugolds’ top scorers last season. (Photo by Pat Deninger, UWRF Photo)

It was an odd year for the WIAC as no team from the conference made the NCAA tournament.

But that isn’t likely to be the case this year.

UW-Eau Claire is the reigning champ in the league and closed out last season on a winning streak that was punctuated with a 6-2 win over rival UW-Stevens Point.

The Blugolds will certainly have a chance to repeat but the Pointers will have a say in who wins the title as they bring back several of their  top players.

UW-River Falls and UW-Superior will also be in the discussion for the conference crown. 

UW-Stout and Northland are coming off tough years but are never an easy out and are capable of winning on any given night.

For Northland, it has added inspiration as Jake Lamberty returns from his bout with cancer and is ready to play hockey again.

It should be an interesting year to say the least as WIAC teams get set to drop the puck.

UW-Eau Claire (18-11-1, 10-6 WIAC)  

The Blugolds got hot at just the right time last season, winning their final seven games on their way to the WIAC crown. They never gave up more than two goals in a game during the impressive stretch.

They return several of their top offensive threats, including Ty Readman, who led the Bluegolds with 10 goals and 10 assists.

Quinn Green is also coming off a big year in which he scored nine goals and tallied five assists.

Willy Stauber is poised to be a key contributor. He dished out seven assists last season to go along with his three goals.

Colin Stein came through with a goal and five assists for a team that scored 79 goals in all.

UW-Eau Claire also brings in several key newcomers, including Kyler Grundy, Jack Johnston and Aaron Swanson.

Filling the void at goalie will be the big thing for the Blugolds. Colin Ahren is the lone returnee at that position, though he has yet to play a game at the collegiate level. Rookies Max Gutjahr and Josh Langford will also be in the competition for the goaltender position.

UW-Stevens Point (21-6-1, 11-2 WIAC)

The Pointers are hoping to not only contend for a WIAC title, but they’ll look to be in the discussion for the national championship as well

Stevens Point still won 21 games last year and brings back one of the top scoring threats in D-III hockey in Jordan Fader, who scored 15 goals and tallied 17 assists.

Noah Finstrom also returns after coming through with seven goals and 10 assists a year ago. Fletcher Anderson is also back in the fold for the Pointers. He tallied seven goals and nine assists, giving the Pointers three of their top five players back in terms of points.

Brett Humberstone and Brady Smith also return and will be key contributors on the ofensive end of the ice.

Humberstone dished out 14 assists to go along with two goals and Smith finished last season with six goals and eight assists.

The defense should also be in good shape, especially with the return of Ryan Wagner. He started 20 games last year and gave up 41 goals while making 439 saves on his way to fashioning a 16-4 record.

UW-Superior (15-12-2, 6-6-1 WIAC)

Rick McKenna is headed into his seventh season at the helm of the Yellowjackets, who are one shy of their 800th in program history.

Among the 16 returnees on the roster is Myles Hektor, who started 17 games in goal last season, allowing 44 goals and racking up 519 saves. He fashioned a 10-8 record.

Offensively, UW-Superior has lost its top four players in terms of points. But it does return one of its top goal scorers in Reed Stark, who finished second on the team in goals (10) and also dished out nine assists.

Zach Bannister is also back. He tied for third on the team in goals (9) and tallied seven assists.

C.J. Walker finished last season with five goals and nine assists and Charles Martin tallied eight assists to go along with his two goals. Bradley Stonnell is also back after coming through with two goals and five assists.

Keep an eye on newcomers Dylan Meilun, Anthony Di Paulo, Tristan Therrien and Chris Ishmael. If those guys make an impact right away, UW-Superior should be in line for another winning season.

UW-River Falls (13-13-1, 9-6-1 WIAC)

Seventeen players are back for a Falcons team that should once again be in the hunt for a WIAC title.

