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This Week in NCHC Hockey: Omaha success starts between the pipes with Vegas prospect Saville leading the charge

Omaha goalie Isaiah Saville has been named the NCHC goaltender of the week five times this season (photo: Mark Kuhlmann).

Omaha announced bad news Tuesday, as COVID-19 protocols forced the Mavericks to postpone a home series scheduled for this weekend against Denver.

When the Mavericks return to action, though — as of now, Jan. 14-15 at North Dakota — they’ll expect to have a strong-playing goaltender starting between the pipes.

Omaha junior Isaiah Saville is fresh off his fifth NCHC goaltender of the week award, and second in a row. He made 26 saves Friday in a 3-2 loss at St. Lawrence, with the Saints scoring two power-play goals. On Saturday, Saville pitched a 21-save shutout in Canton, N.Y., blanking an opponent for the second time in the Mavericks’ last three games.

Saville has four shutouts this season, and six in his collegiate career. He has featured in 15 of Omaha’s (14-6) 20 games this season. His play has helped the Mavericks, ranked 15th in the latest DCU/USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll, stay in the hunt for a second consecutive NCAA tournament appearance.

The Mavericks are yet to be swept on any weekend this season, and have only lost back-to-back games once, dropping consecutive games in December against Colorado College and No. 3 Western Michigan.

Saville recently told USCHO.com that Omaha’s ability to quickly recover from setbacks is down to the team’s culture.

“It goes back to what we do day-in and day-out, and that’s to prepare for the games for the weekend and the rest of the season,” Saville said.

“I think we’re really good at focusing on the task at hand and making sure we do everything we can to be prepared for the next day and the next day, just to give ourselves a better chance for what’s coming up.”

Saville was a fifth-round pick by the Vegas Golden Knights during the 2019 NHL Draft. Vegas representatives get in touch with him periodically, and he is made aware when they’ll have someone on-site to watch him in a game.

He does not feel, however, that being drafted adds any pressure on him. He credits Omaha coach Mike Gabinet for this.

“The culture of our team is that we’re not a bunch of individuals,” Saville said. “Nobody’s higher or lower than anybody else, and that shows in the depth of our lineup, from our three goalies to our forwards and D-men.

“Any of us can play on any given night, and whether you’re a draft pick or not, Coach Gabs doesn’t care about that, and he’ll sit you if he wants to.”

With a career-best .927 save percentage, Saville is working to ensure that he remains Omaha’s go-to goalie during the second half of the season. Keeping up his good recent play would help, and he’s not getting ahead of himself.

“I’m continuing to improve and mature, and I wouldn’t say there are any monthly goals or anything like that,” Saville said. “I just focus in the moment and make sure I’m prepared and working every day.

“That’s a big part of our team in terms of egos being left at the door. We just work every day to get better.”

Denver’s Stapley, Wisconsin’s Ceulemans, Minnesota State’s McKay garner December HCA national men’s college hockey honors

From left, Brett Stapley, Corson Ceulemans, Dryden McKay (photos: Denver Athletics/Wisconsin Athletics/Minnesota State Athletics).

The Hockey Commissioners Association has announced its men’s college hockey national players of the month for December.

Denver’s Brett Stapley is the player of the month, followed by Wisconsin’s Corson Ceulemans as the national rookie of the month and Minnesota State’s Dryden McKay the top goaltender.

Stapley went for five goals and nine points in five games, leading the Pioneers to a 4-1-0 mark. Included in numbers: his first collegiate hat trick at Arizona State and a game-winning goal versus Alaska.

Named the Kwik Trip Holiday Face-Off Best Defenseman of the Tournament for being outstanding at both ends of the ice, Ceulemans collected two goals and seven points in four games and led the Badgers to a 2-1-1 mark. Was in on seven of Wisconsin’s 13 goals in the month.

McKay went 5-0 in December, allowing a single goal in each of the five contests and capping the month with a 26-save 2-1 win over No. 6 Minnesota Duluth. For the month, McKay had a 0.99 GAA with a save percentage of .946.

Minnesota Duluth’s Hughes, Union’s Matsoukas, Minnesota State’s Frank, Penn State’s Bothun collect December HCA national women’s college hockey honors

From left, Gabbie Hughes, Sophie Matsoukas, Calla Frank, Josie Bothun (photos: Minnesota Duluth Athletics/Union Athletics/Minnesota State Athletics/Penn State Athletics).

