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D-III West Hockey Picks – Nov. 26, 2021

UW-Eau Claire will play host to St. Norbert this week in a post-Thanksgiving matchup. Photo Credit: UW-Eau Claire Athletics

Thanksgiving is in the rear-view mirror as teams in the west region take aim at closing out the first full month of the season on a high note.

There are a handful of interesting matchups this weekend, including a battle of nationally ranked teams in Adrian and Trinity. Take a look at some of those games as well as the picks. 

Nov. 26-27
Wisconsin-Stevens Point vs. Concordia
The Pointers (5-3) come into this home-and-home series ranked 13th in the nation. Brandon McReynolds is having a big year for UW-Stevens Point so far, scoring four goals and dishing out an assist.

The Pointers have done well moving the puck around, racking up 25 assists. The Falcons (1-5-1) have had a tough start to the year and have been outscored 34-20.
UW-Stevens Point, 5-2 and 4-1

Nov. 27-28
St. Olaf at Marian
Unbeaten in its last three games, St. Olaf (3-3-2) hopes to keep things moving in the right direction against the Sabres. The Oles are seeking their first road win of the year. Playing solid defensively will be key. St. Olaf has scored 21 goals but has allowed 22.

Marian (3-3-1) has won its last two and showing signs of improvement. Averaging three goals per outing and scoring seven in its last two wins, the Sabres will test the Oles defensively.
Marian, 5-3; St. Olaf, 3-2

St. Norbert at Wisconsin-Eau Claire

Despite being unranked nationally at the moment, both teams are traditionally among the best teams in D-III hockey. The Green Knights (5-3) roll in on a four-game winning streak and have found success on the road, sporting a 4-2 mark away from home. They have given up just six goals during their win streak. Their defense will be a key to success against the Blugolds.

UW-Eau Claire (3-4) has dropped two of its last three but is aiming for a strong finish to November. It has scored 14 goals on the year off 23 assists.
St. Norbert, 3-2; UW-Eau Claire, 5-4

Lake Forest at Manhattanville

Lake (3-3-1) is looking to bounce after dropping its last two. The Foresters have just one win in November. Getting the offense rolling is key after managing just two goals in their last two games. But they’ve shown they can score, having put up four goals three times this year.

The Valiants (3-3-2) are looking for their first win since Nov. 19 as well as their first home win.  They have scored five goals three times. Lake Forest needs a quick start, especially on the road.
Manhattanville, 5-2; Lake Forest, 4-3

Nov. 28
Adrian at Trinity
It’s a matchup featuring two of the nation’s best teams.  The third-ranked Bulldogs square off against the 10th-ranked Bantams in Hartford, Conn.

Adrian (5-2) has won its four games against Division III competition. Six players have scored at least two goals, including Hunter Wendt, Rex Moe and Matthew Rehding, who have four goals apiece. The Bantams (2-0) have scored 11 goals in their first two games.
Adrian, 4-3

USCHO BETTOR’S EDGE: Holiday weekend brings with it several nonconference matchups, some heavy favorites to boot

Providence hosts Dartmouth and visits Brown for the Mayor’s Cup this weekend (photo: Providence Athletics).

Gambling is a strange beast.

Two weeks ago, we had a perfect 5-0 among our staff selections along with three who went 4-1.

Last week, no one was better than 3-2 and, for the first time this season, a staffer was perfectly imperfect going 0-5.

This week, the return of a significant number of non-league games, including some that take on a special meaning dot the schedule. Boston University and Cornell will renew its biennial Red Hot Hockey at Madison Square Garden while Providence will travel to Brown to play for the annual Mayor’s Cup.

Anyway, back to last week. Notre Dame’s sweep of then No. 1 Michigan was a bettor’s dream if you chose the Irish back-to-back nights. Same goes for Western Michigan’s sweep of St. Cloud State. A five-team parlay on the five featured games last weekend paid $4,874.36 per $100 bet.

But that takes a lot of believe in the significant underdogs. Notre Dame was +235 and Western Michigan was +165.

This week, there are even more significant underdogs, so choose wisely and maybe you’ll have some decent spending money heading into the holidays.

You can make your selections on the five games listed below as well as five others in USCHO Pick ‘Em. Go to social.uscho.com to join the fun!

As usual, a disclaimer:

Understand, this is for entertainment purposes only. USCHO.com is not a licensed gambling platform and no money may be wagered through this site or any subsidiary of USCHO.

All games are the first games when they occur in a two-game series, unless noted. Saturday game as marked appropriately.

Enjoy and, if you bet, may you be successful.

Games marked with asterisks indicates odds provided by DraftKings Sportsbook

No. 11 Minnesota (-120) at No. 6 North Dakota (Even) *

In the days of the old WCHA, I’m not sure there was any better rivalry than Minnesota and North Dakota. Lest we forget when North Dakota fans bought hundreds of Holy Cross sweaters after the Crusaders upset Minnesota in the NCAA Tournament back in 2006, and wore said sweaters the season following when the two teams faced off.

This season, you have two pretty evenly matched teams and a similar situation to last week’s Michigan Tech-Bemidji State game where neither team was technically considered a favorite. You’d have to bet $100 to make $100 on North Dakota and $120 to make $100 on Minnesota.

Honestly, the line surprises me a bit with North Dakota at home, ranked higher and significantly higher in the PairWise. But maybe this is where we notice a sportsbook like DraftKings possibly not as in tune with college hockey as some other sports. Another reason North Dakota should be favored is the simple trend: the Fighting Hawks have won the last four games played against the Gophers.

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

No. 20 Bemidji State (-155) at Arizona State (+130) *

Our staff is most undecided on this game, which is actually game two of a Wednesday-Friday series where Bemidji won the opener, 4-3.

The Beavers had the better of play in game one, jumping to a 4-1 lead before Arizona State scored twice in the game’s final 12 minutes to make things interesting.

The Sun Devils have been a bit of a streaky team this season and currently that streak isn’t a good one – three straight losses.

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

UMass Lowell (-330) at Maine (+290) Sat. at Portland, Maine

UMass Lowell had its nine-game unbeaten streak snapped last weekend with a 2-1 loss at Connecticut. But even in defeat the River Hawks defense continues to prove its best asset. Lowell has allowed just 18 goals in 11 games this season, only seven coming at even strength.

Maine will play this “home” game outside of Orono, in its second home of Portland, Maine. The Black Bears continue to improve this season. After beginning the year 0-8-1, Maine has earned an OT win over Merrimack and a shootout victory versus Boston College.

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

Boston University (+190) vs. Cornell (-220) Sat. at Madison Square Garden

I really should have Boston University graded as a large underdog in this game given its 4-8-2 record vs. Cornell’s 7-1-0 mark. But the Terriers have been getting healthier in recent weeks and Red Hot Hockey, the every-other-year event on the major stage of Madison Square Garden, always seems to bring out the best in the underdog.

Boston University, in fact, has won three of the previous meetings at MSG compared to Cornell’s two. Twice the game has ended in a tie. Cornell captured the last two games winning 4-3 in 2017 and 2-0 in 2019.

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

No. 14 Providence (-350) vs. Brown (+290) Sat., Mayor’s Cup

Of all the rivalry trophies, the Mayor’s Cup might not be the best known in college hockey but it is a game Brown coach Brendan Whittet says still matters significantly to the alumni.

Playing the game at home on Thanksgiving weekend, Whittet hopes will be a larger draw for the alum base, but unfortunately, they’ll be watching a Bears team that has been somewhat decimated by injury. Brown is without four forwards and a defenseman for the weekend, which begin Friday at Holy Cross.

Providence, on the other hand, enters the 35th edition of the Mayor’s Cup playing its best hockey of the year. The Friars have won four straight after a short, three-game losing skid. Similar to Brown, the Mayor’s Cup is the second game of the weekend after battling Dartmouth at home on Friday.

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

Pick records to date (last week):

Jim Connelly – 25-10 (2-3)
Dan Rubin – 23-12 (2-3)
Chris Lerch – 21-14 (1-4)
Ed Trefzger – 21-14 (3-2)
Paula Weston – 21-14 (3-2)
Drew Claussen – 20-15 (2-3)
Matthew Semisch – 19-16 (2-3)
Jack Hittinger – 18-17 (2-3)
John Doyle – 18-17 (2-3)
Nate Owen – 16-19 (0-5)

D-III East Hockey Game Picks – November 26, 2021

Utica’s Vaden McManus and Louis-Felix St. Jean hope to hoist a trophy from their Thanksgiving tournament (Photo by Utica Athletics)

The Thanksgiving Holidays always bring great D-III tournament action and this year I no different with many exciting matchups among some of the elite teams in the nation. It will be a challenge to pick winners so will focus on the first round games along with some key non-conference games. Last weekend’s picks that stumbled in at 6-5-1 (.542) which takes down the overall record to 26-13-5 (.648) so I need a post-turkey feast rebound. Here are the picks for this weekend:

Friday, November 26, 2021

Spartan Invitational

Rivier v. Castleton

The Raiders have played everyone close, and this game won’t be different with a possible overtime or shootout to decide who advances to the final. Home crowd is always raucous for the Spartans who eke out the win – Castleton, 3-2

Arcadia v. Franklin Pierce

The first win of the season, especially a program first is always sweet so the desire to repeat the sensation is going to be a big motivator for the Knights who keep the momentum going   –  Arcadia, 4-3

First Light Shootout

Norwich (6) v. Plattsburgh

The tournament formerly known as the Primelink has a new sponsor and is hosted by Middlebury this year. Great rivalry game to open the tournament and the Cadets start fast and hold on for the win – Norwich 3-2

MSOE v. Middlebury

MSOE is the invited guest from the west this year and face a Middlebury team that has yet to play a real game this season. Tough opponent to open with regardless of home ice – MSOE, 5-3

Utica Thanksgiving Showcase

Geneseo (1) v. Massachusetts-Boston

The field is a good one, but everyone wants to see the host school and Geneseo in the final. The Knights will not look past the Beacons to play in the final on Saturday – Geneseo, 5-2

Amherst v. Utica (2)

The Mammoths face a tall task in this one against a Pioneer squad that is deep and explosive offensively. Amherst keeps it close for a while, but the home team emerges with a convincing win – Utica, 5-1

Saturday, November 27, 2021

Skidmore Invitational

Chatham v. Skidmore

The host team does not want to be playing in the consolation game on Sunday so look for a strong effort from the opening face-off from the Thoroughbreds who earn the win with special teams play – Skidmore, 3-2

Connecticut College v. Brockport

Tough weekend for both teams are in the rearview mirror, so which one takes the positive step forward in challenging tournament game? The Golden Eagles rebound led by Mitchell Parsons  – Brockport, 4-2

PAL Stovepipe Tournament

Western New England v. Southern New Hampshire

After an opening season loss to Rivier, the Penmen have ripped off six straight wins and the power play has been deadly. Not a good combination for the Golden Bears who fall to the tournament hosts – SNHU, 5-2

Albertus Magnus v. Fitchburg State

The Battle of the Raptors finds Albertus Magnus coming off a huge road win at Hamilton while FSU has been rock-solid in their early season results. Tournaments usually come down to the hot goaltender so picking the Falcons from Fitchburg and netminder Brian McGrath – FSU, 3-1

Non-Conference

Salve Regina v. Trinity (10)

This non-conference game should be an offensive showcase with talented rosters on both sides. The Bantams would love to get the win over a quality CCC foe and score late to do it – Trinity, 5-4

Tufts v. Stevenson

The long bus trip to Maryland does not play to the Jumbos favor but the Mustangs can’t look past a competent NESCAC foe that will push them for the full 60 minutes – Stevenson, 5-3

Oswego v. Williams

Both teams have very good defense and goaltending and the Ephs haven’t surrendered a goal yet this season. They still haven’t in another low-scoring affair with the Lakers –  Williams, 1-0

King’s v. Morrisville

This game is a key building block for the Mustangs who look to go unbeaten in four games after a slow start against SUNYAC teams. Chalk up the weekend sweep for the home team – Morrisville, 4-3

There are a lot of games with ranked teams and others that would like nothing better than to knock them off. Add in hardware motivation in winning a holiday tournament and recipe is great for some terrific action across the region – “Drop the Puck!”

