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Hobart hoping number seven is lucky

Hobart captain Aaron Maguyon and his teammates face a familiar opponent in Saturday’s first round NCAA tournament game (Photo by Kevin Colton)

The Hobart Statesmen have established a new record for consecutive appearances in the NCAA tournament with their seventh coming this year on an at-large bid. While the consistency has been remarkable, Hobart is looking to payoff their place in the tournament with a national championship and their coach Mark Taylor knows how hard that is to do.

“This is why we play in the toughest conference and play a challenging non-conference schedule,” said Taylor. “Of course, there is some disappointment when you get eliminated from your conference tournament but as long as you are playing at this time of the year, it is all good.”

Hobart won the regular season title in the NEHC before being upset in the conference tournament semifinals by Skidmore. At 19-5-2 overall, the Statesmen bring a game built on size and speed to challenge the best from any opponent. There is a deep and talented roster taking the ice on Saturday against conference rival Elmira, but coach Taylor knows it isn’t always about talent at this time of the year.

I have a lot of respect for Bill Beaney (former head coach of the eight-time national champion Middlebury Panthers),” stated Taylor. “He used to say that “you have to be good; you have to have your rhythm and you need to have a little luck.” I think in the past we didn’t have all of those things going for us but hopefully this year we can find all three and make a run.”

Hobart is led by a pair of book-end forwards in first-year player Luke Aquaro (15-16-31; +21) and senior captain Aaron Maguyon (14-14-28; +23) that showcase a dynamic group of forwards that can produce offense across all four lines. Blake Coffey (6-14-20; +10) leads an experienced defensive group that contributes greatly to the offense at even-strength and on the power play. Goaltending duties have been shared by Liam Lascelle and Joe Halstrom who have the confidence of their teammates. All of the pieces are there for Hobart to make a deep run.

The matchup with Elmira brings a familiar foe to the “The Cooler” on Saturday where the Soaring Eagles took a 5-4 overtime win over Hobart back on January 22. In that game Hobart rallied in the third period to tie the game at 4-4 before losing in the final 15 seconds of the overtime period.

“We beat them at their place the night before by a 2-0 score and played an overtime game at our place the next night,” said Taylor. “These are two really good teams, and I am just glad we are playing it in our building. We anticipate a great crowd and probably some of our football guys showing up without shirts to get the crowd amp’d up. We have been keeping things pretty normal with the practice schedule waiting find out who we would be playing but now it’s all about preparation for Saturday and finding ways to win a hockey game.”

 

 

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: With conference playoffs down to eight teams, battle for NCAA tournament autobid heating up this weekend

Freshman Clayton Cosentino has been a bright spot for Air Force this season (photo: Paat Kelly/Pengo Sports).

The opening round of the Atlantic Hockey tournament consisted of a pair of sweeps, one by the favorites and one by an underdog.

At Mercyhurst, the story was Lakers goaltender Kyle McClellan who stopped 74 of 76 Holy Cross shots he faced in a pair of 2-1 wins.

At Niagara, Bentley got a pair of goals from Collin Rutherford in Game 1 and the same from Cole Kodsi in Game 2 to complete a sweep of the Purple Eagles with wins of 3-2 and 4-1.

That means we’re down to eight teams and it’s on to the quarterfinals.

Previewing the quarterfinals

Bentley at American International
The teams were supposed to meet in the quarterfinals in 2020 before everything was shut down, and again last season, but Bentley had to drop out of the tournament due to COVID protocols.

Hopefully, the third time’s the charm.

The Falcons (14-18-2) are coming off that sweep of Niagara, the first time Bentley has been able to win consecutive games since Jan 15 and Jan. 21.

AIC (18-12-3) ran away with the regular season title thanks to an 11-game winning streak from Nov. 27 to Jan 27, but has cooled off a bit since then, going 4-2-2 to close out the regular season.

The teams split their only regular-season series.

Mercyhurst at Canisius
The first game of this series will be the 83rd Division I meeting between the longtime rivals, with Mercyhurst leading the all-time series 37-35-10 based on a sweep of the Golden Griffins the final weekend of the regular season. The Lakers won the season series 3-1.

Mercyhurst (14-18-4) enters the series on a five game winning streak while Canisius (16-14-3) is 3-2 in its last five games.

Air Force at Army West Point
This is the fifth meeting between the two rivals in the Atlantic Hockey tournament, with the Falcons (13-16-3) advancing in each of the previous four: once at Air Force (2010), once at West Point (2018) and twice in Rochester (2007 finals and 2017 semifinals).

The teams split their series this season with the Black Knights (14-15-4) coming away with four of the six available points.

Sacred Heart at Rochester Institute of Technology
The last two times these teams have met in the postseason, the road team came out on top in three games. Sacred Heart (14-16-4) upset the Tigers in Rochester in 2018, and RIT returned the favor in Bridgeport in 2019.

RIT (16-14-4) won both regular-season meetings.

Awards season, Part II

It’s time to look at our choices for all-league:

Atlantic Hockey First Team
F Colin Bilek, Sr., Army West Point
F Carson Briere, So., Mercyhurst
F Will Caverley, Sr., RIT
D Drew Bavaro So., Bentley
D Dan Willett, Sr., RIT
G Gavin Abric, So., Army West Point

Atlantic Hockey Second Team
F Will Gavin, So., Air Force
F Keaton Mastrodonato, Jr., Canisius
F Carter Wilkie, Fr., RIT
D Zak Galambos, Jr., AIC
D Brandon Koch Jr., Air Force
G Kyle McClellan, So., Mercyhurst

Atlantic Hockey Third Team
F Ryan Leibold, Sr., Holy Cross
F Neil Shea, Jr., Sacred Heart
F Chris Theodore, Sr., AIC
D Anthony Firriolo, Jr., Army
D Nick Hale, Jr, Holy Cross
G Jacob Barczewski, Jr., Canisius

ECAC Hockey recognizes 18 players on three all-league teams for 2021-22 season

Zach Metsa emerged as a top blueliner this season for Quinnipiac (photo: Rob Rasmussen).

ECAC Hockey has announced its three all-league teams for the 2021-22 season.

FIRST TEAM ALL-LEAGUE
Forward: Alex Campbell, So., Clarkson
Forward: Mathieu Gosselin, Jr., Clarkson
Forward: Nick Abruzzese, Jr., Harvard
Defenseman: Zach Metsa, Sr., Quinnipiac
Defenseman: Sam Malinski, Jr., Cornell
Goaltender: Yaniv Perets, So., Quinnipiac

SECOND TEAM ALL-LEAGUE
Forward: Zach Tsekos, Gr., Clarkson
Forward: Ture Linden, Sr., Rensselaer
Forward: Matt Stienburg, Jr., Cornell
Defenseman: Noah Beck, So., Clarkson
Defenseman: Henry Thrun, Jr., Harvard
Goaltender: Mitchell Gibson, Jr., Harvard

THIRD TEAM ALL-LEAGUE
Forward: Alex Laferriere, So., Harvard
Forward: Max Andreev, Sr., Cornell
Forward: Wyatt Bongiovanni, Sr., Quinnipiac
Defenseman: Brandon Estes, Sr., Union
Defenseman: Lukas Kaelble, Gr., Clarkson
Goaltender: Clay Stevenson, So., Dartmouth

This Week in NCHC Hockey: Even with No. 1 seed in conference tournament, Denver not taking Miami lightly this weekend in opening round of playoffs

Denver’s Cameron Wright is one of two players on the Pioneers with 20 goals this season (photo: Ethan Mito/Clarkson Creative Photography).

For as much as coaches and players talk about how brutal NCHC campaigns are, it comes as a surprise that only now, in Year 9 of its existence, the conference has crowned split regular-season champions.

That quirk was news to Denver coach David Carle, whose Pioneers earned on Saturday a share of the Penrose Cup after sweeping Colorado College. North Dakota on Friday had put one hand on the trophy, but a UND loss Saturday in Omaha and DU’s clincher against the Tigers meant that both the Fighting Hawks and Pioneers would lay claim to the bulbous metal chalice.

“I saw a stat about that, co-champions for the first time, and I didn’t even know we did that,” Carle said. “We didn’t focus very much on (the regular-season title). With our team, we’re trying to prepare for playoff hockey, and we’ve played a lot of really good teams in our last 10 games, and it was just living through the grind of what our league is. We’re just trying to get better at our game.”

Denver (25-8-1) has been particularly good in its last three games, scoring five in each. After falling 5-1 at Omaha in the teams’ series opener Feb. 25, the Pioneers won 5-2 in the rematch and then swept CC in a home-and-home series last weekend by a combined score of 10-2.

Five different players scored in Denver’s 5-0 win Friday in Colorado Springs. The following night, on the Pioneers’ home ice inside Magness Arena, two goals and an assist from Carter Savoie helped DU ease past the Tigers, 5-2.

The Pioneers got to celebrate with the Penrose Cup in their dressing room, whereas UND did so on the road. Fun times were had by all, but there could be more to come.

“It’s a nice feather in our cap, something we’ve worked really hard to earn, and it’s a nice trophy to win,” Carle said. “It’s over a 24-game period, and our reward is that we’re the No. 1 seed, and we have advantage hopefully throughout our conference playoffs here. That’s the reward you get for the work you put in.”

Top-seeded Denver opens NCHC playoff action this weekend at home against No. 8 Miami (7-25-2). The Pioneers took all four games of the teams’ regular-season series, but Carle knows the possibility is there for Miami to pull off a couple of upsets.

“They’re playing really well right now,” Carle said. “They swept Omaha at home and beat Duluth, and played Western Michigan very tight in both their games last weekend. For me, it’s a team with a lot of confidence, a team that has improved, and they’re getting healthy right now and have an excellent goaltender. (The series is) no foregone conclusion, and it’s going to be a tough matchup and a good battle this weekend here in our building.”

“If you look past people in our league, you get embarrassed. I don’t think our guys are doing that at all. We respect every opponent that we play, particularly in this league, and in playoff hockey, the margin of error goes down and the desperation goes up. You’re trying to advance yourself and end teams’ seasons, and that’s the hardest thing to do in sport.”