Noah Ganske is included in that group of returning players. The standout defenseman spent part of his summer at the Edmonton Oilers’ development camp. He was the only NCAA Division III athlete to get an invite. That experience should help Ganske be even better this season after leading the way in scoring with eight goals and 11 assists last season.

Dylan Skinner is also back to anchor the defense. He’s a two-time All-WIAC pick as a goaltender and started 20 games last season. Skinner gave up 47 goals, racked up 456 saves and owned a 10-10 record.

Vilho Saariluoma is ready for a big comeback year after missing most of last season with a broken hand. He was the Newcomer of the Year in the WIAC two seasons ago. Even with the injury, he still managed to score four goals and dish out 10 assists last season.

UW-Stout (8-19, 6-9 WIAC)

The majority of the team is back as 21 returning players are on the roster, and that’s good news for the Blue Devils as they take aim at a turnaround season.

Dylan Rallis leads the way after scoring nine goals and dishing out eight assists last season, good enough for second in scoring. He was a first-team All-WIAC pick.

The Blue Devils have depth at goal and that is huge. Tyler Masternak was an all-league pick last season, allowing 33 goals and making 269 saves. Brennan Kitchen was an honorable mention pick in goal during the 2019-20 season and saw action in nine games last year, giving up 24 goals and making 173 saves.

Two of UW-Stout’s best playmakers return in Caleb Serre and Matt Dalhseide. The two combined for 26 assists, including 14 from Serre.

Peyton Hart and Cole Beckstead should be consistent contributors as well. Hart scored seven assists last season to go along with six assists and Beckstead tallied six goals and seven assists.

Northland (4-20-3, 1-13-1 WIAC)

The Lumberjacks won 12 games three years ago but have just eight wins over the last three seasons.

But there is reason for optimism for the Lumberjacks as they get set for another year in the WIAC. The group of returnees include senior Ty Brown, who ranked third on the team in scoring last season with four goals and four assists.

Luke Hartge also returns and will be one of the Lumberjacks’ top playmakers after tallying seven assists last season.

Parker Severson tallied three goals and three assists a year ago and Cam Coutre came through with four goals and an assist.

Jake Lamberty and James Curran are returning players as well while Chris Curr returns in goal. He started 14 games last season and made 446 saves.

TMQ: Looking at Hockey East vs. NCHC, talking college hockey conference realignment for the not-so-distant future

UMass and Denver battled Friday night, but it was the Minutemen that came away with the 4-2 victory in Amherst, Mass. (photo: Chris Tucci/UMass Athletics).

Each week during the season, we look at the big events and big games around Division I men’s college hockey in Tuesday Morning Quarterback.

Paula: Dan, my friend! How nice to be back on the TMQ beat with you. I want to echo Jimmy Connelly’s season-opening remarks from a week ago and say hello to all TMQ’s readers.

It’s two weeks into TMQ, but it feels like the college hockey season is much further along and there is already so much drama – of the on-ice kind, which is a welcome change.

To me, the biggest story is Massachusetts’ home sweep of Denver, not only knocking off the defending champ and a team that entered the weekend No. 1 in the DCU/USCHO poll, but the Minutemen holding the Pioneers to two goals in two games. The Minutemen were up 2-0 before Friday’s game was five minutes old, while the Pioneers put up 47 shots on Luke Pavicich in a 4-2 loss. Pavicich stopped 30 shots in Saturday’s 3-0 shutout.

It was an interesting weekend for NCHC hockey all around. Western Michigan and St. Cloud each swept nonconference opponents, but the league went 5-7-2 against nonleague foes and I do not think that this is something that most fans of college hockey expected.

What are your thoughts on that Denver-Massachusetts series? And is it fair to look at these early weekends and make some assumptions about relative conference strength?

Dan: Paula, it is positively delightful to return to TMQ this year, and I’m excited to swing back into this thing with the hottest takes known to man.