This Week in CCHA Hockey: Bowling Green on pace for another solid season as Falcons aiming to ‘maintain that standard and play to that standard’

Coale Norris (14) celebrates a goal with his Bowling Green teammates last weekend during the Falcons’ sweep of Lake Superior State (photo: Stephen Linsky/BGSU Athletics).

Before the season started, outsiders weren’t quite sure what to make of Bowling Green.

After all, the Falcons had lost 11 players to either graduation or the transfer portal.

It would have understandably been hard to predict how losing so many key contributors would affect a program that has won 20-plus games for seven straight seasons.

“The biggest thing is, going into this year, with the 10-person class we had last year, we knew there was going to be significant turnover. So we tried to the best of our ability to plan for that,” BGSU coach Ty Eigner said Tuesday. “It was a challenge, no doubt, it was a challenge. No matter what other people thought about our team outside of our program going into this year, you can’t fault them or be mad at them for that opinion. We lost a bunch of players, and that’s part of college athletics.”

Inside of the program, though, Eigner and his coaching staff had the same expectations. And so far, with one-third of the season gone, Bowling Green is 7-3-2 and well on pace for another solid finish.

In other words, it seems that reports of the Falcons’ demise have been greatly exaggerated.

“The standard that we’ve had at this program around here the past, seven, eight years of winning 20 games and being a program that can go play anybody, anywhere, that doesn’t change,” Eigner said. “We’ve tried to make sure our guys are aware of that. We’re not lowering the standard because we had a big senior class. We have to do the best we can to maintain that standard and play to that standard.”

Although Eigner knew all of those players would be impossible to outright replace, BGSU’s coaching staff seems to have found a way to, as the cliche goes, reload instead of rebuild, with a combination of transfers, freshmen and returning players.

Minnesota transfer Nathan Burke currently leads the team with eight goals while Ferris State transfer Coale Norris has 10 points. Defenseman Gabe Chicoine, a transfer from Division III Norwich, has 11 assists from the blueline. Eigner said all three have been “significant contributors” to the Falcons in every game.

Internally, players like forwards Taylor Schneider, Alex Barber and Sam Craggs — who elected to return for a fifth year — and goaltender Zach Rose have stepped into bigger roles than they were in previously. Schneider, Barber and Craggs have been anchoring the Falcons’ first line while Rose has taken over nicely for the departed Eric Dop.

“It might have been a little uncomfortable for them early, but now they’re comfortable knowing what the expectations are for them and knowing what their roles are,” Eigner said of the team’s returning players.

But the biggest revelation has been BGSU’s freshmen class. Eigner said the Falcons’ coaching staff was excited about them coming into the season but now they have proven themselves in game situations.

One of those freshmen, Austen Swankler, is currently leading the team with 13 points (five goals, eight assists) while another, goaltender Christian Stoever, has been rotating in the nets with Rose and has a .910 save percentage and 2.59 GAA through five games.

“We knew these kids would have opportunities to contribute right away because of the number of kids we were going to lose, and they’ve done a really nice job,” he said.

To give an idea of just how much BG has been relying on some of these freshmen, Eigner pointed to the Falcons’ series against Minnesota State two weeks ago in Mankato. The Mavericks swept the series, 9-2 and 5-3 — the worst weekend for the Falcons so far this year. But Eigner was impressed with how well the freshmen played against the country’s top team.

“Everybody believed Minnesota State was going to be a really good team, and that’s proven to be true. But when you looked at the lineup charts last Saturday for our second game in that series, they had a bunch of returning players and no freshmen in their lineup,” he said. “We had seven. That’s just who we are. Our challenge for our group this year is to make sure we’re working hard every day and be the best version of ourselves we can.”

That series — especially the heavy defeat — could have hurt BG’s confidence a little. But the Falcons bounced back from that weekend on Mankato with a complete sweep of their own against Lake Superior State. The Falcons beat the Lakers 5-1 and 6-2, moving up to third place in the WCHA standings.

It’s all part of Eigner and the BG coaching staff’s plan to continue to get better as the season goes on.

“Even before we played a game this season, we believed our team has the ability to get better as the year goes on, just because we have so many new people,” Eigner said. “(Last weekend) was a really good bounceback for our guys and a really good way for our guys to build some momentum and build some confidence.”

This Week in ECAC Hockey: Boosted by upperclassmen, transfers, Quinnipiac fast piling up notches in win column

Quinnipiac players celebrate a goal earlier this season against Arizona State (photo: Rob Rasmussen).

When Quinnipiac takes the ices for its next game on Dec. 3, it will have been nearly a month and a half since the Bobcats lost a game.

The Bobcats (10-1-3) will end November on a nine-game unbeaten streak after tying Clarkson Friday and rolling over St. Lawrence on Saturday. Quinnipiac’s only loss this season was a 3-1 setback to North Dakota on Oct. 23. That recent hot stretch has vaulted them to No. 3 in the latest USCHO poll, the highest QU has been ranked since Oct. 2016.

That success is thanks in part to a veteran Bobcats roster that has 18 upperclassmen, including five graduate transfers. It’s a marked change from recent seasons, when Quinnipiac often had a number of inexperienced players in key roles. The end result was a lot of inconsistency, not only from game to game, but often from period to period. This year, the Bobcats have shown plenty of resiliency and found a way to pull out a win against several tough opponents.

“I think that it shows up when get down to crunch time and third periods,” junior forward Guus Van Nes said of this year’s team. “I think that’s when it shows up the most; we bear down and find a way every time, it feels like.”

One of the most noteworthy transfers was former Massachusetts forward Oliver Chau, who won the national championship with the Minutemen last season. He’s tied for second on the Bobcats with six goals this season. Chau recorded his first career hat trick in a 5-2 win over Arizona State on Nov. 13, the second game in a stretch of three consecutive games where Quinnipiac rallied from an early deficit to either win or tie.

“We’ve been through these situations a lot before; we know we can get out of them and there’s a calmness in the locker room between periods,” Chau said. “No matter what the score is, we have a lot of confidence in our group.”

While the Bobcats’ transfers are familiar with college hockey, it can still be challenging to adapt to a new program and its on-ice systems. But it’s been a smooth transition for Chau, who said he was attracted to Quinnipiac because of its business school and MBA program.

“It’s been great,” Chau said. “The returning guys have nothing but helpful and helping us acclimate to this new culture and this new team and getting us prepared in terms of systems on the ice. And also off the ice, making sure we know where everything is in terms of classes and what classes to pick and all that kind of stuff.”

In addition to fitting in with his teammates, Chau has made a good impression on his coach as well.

“I’m just really impressed with him as a player and as a person,” Quinnipiac coach Rand Pecknold said following the Bobcats’ win over Arizona State on Nov. 13. “He is a great leader in our room.”

Pecknold is no stranger to bringing in transfer players; the Bobcats have had at least one transfer on their roster in all but one season dating back to 2012. But it’s unusual to have a transfer with a national championship ring. For his part, Chau has been doing his best to impart any advice to his new teammates.

“For me personally, I just try to be myself,” Chau said. “Obviously with last year, I know a bunch of the guys asked me kind of what like what was the keys to success and I just try to bring some elements from last year into this year’s team so hopefully we can do it again.”

This Week in Hockey East: Commissioner Metcalf talks potential expansion, return of Frozen Fenway with USCHO.com

This Week in Hockey East: Incoming commissioner Metcalf ‘respected by all,’ comes in with ‘a proven national reputation’
Hockey East commissioner Steve Metcalf is now in his second season at the helm of the conference.

A major upheaval is underway in college sports, with a large number of large schools changing conferences in pursuit of more television revenue.

Hockey East commissioner Steve Metcalf doesn’t fret that his league will be affected by any aftershocks.

“In Hockey East, we’ve been together a long time,” he said. “There’s a lot of familiarity with the schools and natural rivalries. It makes sense for so many reasons for us to be together.”

Potential realignment and expansion was just one of the issues Metcalf discussed during an exclusive interview with USCHO.com.

“With the exception of the Big Ten, all the hockey-playing schools are in hockey playing conferences,” Metcalf said. “What’s happening in the rest of the world is being driven by a lot of things, those things aren’t driving or influencing college hockey so much. I haven’t even heard a rumor anywhere about a college hockey team moving conferences. A lot of conferences, there’s a lot of history there or (they) make sense because of the geography. That’s not going to change.”

Metcalf — who became Hockey East commissioner in 2020 after more than 20 years at the University of New Hampshire — said there are no concrete plans in place to add another school to the men’s league, which currently stands at 11.

“It would have to be something the league felt made us stronger, better,” he said. “Do I think having an even number (of schools) would help us in scheduling? Certainly. But I also don’t think we would enter into a decision lightly. We would be very careful about that. We have a strong group and strong Hockey East brand.”

Metcalf said the best development this season has been the return of fans after the COVID-19 pandemic forced games to be played in empty arenas last season. He said attendance has been strong, with crowds of up to 8,000 fans at some games.

“It’s not going to be great attendance every night for everyone,” he said. “We know that, that’s the way it goes. Historically, numbers will pick up as you get later in the season, when sports like football are over. I think fans are pretty excited to be back and see their teams, and that’s obviously good for us.”

Of course, the pandemic is by no means over. Earlier this week, Boston College postponed its games at Notre Dame on Friday this Friday and home against Harvard on Tuesday Nov. 30, due to COVID protocols.

“I think it was the right thing to do,” Metcalf said. “The BC medical folks were the ones making the decision, and we’re supportive of that. They’re non-conference games, so it’s a little different. If this was BC-BU we’d be more anxious about it.”

This is the second year that Hockey East has streamed all of its games online, with most of those games being free. Before the season, Metcalf had said that the free streaming games were being offered as a “thank you” to fans for their loyalty during the pandemic, and as a service to those who would rather not attend games in person due to the pandemic.

“We’ve had a great situation with CBS and the streaming and a great partnership with NESN,” Metcalf said. “With not only more men’s games that we’ve ever done, but women’s games as well, we’ve set the bar high, and I’m optimistic it will be even better.”

Metcalf said it’s unlikely the games will remain on a free platform forever.

“That’s just the reality of how these things go,” he said.

One of the league’s signature events, Frozen Fenway, is likely to return at some point in the near future, Metcalf said. The league has held outdoor games at Fenway Park sporadically since 2010, when it piggybacked on the NHL’s Winter Classic.

“We’ve had preliminary discussions with the Red Sox,” Metcalf said. “They love doing outdoor games. I think it’s likely Hockey East will play at Fenway again.”

Though no concrete plans for Frozen Fenway were in place before the Covid pandemic, the previous events were in 2014 and 2017, which would have put a 2020 Frozen Fenway in sync with a three-year cycle.

“There’s something very attractive about Fenway — it’s such an iconic facility,” Metcalf said. “We have a great relationship with the Red Sox, and they love hockey. They just simply love hockey.”

