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Alaska Anchorage graduate Shasby chosen as next coach for Seawolves hockey program

SHASBY

Alaska Anchorage announced Wednesday that former Seawolves player Matt Shasby has been named the seventh head hockey coach in school history.

Shasby replaces Matt Curley, who resigned in June, and was one of three finalists for the job.

Currently the vice president of player development for the state of Alaska and serving as a coach with the Anchorage Hockey Association, Shasby has coached numerous age groups in addition to high school teams during his coaching career that started in 2009.

“The hiring of Matt is the next step in securing UAA hockey’s future for our university, our city and our state,” said UAA director of athletics Greg Myford in a statement. “Matt’s playing and coaching career comes with a proven passion for his alma mater, UAA hockey, developing talent and prioritizing education. Combine that with his deep ties and desire to positively impact our community and the game of hockey, and he is the right coach at the right time for Seawolf hockey.”

“I am incredibly honored and humbled to be chosen to lead the UAA Seawolf hockey program into its new era,” added Shasby. “It is the greatest privilege in the world to get to say those words. The Seawolf hockey program is a vital part of our hockey and professional community in Anchorage. My goal will be to make sure it will continue to produce high quality professionals that will go on to be leaders in our community and beyond. I want to make sure everyone knows we are all in this together. Every single person and corporate donor who participated in the Save Seawolf Hockey campaign is a part of this relaunch and will continue to be. I have bled green and gold my entire life and work tirelessly to make sure the alumni, the fans, the student body, and the university is proud of this program.

“I would like to thank athletic director Greg Myford for showing confidence in my abilities. I would also like to thank chancellor Sean Parnell and the search committee for this tremendous opportunity. Lastly, I would like to thank Kathie Bethard and Save The Seawolves for their amazing efforts over the past year and a half.”

Alaska Anchorage had its program shuttered in August 2020, but fundraising efforts helped get it reinstated in August for the 2022-23 season.

Shasby is a Seawolves alum who played in 127 games during his four-year career for the Seawolves from 1999 to 2003. He was an All-WCHA Second Team Defenseman and was named to the All-WCHA Academic Team three times. He earned a bachelor’s degree in history from Alaska Anchorage in 2008 and a master’s degree in secondary education from the University of Phoenix. He currently teaches seventh and eighth grade social studies at Northern Lights ABC

Shasby went on to play professional hockey, appearing in 375 games primarily with the Alaska Aces of the ECHL.

He has also served as a volunteer with USA Hockey at numerous camps and coaching education programs.

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Transfers already making a difference for conference teams in early going of ’21-22 season

Logan Britt is currently tied for second on SHU in scoring with three points in four games (photo: Sacred Heart Athletics).

The new NCAA rule allowing transferring players a one-time exemption from having to sit out a year has had a sweeping impact on college hockey this season.

When combined with an extra year of eligibility due to COVID-19, we saw an unprecedented number of players changing teams this past offseason. At one time, there were over 250 players in the NCAA transfer portal.

Several Atlantic Hockey teams and players took advantage, and it’s already paying results:

Sacred Heart goaltender Justin Robbins, a transfer from Arizona State, made 23 saves for the Pioneers’ first win of the season, a 3-2 upset of Boston University last Friday.

Logan Britt, formally a Quinnipiac Bobcat, now a Sacred Heart Pioneer, is currently tied for second on the team in scoring with three points in four games.

Another former Bobcat, Holy Cross sophomore Tyler Ghirardosi, had a goal in each game as the Crusaders came away with a loss and a tie at Mercyhurst last weekend.

And at Bentley, transfers gave the Falcons a big lift, helping them to a 6-2 upset of then No. 6 Boston College last Saturday.

Colin Rutherford, who previously played four years at Dartmouth, had a pair of goals, while former UConn Husky Eric Linell also scored for the Falcons.

Bentley has a total of 13 seniors, including six fifth-year players, four of which are transfers.

“There’s nothing like experience and games played,” said Bentley coach Ryan Soderquist. “Senior-heavy teams are always dangerous.”

Soderquist had said at the beginning of the season that he was looking for more depth up front, and it looks like mission accomplished, at least at this early phase of the season.

“I give credit to our seniors, our leadership group for keeping things on track,” he said. “We’ve got guys who played four years in one college program and who are learning our way, learning how to do business differently. It can be a hard adjustment but they’ve done an amazing job so far.”

Bentley looked like a team very comfortable with itself in the win over Boston College. When the Eagles scored to cut the Falcons’ lead to 3-1 with plenty of time left in the third, Linell scored on the next shift to put the game out of reach.

“That was a big goal for us,” said Soderquist. “It helped to have guys who have been in that situation. Eric came from Hockey East, so did (Kohei) Soto (New Hampshire). They’ve played BC before. Phil Knies was a captain at Miami. Experience like that is invaluable.”

Home (kind of) sweet home

While Atlantic Hockey’s nonconference record is nothing to write home about (7-20), it’s a little better at home (3-6).

Thanks to new(er) facilities at Bentley, Canisius, and RIT, and a soon-to-be on campus facility at Sacred Heart, Atlantic Hockey is getting home games that would have been impossible to imagine in the past.

There’s no way Ohio State or Boston College would have played Bentley at its former home, the John A. Ryan Skating Arena (affectionately known as the JAR). Both have already visited Bentley at its new on-campus arena this season. North Dakota wouldn’t have traveled to Canisius a couple of years ago if the Golden Griffins were still playing at a Division III rink.

Now the league needs to take advantage of home ice and win more of those games. Being over .500 at home would go a long way in moving teams up in the PairWise.