This Week in Big Ten Hockey: Michigan facing stiff test from Notre Dame in conference semifinal; Penn State hoping magic continues against Minnesota

Michigan goalie Erik Portillo has been the go-to netminder for the Wolverines this season (photo: Michigan Photography).

Michigan has lost nine times this season and this weekend it’ll get another crack at the team responsible for 44 percent of those losses.

The Wolverines will host Notre Dame on Saturday in the first Big Ten Tournament semifinal. The Irish won consecutive overtime games at Yost Ice Arena in November and wrapped up the regular season a couple weeks ago by downing Michigan 4-1 and 2-1 at home, denying the Wolverines their first Big Ten regular season title in the process.

Michigan finishing second in the conference standings meant both teams played last weekend. The Wolverines cruised to a sweep over Michigan State, winning 4-1 on Friday and 8-0 on Saturday, while Notre Dame was taken to a third game by Wisconsin. The Irish was able to end the Badgers’ season by winning 3-2 on Saturday and 4-2 on Sunday after dropping Friday’s contest 3-1.

Now the series aspect of the playoffs is over, and it’s win or you’re out for all the remaining teams. Both Michigan and Notre Dame have locked themselves into the NCAA tournament, so both are playing for seeding and conference hardware.

“Every game from here on in gets more important, starting with next Saturday,” Pearson said after the series-clinching victory over the Spartans. “You get into the single elimination now and you’ve got to make sure you’re prepared and you do everything you can to get ready.”

One would think that getting off to a good start on Saturday could help Michigan on Saturday, but Notre Dame hasn’t panicked when falling behind to the Wolverines this season. Michigan had a 2-0 lead in each game in Ann Arbor and jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the Friday game at South Bend. It is worth noting that the three-on-three style of overtime that the Irish used to their advantage for the road sweep won’t be used during the playoffs.

Even before the opponent was sorted out on Saturday, Pearson predicted that his players would be chomping at the bit when they rolled into this week.

“This team’s hungry, we’ve got guys that are driven,” he said. “They’ll be excited when we come back to the rink Monday and get back to work, I know that.”

Prediction: Michigan 4-3

Penn State looks to keep road magic alive at Minnesota

While the first semifinal has two teams that know they will be in the NCAA tournament, the second features a Penn State team that must keep winning to keep playing.

The Nittany Lions will try for their second road win at Minnesota this season on Saturday. If they get it, it’ll probably be slightly more memorable than the one in November.

Minnesota head coach Bob Motzko said he knows how dangerous a lower-seeded team on a run can be.

“You’ve got to think that they’re one excited group,” he said during Minnesota’s media availability on Tuesday. “I’m sure that bus ride home from Columbus, I’ve been on that side before when you win a road series, there’s an adrenaline rush for their team. It’s like a new start, so we’ve got a hockey game here on Saturday night.”

Motzko added that he wasn’t thrilled that the only action his team saw last weekend was an intrasquad scrimmage, played in Austin, Minn., while the rest of the league was continuing to play games. He jokingly saying that the Big Ten should quickly add an eighth team.

“I’ve never done this, so I called around to the other coaches that have gone through the bye, (and) no one seems to like it,” Motzko said. “I didn’t like it before, now I’ve lived it, what do you do? Quick, let’s add an eighth team. Let’s get there.”

Two wins at Penn State are included in Minnesota’s current eight-game winning streak, but the Gophers had to battle back to get the sweep in the second game. Like every other coach in the league, Motzko stressed that the Nittany Lions are a formidable opponent.

“If you make a mistake, they’re dangerous and they’ll make you pay,” he said. “You have to be cautious when it’s time to be cautious. We have to get after them, but you can’t have blatant turnovers (or) missed nets, because you have got to get back. They play north as fast as any team you will see.”

Prediction: Minnesota 5-3

McLaughlin’s OT goal lifts Boston College past New Hampshire; Providence, Merrimack also win Hockey East first-round games

Boston College celebrates after Marc McLaughlin scored at 10:56 of overtime to lift the Eagles to a 4-3 first-round victory over New Hampshire and a date with top-seeded Northeastern in Saturday’s quarterfinal round of the Hockey East tournament (photo: Boston College athletics)

Marc McLaughlin didn’t get all of his shot after a nice set of moves and a pass from Boston College teammate Marshall Warren.

It was still enough to send the Eagles into the Hockey East quarterfinals with a 4-3 overtime victory against New Hampshire on Wednesday in Chestnut Hill, Mass.

McLaughlin’s second goal of the game came 10:56 into the extra session after the Wildcats’ Tyler Ward completed a hat trick by scoring twice on the power play in the third period to early a 3-1 Eagles lead and force overtime.

Jack McBain had two assists for the Eagles, who got 44 saves from Eric Dop.

Providence 2, Vermont 1

Brett Berard’s goal early in the third period provided a cushion for the Friars, who advanced despite a late push by the visiting Catamounts.

Joel Maatta scored a 6-on-4 goal with 1:58 remaining for Vermont, which didn’t get another shot on goal after. Davis Bunz and Michael Callahan blocked shots in the final 1:40 for Providence.

Gabe Carriere made 38 saves for Vermont. Cody Monds put the Friars ahead in the second period and Jaxson Stauber stopped 17 shots.

Merrimack 6, Maine 2

Max Newton scored a pair of third-period goals as the Warriors added on after opening up a 3-0 lead and taking a two-goal lead into the second intermission.

Filip Forsmark scored and added two assists for Merrimack.

Lynden Breen and Matthew Fawcett scored for the Black Bears.

Northeastern’s Frankel, St. Lawrence’s Morgan, Quinnipiac’s Schroeder named finalists for 2022 Women’s Hockey Goalie of the Year award

From left, Aerin Frankel, Lucy Morgan, and Corinne Schroeder

The Women’s Hockey Commissioners Association announced Wednesday the three finalists for the Women’s Hockey Goalie of the Year award in Northeastern’s Aerin Frankel, St. Lawrence’s Lucy Morgan, and Quinnipiac’s Corinne Schroeder.

Frankel and Schroeder are fifth-year students while Morgan is a junior.

Schroeder and Frankel are still playing as Quinnipiac takes on Syracuse on Wednesday in Columbus, Ohio, and Northeastern will meet the winner of the Clarkson-Wisconsin game in an NCAA tournament quarterfinal at home on Saturday.

Voting was carried out by a panel of coaches, administrators and members of the media from across the country

The winner will be announced on Thursday, March 17, on the eve of this year’s Frozen Four that will be hosted by Penn State.

The Women’s Hockey Goalie of the Year Award was established in 2021 and the inaugural winner was Frankel, the lone goaltender among this year’s Patty Kazmaier Award finalists. Frankel also won last year’s Kazmaier Award.

Bracketology: As college hockey playoffs kick into high gear, which teams are on the bubble, and which teams are locks for NCAA tournament bids?

Both UMass and UMass Lowell figure to make the 2022 MCAA tournament (photo: Rich Gagnon).

We’re three weeks into Braceketology and we’re already seeing some conference tournament results that are having lasting impact.

Last weekend, it was Ohio State losing its series in three games to Penn State. The Buckeyes have no games remaining to change their PairWise possibilities, and right now OSU sits right on the tournament bubble – 15th – given that whatever team wins Atlantic Hockey will take the 16th seed.

Right now, the Buckeyes become cheerleaders and they have to root for frontrunners, particularly in Hockey East, the ECAC and the CCHA. If any team currently not in the top 15 of the PairWise wins any of these conference titles, Ohio State’s chances of qualifying become slim to none.

The fact that Penn State remains alive in the Big Ten playoffs could have a nice, positive impact on the NCAA tournament. Should the Nittany Lions win their next two games and earn the B1G autobid, they would be assigned to Allentown as regional host and likely save the attendance for the region. Right now, that appears a destination that could feel pretty empty.

Here are the brackets both I and Jayson put forward this week with our approach on how we get there:

Jim’s Bracket & Approach

I’ll start with the basics – seeding the tournament 1 through 16 using bracket integrity:

Minnesota State
Quinnipiac
Notre Dame
AIC

Michigan
St. Cloud State
Michigan Tech
Ohio State

Denver
North Dakota
Minnesota Duluth
Ohio State

Minnesota
Western Michigan
Massachusetts
UMass Lowell

Remember, that in each region, the top team plays the bottom and the middle teams play one another. Thus, we have two conflicts with Michigan and Ohio State, two B1G teams, set to meet along with North Dakota and Minnesota Duluth set to play from the NCHC.

Let’s address the second first. I feel that switching Quinnipiac and North Dakota makes sense, particularly when I look at where I geographically align each region.

Similarly, I’d like to get Northeastern our of Denver’s region as we know the Pioneers have to play in Loveland. With so few eastern teams in this field, I’d prefer to have Northeastern in either Worcester or Albany. So switching Northeastern and Ohio State makes sense to me.

Thus we end up with four brackets, and I’ll assign my regions at this point.

Allentown
1. Minnesota State
2. North Dakota
3. Notre Dame
4. AIC

Albany
1. Michigan
2. St. Cloud State
3. Michigan Tech
4. Northeastern

Loveland
1. Denver
2. Quinnipiac
3. Minnesota Duluth
4. Ohio State

Worcester
1. Minnesota
2. Western Michigan
3. Massachusetts
4. UMass Lowell

You’ll ask why I assigned each region as I did?

Worcester will have to local teams in UMass and UMass Lowell. Loveland of course has its host Denver. Allentown, a region where I have massive concerns about attendance, gets the greatest traveling fan base in North Dakota. And, while Albany is a concern, you’ll have Michigan, which has a solid national fan base and Northeastern, a school that is less than three hours away.

We’ve mentioned this in the past. I don’t find the regional locations this year ideal in terms of attendance. But with this bracket, I see a pretty solid fan base in most places.