Canton cancels Thanksgiving weekend men’s college hockey tournament due to COVID protocols

Canton has canceled its men’s college hockey tournament scheduled for this Saturday, November 27 and Sunday, November 28 due to COVID protocols.

Saint Anselm, Hamilton, and Potsdam were slated to participate.

In a news release, Canton said it may try to make up games with Saint Anselm and Hamilton later in the season, but no makeup dates have been announced. The Roos are already scheduled to take on Potsdam on three other dates: December 10 and 11, 2021 and January 12, 2022.

SUNY Canton canceled games in several other sports last week and a basketball game on Tuesday due to COVID protocols.

** UPDATE: It was announced Nov. 25 that Potsdam will now play at Hamilton on Saturday at 4 p.m. **

This Week in NCHC Hockey: After sweeping then-No. 2 St. Cloud State, Western Michigan looking to ‘try to be as consistent as possible’

Michael Joyaux celebrates with the Lawson Ice Arena crowd as the Broncos swept St. Cloud State last weekend (photo: Ashley Huss).

When Western Michigan’s players gathered Tuesday to continue a tradition created last year in which they bonded over a Thanksgiving-week team meal they cooked themselves, the Broncos knew they had plenty for which to be thankful.

The Broncos had every reason to celebrate, not only for the holiday but also the team’s recent success. WMU (8-4) has won its last three games and swept No. 2 St. Cloud State last weekend to move up six spots to No. 7 in this week’s USCHO.com poll.

The Broncos lost three consecutive games earlier this month, dropping the back half of a home series against then-No. 4 Minnesota Duluth and then conceded five goals on both nights of a sweep at No. 14 Denver.

WMU had started hot in coach Pat Ferschweiler’s first season in charge, and the Broncos put an exclamation point on their early four-game winning streak with an upset win at then-No. 1 Michigan. Losing three straight more recently didn’t feel like a letdown, partly because of the talent level the Broncos faced. Eight of their last 10 games were against top-15 opponents.

“Duluth is one of the best teams in the country, and I actually believe Denver is, as well,” Ferschweiler said. “I know they’ve lost some games earlier out east, but that’s a super-quality hockey team and as talented as anyone is.

“The (Carter) Savoie kid is elite and can shoot at any given time. They’re deep and talented. They and Duluth are just like the rest of our league.”

WMU is just as competitive, and the Broncos showed that when St. Cloud State visited Kalamazoo’s Lawson Ice Arena.

On Friday, four consecutive goals from fifth-year senior Ethen Frank helped lift WMU to a 6-2 win. Those goals came in a span of 4:15 that started late in the second period and carried over into the third.

“He has dynamic skill and speed, and I think he’s the fastest player in college hockey,” Ferschweiler said. “He also has a great shot, and we have a collection of really good players who have worked really hard, and we have a few players with super high-end talent, and Ethen is one of them.”

Michael Joyaux and Drew Worrad both bagged three assists on a night when SCSU was handed its second consecutive loss after reeling off five straight wins. Joyaux then scored Saturday in a 4-0 WMU win, although Ferschweiler felt the Broncos were outplayed for much of the game. Brandon Bussi made 36 saves in a game where WMU outshot the Huskies by 12.

“We got some great, great goaltending from Brandon to keep us in there, and then we started to play and made it real hard on them in the third period,” Ferschweiler said. Goals in that period from Paul Washe and Ty Glover doubled the lead created in the second by Joyaux and Jason Polin.

“(SCSU) came out determined as the quality hockey team that they are, and our goaltender held us in there until we got to playing better. Brandon is an elite goaltender, but he has had some of his own struggles the last few weeks, where I think he would like some of the goals back from Colgate (during two road wins, including a 6-5 victory on Oct. 29) and maybe a couple back from Denver, but at the end of the day, he’s a high-end college goalie with pro potential.”

The Broncos will look to keep their current streak going, beginning with a two-game set this Friday and Saturday at St. Lawrence. WMU visits Miami next week, then welcomes Omaha to Lawson for games Dec. 10-11. The Great Lakes Invitational returns Dec. 29-30, when WMU wll visit Michigan State and Michigan, respectively.

It’ll be all conference action after that for WMU, which sits in fourth place in the NCHC but is only three points out of second. The Broncos have things to work on, but so far, their coach has also seen a lot from his team that he hopes will stay constant.

“I think we play a consistent game, and one of our best qualities is that we don’t change,” Ferschweiler said.

“We work real hard and try to be as consistent as possible, and we try to defend well enough to get the puck and then try to attack with it. It’s a pretty simple game plan for us.”

NCAA Division I Women’s Hockey: Wednesday Women – Favorites and questions in each conference as November winds down

Arlan: It’s been about a month since you and I last chatted, and obviously, there have been some changes to the puzzle, although not so much at the top. It still looks like Wisconsin followed closely by Ohio State, and then a bit of a gap to the rest of the pack. Just how that pack is ordered, or if it even is a pack instead of a sequence of ones and twos with some separation, changes from week to week.

For the Ivy League, which was just getting underway when we last spoke, the variance has seemed to be greater than normal. That makes sense. Consider Cornell.

The Big Red were the top-seeded team heading into the NCAA Tournament that never was in 2020, but that was a senior-heavy team, especially in terms of impact players. This year, of the seven players who have more than two points through the team’s first 10 games, only senior Gillis Frechette and junior Izzy Daniel belong to the upper classes. The three defenders who have registered at least a point are in their first or second year. To be successful, Cornell will need senior goaltender Lindsay Browning to be on top of her game, as she was in a 37-save, 2-0 shutout over Princeton on Saturday, by far the team’s most impressive result to date. Earlier, the Big Red allowed 15 goals as they dropped their first three ECAC contests to Harvard, Dartmouth, and Yale, and Cornell needed a late extra-attacker goal from Claudia Yu to salvage a 3-3 tie with Brown on home ice.

The Bears don’t figure to be in the playoff hunt; their only other positive result in their eight league games to date was a 1-0 win over Dartmouth. From the Big Green’s perspective, the loss to Brown was discouraging as it figured to be a winnable game mixed into a rugged early schedule in Liz Keady Norton’s first season in charge. From a glass-half-full perspective, Dartmouth did manage to defeat St. Lawrence in addition to Cornell. It sits at 2-5-0 with opportunities to add more points versus Rensselaer and Union, two more teams that would be on the outside looking in if the playoffs started tomorrow, during the first weekend of December.

Harvard is above .500 and tied for fifth with 14.5 league points. While solid, that league record is nearly considerably better, as the Crimson fell in overtime to both Colgate and Clarkson. The best of the Ivies through the early going are Yale and Princeton, who are tied for second place with 16.5 points after eight games.

The Bulldogs’ ledger looks more impressive, as Yale has scored three times as many goals as it has allowed. However, that is deceptive, due to a 15-0 scoring advantage in a couple of non-league games versus NEWHA opponents.

The Tigers, whose first foray outside of the ECAC comes this weekend when they clash twice with Northeastern, enjoy only a 16-11 composite scoring advantage. Nearly half of Princeton’s goals have come off of the stick of Maggie Connors in Sarah Fillier’s absence.

What have you gleaned from the Ivy League teams thus far?

Nicole: I’m still unsure of what to expect long term from Harvard. I have been high on them in recent years based on their roster and some early results, only to watch them finish in the middle of the pack. I think that’s what’s holding me back from being more excited about them at this point. I’d just like to see sustained winning over beatable opponents before I find the bandwagon, I think. When I saw them two years ago at the first Nashville Thanksgiving tournament, I thought they looked better than their final scores would have implied. They have so many great pieces and somehow they don’t seem to add up to become greater than the sum of their parts. They seem closer/better at it this season, but since they’ve only been playing about a month, I’m still unsure what to believe.

Yale has been fun to watch. We saw immediate improvement from them when Mark Bolding took over the program in 2019 and they seem to be taking another big step this season. The Bulldogs had just two winning seasons in program history before he took over and went 17-15 in his first as head coach. They achieved top-10 rankings for the first time ever this year and look poised to earn the program’s first-ever NCAA bid.

When I spoke to Bolding around this time of the year in 2019, he talked a lot about giving the players more ownership and how he didn’t want to show up and impose his philosophy on players he hadn’t coached or recruited. I think that light touch and being conscious of the turmoil that created likely helped the team through the upheaval of Covid and left them in a good spot mentally to take the ice this season.

I love seeing the immediate improvement at Dartmouth. So many people have had overwhelmingly good things to say about Liz Keady Norton and how it was about time she got the chance to lead a squad and I think we’ve seen her immediate impact. I hope we continue to see this program grow and improve.

Those are the Ivies on their own, but what are your feelings on how these schools match up in the ECAC, since that’s the league who’s standings and tournament will determine a lot of what happens in March.

Arlan: I’m not sure if it is a surprise that the team leading the ECAC with a 7-1 mark is Quinnipiac. The Bobcats’ only loss is a 1-0 decision to Princeton in the back half of a home-and-home series, but they had some narrow escapes leading up to it. The only other blemishes are back-to-back ties with Providence, but Quinnipiac also squeaked by Maine, Saint Anselm, Union and RPI by a single tally. The Bobcats only allow about a goal per game, so it looks like they’re well-positioned to contend to the finish, even though they may not always impress.

I’m not able to predict with any confidence who will finish highest among the other ECAC teams outside the Ivy League. The battle should be confined to Colgate and Clarkson, but each has had results that cause concern. The Raiders started fast, winning their first eight games out of conference, but their 5-2-1 league mark includes three overtime games and one-sided losses to both Yale and Quinnipiac.

Meanwhile, Clarkson only has one league loss to Yale, but some of its other results, like a winless trip to Bemidji, are less than inspiring. The standings jousting between those two will likely be won by the team that stays healthier and gets better goaltending.

St. Lawrence should be able to do enough to reach the playoffs, but its league wins are over RPI, Union, and Brown. The one encouraging sign that the Saints may be able to continue to earn points from higher-ranked teams is a 4-4 draw ith Yale.

Rensselaer should at least have a fighting chance of getting into the playoff picture. For Union, it figures to suffer the all-too-familiar fate of seeing its hockey end with the regular season.

Has the ECAC as a whole surprised you in any way? Or do you think that the order of the final standings will look nothing like the current positioning? If nothing else, there should be a team for everyone, as six of the league’s teams are ranked in this week’s USCHO Poll.

Nicole: The ECAC surprises me every week!

Thanks to Kirsten Whalen, my coworker at Victory Press, I’ve had my eye on Quinnipiac for a little while as she let me know the young Canadian talent they were bringing in were game-changers. I really like how they’ve looked so far, but I think their ceiling is actually much higher. They have a lot of players that aren’t fully at the top of their game yet.

I get so much more out of games watching them in person versus on a stream, so I’m excited I get to see Quinnipiac play in Madison for New Years and really get a better read on the Bobcats there.

As for the rest of the leagues, the unpredictability from week to week has been great from a fan standpoint, but as a journalist makes me feel like I have no idea what I’m talking about as I try to forecast and preview games. I don’t think any games are given outcomes at this point.

In terms of league results, I think Colgate is the most surprising. As you said, they were rolling and scoring pretty much at will. With their roster almost entirely intact from last year, they had the advantage to start the season, but I expected them to be able to keep it up. It’s not that they’ve lost or tied, but how fully they were pulled out of their game in those losses.

As an aside, in the preseason call, the coaches were pretty universally in favor of the conference dropping shootouts after overtime. The conference has also introduced half points. I hate both things and I feel like based on what we’ve seen so far, we’re going to be going deep into tiebreakers to figure out final standings.