The Hockey Commissioners Association has announced its women’s college hockey national players of the month for December.

Minnesota Duluth’s Gabbie Hughes is the player of the month, followed by Union’s Sophie Matsoukas as the national rookie of the month and Minnesota State’s Calla Frank and Penn State’s Josie Bothun the top goaltenders.

Hughes led the WCHA with four goals and five assists for nine points in December’s five games, also leading the NCAA in points per game on the month. Making the numbers even more impressive: all five games came against top-10 opponents. The Bulldogs split with No. 2 Ohio State and No. 3 Minnesota before winning at No. 10 Harvard on the last day of the month.

Matsoukas allowed just two goals in 166-plus minutes, making 91 saves in the process and recording her first career shutout. In all, she enjoyed a 0.72 GAA and a save percentage of .978.

Frank had a phenomenal December, allowing only six goals in six games (0.99 GAA, 4-1-1), stopping 140 of 146 shots (.959). On consecutive weekends against St. Thomas and St. Cloud State, Frank and the Mavericks swept four games, taking 3-0 and 3-1 wins from each opponent.

She only played two games, but Bothun was perfect, going 45 for 45 in a pair of 3-0 road shutouts at New Hampshire. With 25 wins in 38 starts, Bothun set the PSU career win record and her two shutouts gave her eight, also a PSU record.

WCHA cancels Minnesota Duluth-St. Cloud State women’s hockey series due to COVID-19 concerns with Bulldogs

The WCHA series between Minnesota Duluth and St. Cloud State scheduled for this weekend, Jan. 7-8, has been canceled.

Due to COVID-19 concerns within the Minnesota Duluth program, the Bulldogs will no longer be traveling to St. Cloud, Minn., for the two-game series originally scheduled for 3 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 7 and 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 8.

Working with the programs, the league will make every effort to reschedule.

This Week in Big Ten Hockey: Michigan readying for defending NCAA champion UMass, Michigan State prepping for Minnesota

Michigan’s Erik Portillo has played in every game so far during the 2021-22 season (photo: Michigan Photography).

The game it didn’t play to end the year garnered most of the attention for Michigan last week, but with the defending national champion coming to town this weekend, it’ll be important for the Wolverines to turn the page into the new year quickly.

Michigan and the Minutemen will play a Saturday-Sunday series at Yost Ice Arena this weekend.

With the game against Western Michigan not being played, the last result for Michigan was a 0-0 tie against Michigan Tech.

It was the first time the Wolverines have been shutout this season. Even with a plethora of high-profile players missing, head coach Mel Pearson said that zero goals on the board shows that the team needs to do some things better.

“We’ve got to get more traffic to the net,” Pearson said after Wednesday’s game against MTU. “We’ve got to be harder at getting to the net. We looked a little rusty but, again, we have to put more pressure on the net and get there.”

The bright spot for Michigan, as it usually is for both teams on each side of a scoreless draw, was goaltender Erik Portillo. The sophomore netminder made 27 saves in the contest and picked up his second shutout of the season.

“I feel like I really trusted my game,” Portillo said after the game. “It’s something I’ve been working on all season, just trusting myself and knowing that I can make every save. I don’t have to overdo anything.”

Pearson said that, aside from stopping the puck, he liked how Portillo worked with the defensemen.

“He stood his ground and really did a good job there,” he said. “He played the puck extremely well tonight. It really took a lot of pressure off our defensemen and made it easier for them. He looked calm.”

The games against UMass wrap up the nonconference schedule for the Wolverines. They currently have a 7-1-0 nonconference record.

Michigan State looks for home cooking against Minnesota

Michigan State ended up being the only team that played both of its home games in the modified Great Lakes Invitational Showcase, going 1-1.

With the Gophers coming to town this weekend, the Spartans will look for some rare home success against the Gophers. Since becoming conference mates Michigan State is 3-10-2 against Minnesota at home. The two teams will play on Friday and Saturday at Munn Ice Arena.

The Spartans were dropped 3-1 by Western Michigan last week and rebounded by defeating Michigan Tech 3-2 in overtime. Like Michigan, goaltending was key for the Spartans in the game against the Huskies. Drew DeRidder had 43 saves in the contest, including 19 in the second period.

Since getting swept by Michigan in early November, Michigan State has a 7-3 record. DeRidder has been the goaltender for six of those wins and is averaging 29 saves in those contests. He has an 8-5-1 record with a 1.99 GAA this season.