“Now we’re able put these teams on the schedule,” said Soderquist. “Having big games in our building gives us the ability to perform and win these games.”

Bentley went 2-1 against Ohio State and Boston College in their new arena. Things are trending upward, but for the league in general, there’s still a long way to go.

Bentley’s Ryan Soderquist on this year’s Falcons, transfers, Atlantic Hockey: USCHO Spotlight college hockey podcast Season 4 Episode 4

Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined by Bentley head coach Ryan Soderquist, fresh off the Falcons’ 6-2 win over then-No. 6 Boston College. Topics include how this year’s team is coming together, the transfer portal, Atlantic Hockey, and the overall college hockey landscape.

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

Sponsor this podcast! Visit https://www.advertisecast.com/USCHOSpotlight for details.

This Week in NCHC Hockey: After false positive during 2021 NCAA tournament, St. Cloud State doing ‘everything we possibly could to make sure we can play’ this season

St. Cloud State coach Brett Larson goes over strategy with his team during a recent practice (photo: SCSU Athletics).

Plenty of talk surrounded Michigan and St. Lawrence earlier this year, when COVID-19 cases saw those teams withdraw from the 2021 NCAA tournament before it began.

Those moves soon became public information. What wasn’t public at the time of the Frozen Four in Pittsburgh, though, was that St. Cloud State briefly worried over a false positive test on the morning of the Huskies’ national championship game against Massachusetts.

In an interview Tuesday with USCHO, St. Cloud State coach Brett Larson said the Huskies’ players and staff for this season are fully vaccinated. What happened in the hours before SCSU’s 5-0 defeat to UMass hadn’t been forgotten.

“For an hour or 45 minutes, while they were doing the second (polymerase chain reaction, or PCR) test, our whole team was living that fear of it potentially ruining your season,” Larson recalled. “Thankfully, it turned out to be a false positive, but I think everybody remembers the fear of not having the opportunity to play in that game.

“I think maybe that carried over to us this (season), where we want to do everything we possibly could to make sure we can play. (The false positive) wasn’t public at the time. They test you every morning, and they tested us on the morning of the national championship game, and one of the tests came back positive, but luckily there was protocol to do a second PCR test, and that came for us to know the first was a false positive, but I’ll tell you what, that player was sitting there 45 minutes, sweating.

“Can you imagine the pressure on that player, to think that maybe he was the one that potentially could cost the team the season?”

Just any team might have been thinking all season.

“I think the untold story is the anxiety that, every week, three times a week, a kid was feeling like he could cost, through no fault of his own, his team the ability to play that weekend. That was a lot of stress on those kids last year.

“We never blamed the kids, unless we’d find out they had gone to a party or done something different, which our guys didn’t, but they could do everything right and still get (COVID-19), and they were all sweating out those tests every week, not wanting to be a guy who costs their team the opportunity to play.”

As for having the Huskies vaccinated, Larson feels that NHL teams’ initiatives helped. Also, shortly after SCSU’s 2021 fall semester began, a representative from a local hospital system was invited in to discuss the vaccine with the Huskies.

“We didn’t try to twist anybody’s arm, and I felt a little uncomfortable about that, but we tried to get as much education as we could, and let them make their own decision,” Larson said. “Fortunately for us, the guys were willing to do that.

“At that time (of the meeting with the hospital representative), we probably still had about a third of the team that maybe wasn’t vaccinated yet, and maybe one or two staff members, but through the education part of it and, let’s be honest, it’s the fact that we wanted to do the best we could to protect our season, I think those two things motivated the guys and the staff to get it done.”

Larson got vaccinated early in the summer, ahead of a recruiting trip to Europe that he had been considering but, in the end, didn’t take.

“There’s always that little feeling of the unknown, and has there been enough research and that type of thing,” Larson said, when asked if he had any concerns about getting the vaccine.

“But, the way I look at it, when you talk to the team doctors and you talk to the people in the hospital system, and they’re professionals in that field, I guess I feel like they know a lot more about it than I do. That’s what gave me some comfort to do it. You know what, if they want to ask me about a power play, I can tell them, because maybe doctors don’t know, but when it comes to medical stuff, I’m going to trust the doctors more than my own opinion.”

Larson knows that breakthrough cases of COVID-19 are still possible for those that are vaccinated. Still, his team is doing its part to try and stop the streak of pandemic-affected college hockey seasons at three.

“There’s still always that worry (about breakthrough cases) in the back of your mind, but I think also there is that feeling like, as long as you’ve been vaccinated, and as long as you’re being as smart as you can to avoid real large crowds and not putting yourselves in certain situations, I just don’t know how much else you can do at this point,” Larson said.

“I feel that if you can control what you can control, then at least your worries are a little bit less.”

NCAA Division I Women’s Hockey: Wednesday Women – Chaos, expansion and bad rules

Nicole: Welcome back for another women’s college hockey season! Arlan and I are back to volley questions back and forth and share some insight into what we’ve seen so far this season.

It’s been an interesting start, to say the least. I definitely felt more lost than normal when I was compiling season previews this year with all the roster changes, teams who hadn’t played in a long time and new players. But even knowing how much was truly up in the air, I’ve still been surprised by a number of teams and results in the first few weeks of the season.

I’ve already declared myself a part of Team Chaos this season. There have been upsets, near upsets and great performances and I love it. I have no idea what’s going to happen in any given game, but frankly that’s a lot of fun and I’m determined to enjoy the ride . There’s been so much good hockey already in games that on paper looked like they’d produce very different outcomes.