I have no idea if other conferences love the shootout or not, but what the shootout does is help separate teams when a number of them are bunched together in the standings – it was a necessary step to try and keep postseason play come down to goals scored or not scored early in the season. Three conference games have ended as ties so far, but it’s something I’d like to remember to check at the end of the season. Maybe I’m overthinking it, but it just feels like with all the chaos we’re seeing is going to show in close standings at the end of the regular season.

Regardless of what the answer is, I wish all the conferences were uniform in how they handled overtime. If for no other reason than the Pairwise uses one calculation. The way conference standings shake out could end up being different than rankings because of these discrepancies. It’s one of those things that we’ve needlessly complicated and frankly it makes it harder for fans to understand. Everyone loves to talk about growing the game, but then they make decisions like the use of half points in just one conference.

You picked apart the ways teams have confounded in the ECAC, but for my money, the most head scratching is coming out of Hockey East.

The teams with the biggest wins have some of the most baffling losses.

Arlan: I may have complained about the ECAC being unpredictable, but of course, even the CHA looks downright orderly when compared to the chaos that is Hockey East. Leading the way in the head-scratching results department are the Maine Black Bears.

Through October, I thought I had a handle on Maine. To that point, it had a record of 3-8, and I had this written off as a lost season in Orono. At least half of the setbacks were entirely forgivable: Quinnipiac twice, Northeastern, and Boston College. Many teams are looking at an 0-4 mark in those games. The Black Bears also fell to Saint Anselm and were shut out by Merrimack, and their only wins to that point came over Long Island twice and Holy Cross. Then the calendar flipped over to November, and they seemingly woke up from their early hibernation. Maine posted a regulation win and a shootout win over Connecticut, a convincing 5-1 beatdown of Boston University, and a win over Providence. I get that Maine has one of the best goalies in the league in Loryn Porter, and she likely stole the first victory from UConn, as her team was outshot 29-9 in that one. Next, Maine closes out 2021 with series against Clarkson and BC, and it could win all four games or none of them, and I don’t know that either result would surprise me.

It’s not just the Black Bears. Boston University has won all three games it has played with the trio that made last season’s NCAA Tournament: Northeastern, Providence, and BC. Meanwhile, in addition to the defeat by Maine, it has been stopped by Rensselaer and Holy Cross, and the Terriers were swept by UConn.

How about the UConn Huskies? They lost only once in their first dozen games, that to a Merrimack team that they’d already dropped twice. Now they’ve lost four straight, although admittedly, the difficulty has ramped up and two of the losses were via the dreaded shootout.

No discussion of HEA can be complete without touching on BC. The Eagles started out 6-0, with the first five wins being by a single goal, and the first four by identical 2-1 scores. It was stretching reality to think that trusting defense first was going to be a sustainable model for the gang from Chestnut Hill, especially once the schedule toughened. After allowing only eight goals total during that early winning streak, BC opponents lit the lamp a dozen times in the next three games, and the Terriers converted five times in BC’s most recent skate. The Eagles’ top offensive threats are more in the point-per-game range at this point of their careers, so they’ll have to figure out how to put the goals-against genie back into the bottle.

Bottom line, slow start and all, Northeastern figures to run away with the title, although the Huskies are currently only seventh in the PairWise. Who is the HEA team most likely to find a way to join NU in the national tournament, if the expansion does occur this season?

Nicole: I actually think UConn might have the edge at the moment, though their second half schedule is pretty brutal, including three against BC and closing out the regular season with home and home series against Providence and Northeastern. In a tight race, they might struggle to get points in those final crucial games. If they’re going to be in the conversation, they have to build up a bit of a cushion before they get to those games, I think.

I feel like I could go back and find old WW columns where I lament Boston College’s lack of consistency and how they seem to lack that killer instinct to close out games and claim their spot in the national rankings. The Eagles are as dynamic as they’ve been in a few seasons thanks in large part to Abby Newhook. They have good scorers, but she seems to have that elusive “it.” As a rookie, she is tied for the team lead in points. She has scored the game-winner in four of the team’s eight wins. You don’t want to look away when the puck is on her stick. Presumably she’s only going to get better as she gets more comfortable on the ice. If BC makes the tournament, it will be on her shoulders. There are players who look at a tied game or a game where her team is down late in a game and think “eff it, I’m going to do it myself.” They simply refuse to let their team lose. My early impression is Abby Newhook is that precise kind of player.

I think Providence is the dark horse. With a 4-5-4 record, they aren’t exactly blowing anyone away, but I really like their determination. When highest scorer Maureen Murphy left for Northeastern, it was unclear who would be able to step up and take on a bigger role and score goals. They still don’t have anyone on the roster who’s name casual fans would recognize, but I actually think it’s pretty cool that the answer to, “who’s going to pick up the slack” has been “Everybody.”

They feel like a team you can never count out or look past and like they’re capable of causing problems for whoever they’re playing. It helps that they have Sandra Arbstreiter in net, but I think there’s just a team ethos here that helps them believe in what they can do. They’re getting contributions through multiple lines and feel about as close to steady as any Hockey East team does this season.

Another group that’s struggled with consistency skate in the CHA. Are you feeling like you understand the way that conference is going to shake out?

Arlan: After some of the other leagues, the CHA is starting to look very straightforward to me, especially RIT. Despite losing its first 16 games, RIT did manage to secure a conference point in an overtime loss at Syracuse. My complaint with the Tigers starts with their schedule. The braintrust must have suspected that RIT was going to struggle this year, as it had only one game where it scored multiple goals in last year’s abbreviated campaign, and the team that yielded that three-goal explosion is no longer in existence. Why isn’t this team playing a series with either Post or St. Michaels, just to provide a feel-good moment, instead of spending a weekend in Minneapolis facing a 131-shot barrage or yielding 20 goals in the Colgate series? I had a ton of respect for Celeste Brown as a player, but as a coach, you can’t let your team suffer nonstop abuse. I will give props to junior goaltender Taylor Liotta, who played very well versus the Gophers and kept that from becoming a debacle.

Elsewhere in the circuit, Lindenwood has played more games with the WCHA (six) than the CHA (four), and three of its next four series are against the western league. Thanks in part to that schedule, the Lions are yielding an average of 5.4 goals per game, and never less than three.

That leaves the remaining trio of Penn State, Syracuse, and Mercyhurst to compete for the crown. These teams figure to beat up on each other but enjoy enough success versus Lindenwood and RIT to finish with winning records.

The Nittany Lions haven’t had as easy a time of things as they did last season. Their record is buoyed by sweeps of Lindenwood and Holy Cross, and a series win over Brown, but the rest of the slate has been a slog. PSU did manage to take points on the road at both Mercyhurst and Syracuse, so the schedule shapes up well in the second half.

The Orange can be thankful that they don’t play in the CHA. They were able to dispatch Union, but went 0-5-2 against a combination of RPI, St. Lawrence, Clarkson, and Colgate, and their trip to Cornell was wiped out due to “police activity.” As if Covid wasn’t enough.

It looks like it might be Mercyhurst’s year again. The Lakers boast an impressive 11-4-2 overall mark, but they’ve played over half of their games that look destined for the bottom third of the rankings. That, and an offense with a return to a higher number of producers, has helped Mercyhurst score three goals for every two that it allows.

In the NEWHA, LIU looks positioned to back up its tourney title of two years ago with one in the regular season this time. So far it is winless against teams from the other conferences, but do you think that having the confidence to schedule these games sends a positive message to the team?

Nicole: I think it says a lot about coach Rob Morgan and his plans for the future, as well as his confidence in his players to be able to handle these situations and not get discouraged. From the get-go Morgan hasn’t treated this like a new program. They haven’t eased themselves in. They have been strong and confident and really took the idea of “act like you’ve been there before” to heart. The Sharks immediately played like an experienced team and were never bogged down in the semantics of being a new program and what they should or shouldn’t do.

I really appreciate this approach. I think it’s clear that Morgan isn’t content with his team being the best team in the conference and has been thinking bigger than that from before his team first took the ice. Scheduling these games will only help them grow themselves, but also is a great way for the players to see the teams they are aspiring to be similar to. I remember former Robert Morris coach Paul Colontino saying something similar when his team played at Wisconsin in the NCAA Quarterfinals. He didn’t want to talk about the game and loss, he was focused on what his team could take away from the experience. The rink, the atmosphere, the demeanor – those are the things he wanted this team to see and aspire to.
It sure seems like Morgan has a similar view. The only risk in it is if the players take the losses hard. But if they can compartmentalize and see the bigger picture on what those games can accomplish and mean long term, I think they’re a great idea in moderation.

For me, this is very different from what is happening with RIT. Obviously neither coach knew exactly how their team would be this season when they started scheduling things years ago, and I’d assume a lot of these games were on the schedule before Celeste Brown took over as Head Coach. The difference is LIU is getting other wins. These losses aren’t demoralizing because they’re games they “should” lose at this point and there are clear goals and objectives for playing these games. With RIT, they just spent a ton of money, not to mention time, to fly out to Minneaota for that series.

It just seems like there is some strategy involved behind the scenes for LIU that doesn’t seem to be present for RIT. But I’ll also give Brown the benefit of the doubt that it will take some time before her plans and philosophy are fully entrenched.

Writing through this definitely makes me wonder if LIU is the team we should be looking at as likely to try to move to the CHA. I spoke with Bob DeGregorio about plans to get the CHA back to six teams. He said the conference is looking to elevate a program or move one school from another conference. Morgan’s clear hunger to grow and get bigger and better means it would make a lot of sense to see the Sharks make the conference jump. It’s an interesting thought, anything.

Arlan: It is an interesting question in our current landscape of women’s hockey as to which type of situation is more difficult for a new program looking to contend for NCAA Championships sooner rather than later. We’ll never see another Minnesota-Duluth, winning an NCAA title in its second season, nor likely a Minnesota, who claimed a national title in year three. It took Wisconsin seven years, and Clarkson 11, if I’m counting correctly. Perhaps we will see a new program, or one new to Division-I, achieve that rapid success again. Can it be done again in a new league, as LIU is attempting? Or is there a better chance to strike gold for a program like St. Thomas that will have to skate through league arenas where the rafters are cluttered with championship banners?

Anyway, the Tommies have managed to clear the first hurdle in the lane of new programs: prove that you can compete at the D-I level. They’ve certainly demonstrated that versus the bottom half of the WCHA, going toe to toe with those teams and earning their share of the points. They’ve played eight games against three teams that not only advanced to the NCAA Tournament last season, but won games once there. While they haven’t gotten closer than three goals to any of those teams at the final buzzer, they haven’t been totally embarrassed in any of those losses. Like most new teams, and frankly, most teams period, St. Thomas can struggle to score but has done well at limiting goals allowed, yielding an average of four per game. They look to have found a keeper in first-year goaltender Saskia Maurer, who was honored as the conference’s Rookie of the Week for the second time for her efforts in keeping Wisconsin in shouting distance.

And while we’re acknowledging goalies facing a slew of shots, the story of Avery Stilwell deserves a mention. She enrolled at Minnesota State intending to play only tennis for the Mavericks, but the hockey team ran out of healthy goalies, and she became the emergency starter in the series versus Ohio State. A lot of the lessons learned in college aren’t taught in the classroom, and the experience of putting herself in an uncomfortable situation on a big stage will serve her well, pardon the pun.

It could have been worse — the Mavericks could have been playing Wisconsin. The Badgers have the dynamic sophomore duo of Makenna Webster and Casey O’Brien leading the country in scoring and Daryl Watts continuing her assault on the all-time record books. As if all that offense isn’t enough, Wisconsin is allowing less than a goal per game and has only twice allowed multiple goals in a game. The surprise may not be that the Badgers are undefeated as their regular season nears its halfway point, but that they’ve wound up in overtime three times, costing them a shot at perfection.