PairWise check-in

The adage is that you shouldn’t put too much stock into the PairWise Rankings until after the new year so, with 2022 officially here, let’s take a look where the Big Ten’s seven teams find themselves.

Michigan leads the pack, coming in at No. 6, followed by No. 11 Minnesota, No. 13 Ohio State, No. 15 Notre Dame, No. 18 Michigan State, No. 20 Penn State and No. 37 Wisconsin.

Obviously, the amount of games remaining can and will change things on a week-to-week basis, but it’s a fun thing to watch. One question remaining is with more games being canceled or postponed, like this weekend’s Ohio State and Wisconsin series, will the format for selecting NCAA tournament teams be changed again this season?

Hockey East announces schedule changes for Jan. 7-8 men’s, women’s college hockey games

Hockey East announced Thursday schedule updates for conference men’s and women’s teams.

The men’s game between Long Island and Northeastern on Friday, Jan. 7 will now air on NESN at 7:30 p.m. Additionally, Northeastern is now scheduled to play Arizona State at Matthews Arena on Tuesday, Jan. 11 at 7 p.m.

The men’s game between UConn and Boston College on Saturday, Jan. 8 will now air on NESN+ at 4 p.m.

The men’s nonconference game between St. Lawrence and New Hampshire will not be played as scheduled.

The men’s nonconference games between Clarkson and St. Lawrence and Merrimack that were scheduled for Jan. 7-8 not be played as scheduled. The Warriors are now scheduled to play Bentley at Lawler Rink on Saturday, Jan. 8 at 7 p.m.

The women’s series between Boston College and Boston University that was scheduled for Jan. 7-8 has been postponed. New dates for the two league games will be announced in the coming days.

Yale men’s hockey games at Princeton, Quinnipiac postponed Jan. 7-8 due to COVID-19 concerns, safety protocols

Due to COVID-19 concerns and safety protocols within the Yale men’s hockey program, the games at Princeton and Quinnipiac on Friday and Saturday, Jan. 7-8, have been postponed.

The games will be rescheduled for a date and time to be determined.

Ohio State’s Steve Rohlik talks this season’s Buckeyes, Big Ten parity: USCHO Spotlight college hockey podcast Season 4 Episode 13

Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined by Ohio State head coach Steve Rohlik. The conversation includes this year’s Buckeyes, high points of the season, the Big Ten’s competitiveness, the transfer portal, and dealing with a COVID schedule change this weekend. (Note: since the time this podcast was recorded, the games this weekend with Wisconsin have been rescheduled.)

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.

This Week in CCHA Hockey: After decent first half, Bowling Green wants ‘to build on how we’ve been playing’ during second half of season

Bowling Green defenseman Eric Parker plays the puck against Yale at the Kwik Trip Holiday Faceoff last weekend in Milwaukee (photo: Ty Helbach).

Ah, the New Year.

A time to make resolutions that you may or may not keep.

For most of us, these resolutions are merely suggestions at self-betterment that might not even have any outwardly tangible signs of change.

Luckily for a college hockey coach who decides to make some resolutions for their team, there should be some visible results at season’s end, in the form of more wins than losses.

Ideally, MANY more wins than losses.

For Bowling Green, it was important for the Falcons to see the second half of the season as a clean break with the first.

“We said on Monday when we got back to practice, ‘Hey, we’re closing the books on the first half of the season,’” BGSU coach Ty Eigner said Tuesday. “We talked honestly about the first half. We own our results and our statistics, our goals for, goals against, power play, all our stats, our won-loss record. We own all that. But now our focus is the second half. We want to build on how we’ve been playing and improve on that in the second half.”

In all, the first half was pretty good to the Falcons, who finished 2021 with a 9-8-3 record and have scored 60 goals (against 63 allowed). In CCHA play, they’re 6-5-1 – good enough for fifth in what is a very tight middle of the table. Considering where people thought they’d be at the start of the season, after losing so many players to graduation or the transfer portal, that’s a very solid start. But it’s not something the Falcons are necessarily happy with.

“But all in all, I think we’re not satisfied with where we’re at,” Eigner said. “We felt like this group had the potential to be a really good team, hopefully what would happen with all those new pieces is that we were playing our best hockey at the end of the year, and that’s still the goal.”