Now if Penn State wins the Big Ten…

Jayson’s Bracket & Approach

Once again this week, let me start out by putting everyone into bracket integrity. That means:

1 Minnesota State
8 Quinnipiac
9 Notre Dame
16 AIC

2 Michigan
7 St. Cloud State
10 Michigan Tech
15 Ohio State

3 Denver
6 North Dakota
11 Minnesota Duluth
14 Northeastern

4 Minnesota
5 Western Michigan
12 Massachusetts
13 UMass Lowell

Now I will check for intra-conference matchups. I have Michigan-Ohio State and North Dakota-Minnesota-Duluth.

First we swap Ohio State and Northeastern.

We have three NCHC teams in the second bands. So we can only move Minnesota-Duluth to play Quinnipiac. Therefore we swap Minnesota-Duluth and Notre Dame.

Therefore our brackets are now:

1 Minnesota State
8 Quinnipiac
11 Minnesota Duluth
16 AIC

2 Michigan
7 St. Cloud State
10 Michigan Tech
14 Northeastern

3 Denver
6 North Dakota
9 Notre Dame
15 Ohio State

4 Minnesota
5 Western Michigan
12 Massachusetts
13 UMass Lowell

Are there any other tweaks I can make? I want to align a little bit more closely to bracket integrity in the second and third bands. If I swap Michigan Tech and Notre Dame, then I go from 7-10 and 6-9 to 7-9 and 6-10. This aligns more with bracket integrity to me in that band.

So I make that swap.

1 Minnesota State
8 Quinnipiac
11 Minnesota Duluth
16 AIC

2 Michigan
7 St. Cloud State
9 Notre Dame
14 Northeastern

3 Denver
6 North Dakota
10 Michigan Tech
15 Ohio State

4 Minnesota
5 Western Michigan
12 Massachusetts
13 UMass Lowell

Now I will start placing the brackets into regionals.

Loveland – Denver bracket because Denver is the host.

I want to place the Minnesota State bracket in Albany because of Quinnipiac and AIC.

I want to place the Minnesota bracket in Worcester because of the two Hockey East teams.

That leaves the Michigan bracket in Allentown, which has two Big Ten teams.

Albany
1. Minnesota State
2. Quinnipiac
3. Minnesota Duluth
4. AIC

Allentown
1. Michigan
2. St. Cloud State
3. Notre Dame
4. Northeastern

Loveland
1. Denver
2. North Dakota
3. Michigan Tech
4. Ohio State

Worcester
1. Minnesota
2. Western Michigan
3. Massachusetts
4. UMass Lowell

Hockey East unveils eight-player 2021-22 all-rookie team, plus six individual awards

David Breazeale emerged as one of Maine’s top blueliners this season (photo: Maine Athletics).

Hockey East announced Wednesday the 2021-22 all-rookie team and six other season-long awards as voted by the men’s league’s 11 head coaches.

ALL-ROOKIE TEAM
G: Devon Levi, Northeastern *
D: Ty Gallagher, Boston University
D: Scott Morrow, Massachusetts *
D: Ryan Ufko, Massachusetts
D: David Breazeale, Maine
F: Matt Crasa, UMass Lowell
F: Justin Hryckowian, Northeastern
F: Jack Hughes, Northeastern
* unanimous selection

Also recognized is a pair of defensive awards, as Northeastern senior captain Jordan Harris has been named best defensive defenseman and UConn senior Jachym Kondelik was voted best defensive forward.

Two statistical awards have been formally announced, including the league’s top scorer in Massachusetts senior forward Bobby Trivigno (14 goals, 18 assists, 32 points). The three stars award was captured by Levi, who compiled the highest total number of points earned when named a first, second, or third star of the game in Hockey East contests.

Hockey East’s two sportsmanship awards have been bestowed upon New Hampshire senior forward Jackson Pierson, who will be presented with the Len Ceglarski Sportsmanship Award, given by the league to one player who has consistently demonstrated superior conduct and sportsmanship on the ice.

The Massachusetts Minutemen will be acknowledged with the Charlie Holt Team Sportsmanship Award for accruing the fewest average penalty minutes per Hockey East game for the second consecutive year.

Hockey East will announce the 2021-22 all-star teams on March 11 and then the finalists for the player, rookie, and coach of the year awards on March 14.

Re-tooled Trinity squad finding its game at the right time

Trinity has had much to celebrate during their eight game win streak including their sixth NESCAC championship (Photo by Trinity Athletics)

The NESCAC champions from Trinity are riding an eight game win streak to close out the regular season and conference tournament. During the NESCAC playoffs, the Bantams surrendered just one goal in three games playing stifling defense and scoring early and opportunistically to advance into the NCAA tournament. The early part of the season did not play out like anything close to the consistency and results found in February and early March, but the team and the coaching staff is happy they found it now and bring a lot of confidence into their first round game against Babson on Saturday.

“It really has been quite a year and very much a work in progress,” said head coach Matt Greason. “We went from having a roster with 387 man-games on defense to starting this season with just 37 man-games on the blueline. Experience and leadership matter and in the early part of the season we were struggling with both as well as lacking the ability to score goals. We really had to take a step back and change how we were doing things. I give credit to the whole roster who was willing to make changes and right now we are playing how we want to play and how we can be successful on the ice.”

Early in the season it was players like Jax Murray (9-12-21; +10) and Gerard Maretta (13-9-22; +7) who were carrying the team as the inconsistency in play went across most of the roster. In the second half, NESCAC Player-of-the-Year, Lucas Michaud (9-14-23; +10) found his game and some key role players have emerged with a much more experienced and physical defensive unit playing well in front of goaltenders Patrick Pugiliese and JP Mella.

“We didn’t find our identity as a team until later in the season,” said Greason. “Now, we have great leadership, depth and experience on the back-end, solid goaltending and we are becoming difficult to play against with the emergence of guys like [Devan Tongue], Riley [Prattson] and Cole [Poliziani]. I thought our team defense has been outstanding and certainly in the NESCAC tournament we played a strong 200-foot game. We are going to need that against a Babson team that has great talent, speed and discipline while being very selfless as a group playing for each other. It should be a great game.”

With Patrick Pugliese working through an injury, the goaltending duties have been handed over to sophomore JP Mella and he has delivered for the Bantams going 8-1-1 with a pair of shutouts and a stellar 1.59 goals-against average. Mella shutout Connecticut College and Williams in the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds of the conference tournament and only yielded a late third period goal to Colby in the Bantams run to the conference title.

“JP has really stepped up for us,” noted Gleason. “He made pretty much all the saves he needed to in the NESCAC tournament, and our team game really has been solid. We are excited to play in the national tournament and know all of the opponents are here because they are freaking good at hockey. We have our work cut out for us on Saturday in a building we have never played in. We will practice there on Friday and get ready for the Beavers on Saturday.”

Battle-tested Beavers readying for NCAA challenge

Babson’s Ryan Black earned Player of the Year honors in the NEHC but will be looking for more team success in the national tournament (Photo by Babson Athletics)

With three teams from the NEHC in the NCAA tournament, the quality of the league overall and schedule of tough games found every weekend tests the resolve of every team. The conference champions from Babson feel like they are battle-tested and appreciate the opportunity to take the next step in the 12-team field selected for the NCAA tournament.

“We have played Elmira three times, Hobart twice and Plymouth State who are all in this tournament,” said coach Jamie Rice. “We feel like we have a mature group – selfless and respectful but highly appreciative of the opportunity to play on the national stage starting with a great Trinity team on Saturday night. They have won like four of the last six NESCAC titles and Matt [Greason] has done a great job in building that program. It is not so long ago that they won the title and played in another final so they know what this is all about and they will be ready to play on Saturday.”

For Babson, the team is the sum of its parts skating four lines and six defensemen while boasting a former All-American in goal in graduate student Brad Arvanitis. He along with seniors Mike Egan (14-17-31; +34), Ryan Black ((18-19-37; +27) and defenseman John Corrigan (2-17-19; +17) lead a deep squad the often sees a surprise player step-up in big moments for the Beavers. During the course of the NEHC playoffs, junior Andrew Holland scored his only goal of the season to beat Norwich in overtime while 13th forward Rory Casey was the offensive hero with two goals against Skidmore in the championship game.

“We play everyone in the game, and everyone feels like the team is all in this together,” said Rice. “Over my 13 years here we have had a large number of playoff games decided by fourth line or other players that aren’t considered our star players. I think that sense of playing for each other, whether scoring a goal or blocking a shot, comes through in big games and big moments. We will need some of that from all of the guys playing on Saturday if we are going to advance to the next round.”

While some surprise players have won some big games recently so too have the players you look to do so on a big stage. Ryan Black scored the overtime game-winner at Elmira in the semifinal round of the NEHC tournament to pick up his eighth game-winning goal of the season. That stat leads the nation across all divisions of college hockey.

“Last week against Skidmore we had an incredible crowd that was probably the loudest I remember in this building,” noted Rice. “The school is on spring break this week so I am not sure what we will have in the stands. Last year in a very abbreviated schedule due to COVID, we played in front of zero fans and at the end of the day, this game is going to be decided by the 44 players inside the glass on Saturday night. We are here; we have done everything to prepare; it’s time to find out if we are ready to seize the opportunity.”

For the school that won the very first D-III national championship back in 1984, the Beavers are ready take on the new challenge in 2022.

NCHC announces 2021-22 all-conference teams, with five teams represented on first team

Riese Gaber has been an offensive force this season for North Dakota (photo: Mark Kuhlmann).

The NCHC on Wednesday announced its all-conference teams, with five different teams represented on the 2021-22 all-NCHC first team.

Voting was conducted by the eight head coaches at each institution and eight media members, one covering each member school. Coaches and media voted for six forwards, four defensemen and two goaltenders, awarding first-team votes for six players (three forwards, two defensemen and one goaltender) and second-team votes for the other six selections. Three points were awarded for a first-team vote while one point was awarded for a second-team vote, with the most points at each position earning the honors.

Coaches were not allowed to vote for their own players, making 15 first-place votes the maximum a player can receive.