I’m kind of loving that I have no idea what is going to happen in each week’s games and that every time I check Twitter or the scoreboard page on USCHO, there’s a surprise. I watch a lot of streams, but I don’t tend to hop around. I usually try to stay with one game all the way through, but this year I’ve been more likely to check in on different outcomes and see how teams are playing as a game winds down.

I know you always remind me that individual upsets don’t really signal any major changes as we’re usually talking about the same teams as the end of the season, but I think all this uncertainty makes for an exciting season and helps draw in fans. Every week is feels like all the games are compelling and worth watching no matter who is playing and that feels like it can only be good for the game.

Arlan: There is some degree of the unknown at this point in every season, but now, I feel like it has been compounded by a number of factors.

Much of the loss of information stems from Covid-19 in one way or another. For the most part, fans weren’t allowed at games last year. All teams played abbreviated schedules. Some leagues and teams didn’t play at all. The Under-18 World Championships didn’t happen, so we missed out on data points of how top recruits from around the world compare to each other.

A person tries to watch as much as possible online, but the quality of streams varies widely. It isn’t obvious to me why Rensselaer and Minnesota State can put out a decent product, while the video quality from Ohio State is infamously bad. It’s not just women’s hockey that gets crumbs, as I have seen the volleyball video that Michigan State produces; Eadweard Muybridge’s 1878 shots of a running horse are likely better. I guess the Spartans could be dealing with the financial fallout of inflicting Larry Nassar on a few generations.

I’m finding it more difficult to learn what happened in a game that I didn’t watch now that collegehockeystats.net is no longer covering the sport. The alternatives that I’ve found don’t have as much information, and some of the information isn’t reliable, even for something as simple as a box score. One team may list a team’s entire roster, even when it approaches 30 players, while another doesn’t show all of the players who were dressed for a game. I’ll watch a player score into an empty net, and the next day, it is shown as an extra-attacker goal. As with any change, we’ll figure it out eventually, but it looks like it will take substantial effort just to reach the same level.

Another challenge in figuring teams out is that there is more flux this year. It’s an Olympic year, so we have the players lost to centralization or the midseason departures that we’ve come to expect. Due to the NCAA’s decision to not count last year as a season of eligibility, we have fifth-year players all around the country. That creates more movement, both from student athletes who have earned their degree but still have eligibility as they enroll in grad school somewhere else, and young players who expected to have a spot waiting with one program forced to look elsewhere if they wish to start their careers on schedule. You can also see a ripple effect as those transfers create logjams on other rosters.

What are your early reads into who might be some of the early winners and losers of all of this roster mayhem?

Nicole: I think the obvious choice for winner when it comes to additions is Ohio State. There’s not a part of their game that didn’t improve thanks to the talent they added to their team this offseason. They also strengthened their own standing by adding players from other WCHA squads. The biggest is Clair de George. It’s not just that she will have an impact for the Buckeyes, but that Bemidji State is now without their biggest offensive weapon. The Beavers are one of the losers in all this shuffling.

A team that I think has really benefited from the bonus year of eligibility is Colgate. Their roster is virtually unchanged from last year’s Frozen Four – they literally lost one goal. One of the Raiders’ strengths is how well they play as a team and work together. They have virtually no adjustments they have to make or work through. Being able to start the season like it’s already mid-year in terms of comfort level is a big advantage for them.

I might have said the same thing about Northeastern, but the opening few weeks haven’t been as smooth for them. I’m not sure that continuity was actually any help for the Huskies.

Wisconsin probably would have been just fine without bringing back their bonus year players, but obviously having Daryl Watts on your top line makes a difference. Folks will focus on her, but I also think having Grace Bowlby on defense and Kennedy Blair in goal are big for the Badgers. The returners also helped cover up the holes that might have been there with Natalie Buchbinder, Lacey Eden and Caroline Harvey centralizing with Team USA.

Incoming players for the next few years are going to take the biggest hit from this decision. Many players hadn’t officially announced commitments to teams, so we won’t know who had their plans changed because of teams having fewer open roster spots.

Anna Wilgren was a late add to the Team USA camp and I think Minnesota State will really miss her. They’ve already shown how much they continue to improve and she was a key part of their defense.

Did I miss anyone you see as having been impacted?

Arlan: Obviously, the biggest loser of all was Robert Morris, as the Colonials went from being an NCAA Tournament team to not having a team at all. That’s hard to top, and is a big part of the reason why the Buckeyes have so many additions via transfer.

But as much as Ohio State added to its roster, it also lost Emma Maltais to Canada’s centralization. I don’t know that they have a single skater on their current roster who can match her impact, although I’m often proven wrong.

There are other centralization hits. I’d say that the biggest of all figures to be the loss of Sarah Fillier from Princeton. The timing has been awful for the Tigers. They win their first ever ECAC Championship in 2020, and seemingly, nothing has gone right since. The pandemic wiped out the 2020 NCAA tourney, as well as Princeton’s season last year. Eden opts for Wisconsin having never played for the Tigers. By the time that Fillier returns next year, the roster will have turned over immensely from the one that she last skated with.

Minnesota lost Abbey Murphy and Patty Kazmaier Top-Three Finalist Grace Zumwinkle, but similar to the Badgers, I think that they’ll find other people to plug into their forward lines eventually. The loss of Zumwinkle was evident early, though, as the Gophers went scoreless on the power play through their first four games, and looked like they had no clue as to what to do without her one timer being an option. In any case, I expect that Minnesota will win or lose based on what happens at the other end of the ice.