The four games leading up to the end of the year perhaps encapsulated best just how close the Falcons think they are to being a great team as opposed to just a good one. Just before the players went home for Christmas break, they dropped both games of a home-and-home series against instate rivals Ohio State by a single goal (4-3 in Columbus and 3-2 in Bowling Green). In both contests, the Falcons couldn’t hang on in the third period.

Then, after they took a week off for Christmas, the Falcons returned a little earlier than most teams and traveled to Milwaukee for the Kwik Trip Holiday Faceoff. In the first game of that tournament, against Providence, Bowling Green was in striking distance until the third period, when the Friars scored three goals and won 6-2.

BG was able to salvage the tournament finale against Yale, 2-1 in the third-place game, to close out their 2021 with a win. But Eigner said all four of those games were on the table for the Falcons, and to not win the first three was frustrating for everyone.

“Frustrating, yes, absolutely. Players were frustrated, coaches were frustrated. Not with each other but frustrated that sometimes, sports are unfair,” he said. “You can play really good and not win. In our sport, goaltenders have the potential to steal games and if the goaltender is the best player on the ice for a certain team that gives them a really good opportunity to win. We did a lot of really good things against Providence and against Ohio State. So we really want to give the guys some things to build on.”

With the foundation laid in 2021, the Falcons go into 2022 hoping to build on that in the CCHA standings. The remainder of their 14 games are all conference matchups. And with such a tightly-contested league, there’s a chance for the Falcons to gain – or lose – ground very quickly.

Bowling Green is currently in fifth place, with 19 points. But they’re only five points behind second-place Bemidji State. Second and sixth place are separated by just six points.

“Obviously Mankato has done a really good job and put them in a position where everybody’s going to have to chase them,” Eigner said. “But I think if you look at the standings, two through six right now is very tight. I think the difference between two and six is basically a weekend series.”

The Falcons have played a series against everyone in the conference aside from Michigan Tech, who are third in the conference (just a point behind Bemidji). Lake Superior State is a point ahead of BG while NMU is a point behind in sixth.

“It’s really tight. All those teams right there are thinking the same exact same thing. If we can get on a run, if we can start playing well, if we can get hot, we can climb the standings,” Eigner said. “We all play each other, which is a good thing. You’re going to have opportunities to gain on people that are in front of you or separate yourselves from people that are behind you.”

The first test for the Falcons is this weekend, when they travel to St. Thomas. BGSU swept the Tommies when they met on Nov. 5-6 – a pair of fairly-close contests that the Falcons ultimately swept, 4-2 and 3-0. Eigner says he thinks the Tommies are going to be even tougher the second time around.

“Our expectation is, they’re going to be excited to play in their rink,” Eigner said. “When they played here, especially that first game, they were in the game the whole time. … I don’t know if they’ve played anybody two times, so we may be the first opportunity for them, so maybe it will look different the second time.

“Obviously, they’re going to be at home, so that gives them some more confidence. I would assume they’re going to be excited to play (us) and open up the second half and if that means they have a chip on their shoulder, we have to be prepared for that.”

Next three Saint Michael’s women’s hockey games postponed due to COVID-19 protocols

Saint Michael’s goalie Leah White was named to the NEWHA weekly honor roll for the week ending on Sunday, Dec. 12 (photo: Jim Laskarzewski).

The Saint Michael’s women’s hockey team’s next three games have all been postponed, with the Purple Knights having been slated to visit Franklin Pierce for a Saturday-Sunday set this weekend and host Sacred Heart next Tuesday.

All three games were non-league affairs against NEWHA counterparts.

Potential makeup dates have not been revealed.

This Week in Hockey East: UMass, with strong Michigan contingent, travels to Ann Arbor this weekend for clash of national contenders

Michigan native Matt Kessel has posted two goals and six points this season for UMass (photo: Rich Gagnon).

It’s only January, but one can be forgiven for thinking it might feel a little like March when the Massachusetts men’s hockey team visits Michigan for a highly anticipated two-game set on Saturday (5 p.m., Big Ten Network) and Sunday (4 p.m., ESPNU).

The Minutemen (10-4-2, 7-2-2 Hockey East) are ranked No. 10 in the latest DCU/USCHO.com poll and have not lost in regulation since the season’s opening weekend.

“Probably most hockey fans in general looked at it at the beginning of the year (and) circled this weekend on their calendar,” UMass coach Greg Carvel said. “Right now, we’re just hoping like hell we get to play because I do think it’ll be good for our guys, a good challenge. They’re obviously a good team and a difficult building to play in. Whatever happens on the ice, it’ll make our team better.”