Speaking of hot, let’s talk about Tampa, the site of this year’s Frozen Four, and this past weekend’s matchup between UMass and Denver. It was billed as a potential matchup in the Frozen Four – and rightfully so, given the teams’ recent histories – and watching them skate onto the ice made us dream of sunny skies and Florida golf courses where my clubs will inevitably destroy the fescue.

The games themselves acted as the conduit between those thoughts and our future predictions. UMass’ sweep included two very different, distinct styles of victories and left the Minutemen thumping their chest with two massive wins. They jumped from No. 13 to No. 6 in the DCU/USCHO Division I poll, though it’s important to note how Denver only went from No. 1 to No. 4.

Back to your question about the leagues. I’ve been notoriously vocal over the past couple of years about how the Pairwise Rankings are problematic in determining the national tournament, but I think these games add a little bit of flavor to what we’ll see when March rolls around. I always felt like Hockey East was better than last year indicated, but the league won’t get the number of bids it deserves unless teams like UMass beat teams like Denver. Make no mistake. These games mattered in a big way to that conversation.

But that’s kind of my problem. I don’t know if Hockey East is better than the NCHC, and teams in October aren’t exactly their best selves, in my opinion. In my mind, we didn’t see the “defending national champion,” and we won’t know if we saw an actual national championship contender until we see more production from either team. It’s fun to speculate, but that’s part of my usual issue.

Can we make assumptions about the parity or competitiveness about the conferences? Absolutely, but we should also know that those are going to change as quickly as they formed.

One thing I know – it at least gave us a second eastern team to talk about with the polls. I’ve heard a lot about eastern bias, but when I look at the polls, I see Minnesota, Minnesota State, Denver, Michigan, North Dakota, St. Cloud, Minnesota Duluth…the only eastern teams are Quinnipiac, UMass, and Boston University. Providence, Northeastern and UConn are No. 11, No. 12 and No. 14.

Paula – where’s the love for my eastern teams?? UConn’s Ice Bus deserves better!

Paula: You said something, Dan, that really sums up so much of what I’m thinking about after this weekend’s games – and something that harkens back to discussions from seasons past about interconference play and parity.

You’re right: Hockey East won’t get the number of bids it deserves unless teams like UMass beat teams like Denver.

It’s more than just the PWR and whatever shortcomings it may have as a predictive tool. When teams like UMass beat teams like Denver, such victories negate the perceived shortcomings and biases, and override what we know to be difficult-to-define inequities in D-I men’s hockey. Of course, when teams like UMass beat teams like Denver, regularly – thereby elevating the conferences of the victorious teams – there’s an argument to be made that the PWR is a system that works.

I agree, though, that these games do matter in that conversation.

As for the lack of love for eastern teams, given that the NCHC has been so dominant for so long and the top teams in the Big Ten have been real contenders for several years – plus Minnesota State’s continued excellence – I’m not surprised that it’s taking voters a while to warm up to eastern teams. Connecticut went from No. 17 to No. 14 in this week’s poll, which is not insignificant, while Ohio State, a team that’s 4-1-1, sank from No. 11 to No. 16. (For the record, in my ballot this week, UConn is 14 and OSU 15). That indicates to me that voters think that the Buckeyes should have had better success against the Huskies.

It’s early. Teams playing in a conference that is perceived as having less success in recent years will have to prove themselves for voters to show some love. It’s not lost on me that Hockey East has the current best interconference win percentage (.692). If that persists, not only will voters recognize that, but that will be reflected in the PWR as well.

Perception is a funny thing. Western Michigan is 4-1-1 to start the season and they are No. 17 in the poll because all of their opponents have been CCHA or independent teams. Notre Dame is 2-1-1 and No. 13 after a loss to Denver, a tie with Air Force and a sweep of Northern Michigan. Unranked Michigan State is 2-2-0 and received no votes after splitting at home this past weekend to UMass Lowell, who dropped from No. 16 to No. 19 with that loss.

Dan: I suppose it’s the duality of that conversation that’s most fascinating in the early days of the season. There aren’t a lot of numbers, so we base everything on the history of what we know, which is why teams outrank others.