St. Lawrence is another team that I think will have difficulty filling the centralization holes left by Anna Segedi and Julia Gosling. They were the only Saints who were in point-per-game territory last year.

The team that rivals OSU for the title of win-some-lose-some is Minnesota-Duluth. The Bulldogs lose WCHA Defensive Player of the Year Ashton Bell from their blue line, but add one of the most dangerous players in the country in Elizabeth Giguère. With Giguère, Gabby Hughes, and Anna Klein, UMD’s top line can rival that sent out by anyone. The question for the ‘Dogs will be what else can they bring to the table.

It will be interesting to see how Clarkson fares minus Giguère, as she’s an irreplaceable talent. The Golden Knights still have Caitrin Lonergan, who started her career at BC during the Obama Administration, but other than her and Gabrielle David, they don’t return proven scorers. The schedule makers have given them time to figure things out, as the teeth of Clarkson’s schedule doesn’t arrive until after the new year.

You said that Northeastern was largely intact, but Alina Mueller has only appeared in one box score, and has yet to play a big role. If she doesn’t bounce back from her injury at the World Championships, the Huskies have demonstrated that they just aren’t the same.

I’m not sure anyone has been as up and down from one game to the next on a weekend as UMD. The Bulldogs dominated the Mavericks to open the season, then lost the next day. They struggled to get much going in the first game against the Gophers, but scored five goals in winning the second game in overtime. The pattern was similar versus Wisconsin, but this time UMD came out on the short end of the three-on-three display.

Have you noticed any other team being as on and off as Maura Crowell’s crew?

Nicole: My first thought was Boston University. One of the two teams to take down Northeastern already, they followed that up with ties and shootout losses to New Hampshire (who they’d already beaten 4-2 and 5-0) and Merrimack.

I admit I didn’t have high expectations for the Terriers this year. I thought they’d end up in the middle of the Hockey East pack. Goalie Corinne Schroeder moved on, Jesse Compher graduated and I wasn’t sure who would step up for BU this year. So the win over NU was a surprise and big.

But now I have no idea what to expect from them or what the rest of their season will bring. I like that the Terriers are a team that aren’t leaning on individual players, but instead their strength comes from how well they all play together. I think they’ll continue to improve as the season goes on, but I hope that happens before too much damage is done to both their conference standings.

Though not quite the same as you mentioned, another team that feels like it’s on a roller coaster so far is Boston College. They’re 5-0, but only by the skin of their teeth. The Eagles have eked out one-goal wins in each of their games so far. I love that resiliency and pulling out the wins, but I also wonder why some of these games have been so close.

We’ve talked in years’ past about the unpredictability of BC and I feel like it’s a good sign for them to get these wins, so maybe I’m not being fair, but every week it feels like I’m holding my breath for them and I’m not sure that’s sustainable all season.

We’ve had four weeks of games already and the Ivies are about to join in. Which teams or players have stood out to you, for positive or negative reasons?

Arlan: We wondered what St. Thomas would look like in its first season of Division I. Sure, Joel Johnson’s new team had a rough weekend against Ohio State and former colleague Nadine Muzerall, but that’s often the case even for his former team. Beyond that, the Tommies’ results have been about as good as they could hope. They got their first WCHA win via a split with Bemidji State, and followed that up by taking four of six points in a home-and-home series with St. Cloud. That adds up to a surprising fourth place in the current WCHA standings. St. Thomas’ next three WCHA series are UMD, Ohio State, and Wisconsin, so it will need to take full advantage of the season’s first non-WCHA action versus RIT to retain some positive momentum.

While it can’t compete with a first win, it must have felt almost as good to the veteran players for Rensselaer when it swept Union on October 8 and 9. The Engineers last win before then came March 2, 2019 over Cornell, the last victory in a 14-win season. Since then, they’ve endured a winless 2019-20, and a season lost to Covid. Congratulations RPI!

While it hasn’t been facing championship contenders, Colgate has nonetheless won its first eight games by a composite score of 50-9. The 2016-17 Raiders were undefeated over their first 13 games, but they had to settle for a tie in game six. Colgate reached the championship game the following season after winning its first seven contests.

Connecticut and Ohio State are still perfect at 6-0.

One of the players who has been instrumental in the Buckeyes maintaining a perfect record is junior Jennifer Gardiner, who is tied for the team lead with 11 points, just shy of a two-points-per game pace. She was constantly able to use her speed to get around the corner when I watched her versus Minnesota, aiding Gardiner to her fast start. She wasn’t as prolific during her first two campaigns, when her average was more like half a point per game.

I did try to identify other breakout stars by scanning the points leaders, but those look to be dominated by players from Wisconsin and Colgate. I’ll need to see if they can keep producing when the quality of the opponent climbs a notch or two.

In terms of negatives, I’d prefer to wait more than a month before calling anyone out.

Something that is neither a team or a player that has stood out is the rule tweak such that the Ratings Percentage Index will consider an overtime win to be worth 55 percent of a regulation win, while an overtime loss is 45 percent. I haven’t seen if the PairWise rankings will similarly weight overtime results when looking at Common Opponents and Head-2-Head results.

What are your thoughts on this or any other rule change?

Nicole: One thing that sticks out to me in terms of these continued tweaks to things – the 55/45 split you mentioned above, some conferences taking out shootouts in event of a tie, the 1.5 points the ECAC is giving to teams that end in a tie after OT – don’t really address the root problem and just feel like they’re making things more complicated in a way that doesn’t solve anything or help anyone. It feels like we’re trying to game the system instead of just, you know, fixing the system.