UMass was missing six players due to Covid protocols in Monday night’s impromptu 4-3 win over Merrimack (in a game added to the schedule as a non-conference contest after each school had numerous non-league games cancelled recently). As of Tuesday evening, the games were still on.

Michigan (14-6-0, 7-5-0 Big Ten) has played just once since Dec. 11, a scoreless tie at home vs. No. 20 Michigan Tech on Dec. 29. A home game scheduled for the next night vs. No. 3 Western Michigan was postponed. The Wolverines stand at No. 6 in the latest DCU/USCHO.com poll, down from No. 3 in the previous poll.

The school has already announced a standing-room-only crowd is expected this weekend at Yost Arena (capacity 5,800).

“We’re really looking forward to it — any time you get to play the defending national champ it’s a big series,” Michigan coach Mel Pearson said. “It’s just going to be a real exciting, great weekend of hockey. We know they’re a really great team.”

Although both schools have above-average prospects to make the NCAA tournament, this weekend’s series has far more implications than just inter-conference bragging rights. The Minutemen and Wolverines rank Nos. 9 and 6, respectively, in the PairWise Rankings.

“These non-conference games have become huge now,” Pearson said. “In the PairWise, any time you play a top-10 team like UMass, there’s a lot at stake for both teams for sure.”

Pearson said getting out to an early lead will be key, but also praised the Minutemen’s ability to rally from deficits. Four of UMass’s last five games required a third-period rally either to win or force overtime, and only twice in its last 13 contests has UMass won by more than one goal — 5-1 at No 16 Providence on Nov. 6, and 3-0 at New Hampshire on Nov. 19.

“They get up on you, and then you’re chasing the game,” Pearson said. “You have to try to get the lead on them. Even at that point, they come back. They’re capable. They have the players that can play from behind and they play tough when they get in front of you.”

Carvel said how well his team plays defense will set the tone for the weekend.

“That was a big part of our success last year,” he said. “We became a very good defensive team, a very disciplined team. We were the least penalized team in Hockey East last year. That combination usually gives you a good situation. If you can stay out of the penalty box and don’t provide transition offense for your opponent.”

The Wolverines boast four skaters with more than 20 points — Kent Kohnson (four goals, 19 assists, 23 points), Owen Power (3-20-23), and Matt Beniers and Brendan Brisson (each 11-11-22). Goalie Erik Portillo has started every game in net for Michigan (2.37 GAA, .971 save percentage).

For UMass, Scott Morrow (8-10-18) leads the team in scoring. Matt Murray continues his outstanding season in net (2.21, .925).

The current UMass roster features no fewer than six players from the state of Michigan. Carvel said playing at Yost will be special for them, and many plan to have family members in the crowd.

“We know this is going to be a great environment for college hockey,” Carvel said. “We just hope we can put a team on the ice that’s representative of who we are and we’re not missing too many players.”

Cortland climbing the SUNYAC standings

Cortland captain Ethan Homitz has a very focused team looking to play their best hockey in the second-half (Photo by Darl Zehr)

A look at the SUNYAC standings typically finds some usual suspects leading the way year after year. Geneseo, Oswego and Plattsburgh have long been the dominant teams in the conference, but this year sees an interloper sitting in second place at the semester break. Cortland finished conference play at    5-2-1 in the first-half including a tie with No. 2 ranked Geneseo on the road and a major non-conference win at Hobart. Confidence is high. Results have been positive. There is a lot to expect in the second half.

It has been a couple of years in the making but we are starting to see the results mirror the effort and hard work that the players have put in over the last two seasons,” said head coach Joe Cardarelli. “We played Oswego, Geneseo and Plattsburgh all on the road in the first half and lost two one-goal games and tied at Geneseo. We can look forward to playing them in our rink in the second half of the season knowing we can compete with them.”

The night following the Oswego game, the Red Dragons traveled to Hobart with a quick turnaround against another perennial D-III power. After surrendering the games first goal in the first minute of play, Cortland flipped the script and scored a goal each in the next two periods to steal a big win.

“Yeah, it is probably never great to get scored on in the first minute of any game, but you definitely don’t want to get in that hole against a team like Hobart,” noted Cardarelli. “It is a tough place to play but I was very pleased with how we bounced back. We weathered the first period and then we scored in the first minute of the second period and found a way to win it in the third period. This group does not get flustered by much and that bounce back win against a nationally ranked team provided a big confidence boost – we got a result that was emblematic of the work on and off the ice.”