First-Team All-NCHC
F: Bobby Brink, Jr., Denver – 45 (15) – unanimous
F: Ethen Frank, Gr., Western Michigan – 38 (12)
F: Riese Gaber, So., North Dakota – 25 (6)
D: Ronnie Attard, Jr., Western Michigan – 42 (14)
D: Nick Perbix, Sr., St. Cloud State – 24 (6)
G: Ryan Fanti, Jr., Minnesota Duluth – 23 (6)

Second-Team All-NCHC
F: Carter Savoie, So., Denver – 20 (4)
F: Drew Worrad, Sr., Western Michigan – 17 (4)
F: Kevin Fitzgerald, Gr., St. Cloud State – 17 (3)
D: Jake Sanderson, So., North Dakota – 19 (5)
D: Mike Benning, So., Denver – 16 (3)
G: Zach Driscoll, Sr., North Dakota – 22 (6)

Honorable Mention All-NCHC
F: Cole Guttman, Sr., Denver – 10 (1)
F: Noah Cates, Sr., Minnesota Duluth – 9 (2)
F: Connor Ford, Sr., North Dakota – 4 (1)
D: Brandon Scanlin, Jr., Omaha – 10 (1)
D: Michael Joyaux, Sr., Western Michigan – 6 (1)
G: Magnus Chrona, Jr., Denver – 10 (2)

The NCHC will announce its individual award finalists on Thursday. Individual award winners will be announced at the NCHC awards celebration in Saint Paul, Minn. on Thursday, March 17 on the eve of the 2022 NCHC Frozen Faceoff.

Panthers in hot pursuit of NCAA success

PSU forward Myles Abbate earned MASCAC Player of the Year honors while winning the conference title for the third year consecutive time (Photo by Kim Bownes – AD)

For the fifth time in program history, the Plymouth State Panthers will play an opening round NCAA game in the 2022 tournament bracket looking for their first win on the national stage. With a core group of returning seniors and graduate students, PSU won their third consecutive MASCAC title to earn the conference auto-bid and will travel to face the CCC champions, University of New England on Saturday night in Biddeford, Maine.

“Yeah, we have been here before, but it is about much more than a first win with this group,” said head coach Craig Russell. “In the past we have been a bit top heavy with one big line, but this team has both depth and size with all our lines able to score goals – something you absolutely need in a tournament like this with the level of competition. I really think we are built for this and getting a key piece like Collin Tracy back on the blueline will be a big add for the roster heading to UNE.”

The Panthers are led by MASCAC Player-of-the-Year Myles Abbate (17-23-40; +21) fellow 1st Team All-MASCAC players JR Barone (20-13-33; +19) and Simon Besner (1-15-16; +20). The team has found balanced scoring in the second half of the season with the emergence of players like Jeromey Rancourt (12-4-16), Anton Nasstrom (7-12-19), Whim Stalberg (9-6-15) and Peter Laviolette (11-15-26). The team can play big & heavy where needed and has focused playing the game on the quick side of the ledger.

“Our goal all season has been to play quicker,” noted Russell. “ We have seen how teams in other conferences play fast due to the level of competition and we have tried to make that a key element in our game in skating, puck movement and decision making. We were forced that way playing teams like Plattsburgh and Babson but really saw it take root in a nice win over Massachusetts-Boston earlier this season. We know that UNE likes to play fast, especially on the big sheet and while we don’t expect to change much about how we play, I do want us to focus on playing quicker. It will be key to our success if we are going to advance and contend in this tournament.”

While the two teams did not play in the regular season this year, they did play a pre-season game that was very closely contested and consistent with all of the past matchups that were decided by just a single goal.

“They are a familiar opponent, but the pre-season was a long time ago and I am sure we are both different teams at this point of the season,” stated Russell. “ They have a very potent offense, and that first line is a special group. We will need to be disciplined and stay out of the penalty box to avoid their power play, but we are pretty good there too. I think adding a piece on the back-end will help but it will be a raucous crowd in their building, and we are excited to play and hopefully, play well.”

NCAA Division I Women’s Hockey: Wednesday Women – Dissecting and predicting the NCAA tournament

Arlan: Hey Nicole! I hope you survived the weather over the weekend, including the rain, thunderstorms, ice, and snow that hit the Twin Cities during the WCHA Final Faceoff. Better that than the fatal tornados that hit Iowa, I guess.

Anyway, there’s plenty to discuss. Let’s start with a mention of the final NEWHA Championship that will not result in an NCAA Tournament bid.

Congratulations to Franklin Pierce, and congrats to Grant Salzano, our guest from last week, who correctly predicted they would be the winner! The Ravens entered the tournament’s semifinals as the only one of the four remaining teams without a NEWHA playoff crown to its credit. That’s no longer true, as Suzette Faucher earned tournament Most Outstanding Player honors by shutting out first Sacred Heart and then Saint Anselm. Statistically, Faucher finishes the season as the hardest goalie to score against in the country. About the only thing that she couldn’t do for the Ravens was score, but when Ava Kison netted the final’s only goal on a power play, she made sure it held up for a 1-0 victory over the Hawks.

When RIT accomplished something similar in 2014, the final year that the CHA didn’t own an automatic bid, the Tigers turned it into a practice run, going back to back in a worst-to-first win in 2015. Do you think Faucher can backstop the Ravens to a repeat run in 2023, like Ali Binnington did at RIT? Or how do you see the contenders in our newest league lining up as it enters its NCAA Tournament era?

Nicole: I love that we’ve seen a bunch of different teams take the top spot since NEWHA formed. It’s great for the league and for the universities’ recruiting, which will help build the league’s profile.

I like the rate of growth we’ve seen from all the NEWHA teams. They have wins over D1 opponents and feel like this could be a good transition. My concern is that despite the years that have passed since the CHA formed, the winner makes it to the NCAA tournament as the bottom seed and is promptly dispatched by the top seed. The expanded field might change that for them, but it does make me worry about what gap might exist between the rest of the NCAA field and the NEWHA auto bid winner.

But I’ll save that worry for another day. Stonehill hits the ice next year and NEWHA will have six teams. Expansion is great for the sport and I’m going to choose to look at the positives instead of worrying about possible negatives, as is usually my wont.

I do think it will be interesting to see how other teams add NEWHA squads to their schedule now that they’ve reached full, tournament-eligible status.

Arlan: Elsewhere in the conference tourneys, we saw a lot of come-from-behind wins, including a fair amount of overtime. Syracuse needed the latter, but not the former, in order to vanquish Mercyhurst and reach its second NCAA Tournament. The Orange were up a couple of goals at the midway point before the Lakers stormed back. Undaunted, Sarah Thompson won it for Syracuse 7:32 into the extra session.

Northeastern was another top-seeded host whose seeding held up. Connecticut had a strong showing in the Hockey East Tournament, taking down Boston University and Vermont by identical 3-1 scores to set up an all-Huskies final. UConn scored first but came out on the wrong end of another 3-1 verdict, when Alina Müller scored goals that bracketed either side of the second intermission to give Northeastern its fifth straight Hockey East Tournament Championship.

I watched a lot of the Hockey East Tournament this year, but not a lot of deep analysis is needed. Maine put up a good fight, but it really couldn’t skate with Northeastern; the game was a matter of time. UConn played very well versus both the Terriers and Catamounts, making the key plays in both games and winning with some degree of comfort. Whatever advantage UConn enjoyed in the first two rounds was reversed in the final; had it been playing the version of Northeastern that didn’t include Müller, maybe Connecticut finds a way to come out on top. Müller was there; her team won.

What stood out to you in those tournaments?

Nicole: Connecticut has felt on the edge of breaking out the past few seasons – this was their third Hockey East title game loss in the past five years. They are a team that is particularly good in the postseason and elimination games regardless of how the regular season went. In 2020, they played for the title as the 5th seed. In 2018, they were the 7th seed. Thanks to those performances, I had high hopes for their chances in this year’s final and the longer Northeastern went without scoring, the higher I thought Connecticut’s odds were.

Müller had three assists in each of her first two games back, but hadn’t scored. It was only a matter of time and I think it’s clear she’s not experiencing any lag in getting back into the college game after being away for a month at the Olympics. Connecticut’s chances were pretty much erased when she scored twice in a matter of seconds in game play to close the third and open the fourth.

I was really taken in by Vermont’s accomplishments and enthusiasm this season. I was pretty surprised how easily Connecticut handled them in the semifinal. UConn is kind of the under the radar team this season – Northeastern was the presumptive winner, Vermont was the surprise story, but Connecticut went 23-8-4 and really kind of cruised into the tournament title game. I hope this was a tide change for the Catamounts and not just a great single season.

I can’t decide how I feel about the CHA finishing their tournament a week before everyone else. When they’ve had six teams, they’ll play an extra week of regular season before completing their whole tournament in one week. This year they crowned a champion while everyone else was playing quarterfinal series and Syracuse has had a week off before the NCAAs start.

There’s probably a good argument to be had about whether that week off can hurt or harm their chances, but I guess we’ll wait and see how the Orange look in their opening round game and draw our conclusions from there.

I hope they spent their week watching tape and talking about protecting a lead. They’ve been able to mount comebacks against CHA opponents, but don’t think they’ll have that luxury against Quinnipiac.

As for the tournament, everything just felt a little off this season in the CHA. I’d assume it has at least something to do with the Robert Morris saga, but there didn’t seem to be as much competition and fire as we’ve seen. That race and tournament have been so fun the past couple of seasons because the title has been up for grabs and come down to the wire. I felt like we were missing that feeling this season.

Arlan: You’ve made no secret of your fondness for chaos; I imagine that you took some pleasure from the ECAC Tournament? That started in the quarterfinal round, where both of the top two seeds were extended to a third game, and No. 1 Harvard didn’t survive the extension, falling to Princeton. Yale, by virtue of taking the rubber game from St. Lawrence, earned the right to host the last two rounds. The Bulldogs fell into an early hole to the Tigers, but reversed the score in the second frame and advanced.