Pairwise is a great system on the men’s side, but it relies heavily on comparing conferences to understand how good or bad each team is relative to one another across the country. With fewer teams and just a few weekends a year for non-conference games, the system doesn’t work very well on the women’s side. It’s a small sample size that cannot give us meaningful data.

And because the Pairwise is so reliant on non-conference games, there is a lot of jockeying by teams in terms of scheduling. Top teams tend not to schedule tougher non-conference opponents so they don’t get dinged by possible losses come the end of the year. And teams that might otherwise be on the outside looking in take the risk of scheduling tough opponents in hopes they’ll get a ratings boost out of it.

I both understand why conferences and teams want to get some “credit” for taking a game to OT, but also think that ultimately, it’s about jockeying for position and being conscious of what zero points or zero credit for that game means to a team in the rankings.

It’s a case of knowing that the NCAA is going to use this flawed system where the way things are weighted in RPI seems arbitrary and Pairwise was created for a different set of circumstances and women’s hockey gets shoehorned into it and instead of fighting for a framework that is actually useful, working to be successful in those parameters.

Pairwise was a problem before last season when no one played outside their conference due to Covid, but that really put a fine point on the flaw of the system.

So basically I’m frustrated by each small change every year because they aren’t solving the actual problem. And I don’t feel like the NCAA is going to acknowledge or do anything to change the process or stop trying to shoehorn the women into a framework not set up for the sport as it exists right now.

In other offseason committee news, they decided to table a discussion about expanding the number of teams that make the NCAA tournament. There has been a push to make it 10 or 12 teams that has particularly been spurred on by the fact that NEWHA will receive an autobid soon. The Covid year has messed up some of the timeline on these things, but I believe NEWHA is scheduled to receive their autobid in the 2022-23 season. That would make five auto bid spots and just three at large bids as the tournament format stands right now.

To further complicate this conversation, with Robert Morris cutting their programs, the CHA is now below the necessary six team threshold for receiving an autobid. They get a two-year grace period to get back up to six before the autobid is taken away.

All hopes are that RMU’s programs come back (though I have to wonder what players would trust them enough to commit there), but in the meantime we have to assume they’re not. I’d assume the CHA is going to do what they can to bring in another team. What are your thoughts about what team could or should join them?

I don’t think we’ve ever really talked about expanding the tournament. You have even more historical perspective than I do. Do you have strong feelings about it?

Arlan: I feel that tournament expansion is pointless while we have tournament quarterfinals where the primary directive is to reduce flights. The first round of NCAAs will just be more rehashing of conference tournaments.

Having a larger field is a positive if those teams are capable of doing something once they get into the field. What would the expectation be for the ninth team and beyond? Not much. It is like trying to pick the top 10 for the weekly rankings. At a certain point, one votes for teams because there has to be 10 of them, not because those last couple of teams have really made a deserving case.

The expansion from four teams to eight took effect in 2005. The first year, St. Lawrence went on the road and knocked off second-seeded UMD. In the third year in 2007, three quarterfinal hosts were upset. Clearly, the time was right for expansion. The additional teams were able to impact the event, not just put their names into a bracket so that they could say they were there. I’ll be in favor of expanding the NCAA Tournament once we have more teams whose inclusion will improve the event.

I think Division-I needs more contenders. For years, WCHA teams dominated, and someone like Dartmouth, St. Lawrence, New Hampshire, or BC would rise and fall without ever quite reaching the pinnacle. Both Cornell and Princeton looked poised to make some noise in the 2020 tournament that was wiped out. What toll did the year off take on their programs? Penn State took advantage of the unique schedule to have a breakthrough year; how close are the Nittany Lions to being able to contend? The first couple of series this year suggest we’ll need to wait a bit more, or do you think that PSU is in fact very close to advancing to Frozen Fours and beyond?

Nicole: No, based on what we’ve seen to start this season, I don’t think Penn State is poised to take another step forward just yet, though I’m fully prepared and hopeful they’ll prove me wrong.

And history has shown us that even the best CHA teams have not fared well once they make it into the tournament.

Your argument about more pointless or blowout games is probably the best one I’ve heard in opposition to expansion. Much like what I said about Pairwise above, there needs to be systemic change from the NCAA to make this viable. I can and have ranted extensively about how unfair the unequal treatment of the women’s hockey tournament is, but maybe it’s time to do so again, since publicly shaming the NCAA during the women’s basketball tournament actually got results.

Most conversations about expansion focus on how there will only be three at-large bids, but I’ve not heard a lot of talk about the logistics or details or how adding more teams would further stretch what is clearly a very meager budget allotted for this sport.

One possible solution is doing away with quarterfinal host schools and bringing everyone to one site. I totally get why schools want to host those games, but it was incredibly convenient to have everyone in one spot for a week to play the tournament out in March. I know a lot of people would need to be convinced, since almost no one got to experience it in Erie, but I think making the tournament a six-day big deal could be a positive and would help eliminate the distance part of the quarterfinal matchup equation, though again, that’s not fixing the actual problem, it’s working around it.

Even in 2020, the NCAA had a revenue of around half a million dollars. They lost about 50% due to the pandemic, but since they regularly pull in over a billion dollars, that’s still pretty good for a non-profit, tax-exempt entity.

I know a good number of coaches and athletic directors are in favor of expanding the tournament, so it feels like an inevitability, but I do hope we see some systemic change from the NCAA alongside it.