Minnesota is No. 1 after splitting with Minnesota State and sweeping Lindenwood. Minnesota State is No. 2 after sweeping Duluth. Our logic tells us that a Big Ten team has to be better than a CCHA team, and the perception greatly factors into how people rank teams. When we shake down the end of the season, we won’t have that luxury because we will have the treasure trove of empirical evidence.

Yet it’s also too early to make that call. We need to base the end of the season on every result, but here I am arguing that it’s unfortunate that the data relies almost as critically on the games when a team isn’t playing its best hockey in the first few weeks. We base it all on history, which is why Harvard is ranked higher than Western Michigan despite not playing a game yet (we’re getting there, Ivies!).

Either way, it sure is fun to let the wheels churn a bit.

I mentioned Lindenwood, which lost to Minnesota but unquestionably held its own against both the Gophers and Michigan before splitting with Air Force. The new guys on the block in college hockey are putting on a show early on. LIU hung with Northeastern and tied Quinnipiac, and the Sharks are headed to Michigan State next.

Stonehill is going to play more of a hybrid schedule this year against teams from every level, but how exciting is it to see those two newer teams enjoy some modest success?

Paula: It is very exciting to see new programs improve and become competitive. Arizona State has been fun since the beginning and watching the forward motion of each new program as it emerges makes from some interesting D-I scenarios.

Looking at the current independent D-I teams and seeing the two Alaska programs that once had conference homes is both disturbing and understandable. I want both Alaska teams to thrive. I can understand the money issues surrounding both teams. Both should belong to a conference – but how?

There are five current independent teams and Stonehill when fully participatory will make six. How will this force the D-I landscape to change in the coming years?

Without a conference home, independent teams have significant disadvantages in recruiting and scheduling, and that affects their ability to compete nationally. How long can independent teams function if there is no payoff for them other than a self-contained regular season?

In a perfect world, Dan, what would you like to see happen?

Dan: We talk about conference alignments, but we are really bearing down on a time when the change is going to happen, in my opinion. And, to me, the reason isn’t Arizona State or Lindenwood or even LIU. It’s that last team in the mix: Stonehill.

Stonehill is likely unknown outside of Massachusetts, but the small school located an hour outside of Boston joined Merrimack, Bryant, and UMass Lowell as former Northeast-10 teams that reclassified to Division I. As a result of the move, the hockey program formally moved up to Division I, but since the Northeast Conference doesn’t sponsor the sport, it currently doesn’t have a home. The Skyhawks are going to play a schedule mostly against lower division teams, but their move should influence what happens to the Division II hockey programs that don’t currently compete for a national championship.

That myriad group of schools – Southern New Hampshire, Assumption, Saint Michael’s Franklin Pierce, Post, and Saint Anselm – aren’t eligible to compete for the Division III national championship, but because hockey doesn’t sponsor a D-II championship, they could all reclassify to Division I without penalty.

Atlantic Hockey is no longer considered a “cost containment” league – the number of new arenas, the increase in scholarships, and the overall spending of the member institutions should be obvious indicators – so all of those schools without a logical home could potentially band together and reclassify together to form a league similar to the women’s hockey NEWHA.

The NEWHA doesn’t have an NCAA autobid, but there’s mounting evidence that the league is ripe for Division I men’s hockey if it’s there. I personally would love it since the larger number of schools are increasingly cost prohibitive to startup programs. LIU and Stonehill could be trailblazers in that regard, but I’m looking more at Stonehill, which is less than 10 years removed from a trip to the NCAA Division II baseball tournament and is a noted basketball power that went to the D-II Final Four in 2012 and the D-II Elite Eight in 2016, as the torchbearer.

We all knew what Arizona State brought to the table, and Augustana is headed for the CCHA. LIU was a curious addition, and Lindenwood already had a women’s team in the CHA. Stonehill is coming more from D-II, and if it succeeds, it would offer a roadmap for others to follow on the ice.

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