On the other side of the bracket, Colgate and Quinnipiac played a classic semifinal. The Raiders twice fought back from deficits before Allyson Simpson tallied the deciding goal with under four minutes in regulation. Colgate played from behind in the final versus Yale as well, waiting until the final stanza to answer an early Bulldogs goal. Nearly five minutes into OT, Simpson assisted Kalty Kaltounkova in being the day’s heroine. The 2-1 victory gave Colgate its second consecutive ECAC Championship, although this one capped a campaign that included a full field, as opposed to 2021’s four-team schedule.

In our last column, I chose Harvard as my likely winner of this tournament. So much for that. Readers, when you get deeper into this column and I start to prognosticate regarding how the NCAA Tournament will unfold, remember that I’m the guy who picked the host that didn’t make it out of the quarters.

Enough about me – what did you think of the ECAC results?

Nicole: Well, I’m not sure I’m any better in the predictions department. I was pulling for Yale and Vermont’s historic seasons and I’m so excited to see more teams be competitive at the end of the season. And in my column last week opined that I thought Minnesota Duluth would give the Gophers a run for their money. So basically we’re not very good at this.

But I loved those quarterfinal series. Obviously Princeton was a bit of an upstart as the 8th seed, but they were also much better than your typical eight seed and those series all showed how close this conference was all year.

Maybe it’s because I am used to how things are done in the WCHA, but I’ve always thought one of the down sides of the 12-team ECAC is that teams only play two games against each other. I feel like I get a much better idea of how WCHA teams stack up against each other than I do for ECAC teams. Sweeping an opponent on the season doesn’t necessarily tell me anything in the ECAC, just as a split series doesn’t mean games between the teams are toss-ups. That’s why the ECAC tournament is so interesting to me – I get more data to think about in terms of how the teams are playing and how they compare to one another.

I was more surprised by St. Lawrence taking Yale to the wire than I was Princeton upsetting Harvard, I think. The Saints ended the season at .500 and closed out the regular season with three losses and two ties. They took two wins off Quinnipiac in early February just before that, but those next five games made that feel like a bit of a fluke. Of course, Lucy Morgan is one of the best in the country in net and really gave them such a solid base to build out from.

I was also a little surprised by Colgate’s comeback win, if only because the Raiders had started the season with such a splash and had sort of faded back into the pack a bit. I knew they were still a good team, but they’d played some close games and I wasn’t sure if they were going to have what it took to gut out the early part of the playoffs.

Kalty Kaltounkova is one of my favorite individual players in the country. I just like her style of play. I like how I’ve seen her develop a smarter game and how to use her body to her advantage. Czechia didn’t have her on their Olympic roster this year and I was really surprised. She’s a player that I think has really blossomed in Colgate’s “We Play Free” philosophy.

A player that doesn’t get mentioned often is transfer Dara Grieg. She wasn’t getting much playing time and went to Hamilton to join the Raiders and immediately showed why the Badgers recruited her in the first place. She’s third on the team in scoring and scored the only goal in their 1-0, OT win in the quarterfinals. She doesn’t draw the attention of the defense in the same way her linemates do and she’s as good at dishing the puck as she is shooting it herself.

I’ll admit I was rooting for Yale to earn their first ever conference tournament title, but as I’ve said before, I don’t think this is the last we’ll hear from the Bulldogs in conference play. It feels like the program has been built up to be a contender year in and year out.

Arlan: Ever since the days when people like David DeRemer quit writing for USCHO and we have lacked writers from the East on the women’s side, we get complaints from readers that we devote more coverage to the WCHA. I shouldn’t speak for you, but I think the reason for this is obvious. We both live in the Midwest, and regularly watch and attend WCHA games.

However, I’ll keep my WCHA Tournament comments respectfully brief. Minnesota-Duluth didn’t seem to have the jump after playing three games to get past Minnesota State-Mankato the weekend before, and lost many races to the puck in falling to Minnesota. Wisconsin had the better of play for much of its game with Ohio State, but the Buckeyes were able to accomplish more during the several-minute stretch of the second period that they dominated. In the final, the Gophers survived a shaky first period to take a two-goal lead after 40 minutes, but couldn’t hold that lead when the Buckeyes pushed back. Maybe Minnesota was able to get a puck into OSU’s net via a third-period powerplay, but there was no video evidence of it. What was certain was Sophie Jaques second-straight goal giving the Buckeyes the title just seconds into overtime.

What did I miss by not observing that tournament in person?

Nicole: Right. I’m a born and raised Wisconsinite and I fell in love with college hockey while watching the 2006 Wisconsin men’s and women’s teams both win the National Championship that year. In a lot of ways, it’s impossible to extricate that from my career covering women’s college hockey. Being a sportswriter is tough and the season can be grueling even on this end. I’m of the firm belief you have to be a fan – you have to love the sport – to cover it. Otherwise it’s a miserable experience.

When I first started this gig, I thought it was important to be at games in person every weekend, but I’ve found a mix of traveling to Madison to see teams and staying home to watch streams seems to be the best way to go about it. I’m set up to have up to three streams going at once – I usually have a primary one I’m paying attention to and have the other two muted so I can check in and possibly switch between if they become more interesting than the one I initially picked.

I both fully understand someone being annoyed that I only attend games in the midwest and also want to make it clear that I do a lot to watch as many games as I can.

The unfortunate state of things is that not all streams are a great way to watch games. It’s not easy to analyze players or teams through netting and glass and a single side-view camera. That means I generally have better knowledge of the teams I actually see in person, which again are almost all WCHA teams. Covid made everything, including scheduling interviews, difficult. I’ve definitely done fewer columns and interviews the past two years than I have in years past and hope to get back to having more of that micro, personalized coverage next season instead of the more big picture stuff I’ve been doing this year.

I suppose that’s a really long winded defense, but I hope that teams and fans know that I’m constantly thinking of ways to expand my coverage and watch more games. I make a conscious and concerted effort to fight against my own natural biases and tendencies and to make sure I’m covering everyone as equally as possible. That being said, I live here and covering women’s hockey isn’t a high-paying gig. Other than the Frozen Four, if I can’t drive to watch the game, I’m just not going to be able to attend in person. I’d love to be able to do more and attend more games, but unless I get a wealthy benefactor or win the lottery, I’m going to keep attending games in Madison, occasionally driving to Minneapolis, sometimes making it to Columbus and watching a whole lot of streaming hockey.

To actually answer your question, I’m not sure a stream properly conveyed just how good Minnesota looked in their semifinal. As you mentioned, UMD looked a little worn out, but I’m not sure any team would have looked good in comparison to the Gophers. It was a start to finish top-tier and complete game from them. I saw some of what the relentless Minnesota forecheck can do when they were in Madison back in January, but this was even more smothering. UMD could not do anything without a Gopher in their face, forcing them to make quick decisions. It was just really impressive and one of the best team performances I’ve seen.

What Ohio State did well (and the Gophers, too, to some extent) that might not always be obvious on the stream was create and find open space. Both of Sophie Jaques’ goals were scored with her unmarked in the slot. It’s not as though the Gophers didn’t have plans to keep her very, very marked. Both teams were very good at drawing in defenders and then getting the puck to the open player. She found open space, but that space was there because a teammate was monopolizing the defense’s attention. Minnesota did it on Abigail Boreen’s goal – Ohio State committed to covering Taylor Heise on the breakaway, giving Boreen a clear shot on net.

Arlan: I confess that I had no idea of what to expect in the way of NCAA Tournament brackets. We all understood where the PairWise had the teams ranked, thanks to Grant’s excellent work with his predictive tools, but just how the selection committee would sort through considerations of intraconference matchups and reducing airplane flights was a bit of an unknown.

Overall, the committee did a good job, in my opinion. It would be nice if there had been some way to avoid the reprise of the ECAC final matching Yale and Colgate, with the latter earning the role of host this time, but as the fifth and fourth seeds, they were destined for that Hamilton Regional, the only one with only two teams.

The situation is reminiscent of 2016 when Quinnipiac took the ECAC Championship over Clarkson by a 1-0 decision, but six days later the Golden Knights scored the only goal 10 seconds into their NCAA quarterfinal. I realize that there have been many examples like this over the years, and the conference winner has likely won at least as many as it has lost in the rematch, but that one always sticks out to me because the deciding goal came so early. One of the oft-used cliches in sport is that one team supposedly “wants it more.” For the most part, I don’t buy that, but I can see that especially in the opening minutes, the losing team in a recent meeting might feel just a bit more motivation.

Colgate had a devil of a time scoring on Yale and Gianna Meloni this season, as the Raiders endured eight periods without any positive reinforcement, better known as goals, before finally breaking through. What do you expect the storyline to be in the teams’ fourth meeting? Will it be about Meloni continuing her mastery of Colgate? Yale stepping onto the national stage for the first time? Or the Raiders trying to start a tournament run similar to the one they made in the previous Olympic year?

Nicole: I definitely think Yale is going to be smarting from the come-from-behind, overtime loss in the ECAC final. It has to feel like they really let that one slip through their fingers and I assume that will be a motivating factor. The Bulldogs have created a whole new set of standards in New Haven and I think they really want to have something to show for it. They lost the regular season crown in the final weekend of the regular season and then didn’t take the tournament, either. It has to be weighing on their minds that “NCAA tournament bid” isn’t how they want to look back and define this season.

Colgate’s experience played a big role in the championship game, I think. There’s something to be said for having been there before and knowing how to handle the stress and emotions of playing in such an important game. Yale failed to play a full 60 minutes in that game, which led to overtime. Maybe they were feeling secure in Colgate’s lack of scoring prowess against them, but I think by the time the Elis realized they had a fight on their hands, Colgate had built all the momentum and passed them by.

Absolutely Yale needs a big goaltending performance. They need to stay out of the penalty box and not give the Raiders any additional opportunities. Where Colgate excels is being creative with the puck and reacting to what a team puts in front of them. As a new program with a newer coach who didn’t play last season, I’m not sure the Bulldogs have the confident self-awareness to be reactive in the same way.