One of the biggest surprises this season for Cortland has been the balanced scoring from their roster. While Domenic Settimo and Sutter Donegan lead the team with six goals each, 13 players have scored at least two goals providing a very balanced lineup for opponents to try to defend against.

“That was a very pleasant surprise for the coaching staff,” stated Cardarelli. “We kind of expected that a couple of guys would be carrying the scoring load, but it has been much more balanced – Nick Grupp has eleven points and two goals – both shorthanded. We have a 50% new team including the sophomores that didn’t get to play a season and they are factoring in on the scoresheet regularly. Those are the contributions we have been getting up and down the lineup and from different players each game. We hope that continues in the second half.”

While the diversity in goal production has been new and exciting, the netminding has been a constant strength in junior Luca Durante’s play in the crease. Durante has a 2.17 goals-against average and a .938 save-percentage, and his stellar play adds to the confidence level of the players in front of him.

Luca has been great for us and not just this season,” said Cardarelli. “He really has improved his game with his save selection and rebound control. He has dramatically cutdown the second and third scoring chances by controlling the puck and putting rebounds into safe areas. His play really gives the guys skating in front of him the motivation to play hard every shift.”

The Red Dragons returned to the ice on Tuesday night and showed off their offensive balance with an 11-2 win over Rivier. Nine different players scored including Settimo and Donegan. They have four more non-conference games with Nazareth, Neumann, Wilkes and Skidmore before returning the conference play against Plattsburgh on January 21.

“It kind of feels like big time college basketball where we play a bunch of non-conference games before running the gauntlet of SUNYAC teams to close out the season,” stated Cardarelli. “We play three of those first five games on the road so it will be more experience for us to build our game before getting back into conference play. The team came back in good shape from the semester break, and we are excited for a big second-half of the season.”

Cortland travels to Nazareth on Friday before returning home to face Neumann on Saturday night opening up a stretch of four games in eight nights.

This Week in ECAC Hockey: Conference teams start new calendar year making moves to position for NCAA tournament runs

Harvard players celebrate one of their six goals against UConn this past Sunday in a 6-3 win over the Huskies (photo: Harvard Athletics).

The start of the New Year means that the games are starting to get more amplified in the college hockey season.

That’s especially the case in ECAC Hockey, where the margin of error for making the NCAA tournament is tight for several of the league’s contenders.

While there’s still plenty of time left, Quinnipiac would be the only conference team in position to receive an at-large bid to the national tournament if the season ended today. The first-place Bobcats were seventh in the PairWise as of Tuesday night.

The next highest ranked team is Clarkson (21) followed by Harvard (24) and Cornell (26). With the exception of last year, when only four teams played an abbreviated league schedule, ECAC Hockey has had at least three bids to the NCAA tournament every year since 2013.

That streak appears in jeopardy this season.

The conference’s .434 out-of-conference winning percentage isn’t great but is in line with recent seasons. What’s really hurting the league is the presence of five of the conference’s teams (Union, Dartmouth, Princeton, Brown, and Yale) in the bottom 15 of the PairWise. None of those teams played last season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Big Red also didn’t play year due the pandemic, but Cornell has the sixth best winning percentage in Division I. Despite that, the Big Red are currently not in position for an at-large bid. Cornell didn’t do itself any favors by getting swept at Arizona State last weekend, but it has also been hurt by the new PairWise rules that only counts a 3-on-3 overtime win as 55 percent of a win; the Big Red have three overtime wins this season.

Cornell is about to enter a crucial stretch of games. The Big Red travel to North Dakota (second in the PairWise) this weekend and then host Quinnipiac on Jan. 22. In between facing the Fighting Hawks and Bobcats, the Big Red play Yale, Brown, and Princeton. A loss to one of those teams would deal a big hit to Cornell’s PairWise rankings.

There’s still plenty of time left. But given the nightly competitiveness during conference play, ECAC Hockey’s contenders can ill-afford any slipups in the final two months of the regular season.

COVID Updates

A number of teams adjusted their schedules or attendance policies due to the spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19.

Here’s a look at those changes:

— Harvard announced that it is closing attendance to the general public at all home athletic events through Jan. 23. Any guests of the student-athletes or coaches will need to show a vaccination card. A negative test result is no longer sufficient to gain entry.