Looking ahead, is there anybody on the Badger’s schedule with a chance to knock them off? They still have to visit the Beavers in Bemidji, the team that managed to hold them off the scoreboard and earned a tie, but I’m not sure that BSU can score on Wisconsin. UMD, whose top line of Elizabeth Giguere, Gabbie Hughes, and Anna Klein is as dangerous as anyone in the country put a scare into the Badgers right up until OT, but the rematch will be in Madison. Minnesota is another team that can score, especially with Taylor Heise performing at the level that she’s found this year, but it’s been awhile since the Gophers have proven that they can shut a top team down. Quinnipiac is nearly as stingy as Wisconsin but doesn’t have the thunder up front. Ohio State usually manages to figure the Badgers out for 60 minutes at some point, and the Buckeyes figure to get at least three more chances to do so again this season.

Anyway, I’d like to wish a wonderful Thanksgiving to all of our readers, and like the players that we follow, may they find a way to make the best out of a situation that is still far from ideal.

Nicole: I think it will be interesting to see how the Badgers react to Quinnipiac’s defense. Bemidji State showed Wisconsin can be stymied, so there’s that. I also think Quinnipiac’s defense plays different stylistically. One place I’m interested to see how they fare against each other is down the line sheet. I’m not sure the Bobcats are used to fending off 3-4 lines as strong as the Badgers. The fact that there’s little to no respite is part of the problem when facing them. Even if opponents do a good job of corralling Daryl Watts and Casey O’Brien, there’s still Sarah Wozniewicz’s puck handling skills and Caitlin Schneider’s speed on the third line. The Badgers possess and move the puck differently than say Clarkson or Colgate, so I really think these will be two great games to watch. The details are going to be important here.

It’s unlikely the Badgers will sweep Ohio State – or Minnesota for that matter. Wisconsin closes out the regular season in Columbus. The outcome of those games could have implications in both the WCHA and Pairwise.

On a different note, the idea of “celebrating” Thanksgiving is complicated and is further compounded here by the fact that many of the players, coaches and fans we talk to and about had their day of thanks a month ago. But despite the fraught history of Thanksgiving, it’s always a good idea to take time to be grateful and mindful. It’s been harder to find the good stuff over the past 18 months or so, so I wanted to take a second to be thankful for things running relatively smoothly this year. All the teams are playing, we haven’t had any stoppages and the student athletes are getting to have the experience they signed up for.

Thanks to Arlan for pushing his hockey writing retirement off a little longer every year to continue writing this column with me. I’m forever amazed at the things you remember off the top of your head. Folks, Arlan’s forgotten more stuff than most of us will ever know about this game. That he sticks around here and in the forum is a gift. Beyond his extensive knowledge, he always offers great context for things that are happening.

Thanks to our readers. Thank you for spending time with us every week.

Thanks to all the Sports Information Directors who make it immeasurably easier – and better – for me to cover this sport. They’re the major unsung heroes of college sports coverage.

I believe family is what you make it and I’m so thankful for the friends I’ve made through this sport that have become my chosen family. There are times this sport drives me batty, but I’ll never be upset about all the amazing people it has brought into my life. We’re a small community here in women’s hockey and I’m so happy and proud to be a part of it.

Be safe, take care of yourselves and make sure you take time to watch some awesome non-conference matchups this weekend.

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Niagara steps out of conference play, faces tough challenge this weekend at Michigan

Niagara’s Mike Faulkner scored his first goal of the season last weekend against Air Force (photo: Niagara Athletics).

Niagara is not shying away from stiff competition.

The Purple Eagles’ nonconference schedule is shaping up to be the most difficult in Atlantic Hockey:

  • Two games at North Dakota
  • Two games at Penn State
  • Two games at Michigan
  • Two games at Notre Dame

American International’s non-league schedule comes close (Quinnipiac, UMass, Providence), but at least the Yellow Jackets play a couple of those games at home.

So far, Niagara is 0-4 out of league, dropping both ends of the North Dakota and Penn State series. Jason Lammers’ team travels to Ann Arbor this week to face off against a Michigan team that was ranked No. 1 before falling twice to Notre Dame, both times in overtime.

The Wolverines certainly won’t be overlooking Niagara as they look to rebound.

“The timing for us isn’t perfect,” said Lammers. “Obviously, I wish they would have swept (Notre Dame) last weekend and yawned as we took the ice. I’m sure they’re having a good week of practice in preparation for us.”

Niagara will try to use to its advantage a mature roster and willingness to play a physical game. The Purple Eagles feature 17 upperclassmen and grad students.

“It’s an asset,” said Lammers. “It’s something we have to use. We need to outcompete them and be aggressive.”

Lammers says it’s not so much getting his team ready for Michigan in particular, but preparing his team each week to get better.

“We’re really focused on ourselves,” he said. “We will do our pre-scouting as we normally do, but we’re always working on what he can do to make our group better every week.”

At this point in the season, Lammers has two priorities for improvement.

“Looking at ourselves, priority one is special teams. Priority two is heating up our sticks and getting more chances near the net.”

Lammers believes that playing a difficult nonconference schedule will pay dividends by the end of the season. It’s working – Niagara made the conference championship game in 2019 and bowed out in the semifinals last season.

And his players relish the opportunity.

“They love playing in these big buildings against top level competition.,” Lammers said. “It’s a chance to further showcase their gifts against players who are obviously gifted themselves. And we also try to schedule (away) games close to players’ hometowns so their family and friends can see them play.”

There’s also a bigger picture at play. Atlantic Hockey has been a one-bid league since its inception with the exception of 2013, when Niagara faltered in the conference semifinals but its 23-9-5 record put it high enough in the PairWise Rankings to make the NCAA tournament as an at-large team.

“We’re here to help (Atlantic Hockey) be a two-bid league,” said Lammers. “It’s rough for a team to have a great season, but slip up (in the tournament) and get left home.

“I think every team is looking for a way to get a second chance.”

This Week in Big Ten Hockey: ‘One of the great rivalries in college hockey’ coming back this weekend as Minnesota visits NCHC’s North Dakota

Minnesota freshman Matthew Knies celebrates a goal earlier this season against Ohio State (photo: Bjorn Franke).

For Minnesota fans, the next chapter of a popular rivalry is one thing to be thankful for this weekend.

The No. 11 Gophers will travel to Ralph Engelstad Arena to play No. 6 North Dakota on Friday and Saturday.

“This is probably one of the great rivalries in college hockey, North Dakota and Minnesota,” Gophers coach Bob Motzko said Monday on his weekly radio show. “With COVID, we couldn’t play last year, and I haven’t been back (to Grand Forks) since I was with St. Cloud. This is a fun weekend for us to go play North Dakota and get up there and renew this rivalry.”

The two teams have quite the history from the old WCHA, from postgame handshake line fights to a dead gopher being tossed onto the ice. That led to a brief hiatus when both teams bolted from the conference in 2013.

They met again during the 2016-17 season and have played regularly since. Minnesota has an all-time 148-134-16 record against UND, but it has struggled against the Fighting Hawks on the road to a tune of 58-72-8 and UND has won the last four contests between the two teams.

The Gophers might be more concerned about more recent history on their drive northwest, namely the struggles in the first game of a series this season. Including last week against Penn State, Minnesota is 2-5-0 in Friday games this season.

“Once again, we found a way to give up five goals in what I thought was a much closer game,” Mozko said, referring to Friday’s loss to the Nittany Lions. “We’ve had breakdowns in back checking, of all things. We work on it, and the thing is you shouldn’t have to work on back checking.”

Saturday games have been better, Minnesota is 6-1-0 and has swept both series that it did win on Friday, but Motzko is looking for a better start to the series this weekend.

“I want us to, start to finish, play a game,” Motzko said. “In those Friday games we had a 3-0 lead and a 2-0 lead and didn’t finish them. We haven’t played bad, but we haven’t done the things you need to do to finish a game off.”

The Gophers got two goals from senior Sammy Walker on Saturday night after the captain had gone scoreless in three straight contests. Motzko moved Walker from center to wing in the game and both parties seemed to enjoy the switch.

“We’ve been wanting to do it for a while,” Motzko said. “Just let Sammy stop worrying about getting down low and playing defense. He’s got great speed, he wants to anticipate offense. I really think that’s where Sammy will be in pro hockey.

“We can always go back. I just met with Sammy this morning and said, ‘Let’s try this a little bit,’ and we’ve got time right now to do that, and we’ve got options. We’ve got talent and depth and we’ve got to use it.”

On the other end of the age spectrum, the Gophers are also enjoying the production coming from 19-year-old freshman Matthew Knies, who had five points last weekend and leads the team with 14.

“He’s a heck of a player and is feeling it and playing great,” Motzko said. “We need that enthusiasm and that energy that a young player, he’s playing with Ben Meyers, that they’ve developed, really to catch on now with other guys. That’s what we’re moving towards, getting more guys on the same page.”

UND is led in scoring by sophomore defenseman Jake Sanderson, who Motzko called one of the best defensemen in the world. The Gophers defensive corps was thought to be one of their strongest attributes heading into the season, but the unit as a whole has struggled to contribute to the team’s offense.

“It’s one of the big things that’s impacting our game right now,” Motzko said. “They just got off to a, I’ll call it a sophomore slump. Last year, that ‘D’ corps was one of the elite in college hockey and I think that they just got off to a sophomore slump that blindsided us and them.

“They’re going to be just fine. It’d be a great weekend to snap through it and get some offense from our defensemen.”

Canisius adding former hockey standout Conacher to school’s sports hall of fame as part of 2022 class

CONACHER

Canisius announced Tuesday that 2011 graduate Cory Conacher has been selected as part of the 58th induction class to the Canisius College Sports Hall of Fame.

The 2009-10 Atlantic Hockey Player of the Year, Conacher rewrote the Canisius Division I era record book, establishing 12 single-game and career marks during his time on Main Street.

The school’s Division I era career leader in points (147) and goals (62), Conacher was a two-time All-AHA selection as well as a Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award All-America First Team pick in 2010-11. His 53 points and 33 assists during the 2009-10 season still stand as single-season standards for the program while his 23-goal effort in 2010-11 also stands as the school’s single-season mark.

After graduation, Conacher embarked on a professional playing career that is in its 12th season. He has played 193 games in the NHL with the Ottawa Senators, Buffalo Sabres, New York Islanders and Tampa Bay Lightning. Conacher was named the AHL’s Most Valuable Player and Rookie of the Year during 2011-12 season as he helped guide the Norfolk Admirals to the Calder Cup championship.

He has also played abroad, winning an NLA championship (2015-16) and a Swiss Cup title (2020-21) with SC Bern in the Swiss League.

An All-Atlantic Hockey 10th Anniversary First Team selection in 2013, Conacher is the 14th member of the hockey program to enter the Canisius Sports Hall of Fame.

The induction ceremony will be held Sunday, Feb. 6, 2022, when the men’s basketball team plays host to Manhattan at the Koessler Athletic Center at 1 p.m. The annual Hall of Fame Day will begin with a special induction brunch at Montante Cultural Center on the Canisius campus. The cost is $35 per person ($15 for children ages 10 and younger) and includes a buffet-style brunch menu, cash bar and a ticket to the men’s basketball game.

Those interested in taking part in the brunch are asked to RSVP to the Canisius Office of Alumni Engagement by calling 716-888-2700 or register online. The deadline to RSVP is Feb. 1, 2022.