Switching gears, let’s talk about this week’s big series. We talked about them both individually above, but should we talk about the big series between #1 Wisconsin and #2 Ohio State? It feels like the outcome is bound to be a split, but how do you think these teams match up down their lines? Do you see anything that stands out that might be a decider here?

Arlan: When these two play during the regular season in recent years, the decider is that one team scores a goal and the other team doesn’t. I can’t find any science beyond that. They almost reprise the days of Big Ten smash-mouth football: try not to do anything offensively that will cause you to lose the game, and hope that your defense can cause a turnover that leads to a score. For a couple of coaches who were elite offensive performers in their playing days, they sure can embody that “defense wins championships” mentality, at least against each other.

Based on a very small sample size and my own uninformed biases, I think that a higher-scoring game would favor Wisconsin. If you match the career numbers of Wisconsin forwards against those from Ohio State, it paints an optimistic picture for the Badgers. I’d give the Buckeyes a slight edge on the blue line and in net. I’d say that I like OSU’s chances better in a 2-1 game than in one that finishes 5-4.

However this weekend shakes out, I doubt it matters much in the big picture. Both teams will make the NCAA Tournament. Defeating Wisconsin in October doesn’t indicate the same success come March. Muzerall has impressed me the last couple of seasons with how quickly she has her squad up to speed. Johnson has traditionally taken advantage of all the months available to him to wind his club up like a big diesel engine.

Looking beyond this weekend at the season as a whole, if you told me I had to either bet on the Badgers to win it all or I could bet the rest of the field, the smart money would have to be on the Badgers. They have the proven track record. Other than a handful of players who were part of Clarkson’s 2018 run and Badger transfers, nobody else has the championship experience. Plus, I think that they could suffer a key injury or two and still get the job done.

Do you think differently, either about the importance of this weekend or Wisconsin’s odds of winning it all?

Nicole: The importance of the weekend probably comes in the intangibles. If one team performs significantly better, they’re going to become everyone’s odds-on favorite and have all the confidence in the world. It puts them in the drivers seat for the conference and the top seed at this point.

Ohio State has more scoring depth this year than they have had in years’ past, which I do think improves the way they match up against the Badgers, but the problem comes with trying to slow down the second and third lines. Both teams are softer on defense, so as you said, I think the game will hinge quite a lot on how the blueliners play. HIstorically, Andrea Braendli has had her best games in net against Wisconsin.

When Wisconsin stumbled in the first period of the second game against UMD last weekend, it was because they could not hold on to the puck. They managed one shot in that frame. They struggled to get into, much less hold the zone and just weren’t clean or crisp on passes or moving with the puck. They were able to self-correct for the rest of the game, but it definitely was a peek into what would work to knock them off their game and make them vulnerable.

You make a good point about regular season vs. post season wins. The Buckeyes have been much more successful against the Badgers in the first than the second. I like that OSU has the experience of last year’s tournament, but the roster is much changed from that group.

At this point, these two teams are the ones I’d pick to win it all. There’s still a lot of time to see more from other squads and to see if either of these two have faults that haven’t been exposed yet, but their depth is just hard to compete with and they’ve handled their games so far.

Of course, Minnesota and Colgate have a #3 vs. #4 matchup this series and if Colgate shines, I’d have to move them up into the conversation.

 

 

 

 

 

 

This Week in Big Ten Hockey: Upcoming Minnesota series with NCHC’s Minnesota Duluth should be ‘just good hockey teams going against each other’

Minnesota captain Sammy Walker celebrates a goal during the 2019-20 season (photo: Brace Hemmelgarn).

Minnesota hasn’t played an in-state rival for conference points since March of 2013, but in the middle of back-to-back series against St. Cloud State and Minnesota Duluth, it feels like we’ve been transported back a couple years.

The Gophers and Bulldogs will face off in a home-and-home bout this weekend with Friday’s game being played in Minneapolis before the two teams head north on Interstate 35 for Saturday’s contest.

“You dig into Duluth, they’re an old wily group,” Minnesota coach Bob Motzko said at the team’s media availability on Tuesday. “They won’t beat themselves and they’re battle tested. They’ve already had four tough games that they’ve played.”

The series has a lot to live up to if it wants to surpass the one between Minnesota and St. Cloud State. After the Huskies won a close 2-1 game at Mariucci Arena, Saturday’s tilt in St. Cloud was a back-and-forth affair that ended with a non-call that had the two fan bases going after each other on Twitter about the definitions of a hold and embellishment and produced a great radio call from Wally Shaver.

Oh, and the Gophers won in overtime. However, with overtime victories only counting at 55 percent of a victory when it comes to the PairWise Rankings, the series with Duluth is an opportunity to add to their NCAA tournament resume.

“You’ve got just good hockey teams going against each other,” Motzko said. “That’s the story, right now, is what great hockey it was and exciting hockey for the fans. We’re all going to beat each other up and you’ve got to stay healthy in the second half of the year, but I think there’s a narrative there.”

The Gophers have had a balanced offense through four contests with Bryce Brodzinski scoring four goals and Sammy Walker scoring three. Freshman Matthew Knies and sophomore Mason Nevers have also each chipped in a couple goals. Senior Blake McLaughlin leads the team in points with seven, six of those being assists.

“Blake is a tremendous passer and Sammy can pass and he can shoot and both of them can put the puck in the net,” Minnesota senior forward Grant Cruikshank said. “Them playing together for four years now, they’ve definitely built this pretty strong chemistry. It’s fun to watch, it sucks to play against in practice, but they’re great players and they push each other every day and it pushes the rest of us.”