— Yale will hold all home games without fans until Jan. 6.

— Union will require all fans to provide proof of vaccination to attend any home game.

— A number of games were also postponed last weekend due to COVID-19 outbreaks. A home-and-home series between travel partners Quinnipiac and Princeton was rescheduled for Jan. 18 and Jan. 26. Clarkson postponed its game Monday against Canisius, while Union postponed a two-game series against Massachusetts set for last weekend. Neither school has announced makeup dates for its games.

Ohio State-Wisconsin men’s hockey series originally scheduled for Jan. 7-8 now planned for Jan. 8-9

With guidance from the Big Ten, the Wisconsin men’s hockey’s series against Ohio State will be played on Saturday and Sunday this weekend at the Kohl Center in Madison, Wis.

Saturday’s game will start at 6 p.m., with Sunday beginning at 3 p.m.

The series was originally scheduled for Friday-Saturday but was postponed due to COVID-19 protocols inside the Wisconsin men’s hockey program.

All tickets and parking purchased for Saturday will still be valid for Saturday. All tickets and parking purchased for Friday will be honored on Sunday.

St. Lawrence-New Hampshire men’s hockey game scheduled for Jan. 7 canceled due to COVID-19, will not have makeup date

The New Hampshire-St. Lawrence men’s hockey game scheduled for Friday, Jan. 7, at 7 p.m. at the Whittemore Center has been cancelled due to COVID protocols within the SLU program.

The game will not be rescheduled.

The Wildcats actively seeking an opponent for Friday night at 7 p.m. at the Whittemore Center, and an announcement will be forthcoming.

Tickets for the UNH/SLU game will be accepted for a potential Friday night game against a different opponent, or fans can exchange their tickets at the UNH ticket office for tickets of equal or lesser value, based on availability, to any remaining Wildcats’ home game during the 2021-22 season.

New Hampshire is scheduled to meet Clarkson on Saturday, Jan. 8, at 7:30 p.m. at the Whittemore Center.

This weekend’s Minnesota Duluth-St. Cloud State hockey series postponed with UMD in COVID-19 protocols

This weekend’s NCHC series between Minnesota Duluth and St. Cloud State, scheduled for Friday and Saturday, Jan. 7-8, at SCSU’s Herb Brooks National Hockey Center, has been postponed due to COVID-19 protocols within the Minnesota Duluth hockey program.

This series will attempt to be made up later this season. If the games are unable to be rescheduled, the games will be declared no contests.

COVID-19 protocols force Holy Cross-Maine women’s hockey series to move from Jan. 7-8 to Jan. 9-10

In accordance with COVID-19 protocols and out of an abundance of caution, the women’s series between Holy Cross and Maine originally set for Friday and Saturday, January 7-8, has been rescheduled for Sunday, January 9 at 5 p.m. and Monday, January 10 at 2 p.m. at Maine.

More COVID-19 woes: RPI’s weekend games at Harvard, Dartmouth postponed; Bentley-UMass Lowell home-and-home series also postponed

Ethan Roswell and Bentley will not play UMass Lowell this weekend (photo: Bentley Athletics).

Two more men’s hockey series have been postponed this weekend due to COVID-19 protocols.

The Rensselaer men’s hockey team was slated to travel to Harvard and Dartmouth for ECAC Hockey games on Friday and Saturday nights, but the program is now paused for an undetermined amount of time.

The Engineers will now travel to Dartmouth for an ECAC Hockey game on Tuesday, February 1 at 6 p.m.

In addition, Bentley’s home-and-home series against UMass Lowell, scheduled this week for Jan. 5 and 8, has been postponed due to COVID-19 protocols.

No makeup dates have been announced.

COVID-19 protocols postpone UW-Eau Claire-Lawrence men’s hockey game slated for Jan. 4

The Lawrence men’s hockey game with UW-Eau Claire scheduled for tonight, Jan. 4, has been postponed.

The nonconference contest, set to be played at the Appleton Ice Center, was postponed due to COVID-19 protocols.

No makeup date has been set.

Sacred Heart-Yale women’s hockey game scheduled for Jan. 4 postponed due to COVID-19 issues with SHU, will be rescheduled

Tonight’s 6 p.m. women’s hockey game between Yale and Sacred Heart at Ingalls Rink has been postponed due to COVID-19 issues within the Pioneers program.

The game will be made up later this season.

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