Mammoths look to shake off COVID rust

Amherst players looking to build their game in challenging schedule to open the season (Photo by Amherst Athletics)

COVID. The pandemic has presented immense challenge to all of us in so many ways and continues to be part of our everyday lives at home and at work. For student athletes playing hockey across New England, the challenges were varied by conference and institution. While some programs managed to find continuity with some games and/or team practices for the 2020-21, not all were able to create the desired team environment nor participate on the ice in a productive or culture-building way for new recruits joining the program. Among the NESCAC schools, who saw their season canceled early by the institution Presidents, Amherst is one of few that saw unique challenges that now create different opportunities in the 2021-22 season that has just commenced.

“It has been surreal,” said head coach Jack Arena. “We had nine players on campus last fall, just nine. That number by institution guidelines was too large to have at one practice so we skated in multiple sessions. When the season was canceled and the kids came back from break, the ice had been taken out, so we did not have a place to continue skating for last season. Based on last year’s first-year class and now the new players joining this year, we had 15 players on the ice in October that had never been in a college practice nor coached by this staff. It has really made us look at our approach and building our culture into a group of players that hasn’t had the continuity of the past – not as a group. This is a very unique year for sure and it will be interesting to see how other teams in the league deal with varying degrees of activity over the past year.”

Last week the Mammoths opened their season on the road against Hamilton and, in typical Amherst fashion, scored a power play goal to take a 1-0 lead in the first period. Unfortunately, the Continentals answered back with five goals over the final 41 minutes of play, including a goal in the final minute of the first period and a goal in the final second of the second period for a convincing 5-1 win.

“We are going to have to develop our game quickly,” noted Arena. “We have seen some progress in practice, and it was a benefit to start a couple weeks earlier than usual to give us more prep time, but practice and game situations are different. We are scheduled at home against St. Michael’s on Tuesday who have had their own COVID protocol challenges to start the season. If we don’t get that game [on schedule for 11/23], we have a very difficult schedule starting against Utica on Friday. Depending on that outcome we either get Massachusetts-Boston or Geneseo and then Trinity, Wesleyan, Middlebury and Williams all on the road before we play another home game. We are going to have a young team learning as they go, and the early season schedule will certainly challenge us to improve quickly.”

St. Michael’s opened their season this past weekend after several postponements to start the season. The Purple Knights have two games under their belt so far with a 5-2 win over Franklin Pierce and a 4-2 loss to Assumption. The Mammoths would certainly like to take advantage of playing a home game Tuesday afternoon before the Thanksgiving holiday and embarking on a road trip to Utica for their Thanksgiving Tournament this weekend.

Looking back at the weekend in D-III West Hockey

Tim Coughlin earned a milestone win over the weekend at St. Norbert. Photo by Paul Ferron/St. Norbert Athletics.

Tim Coghlin further cemented his place in college hockey history Friday night when his St. Norbert team took care of business against Finlandia with a 9-1 win.

Coghlin won the 600th game of his career, becoming only the fourth to reach that mark at the NCAA Division III level and the 14th to get to 600 at any level of of NCAA hockey. He is in his 28th season at St. Norbert and has lost just 160 games in that time. 

His career has featured 19 trips to the NCAA tourney with the Green Knights and five of those trips have ended with national championships, the last in 2018. His nine title game appearances are tied for the most in D-III history.

Michael McChesney turned in a big game to help his coach reach his latest milestone, scoring twice and dishing out an assist. Brock Baker produced the same stat line as the Green Knights rolled to a big road win.

A total of seven players had multi-point nights for St. Norbert while Colby Entz played in his first game of the season and got the job done in goal, stopping 15 shots. 

St. Norbert is 5-3 overall and 4-0 in the NCHA. It has won four consecutive games, scoring four or more goals in each of those wins.

Mosquera shines for Vikings

Alex Mosquera was on top of his game for Lawrence in a 2-1 win over MSOE Saturday night.

The senior netminder stopped 53 shots in the victory, including 25 in the final period of play as the Vikings secured their first NCHA win of the season. Lawrence improved to 3-4 overall.

Bradon Halvorsen and Oliver DeCroock both scored goals in the wins.

Mosequera’s effort helped the Vikings bounce back from a 3-2 loss to the Raiders the night before. Lawrence had dropped three consecutive games.

Mosquera has played in six games this season, starting five of them, and has allowed 18 goals while racking up 198 saves.

Still unbeaten

Aurora’s special season continues as the Spartans beat Lake Forest for the third time this season Saturday with a 5-2 win and kept their record perfect through eight games.

Adam Keyes, Jack Jaunich and Brayden Sampson all scored a goal and dished out an assist as Aurora pushed its NCHA mark to 4-0. Gio Procopio dished out two assists and Josh Boyko helped the Spartans’ cause with 23 saves.

Aurora has won five of its games on the road and has scored four or more goals in four consecutive games. The Spartans opened their series on Friday against Lake Forest with a 4-0 win.

Auggies thrive on power play

Nationally ranked Augsburg kept its unbeaten record intact with an impressive performance against St. Scholastica Saturday to cap off a sweep of the Saints.

The Auggies scored all four of their goals off the power play in 4-0 win as they improved to 6-0 overall while picking up their first two MIAC wins of the season.

Gavin Holland paved the way with two goals and Austin Martinsen dished out three assists. Holland now leads the MIAC in goals and is ranked second in the league in points. 

Samuel Vyletelka earned his second shutout of the year and the second of his career in the win. The first-year player stopped 22 shots. Augsburg held a 36-22 advantage in shots. 

The Auggies have outscored the opposition 20-4 this season and boasts one of the best scoring defenses in the country.

Royals continue to find success

Bethel opened its series against Gustavus Friday with a 5-2 win on a night when five different players scored goals for the Royals.

Ben Doherty helped lead the way as he scored a goal and dished out an assist. Luke Posner tallied two assists in the win.

One of the goals was scored by netminder Ridge Gerards. He connected on an empty netter with just over a minute to play in the action. He also stopped 39 shots in the victory.

The Royals and Gusties played to a 2-2 tie in the series finale Saturday. Bethel is 6-1-1 on the season. Friday’s game marked the the third time this season the Royals have scored five or more goals in a game.

Oles deliver in overtime

Matthew Pointer came through with a big goal in overtime to lift St. Olaf to a 2-1 win over Concordia in a MIAC battle Friday. The two teams ended the series Saturday with a 2-2 tie.

Pointer scored his goal off an assist from Evan Shoemaker.

Cooper Lukenda came through with 16 saves. He entered the game at the start of the second period and helped St. Olaf end a four-game losing streak to the Cobbers in the series between the two teams.

Big win for the Yellow Jackets

Wisconsin-Superior showed no signs of nerves in a battle against nationally ranked Wisconsin-Stevens Point Saturday night, coming away with a 3-2 win over the Pointers.

It was the first meeting between the two teams since the WIAC title game last season, which was also won by Superior.

Superior scored three consecutive goals to grab the momentum and neverlooked back while Myles Hektor made 27 saves, including 12 in the final period.

Zach Bannister, David Kaplan and Levi Cudmore all scored for the Yellow Jackets, who improved to 4-2 overall and 2-1 in the WIAC. The win helped them bounce back from a 5-1 loss to Wisconsin-Eau Claire one night earlier.

Blugolds roll in opener

Wisconsin-Eau Claire came to play in its WIAC opener Friday, skating to a 5-1 win over the UW-Superior, the reigning champ the conference.

Troy MacTavish, Simon Sagissor, Ty Readman, Quinn Green and Connor Szmul all scored goals for the Blugolds while Ryan Ouellette notched 21 saves in goal to pick up his third win of the season. It’s the fourth time this season that UW-Eau Claire has allowed just one goal or less in a game.

Stout ends drought

For the first time since 2017, Wisconsin-Stout picked up a win over UW-Eau Claire, securing a 4-2 win Saturday. 

The Blue Devils scored twice in the third to secure the win. It’s their second consecutive win and and they improved to 2-6 overall. Both of their wins have come on the road.

Raphael Gosselin scored a goal and dished out an assist to help pace the Blue Devils. Tyler Masternak racked up 24 saves for his second win of the season.

TMQ: Looking at the past weekend in college hockey, initiating PairWise analysis, ongoing COVID concerns

Quinnipiac senior forward Ethan de Jong recorded his first career hat trick in Saturday’s 8-0 win over St. Lawrence and also added an assist in Friday’s 2-2 tie with Clarkson (photo: Rob Rasmussen).

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

Paula: Well, Dan, it was a wild weekend for the top teams in college hockey, resulting in a new No. 1 and some rearranging of the top 10 in the USCHO Men’s Poll.

Thirty-eight voters agree that Minnesota State is the best team in college hockey — this week, anyway — after the Mavericks absolutely handled St. Thomas, outscoring the Tommies 14-0 in a two-game sweep.

Minnesota Duluth and Qunnipiac garnered 11 votes between them after the Bulldogs split with North Dakota and the Bobcats shut out St. Lawrence 8-0 and tied Clarkson 2-2. What’s interesting to me is that Michigan still received a single first-place vote after losing two OT home games to Notre Dame — who climbed from 14th to Not. 8 with the road sweep.

Last week on USCHO Live! Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger talked with Michigan’s Mel Pearson, who addressed some of the issues his young, talented team is having, including that sophomore class playing in full arenas for the first time this season. All four of Michigan’s losses have been at Yost, a barn with a fantastic atmosphere that opposing teams often claim to relish. The Irish clearly enjoyed that hospitality.

What I am wondering — still — is how many pandemic-related intangibles are affecting the wild ride we’re seeing nearly weekly in the top 10. It’s also fascinating to see perceived strength of opponent play into rankings, win or lose. How are you seeing any of this play out?

Dan: This is an excellent question and I am honestly stumped at how to fully answer it.

There’s a part of me that thinks last year was a debacle and nothing that came out of it matters to how this year is being played. This is a fresh slate with teams being able to practice on regular schedules. The team-building drills and exercises are back in full swing, and after a month or two, the identities are forming. That’s something we would expect in any year, and the first year out of the pandemic, in that regard, would illustrate how much of a return to normal we have.

But it’s not that clear cut, nor is it that easy to answer. A good chunk of teams lost last year in a number of different ways, and we’ll never be able to measure how much playing through the pandemic’s height impacted cultures and players’ willingness to continue playing for teams. The new transfer rules made it easier to move around, anyways, but we’ll never know how many of those players were just plain exhausted by the end of the season. As a result, I don’t think we’ll ever be able to figure out how many intangibles, which is a great term to use, are still impacting programs.

You also bring up a great point about Michigan that’s also pretty tough to answer. I’d love to sit back and talk about the stress of a team that’s at home, but I think it’s a hard-to-measure combination of factors. Michigan is so talented and is expected to crush every opponent, but it’s hard to tell if it weighs on a team or is a factor when it plays against teams who are that good. I think that’s more case-by-case about the team, the opponent, the factors and the intangibles to the individual matchup than it is a broadstroke conversation.

Because of the pandemic, everyone needed to learn how to go into an arena with fans for the first time, and where some people have relished it, others have simply not known how to react to it. I’m not sure what’s happening with Michigan – I’m not saying it’s one way or the other – but I do know that even as an employee or a journalist, there’s a lot that I’m still not used to experiencing again.

When it comes to the rankings, though, I don’t know if the pandemic is involved moreso than the recency bias that’s always in every week, and I more see that as a compliment to the best teams that are tightly packed together. I know I dropped Michigan out of the top four or five spots, but my vote for Quinnipiac at No. 1 was as much a compliment to how the Bobcats look right now than it is a knock against Michigan or St. Cloud, who I had at No. 5 and No. 6 behind Minnesota Duluth, Minnesota State and North Dakota. That’s a murderer’s row of teams, and they all have a very good case as the No. 1 team.