Cruikshank, a Wisconsin native and transfer from Colorado College, has an interesting perspective on the in-state rivalries having played at places like St. Cloud and Duluth as a member of the Tigers but is now experiencing them differently as a member of the Gophers.

“It’s been so much fun, definitely something I haven’t experience before,” he said. “I can imagine that it’ll pretty similar when we play Wisconsin, which is one that I have circled on my calendar, but it’s been awesome. I think I’ve gotten more of a look at just how many people are invested in in-state rivalries and how many people are watching and looking forward to every weekend.”

As it does with all the in-state teams, Minnesota enjoys a healthy lead in the all-time record against the Bulldogs. Since both teams bolted from the WCHA, the pendulum has swung the other way with UMD having a 11-3-2 record against the Gophers.

A high-quality opponent, no matter who it is, is now the expectation according to Motzko.

“All five (Minnesota teams) made the NCAA tournament a year ago, (and) all five teams are pretty good,” Motzko said of the current level of play within the state. “It’s just going to be a dog fight in our state right now and it’s good, it’s good for college hockey, and it’s sure great for our region. I don’t know if it’s great for coaches, but it is great.”

Endicott tabbed top team in CCC preseason coaches poll ahead of ’21-22 season

Endicott is the No. 1 team in the newest CCC preseason coaches poll (photo: David Le).

Endicott has been picked first overall in the 2021-22 Commonwealth Coast Conference preseason coaches poll.

The Gulls earned 63 points and seven of the eight first place votes cast by the league’s eight head coaches.

2021-22 CCC Preseason Coaches Poll

Team – Points (First-place votes)
1. Endicott 63 (7)
2. University of New England 52
3. Salve Regina 45 (1)
4. Curry 38
5. Wentworth 31
6. Nichols 30
7. Suffolk 21
8. Western New England 8

Yale assistant women’s hockey coach Blanchard named new head coach at UMass Boston

BLANCHARD

UMass Boston has named Danielle Blanchard the new head women’s hockey coach for the Beacons.

Blanchard, who will begin her new position immediately following an extensive nationwide search, comes to the harbor campus after serving as the assistant coach at Yale.

“Danielle’s extensive knowledge of the game of ice hockey, her care and attention to the development of players, and her clear understanding of how to build a positive championship culture made her the right coach to lead our Beacon women’s ice hockey program,” said UMass Boston director of athletics and recreation Jacqueline Schuman in a statement. “With Danielle at the helm, I am confident that our young women will have the ability to reach their greatest potential as student-athletes at UMass Boston.”

While at Yale, Blanchard helped the 2019-20 edition of the Bulldogs to a program-record 17 wins, including a school-best six consecutive. The team finished with a school-record 13 conference wins in the same season. Of her many responsibilities, Blanchard worked extensively on player development, both on and off the ice.

“It is truly a privilege to be named the next head women’s hockey coach at the University of Massachusetts Boston,” said Blanchard. “I am very grateful for this opportunity and would like to thank director of athletics Jacqueline Schuman, and the members of the search committee for granting me this position.”

A native of Newmarket, Ont., Blanchard has over a decade of coaching experience and has one of the most decorated resumes in the history of Division III women’s hockey.

As a student-athlete, Blanchard attended powerhouse Plattsburgh, where she was named an AHCA All-American four times and was a two-time national champion. She was named the 2008 Laura Hurd Award recipient, which is given annually to the most outstanding player in Division III women’s hockey.

To date, Blanchard sits in the NCAA Division III record books in multiple categories including career points with 177, power-play goals with 25, assists with 90 and goals with 87.

Blanchard returned to Plattsburgh to serve as an assistant under longtime head coach Kevin Houle in 2013. From 2013 to 2019, Blanchard helped her alma mater win five national championships, while also coaching two Laura Hurd Award recipients and 13 AHCA All-Americans. Since 2016, Blanchard has also served as a USA Hockey evaluator and practice coordinator.

“I am motivated to start working with these talented women and helping them to reach their full potential athletically and academically,” Blanchard said. “I look forward to building relationships with the campus, the community, and the very supportive alum. I am appreciative of my experience at Yale University and would like to thank the athletic department, the team and head coach Mark Bolding for my time there.”

She graduated from Plattsburgh in 2009 with a Bachelor’s in Arts in Communication Studies.

Utica hires Plymouth State’s Moore as new assistant coach for Pioneers’ women’s hockey team

MOORE

Utica has announced the hiring of Madyson Moore as a full-time assistant coach for the Pioneers’ women’s hockey team.

Moore comes to Utica after a decorative career between New England College and Norwich. In 95 career games between the two schools, Moore accumulated 68 points and was a member of the 2014 Norwich team that finished as the national runner-up.

Most recently, she served as an assistant coach at Plymouth State for the 2020-21 season. The Panthers went 3-4-1 in an abbreviated schedule.

She previously spent two seasons as a coach with the ACHA program at McKendree University in Illinois primarily as an assistant coach. Moore was also the program’s interim head coach for a brief period during the 2016-17 season.

For the 2019-20 season, she was a head girls’ varsity hockey coach in the Cambridge Public School system in Massachusetts.

UCHC commissioner Mitrano selected chairperson of NCAA Division III Championships Committee

MITRANO

United Collegiate Hockey Conference commissioner Chuck Mitrano has been named chairperson of the NCAA Division III Championships Committee.

Mitrano, who has served on the championships committee since 2020, will begin his appointment as chair in January 2022 and will serve through January 2024.