Arlan: The most compelling regional looks to be the one that will play out in Boston. It offers a first-round pairing of Clarkson and Wisconsin, teams that met in the title game in 2017 and collided in a semifinal two years later. Each triumphed once, with that win leading directly and indirectly, respectively, to a national championship. The two programs have split the last four crowns, but may be heading in slightly different directions.

Clarkson missed out on the tournament in 2020-21, in what was a strange year everywhere, and in the ECAC in particular. There, competition was reduced to four teams and a schedule that included a marathon series pairing Clarkson with Colgate. The Golden Knights are back in the event this year, but only because the bracket expanded to 11 teams and the NEWHA did not yet have an autobid. Next year, their conference looks to be ultracompetitive once more, as teams below return players away during the Olympic year. Clarkson can’t take it for granted that they’ll be back next year, so it could give extra urgency to this tournament, particularly after being reduced to a spectator for the ECAC semifinals.

Wisconsin is also in the unfamiliar role of a visitor for regional competition, instead of opening in the familiar confines of LaBahn Arena. Except for last year when the entire tournament was played in Erie. Or the year before, when the tournament wasn’t played at all. In any case, the Badgers didn’t earn one of the top four seeds for the first time since 2013. Why not? One reason is that they shared a league with the top two seeds. Their roster was also thinned by Olympic year departures that left them especially susceptible to injuries. That minutes of zone time and barrages of shots don’t always result in goals is a problem not limited to this particular team or Wisconsin as a whole. The larger issue is that the back end has been more vulnerable than it usually is, increasing the cause for concern if the offense sputters.

Even if this is a down year for the Golden Knights and Badgers, one of these squads will advance to face Northeastern. If it is Wisconsin, that regional final will be a rematch of last season’s NCAA Championship. Clarkson has already played 13 games (4-8-1) versus the tournament field. The Badgers played 15 games versus tournament teams (6-7-2). Neither has been particularly hot of late: Wisconsin won just once in its last eight games versus the field; Clarkson lost its final six contests against the teams that are still playing.

Still, whichever team advances on Thursday will be on a one-game winning streak and have played at least 14 games against the tourney field. Northeastern has yet to play one. That’s hard to do with the expanded field. Syracuse also emerged from a circuit where it was the only team to advance, but it still played four non-conference games against tourney teams. The Huskies had some bad luck. Cornell and Princeton could have been expected to finish higher. Losing in the first round of the Beanpot meant they didn’t see Harvard. They’ve played a number of games against the next tier of teams like Cornell, Princeton, UConn, and Vermont, so it might not be an obstacle.

Over the years, we’ve questioned how well a number of Hockey East contenders were prepared by their conference schedule. Am I making too much of an issue of it this time? Can Northeastern’s obvious talent and home ice carry them through a game against a seemingly more battle-tested opponent?

Nicole: I feel like I’ve talked about this before and I don’t want to sound like I’m piling on the Huskies, but no, I don’t think you’re making too much of an issue. It’s a concern in theory, but it was also proven correct in last year’s tournament.

In the first round of team availability in Erie, the Huskies came off as unconcerned about facing Minnesota Duluth. Both coach Dave Flint and the players were dismissive of the idea that the semifinal would be different or more difficult than any other game they’d played that season.
Then the first period happened and UMD controlled the puck and the pace of play and outshot Northeastern 13-4. Flint looked shell shocked in his first period interview.

They managed to eke out an OT win there and they adjusted a bit, but were still trying to build plays out of the back and take time to make decisions as they were happening. If they come in with that mentality again, I’m not sure they will make it out of this regional. And even if they do, I think they’re going to be full on steamrolled if they have to face Minnesota or Ohio State, who are playing far faster than UMD did in that semifinal.

One has to imagine that they’re more prepared this time around, but I was shocked at how cavalier they were before that game last season, so I’m not sure the same overconfidence won’t still be an issue.

Clarkson had a truly dismal February and is in this tournament by the skin of their teeth and, I think, in part thanks to the relative weakness of Hockey East. It was at the start of the season, but as they’re taking on a WCHA team, I can’t help but go back to their tie and loss against Bemidji State as a reason I have a hard time picking them against the Badgers. I really like Caitrin Lonergan and I think her speed and using her in transition to catch the depleted Wisconsin defense out of position is probably the Golden Knight’s best chance at getting the win here.

If Wisconsin plays like they played against Ohio State last weekend, I like their chances all the way through this tournament. They showed some fight and flashes of the team that swept Ohio State early on and came back for a 5-1 win after losing to UMD in early February. The short turnaround and travel might affect them the most – they’ve had a depleted roster and have seemed to feel the strain of their missing and injured players as the season winds down.

The Badgers are at their best when they trust themselves and use the chemistry they’ve built to make quick decisions, read where their teammates will be and move the puck cleanly. In Columbus a few weeks ago, even the veterans were making the simple things complicated, taking too long to make decisions and turning over the puck without much provocation. The problem for Badger fans is worrying about which version of the team will show up for any given game. The team hasn’t always been great at putting all its potential pieces together and executing smoothly.

However, no offense to Northeastern, but if I’m Wisconsin, I’m looking at this bracket and thinking this is one of the better case scenarios for making the Frozen Four. That’s not to imply either game will be easy for them, but any route that doesn’t require playing Ohio State or Minnesota is an appealing one. Both are so smothering that it makes it difficult for opponents to play the game the way they’d like. Northeastern may very well still win their regional, but for a Badger team that’s been thin on defense and not always at the top of their game, the idea that they might be able to move the puck around the way they want to and not be forced into quick decisions is a definite confidence boost.

Arlan: If Wisconsin finds its bracket appealing because no other WCHA teams are in its quarter, Ohio State is the only WCHA team in the Buckeyes’ half of the bracket. How valuable is that? I don’t know if it matters beyond any other top-seeded team which figures to have an easier route, than say, a No. 3 seed. The OSU half also is devoid of Northeastern, who has been the top Eastern team for the last couple of years. We can claim it is an attractive bracket, but that will be of little consolation to Ohio State if Quinnipiac or Colgate or some other supposedly “desirable” opponent ends its season.

If Nadine Muzerall’s team does emerge on top, my thought is that it will be because she’s built a darn good hockey team. They definitely stuck with it last weekend, and kept plugging away when they fell behind each day to teams that have had success playing with a lead. Jaques showed everyone why she’s the favorite of many to win the Patty Kazmaier Award, and Amanda Thiele proved she’s more than some goalie who was filling in while Adrea Braendli went to the Olympics.

Should the seeds hold, Ohio State would be running into a Colgate team at the Frozen Four that doesn’t look that different from the Buckeyes. No, it doesn’t have a Jaques on the blue line, but it has a formidable one-two punch in Kaltounkova and Danielle Serdachny, who each have piled up 53 points. Plus, it has the depth to match lines, as they are just two of the 16 Raiders who have hit double digits in points. In Hannah Murphy, Colgate also has a less-experienced goaltender who has emerged as the starter.

Not saying it couldn’t also be true of some other pairing, but I think Ohio State and Colgate could make a riveting semifinal. What do you think?

Nicole: It puts me in mind of the 2018 semifinal between Wisconsin and Colgate, which I think was the Raiders’ coming out party, so to speak, on the national stage. These are obviously two different teams, but Greg Fargo commented after the 2018 win that he was excited for power plays because that was about the only time his team was able to move the puck on the ice. That the Raiders were able to win a game in which they were outshot 48-24 and couldn’t move the puck as much as they wanted is a good sign that they’d be ready to weather what Ohio State has to offer. Back in 2018, the Raiders won partly because of the play of their goalie, Julia Vandyk, so your comment about Murphy might prove to be prescient.

Ohio State definitely earned their right to that top spot and the less crowded side of the bracket. I was voting them above the Gophers for much of the second half, though it’s probably a coin flip between the two teams. I was really impressed with how they responded in the third period of the WCHA title game.

You mention Muzerall built a great team, and that’s absolutely true – they’re my pick to win it all. But I think most important is that she’s built a great program. Under her leadership, the program has become a regular national contender and that doesn’t seem like it will change after this year. In a relatively short time, she made the Buckeyes a perennial top program in the WCHA, which is no easy feat. Beyond their success on the ice, I am most impressed with the way I’ve seen players blossom while being a part of this program. There’s no arguing that Nadine’s methods work and her players respond to them – and her. I love seeing a loud, assertive and brash woman be successful and urge her young players to be unabashed in their confidence, desire to win and finding their voice.

Arlan: While I like what the top of the bracket has to offer, it’s no secret that the name recognition lives in the bottom half, which contains the four programs that have won all of the NCAA Tournaments contested to date. Even the two that have yet to hoist the trophy have reached the final, four times in Harvard’s case. Meanwhile, the five programs found in the top half of the draw have a total of one Frozen Four victory between them.

Of course, much of that is ancient history. It’s been a dozen years since UMD last won, and last year was the first time the Bulldogs even made it back to the Frozen Four. Harvard played in the final in 2015, but that was its only FF trip since 2009. Even Minnesota has won only one game at the Frozen Four since its last championship in 2016.

Those three squads find themselves in the same regional; can any of them win it all? I can easily see either the Crimson or Bulldogs winning two games. Winning four? That sounds like a long reach. Harvard got on a nice roll in January, but hasn’t been at the same level. UMD’s streaks of that length have come at the expense of primarily lesser teams.

How about the Gophers? They’re definitely a veteran group, with 10 seniors that play heavy minutes. I’ve always felt that to be successful at this time of year, you need your seniors to lead the way, playing at a championship level. On Saturday, the Gophers got that. Lauren Bench made big saves. The three seniors anchored the blue line. All five of their goals came from seniors. Sunday? When they needed 20 strong minutes to finish out a win over OSU, the senior leaders couldn’t maintain that caliber.

Brad Frost has talked about wanting his team to be more gritty. I think that they got what they needed from the depth players on the roster, but the top-line kids didn’t make the plays that they needed to make. Not score more goals, but make the little plays. Gritty plays. One let Sara Saekkinen get her stick free on the edge of the crease to start the comeback. Another made a soft attempt at a clear just inside her own blue line and the tying goal soon followed. Finally, another put the puck on Jaques tape in the slot instead of clearing it or pinning it in a safe area.