The bias aspect, though, is something I think we need to talk about more frequently because I think it genuinely hurts a team like Omaha, which is tied for fourth in scoring offense and tied for ninth in scoring defense, has an 11-3 overall record, and can’t seem to get higher than ninth in the poll. The Mavs deserve more, in my mind, but they still don’t have that same glamour that Michigan or North Dakota have. The same goes for Cornell and Harvard, which are two teams everyone forgot about because of the double whammy of starting later than everyone AND not playing last year.

Bias has always been a touchy subject for me, though, and it’s largely because I think certain leagues (ahem, Atlantic Hockey) have never gotten their proper due or respect. I compared Atlantic Hockey to the WCHA two years ago and put a ranked team up against RIT in both overall record, scoring offense, scoring defense, non-conference record and some other situational numbers while removing the teams. RIT barely had a vote, but the WCHA team was ranked inside the top 18 in the nation. I bristled at it at the time, much like I did this year when Bentley went 2-2 with wins over Ohio State and Boston College.

In the poll that was released two days later, BC, which had just beaten Northeastern in a tremendous game, dropped from No. 6 to No. 10, likely because of the loss. Ohio State had 30 votes and was just outside the No. 20 spot held by, ironically enough, Northeastern. Bentley, meanwhile, had four votes. That, to me, was an indictment of how voters viewed Atlantic Hockey, a league that’s beaten teams in the national tournament almost annually and put Air Force into a No. 3 seed as recently as 2018.

I hope all of this makes at least some sense, but wow, there was a lot to unpack there. I think I covered it all. Anyways, we’re hot and spicy out of the gate here.

Paula: Spicy, indeed!

That wasn’t my intention, but I’m glad you bring up the inherent biases. It’s the difference between a poll in which people offer an educated opinion about what’s going on in a given week and the PairWise Rankings, which is data-driven. Ultimately, the poll doesn’t matter except to provide us with good points from which to launch these discussions, right? At the end of the season, it’s the PWR that matters the most.

And that, coaches would argue, is the thing: play the games, take care of business on the ice, and the end of the season will take care of itself.

As for this week, I gave Minnesota State the top spot on my ballot for the thoroughness with which they dispatched St. Thomas. There’s a lot of merit in your first-place vote for Quinnipiac based on their drubbing of St. Lawrence. What’s interesting to me, though, is that we’re both reporters who often champion leagues we perceive as under-served by the general college hockey media. Also interesting is the mix in the top five in the poll — CCHA, NCHC, ECAC, Big Ten, NCHC, in that order – while three NCHC teams are represented in the PWR, plus Minnesota State and Michigan.

We may be going around and around about the same thing, and instead of life imitating art, at the end of the season the converse may be true: art (the poll) imitating life (PWR).

Dan: That’s where I stand with it, but I’ll readily admit that I do love looking back over the old polls as a screenshot into what we were thinking at a time or place. It’s always fun to look through our USCHO.com poll archive, where you can literally see any week from a past year, and see how people were thinking. It offers perspective that we, as writers, use to craft our arguments whenever talking about which teams are on streaks or look good. That’s why it still has an important place opposite the Pairwise, which I guess leads me to my next question for you.

We didn’t have the Pairwise last year because nonconference scheduling was nonexistent in a COVID world. It led to a conversation about how that opened the possibility of introducing an old-style, smoke-filled rooms of people figuring out which teams belonged in the tournament and which ones didn’t, and I hope, somehow that, the Pairwise is used in conjunction with our poll to determine a field of teams as we move forward. I think using math is great, but we’ve seen that the Pairwise itself is flawed.

I look at the WCHA and how it couldn’t get certain teams into the tournament for years because its collective PWR dragged its coefficient down, and the best teams in Atlantic Hockey dealt with a similar situation. Coaches and leagues obviously need to win their way into the tournament, but if the entire league can’t do it from top to bottom for a variety of reasons, then we’re left talking about it on an annual basis.

I would love to know if there’s a way to evolve and to merge art with life. Is there a way to use the PWR to form a pile of teams that then get analyzed by a committee, or is the mathematical equation simply the only way we can do it?

Paula: Data-driven decisions, all the way.

Think of how much more sense college hockey would make if things like data at the gate were taken into consideration for regionals, for example. There is so much evidence that shows that non-campus sites for regional play are a bust. It’s too early in the season to gripe about this – especially when we think of the restrictions of a year ago – but there is a lot that college hockey gets right, but regionals ain’t it.

Selection, though, is. You and I can make a pretty good argument for nuancing some of the bubble selections to allow for factors other than conference strength to help pick the field – and let me make it clear here and now that I know that “conference strength” isn’t a thing but that strength of schedule is – allowing chances for some deserving teams to participate who are often overlooked, but that’s also an argument for keeping it to the numbers only, to take away the bias. However the committee does what it does, there will always be someone unhappy.

Look at the poll. I rewarded Minnesota State for sweeping a weak St. Thomas team while Omaha handled Alaska really well and fell in my poll – sorry Mavericks – because I moved North Dakota up. The Mavs didn’t deserve to drop a spot in my poll, nor did the Buckeyes, who didn’t even play. I had to move North Dakota up and this is why I’m glad a committee of humans other than me uses something like math to select the field.

I want to pivot here to the news that Boston College is postponing games this weekend against Notre Dame and Harvard because of COVID protocols. As someone who lives in Michigan, the state leading the current U.S. COVID surge with truly alarming numbers, I can’t tell you how dismayed I am to see this happen in Massachusetts.

BC is in Suffolk County, which has a one percent COVID positivity rate. Honestly, I expected this – but not in Boston. What do we take away from the news that a team that played at home last weekend in a place with one of the lowest COVID positivity rates in the country needs to reschedule a weekend out of the proverbial abundance of caution?

Dan: In terms of what it means to Hockey East, Massachusetts or Boston College (a school that, in full disclosure, I work with, even though I don’t know anything about this situation, just felt it was worth a disclaimer there) – or even Harvard or Notre Dame, who were subsequently rescheduled – I simply don’t know.

I’m really proud of Massachusetts and the way we handled COVID-19 (we were one of the first and hardest-hit states when we didn’t know what we didn’t know) and as a resident of the Commonwealth and more specifically Middlesex County, I’ve never gone to an event and felt unsafe given the way it’s been handled in this state. There’s a knowing risk involved any time I step out anywhere, especially since we know that the Delta variant that’s most prevalent makes some vaccines diminish their effectiveness, but with the indoor move of activities as temperatures are getting colder and the natural diminishment of vaccinations from last winter, the state opened booster eligibility to all adults aged 18 and older with the recommendation to acquire the booster if your vaccine status was older than six months. So it’s worth noting that I think the state’s rate back down where it belongs as vaccination rates and booster rates raise like they did when we first went through the process.

That said, COVID is still very much a presence in our lives, and the rate of infection in Massachusetts topped three percent over the last seven days after it cratered around November 1. I do think that in the post-COVID era, I’d rather see a school postpone out of an abundance of caution rather than proceed and potentially run the risk of infection with another team.

I think back to the days when players and coaches would gut through games while suffering from the flu or a viral infection or some other sickness, and I remember getting sick after the Brown-Princeton triple overtime playoff game. The next week, I worked the Bentley-Robert Morris series with what I thought was a bad cold, but I was practically shivering a cold sweat in the broadcast booth while I ate raw honey and sucked on lozenges to help my throat get through it. That was a totally normal thing to do in those days, but with what we know about the coronavirus and COVID-19, that’ll never happen again. That’s a good thing for everyone involved, and that’s a perfect example of when a school announces “an abundance of caution,” I think.

Again, I don’t know what’s going on in this instance with BC, but I’ll just reinforce that it’s better to be safe than sorry in 2021.

All of that said, as confident as I am in things in Massachusetts, I understand how I live in a bubble out here, and I don’t know what to expect from other schools or other states. I’m always going to be worried about it, but all I hope is that this reinforces the best practices regarding the coronavirus. I wish for people to get vaccinated wherever and whenever they can so these embers can be easily stamped out, and if they aren’t vaccinated, follow the CDC guidelines and recommendations to minimize both the risk of infection and the ongoing spread across the country. We all want to have college hockey, and every step is important to keep things moving in the right direction.

From all of us at USCHO.com, Happy Thanksgiving!

Michigan, St. Cloud State swept; ECAC’s top contenders; Minnesota Duluth, North Dakota don’t disappoint: Weekend Review college hockey podcast Season 4 Episode 8

Hosts Jim Connelly, Derek Schooley, and Ed Trefzger look at this past weekend’s games and news. Topics include:

• With No. 1 Michigan losing twice in OT and No. 2 St. Cloud State getting swept, it was a difficult poll ballot;

• Western Michigan did what it needed to do, and emphatically so;

• Getting a feel for the ECAC;

• Minnesota Duluth and North Dakota gave us exactly what we expected

• Boston College postponed a trip to Notre Dame and a home game vs. Harvard for COVID-19 precautions;

• What we’re thankful for in college hockey this Thanksgiving.

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

Minnesota State garners 38 first-place votes, moves back to top of USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll

Ryan Sandelin had a goal and an assist as Minnesota State downed St. Thomas 5-0 on the road Saturday night (photo: Matt Dewkett).

Minnesota State earned 38 first-place votes in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll, good enough to move up two places and sit No. 1 this week.

Minnesota Duluth picked up five first-place nods and jumps two spots to No. 2 this week, while Quinnipiac moves up two to No. 3, getting six first-place votes.

Last week’s top team, Michigan, is down to fourth and picked up the last first-place vote this week.

USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll – Nov. 22, 2021

St. Cloud State is down three to No. 5 in this week’s poll.

North Dakota remains sixth, followed by Western Michigan at No. 7, up six places, Notre Dame up six to No. 8, and Omaha and Cornell remaining ninth and 10th, respectively.

No new teams enter this week’s rankings.

In addition to the top 20, 11 other teams received votes this week.

The USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll consists of 50 voters, including coaches and beat writers and sports professionals from across the country.

Boston College postpones upcoming college hockey games against Notre Dame, Harvard due to COVID-19 protocols

Due to COVID-19 protocols and “out of an abundance of caution,” according to a news release, the Boston College men’s hockey team has postponed its games against Notre Dame this Friday, Nov. 26 and Harvard next Tuesday, Nov. 30.

The schools are currently working to reschedule these two games to later dates.

The Eagles are scheduled to return to action on Tuesday, Dec. 7 against Brown at Kelley Rink.

Winners of six straight including a weekend sweep at top-ranked Michigan this past weekend, eighth-ranked Notre Dame will now be off until playing host to 17th-ranked Ohio State on Dec. 3-4 at the Compton Family Ice Arena.

Harvard next plays at Brown on Dec. 3 and at Yale Dec. 4.

D-III East Hockey Weekend Wrap-up – November 22, 2021

Trinity’s Lucas Michaud scored two goals to help the Bantams to a pair of wins to open NESCAC play (Photo by Trinity Athletics)

It is Thanksgiving week and there is much to be thankful for with the return of the hockey season and the great action seen across each of the conferences in the east. Just when you think you have it figured out, there is a surprise team that has a statement win each weekend. I am thankful that it looks like it is going to be an exciting ride from now to the end and here are some highlights from the weekend that exemplify my point:

CCC

Endicott remained unbeaten (7-0-1 overall) entering a bye week with a weekend sweep of Western New England. The Gulls won Thursday’s game by a 4-1 score but found themselves in a battle at home on Saturday. Despite outshooting the Golden Bears by a 51-27 margin and building a 5-2 lead, WNE wouldn’t quit, and late goals Marko Bohatiuk and Sam Mitchell closed the gap to 5-4 with just over a minute remaining in regulation. Goaltender Elijah Harris made sure there were no more visiting goals and the Gulls held on for the 5-4 win. Connor Geshan scored twice for the Gulls.

Independents

Albertus Magnus picked up a big win as they knocked off Hamilton on Saturday by a 4-2 score. Alex Gagnon gave the visitors a 3-1 lead in the third period before Grisha Gotovets scored to bring the Continentals within one goal. Jonathan Stein, with an assist from Gagnon, sealed the win with just over a minute remaining. Logan Bateman made 32 saves to earn the big road win for the Falcons.

MASCAC

Fitchburg State and Massachusetts-Dartmouth played a seesaw affair on Thursday night with the Falcons eking out a 4-3 home win. The Corsairs took on-goal leads three times only to see FSU respond each time. Zachery Diamont tied the game 3-3 less than ten seconds into the third period and Rece Bergeman gave the Falcons a lead that Brian McGrath wouldn’t relinquish with just over six minutes remaining in regulation time.

NE-10

Following a number of postponements due to COVID protocols, St. Michael’s finally skated into conference action this weekend and opened their season successfully with a 5-2 win over Franklin Pierce on Friday. Five different players scored for the Purple Knights in the win. On Saturday, Assumption flipped the script on St. Michael’s with a 4-2 road win. Devan Sheth scored twice in the third period to break open a 2-2 tie and earn the Greyhounds the big NE-10 win.

NEHC

Hobart posted a pair of statement wins with an offensive eruption that saw 20 goals scored in games against Massachusetts-Boston and Johnson & Wales over the weekend. Friday night saw the Statesmen bounce back from a non-conference loss at Cortland with an 8-4 win before Aaron Maguyon led the offensive barrage on Saturday with a hat trick in a 12-1 win over the Wildcats.

NEHC newcomer Elmira opened their conference schedule at home and, like travel partner Hobart made the trip west a miserable one for the Beacons and Wildcats. Friday saw the Soaring Eagles leverage a four-goal second period in a 5-1 win over Johnson & Wales. On Saturday, Elmira spotted the beacons a 2-0 lead in the first period before scoring five unanswered goals from five different players to earn a 5-2 win that moved them to 5-1-1 on the season.

NESCAC

The conference opened play this weekend – always the last to join but never disappointing with the action. With Middlebury on the sidelines having to postpone games on their opening road trip to Maine, the attention turned to Williams facing Colby and Bowdoin. Goaltender Evan Ruschil was outstanding in picking up 1-0 shutouts in both games stopping 43 shots against Colby and 25 at Bowdoin.

Trinity opened their season with a pair of wins against Connecticut College and Tufts. On Friday, Jax Murray scored a pair of goals in the Bantams’ 5-1 win over the Camels. On Saturday, Casey Rhodes scored twice in a 6-4 win over the Jumbos. Lucas Michaud scored once in each game for Trinity.

SUNYAC

Cortland continued their recent strong play by following up their win over Hobart with a win and a tie in SUNYAC play against Geneseo and Brockport. On Friday, Ethan Homitz’s power play goal with under three minutes remaining in the third period led to a 2-2 OT tie with Geneseo. On Saturday, the Red Dragons stunned Brockport with Domenic Settimo scoring two goals in a 4-2 win. Luca Durante made 25 saves for Cortland who moved to 4-2-1 overall on the season.

UCHC

On Friday night Lebanon Valley rallied from a 3-1 first period deficit to Wilkes with second period goals from Blake Tosto and Jackson Legro to tie the game at 3-3. There was no scoring in the third period and Wilkes’ Tyler Barrow was the overtime hero giving the Colonels a 4-3 win.

Manhattanville picked up a win and a tie over the weekend including a big 5-3 road win at Stevenson on Friday night. The Valiants took one goal leads three times with the Mustangs answering before Jarod Lavallee gave the visitors the lead for good seven minutes into the third period. Josh Fletcher sealed the win with an empty-net goal late and Tyler Roy made 31 saves to earn the win. On Saturday, Manhattanville’s Kyle Miller and Nick Prestia each gave the visitors one-goal leads but Carson Grainer and Michael Lamison answered for the Cougars to finish the game with a 2-2 overtime tie. Roy with 36 saves and Chatham’s Ricardo Gonzalez, 31 saves, were outstanding in goal.

Three Biscuits

Aaron Maguyon – Hobart – scored a hat trick in a 12-1 win over Johnson & Wales on Saturday. The Statesmen scored 20 goals over the weekend in two conference wins at home.

Evan Ruschil – Williams – recorded back-to-back shutouts for the Ephs in 1-0 wins over Colby and Bowdoin. Ruschil combined to make 68 saves in the two road wins.

George Thurston – Southern New Hampshire – scored a hat trick in a 6-4 win over St. Anselm on Friday night. Two of the goals came on the power play with the third tally sealing in the win into the empty-net.

Lots of great holiday tournament action upcoming this Thanksgiving weekend across the region so save some room for some puck action after your holiday feasting on Thursday.

NCAA Division I Women’s Hockey: Weekend Recap, November 22, 2021

(1) Wisconsin at St. Thomas

Maddi Wheeler had two goals and two assists and Makenna Webster added a goal and three assists to lead Wisconsin to a 7-1 win on Saturday. Brette Pettet, Casey O’Brien, Nicole LaMantia and Sophie Shirley also scored with the Badgers in the win. Maddie Jurgensen was the goal-scorer for St. Thomas in the loss. On Sunday, five different Badgers tallied multi-point games as Wisconsin earned the weekend sweep with a 5-1 win. Sarah Wozniewicz scored the Badgers last goal and Pettet, O’Brien, Shirley and Webster each lit the lamp again. Abby Promersberger was the goal scorer for the Tommies.

(2) Ohio State at Minnesota State

Kennedy Bobyck put Minnesota State on the board first, but then Ohio State rattled off four straight goals over the first and second periods. Clair DeGeorge made it 2-1 before Paetyn Levis scored in the closing seconds of the first to increase the lead. Levis scored again midway through the second and then Sophie Jaques scored in the final tenth of a second of the frame to make it 4-1. Brittyn Fleming scored in the opening minute of the third to make it 4-2, but Lauren Bernard extended the lead to 5-2. Alexis Paddington’s power play tally was the Mavericks’ third goal before Liz Schepers added her own power play goal to make it 6-3 for Ohio State. On Saturday, Jenna Buglioni lead the Buckeyes with two goals and two assists while DeGeorge had two goals and an assist to lead Ohio State to a 9-0 win and weekend sweep.

(3) Minnesota at St. Cloud State

Taylor Heise scored a short-handed goal less than three minutes into the game to give Minnesota a 1-0 lead. Emma Gentry scored for St. Cloud and the teams head to the locker room tied at one. In the second, Audrey Wethington and Olivia Knowles scored less than a minute apart to make it 3-1 Gophers and then Abigail Boreen and Heise scored in the closing minutes to give Minnesota a 5-1 lead. Addi Scibner had a power play goal for the Huskies in the third, but Gracie Ostertag added an extra attacker goal of her own to make it a 6-2 win for the Gophers. Emily Brown, Ostertag, Boreen, Emily Oden and Crystalyn Hengler all scored to lead Minnesota to a 5-1 win. Mackenzie Bougerie was the goal scorer for St. Cloud State.

New Hampshire at (4) Northeastern

Chloe Aurard scored twice to lead the Huskies to a 4-1 win. Andrea Renner and Maureen Murphy also lit the lamp for Northeastern in the win. Kiira Juodikis scored for UNH in the loss.

Connecticut at (4) Northeastern

Connecticut was up 2-0 at the midpoint of this game thanks to goals from Viki Harkness and Katie Thurman, but Northeastern came storming back. Chloe Aurard scored on the power play near the end of the second and Maddie Mills had her own extra attacker goal midway through the third to tie the game at two. Brooke Hobson scored the game-winner late in the third to give Northeastern a 3-2 win.

(10) Princeton at (5) Colgate

Colgate outshot Princeton 48-29, but this game ended a 1-1 tie. The Raiders took the lead midway through the second on a power play goal from Kaitlyn O’Donohoe. Maggie Connors tied the game up six minutes later and that’s how the game would end.

(6) Quinnipiac at (5) Colgate

Quinnipiac earned their highest-ranked victory in more than five years when they defeated Colgate 4-0 on Saturday. Sophie Urban and Jess Schryver each scored in the first and that set the tone. Nina Steigauf extended the lead in the second and Maya Labad added a goal early in the third to finish out the win.

(6) Quinnipiac at Cornell

Quinnipiac used three second-period goals to take down Cornell for the first time since the 17-18 season. Veronica Bac, Taylor House, Maya Labad and Jess Schryver all scored in the win. The Bobcats earned their first ever sweep weekend over Cornell and Colgate with the wins.

(7) UMD at Bemidji State

Elizabeth Giguere had five assists to lead all scorers and tallied her 250th career point on Friday as UMD cruised to a 9-0 win. Gabbie Hughes added a goal and three assists while Anneke Linser and Clara Van Wieren each had a goal and two assists. On Saturday, the game was tied at one after the first. McKenzie Hewett scored for the Bulldogs first, but Reece Hunt replied with a power play goal for the Beavers. Mannon McMahon and Naomi Rogge put UMD ahead in the second and Taylor Anderson made it a 4-1 win with a goal in the third.

Brown at (7) Clarkson

Maya Mangiafico’s goal 13:16 into the first opened the scoring and had Brown up 1-0, but Clarkson took control from there on out. Kirstyn McQuigge responded a couple of minutes later to make it a tie game. Nicole Gosling and Jenna Goodwins cored in the second to make it 3-1. In the third, Laurence Frenette and Kristina Schuler each lit the lamp to close out the 5-1 win.

(9) Yale at (7) Clarkson

Defender Emma Seitz had two goals and two assists to lead Yale to a 4-2 win over Clarkson. She and Claire Dalton scored on the player advantage to put the Bulldogs up 2-0 after the first. Brooke McQuigge scored the lone goal of the second to narrow the gap for Clarkson. Seitz scored midway through the third. Anna Bargman scored in the final two minutes to extend the lead to 4-1. Stephanie Markowski scored a few seconds later, but the Golden Knights ran out of time.

(9) Yale at St. Lawrence

Yale came from behind twice, but this one ended in a 4-4 tie. Abby Huslter scored just 22 seconds into the game to give the Saints a 1-0 lead. Anna Bargman tied it up for Yale midway through the period and Claire Dalton gave the Bulldogs their first lead on a short-handed goal a few minutes later. But Nara Elia scored on the power play just before intermission with less than 90 seconds left in the frame to tie it at two. Aly McLeod’s unassisted goal with 35 seconds left sent St. Lawrence to the locker room with a 3-2 lead. Emma Seitz scored early in the second to knot things up once more. Kristen Guerriero had an extra-attacker goal at the midpoint of the game to put St. Lawrence up 4-3, but Rebecca Vanstone brought Yale back one more time and this one could not determine a winner.

(10) Princeton at Cornell

Gillis Frechette scored 30 seconds into the game and Sam Burke scored on the power play with less than a minute left in the first and that was enough to carry Cornell over Princeton. Cornell’s power play was stellar in the game, successfully killing five penalties, including a pair of five-of-threes and a five-minute major. The Big Red took a 2-0 win.

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