Yes, the Buckeyes made good plays in all three cases. Teams trying to win a tournament will do that. In order to win one yourself, you have to be able to prevent them from doing so with solid, gritty plays when needed.

So now that I’ve trashed those teams, who does win it all? I’d say Ohio State is about 35 percent probability to emerge as the champion. I don’t know if anyone else is more than a 20 percent favorite, and that’s being too generous. It might just be a bunch of teams that are around 10 to 15 percent favorites to get it done.

Do you have something sharper than my fuzzy numbers?

Nicole: The Buckeyes are so good at recognizing those breakdowns and exploiting them. They can be so patient and wait for the right window to strike and that’s just one of the reasons they’re my favorite to win. I’d probably put their percentage higher than you did. They certainly aren’t infallible and they’ve lost to both Wisconsin and Minnesota this season. But they did not panic in the third period of the WCHA championship game. They did not start to play out of character or abandon their plan. They just honed in on the areas they could exploit and then did so. They are playing their very best at the right time, riding a high of confidence and are absolutely sure they can and should win it all. I’m not sure any other team matches their combination of talent and swagger.

That point about the Gophers and grit in an interesting one. They are definitely trying to be more of a finesse team and that’s not always going to work for them. Their top line, particularly, has such a high hockey IQ and does such a great job of reading defenses that they’re often skating and passing right around people. That may have left them somewhat unprepared for when they are put in a more physical game where things get a lot less pretty and a lot more contested. Finesse isn’t always going to work, passes aren’t going to be complete and the ability to fight for a puck on the boards and come away with it cleanly is one of the most underrated parts of the women’s game.

One thing I’ll be keeping a close eye on is how teams adjust and adapt. Whether it’s line matchups, specific player matchups, faceoffs, a short bench or something else, one of the best parts of this time of the season is seeing how the coaches’ minds work in real time and what machinations they’re willing to try when it’s win and go home.

Regardless of the outcomes, we are in for four days of high-level, entertaining, skilled and fun hockey. I hope the Olympic year and the higher profile this year bring in more fans to see the high level of competition women’s college hockey has.

 

 

Bentley’s Ryan Soderquist on playoff road sweep, working through on-ice adversity: USCHO Spotlight college hockey podcast Season 4 Episode 22

Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined for a second time this season by Bentley head coach Ryan Soderquist. The Falcons were at or near the top of Atlantic Hockey through the first half of the season, but slumped a bit in the latter part of the season. We discuss the team’s turnaround in a weekend sweep at Niagara in Atlantic Hockey’s first round, how they worked through adversity on the ice, and look ahead to this weekend’s quarterfinal round at American International.

This 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.

Nor’easters bring ‘solid backbone’ to NCAA tournament run

Nor’easter goaltender Billy Girard IV has been a key piece in the Nor’easters winning the CCC and playing in the NCAA tournament (Photo by Tristan Durgin – UNE Athletics)

After Saturday’s thrilling 3-2 overtime win over Endicott to win the Commonwealth Coast Conference (CCC), the University of New England enters the first round of the D-III NCAA tournament with a lot of momentum and excitement as they will host Plymouth State on Saturday in first round action. The Nor’easters have been hot at the right time of the year having won 11 games in a row and look for another battle when the Panthers come to Biddeford this weekend.

“Plymouth State is a familiar opponent for us,” said head coach Kevin Swallow. “We have played them before including a pre-season game this year where we scored some power play goals but five-on five was pretty even hockey. Craig [Russell] does a great job over there and we know it is going to be a battle with them for the full 60 minutes.”

Leading the way for the Nor’easters offensively, the line of Jared Christy (16-16-32; +19), Austin Morgan (10-23-33; +14) and Jake Fuss (11-26-37; +17) has been on fire having been united towards the end of the season. The three lead the team in points and have combined for ten power play goals and ten game-winning goals.

“All year they have asked to play together,” noted Swallow. “We did put them together down the stretch and they have been a terrific combination. They are the best line we have had here since the days of Ryan Bloom and the Fleurents. They certainly can create challenges for the opposition, but we have a lot more behind them. I really like the depth on this team and the balance. We have always been able to score goals but this year we have had balance with good defense and great goaltending.

The “backbone” of the team has been netminder Billy Girard IV. Girard has posted a 19-3-1 record with a 2.26 goals-against average and a .914 save percentage in 23 starts this season.

“Billy really has been the backbone of the team all season,” said Swallow. “he has been a difference maker on the back-end for us and really gives the guys on the ice a lot of confidence. He along with eh rest of the team have been playing really well over the last month or so and we want to keep that going for a couple more weeks.”

UNE will host Plymouth State on Saturday night. Game time is scheduled for 7 PM in Biddeford and Coach Swallow is hoping for another electric atmosphere like the team saw in the building in their win over Endicott.

“The atmosphere was really great last week, stated Swallow. “Unfortunately, spring break starts at the end of the week so we may not have the student representation we saw last week. I know some of the guys on the team are trying to get their friends to leave on Sunday but regardless we have had great crowds all season and it should be a loud crows on Saturday night.”

This Week in CCHA Hockey: Northern Michigan looking to play giant killer in upcoming playoff series with No. 1 Minnesota State

Northern Michigan players celebrate a goal last weekend against Lake Superior State (photo: NMU Athletics).

Three times this season, Northern Michigan has knocked off the No. 1 team in the country.

They’ll get a chance to do it for a fourth time on Saturday night when they take on No. 1 seeded Minnesota State, the nation’s top-ranked team. The fifth-seeded Wildcats defeated fourth-seeded Lake Superior State in a tough three-game CCHA quarterfinal series last weekend in Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., for the right to advance to Saturday’s semifinal.

“We’re happy to be moving on,” NMU coach Grant Potulny said. “That was a tough series for us. We didn’t match up great with Lake Superior State when we played them earlier this year, so to be able to move on and get to the semifinals is great. And having a one-game shot makes it much more manageable to prepare for and much more manageable in terms of an opportunity to advance.”

The Wildcats (20-15-1, 12-13-1 CCHA) have had their ups and downs this season but reaching 20 wins and advancing to the Mason Cup semifinals was an important milestone for a team that struggled in conference play.

Much of that was due to injuries and external factors beyond the team’s control. The Wildcats spent a chunk of the season without its full complement of defenseman. And then in January, the team’s series against rivals Michigan Tech was postponed due to COVID-19 health and safety precautions within the Wildcats’ program.

When the series was eventually rescheduled in February, the Wildcats had injuries to two of their three goaltenders (Charlie Glockner and Rico DiMatteo) and had to call in Braden Golisek – a sports communication intern at NMU who was playing intramural hockey at the time – as a backup for a midweek game against the Huskies. He didn’t end up playing in that game – third goalie Nolan Kent did – but it’s emblematic of just what kind of adversity the Wildcats have had to overcome this season.

“Any time you win 20 games, you look at your year, and you say it was a successful year,” Potulny said. “But you look at us this year with the amount of injuries and adversity we had, we got shut down for 10 days because of COVID, all those things combined, I think we’re real proud of the effort .

“That being said, from the first day of practice, we tell the guys, we’re coaching for the end of the year, and that came together last weekend. Hopefully we can come together and have a great effort on Saturday night.”

Potulny knows it will be tough against the Mavericks (33-5-0, 23-3-0), who have only lost five times this season. The good news for NMU is that the Wildcats are one of those five.

The Wildcats beat NMU 4-2 on Jan. 14 in Marquette. CCHA goal scoring leader AJ Vanderbeck scored what turned out to be the game winner in the second period, and NMU was able to hang on despite a furious third period which saw the Mavericks pull to within a goal and outshoot the Wildcats 13-3.

Potulny said the confidence that comes from winning a playoff series combined with the fact that they know how to beat MSU should help them, especially in a one-game semifinal series where anything can happen.

“I think when you win a playoff series, you shed confidence in your group. And the games here (against Minnesota State) showed the step our team made to close the gap,” he said.

The difference this time is that the Wildcats are in Mankato, where they lost 4-2 and 7-0 back in October.

“You have to have a good start. You can’t get run out of the building on the road. And you have to do a great job on special teams and get great goaltending,” he said. “All those things, those are non-negotiable for us to have a chance to win the game. We just hope to still be in the game in the third period, and at that point, you hope your guys make some plays.”

Tech, Bemidji have showdown in Houghton

In the other semifinal, third-seeded Bemidji state heads to the Upper Peninsula to take on second-seeded Michigan Tech. The Huskies are No. 10 in the Pairwise rankings and will probably make the NCAAs tournament, but a win over the Beavers would likely seal the deal for sure and make them a lock.

The Beavers, on the other hand, need to win the CCHA tournament to have any shot of returning to the NCAAs for the second consecutive season.

Michigan Tech leads the season series 3-1, including a sweep in Houghton in January – a pair of 5-2 wins. Tech’s Brian Halonen has registered at least a point for the Huskies in all four games this season and has a team-high seven points against the Beavers.

Meanwhile, BSU’s Owen Sillinger scored a pair of goals in the Beavers’ home series with the Huskies in October but Tech was able to shut him down in Houghton, limiting him to just a single assist. Sillinger, who has a team-high 45 points, broke BSU’s single-season Division I points record with his goal against Bowling Green last Friday. Matt Read set the program’s previous record with 41 points in the 2009-10 season.

“They have depth in scoring and they’re a tremendous team. It’s going to be an even game. And I’d rather play them here than in their rink for sure,” Tech head coach Joe Shawhan said of the Beavers. “I’m very fortunate that we were able to lock up home ice. And I wouldn’t be surprised to see another overtime game.”

Six players from four teams earn spots on 2022 ECAC Hockey all-rookie team

Dartmouth goalie Clay Stevenson earned his first career shutout Feb. 12, 2022 in a 1-0 win over Yale (photo: Doug Austin).

ECAC Hockey has announced the 2022 men’s all-rookie team, with six players from four teams being honored.

Forward: Matthew Coronato, Fr., Harvard
Forward: Ayrton Martino, Fr., Clarkson
Forward: Alex Laferriere, So., Harvard
Defenseman: Hank Kempf, Fr., Cornell
Defenseman: Ian Moore, Fr., Harvard
Goaltender: Clay Stevenson, So., Dartmouth

This Week in ECAC Hockey: Previewing the four best-of-three playoff series set to go this weekend across the conference

Union goalie Connor Murphy has taken the reins as the No. 1 netminder for the Dutchmen (photo: Michael Mason).

All four home teams won their playoff series in the opening round of the ECAC Hockey postseason.

Now, they’ll head on the road to try and repeat that success.

Colgate and Union swept their respective opponents, while St. Lawrence and Rensselaer won in three games. The Saints beat Brown 4-3 in overtime on Sunday, while RPI scored four third-period goals to beat Dartmouth 5-3. It was the Engineers’ first playoff series win at home since 2004.

“We talked as a group about this invisible line that you have to cross to find playoff success,” RPI coach Dave Smith said after Sunday’s game. “That invisible line was extremely thick, and I thought we played well all weekend. We lost the first game, and we were losing tonight and the guys just didn’t give up.”

The sixth-seeded Engineers travel to fourth-seeded Harvard this weekend. That was supposed to be the matchup in March 2020 at Houston Field House, but that series, along with the rest of the college hockey season, was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

With last weekend behind them, the Engineers will look to carry Sunday’s momentum into the matchup with the Crimson.

“Moving forward, nothing is going to be easy,” RPI junior forward Ryan Mashie said. “It was good to get three games in and play that kind of hockey because you never know what is going to happen next weekend.”

Here’s a look at the four series set for this weekend:

No. 8 St. Lawrence at No. 1 Quinnipiac

Season series: 2-0 Quinnipiac

Last year, the Saints shocked top-seeded Quinnipiac in the league title game with a 3-2 win in overtime. But the Bobcats dominated St. Lawrence in the two the regular season matchups this season, sweeping the Saints by a combined score of 11-3.

The Bobcats were led by a defense that allowed 14 goals in 22 league games, while the Saints only average two goals per game in league play. Quinnipiac has been led by its depth all season; No. 2 goalie Dylan St. Cyr would likely start on a lot of other league teams, while leading scorer Oliver Chau won a national championship with Massachusetts last season. St. Cyr didn’t see more playing time thanks to Yaniv Perets, who is a finalist for both the Ken Dryden award for the top goalie as well as the league’s player of the year after finishing with a .964 save percentage in conference play.

This is a matchup of the top two penalty-kill units in the league and two of the bottom power-play groups. The Saints were 1 for 2 on the man advantage in Sunday’s win over Brown and will need to carry over some of that momentum if they want to have a chance to upset Quinnipiac for the second season in a row.

Prediction: Quinnipiac in two

No. 7 Union at No. 2 Clarkson

Season series: 1-1

Union beat Clarkson in overtime when these teams first met back in November, but Clarkson followed that up with an 8-2 blowout win in January.

Like Quinnipiac, the Golden Knights have a veteran group, led by fifth-year players and captains Zach Tsekos and Jack Jacome. It took Clarkson a little while to put it together, but it only lost two league games in the second half of the season.

Sophomore Ethan Haider was the primary starter in goal for much of the season, but freshman Jacob Mucitelli came on strong in the second half and ended with a 7-0-1 record and .938 save percentage in conference play. Each goalie started a game during Clarkson’s final regular season weekend.

The one area where Clarkson hasn’t excelled this season in league play is on the penalty kill. The Dutchmen power play was solid in league play and scored in each of the two games against Princeton last weekend.

While the Golden Knights split playing time in goal, junior Connor Murphy started every game in net this season for Union.

Murphy might be able to steal a game in net for the Dutchmen, but Clarkson is arguably the most balanced team in ECAC Hockey.

Prediction: Clarkson in three

No. 6 Rensselaer at No. 3 Harvard

Season series: 1-1

Entering the season, Harvard was expected to score plenty of goals with the talent in its lineup.

That ended up being the case, but the Crimson finished with their highest seed in the league tournament since 2017 thanks to a strong season in goal from Mitchell Gibson. The junior had a .927 save percentage in league play and was named one of the finalists for league’s top goalie award.

For RPI, senior forward Ture Linden was named a finalist for the league’s player of the year after finishing tied with three players, including Harvard freshman Alex Laferriere, for the league lead with 12 goals. Linden’s nomination comes after he only scored nine goals during his first two seasons (The Engineers did not play last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic).

RPI’s Jack Watson had a strong season in goal as a freshman, but he’ll be challenged by a Harvard lineup that might have some of the most dynamic playmakers in the league.

Prediction: Harvard in three

No. 5 Colgate at No. 4 Cornell

Season series: 1-1

Colgate and Cornell might be travel partners, but the two teams haven’t played an elimination game since 2006. (The Big Red beat the Raiders 3-0 in the now defunct consolation game in 2012).

A late-season slump by Cornell gave Colgate a chance to surpass its travel partner for the final bye in the league tournament, but the Big Red ended the regular season on a three-game winning streak to secure fourth place.

There are some similarities between the two teams: Both are in the top ten in Division I men’s hockey in faceoff winning percentage, while each team has had three different goalies see significant playing time this season. Senior Mitch Benson started both games against Yale last weekend for Colgate, while freshman Ian Shane has taken over as the Big Red’s primary goalie in the second half, finishing with a .938 save percentage in conference play.

Cornell is deep offensively, as illustrated by third-line center Kyle Betts, who finished the regular season with nine points in nine games. That depth should give the Big Red the edge.

Prediction: Cornell in three

Oles have become best version of themselves at right time

Evan Shoemaker and the St. Olaf Oles are getting set to play in the NCAA tournament this weekend. Hannah Robb / St. Olaf College Athletics.

Junior forward Evan Shoemaker had a feeling this season could be special for St. Olaf. 

To those on the outside of the program, that didn’t seem possible. Not for a team that played only two games a year ago because of the COVID-19 pandemic and had won a total of four games the year before that. Not to mention there were 12 freshman on the roster.

Internally, though, there was hope and confidence.

“Winning the MIAC was one of our goals going into the season,” Shoemaker said. “It was hard to tell what we were going to do this year, but the expectation was to get to the (MIAC) tournament and see what we could do.”

What the Oles did was win three MIAC tournament games, all on the road, against the top three teams in the conference, capping off a memorable and seemingly improbable run this past Saturday with a 5-2 win over Augsburg, the regular-season MIAC champion and the fourth-ranked team in the nation in the DCU/USCHO NCAA Division III men’s poll.

“It’s still surreal we won, especially as a seven seed,” Shoemaker said. “We just took it game by game, trying to be the best version of our team each time we played,”

That was something second-year head coach Eddie Effinger reminded his team about week in and week out during a regular season that had its share of bright moments, but also featured more than its fair share of challenges.

The Oles (11-14-3) had four wins heading into Christmas and then stumbled into the conference tournament, dropping seven of their last nine. Two of those losses came in overtime. 

Through it all, Effinger kept reminding his team of the importance of being the best version of itself when it mattered most. His own college coach during his playing days at Amherst, Jack Arena, always told him the same thing.

“We practiced and preached that all year, and the guys bought into it,” Effinger said. “That helped us when we were struggling, when the score didn’t line up with the effort. It gave us something to grasp and hang onto.”

Shoemaker admits that wasn’t easy. But he never stopped believing.

“It was frustrating because the year as a whole was tough,” Shoemaker said. “We easily could have been a 15-win team or more. We felt like we were the better team a lot of nights, but we didn’t get the bounces.”

Some of that, Shoemaker believes, goes back to the team not having a lot of experience, especially in close games. 

Each week, though, was a learning experience, and it all clicked at the right time as the Oles won their first MIAC title since 2006 to clinch an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.

“Once everyone knew their role, we were hard to beat in the (MIAC) playoffs,” Shoemaker said. “We turned the ship around and wanted to prove a lot of people wrong, We had a lot of ups and downs, but it all came together.”

It started in the offseason. Effinger and his coaching staff helped lay a foundation for the team to connect. The players did a lot of team bonding, something that wasn’t there the previous season because of the pandemic.

“It didn’t feel like it was really back to normal in the locker room until around Christmas,” Effinger said. “At times, it seemed like the guys didn’t know each. They didn’t have those friendships that happen organically But we got there.”

The team was clicking at its best in the MIAC tourney. The Oles beat third-seeded Concordia 3-2 and knocked off second-seeded Saint John’s 3-1 four days later in the semifinal round. They then faced the Auggies, owners of a 16-game home winning streak, for the title. 

Effinger said keeping things simple was the key to success.

“You have to simplify everything, especially with us having a young team,” Effinger said. “I felt we had enough talent to score goals. The big issue was keeping the puck out of the net. We worked a lot on defense, focusing on our defensive zone structure, telling the guys to play fast and simple with the puck. If we were going to make mistakes, we were going to make them going fast.”

St. Norbert presents a new challenge. The Green Knights (23-6) are ranked sixth in the nation and have a tradition of success, winning five national titles, the last in 2018. 

St. Olaf will face off against them Saturday in the opening round of the tournament. Effinger said the experience his team has gained so far playing in the postseason has been beyond valuable. And win or lose, this is another golden opportunity for the Oles.

“I’m so proud of our guys, but we have to put the MIAC behind us, put away that trophy, and focus on taking advantage of the next opportunity,” Effinger said. “No one says you are going to get back here. Don’t just be happy to be playing here with the NCAA banner in the background.”

For someone like Shoemaker, this tourney run has been a dream come true, and the chance to play in the NCAA tournament is something is something he savors a great deal considering how tough things have been at times since he’s been at St. Olaf.

“We’ve had a lot of ups and downs, but I came here because I felt everything was in place to have competitive hockey program,” Shoemaker said. “I wanted to be part of the change, and to see it come to fruition, and what we can have in the future, too, it’s exciting. This is a rewarding feeling knowing how much we’ve put into this season.”

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