The committee handles the oversight of Division III’s championships. The committee reports directly to management council on matters such as budgetary recommendations. The committee also supervises the Division III championships qualification and selection process, reviews recommendations from sports committees regarding the administration of those championship, and reviews other issues related to the administration of championships events among other duties.

“I am truly honored to be selected as chair of the NCAA Championships Committee,” said Mitrano in a statement. “I look forward to collaborating with fellow committee members, the dedicated NCAA office administrators, the many individuals who graciously volunteer their time on our ranking and selection committees and the DIII membership to enhance the experiences of the exceptional student-athletes.”

Mitrano, who has served as UCHC commissioner since its inception in 2017, is also commissioner of the Empire 8 Conference and United Volleyball Conference. He has served on several regional and national committees, most recently as the president of the NCAA Division III Commissioner’s Association.

Mitrano was also president of the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) from 2015 to 2017.

With vaccinations varying across the college hockey community, most schools, leagues helping make this a normal season while still in a COVID world

St. Cloud State and St. Thomas play an Oct. 2, 2021 exhibition game at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center in St. Cloud, Minn. (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Even before the puck dropped on the opening weekend of the 2021-22 season, college hockey felt the effects of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The season-opening series between Alaska and Minnesota scheduled for Oct. 2-3 in Minneapolis was postponed to mid-January because of COVID protocols that involved Tier 1 individuals associated with the Alaska program.

Tier 1 individuals. COVID protocols. Phrases like these are now part of the lexicon of collegiate sports, and heading into a second college hockey season controlled in part by what turns the virus might take, every D-I conference has had more to consider than league standings and PairWise Rankings.

“Last year we had some very specific things that we as a conference were saying had to be done, especially related to testing,” said NCHC commissioner Josh Fenton. “This year, we’re requiring people to follow NCAA and local health authority guides.”

In August, the NCAA published its “2021 Fall Training and Competition” guidelines, which were developed by dozens of doctors from member institutions across the three NCAA divisions plus several administrators from Division I conferences. The guidelines also rely on recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We’re following the NCAA guidance that’s coming out from Dr. Hainline as the head of that unit at the minimum,” said Steve Hagwell, ECAC commissioner. Brian Hainline oversees the NCAA Sports Science Institute and is the chief medical officer for the NCAA.

“All of our institutions are requiring that their student-athletes are vaccinated. There are exceptions on campuses for students in general – not big numbers – so student-athletes can fall under the medical and religious exemptions that are being granted, but it’s not across the board. It’s some institutions and it’s very few, so I think it’s very limited for the most part.”

The NCAA guidelines do not require vaccinations, even though many member institutions do. Tier 1 individuals – players and all who work directly with players – aren’t required to be tested for COVID-19 as long as they’re asymptomatic. Vaccinated athletes who come into contact with those who have tested positive for COVID-19 won’t be required to quarantine.

“We are, for the most part, deferring to our individual schools, local jurisdictions and states, because they’re all so different,” said CCHA commissioner Don Lucia. “Basically, where we’re at, is that we have very good vaccination rates from our players. We did mandate that officials have to be vaccinated for this upcoming season. We didn’t want to run into a situation where an official gets to a site and can’t officiate.”

Not every conference is requiring on-ice officials to be vaccinated, but Atlantic Hockey, the CCHA, and Hockey East are requiring vaccines for refs and linesmen. In the NCHC, while vaccines aren’t required, the league says that 90-95% of on-ice officials are vaccinated and those who choose not to get the vaccine must submit proof of a negative test to the league office in the weeks that they’re scheduled to work. The Big Ten has a similar policy where officials submit proof of vaccine or negative tests to a server.

In addition, at Michigan State and Minnesota, officials are required to mask up during stoppages of play and when approaching the benches.

In every conference, rules for attending hockey games vary from arena to arena. When member teams play on institution grounds, the institution sets its own attendance mandates. Most indoor arenas require spectators to wear masks, although some municipalities that control arenas where college hockey teams play may extend mask rules to players and coaches when not in the field of play.

Some institutions have even stricter attendance guidelines. Colorado College is requiring proof of vaccination or proof of negative test within the previous 72 hours for admission to the arena. Rensselaer announced early in August that only RPI students, faculty and staff who are compliant with the school’s COVID-19 protocols will be allowed to attend any athletic events on its campus.

Beyond the mandates of institutions and arenas, every conference navigates multiple municipalities that span counties and states. “Last year, we had 11 counties that we had to deal with,” said Atlantic Hockey commissioner Bob DiGregorio. “We were on the phone every Monday to see if there had been any changes. Last year was a long, long year. It’s amazing what one year has done.”

While there is still a lot to navigate, said Fenton, last year was far more difficult, including a 40-page document for health and safety protocols. “This year’s version is a 10 to 15 page document,” said Fenton, based on the NCAA guidelines.

Every conference is taking everything into account and keeping in mind that things may change without warning – but not without preparation. Last year’s 40-page NCHC document for health and safety protocols paved the way for this year’s document that’s less than half that length.

“We’re following any local health authority guidelines, restrictions, requirements,” said Fenton. “Whether it be a state restriction, a city restriction, a county restriction or maybe more specifically and probably more appropriately institutional requirements, and then obviously more specifically within the competition venue, whatever those requirements are.”

Should COVID derail conference play, each league has its own set of rules for how the games will be counted – or not.

The Big Ten, for example, has a strict across-the-board policy for all sports regarding COVID cancellations. They’re all forfeitures. The B1G website says, in part, that “if one of its member institutions is unable to play a conference due to COVID-19,” that’s a forfeit “and will not be rescheduled.” The game is a loss for “the team impacted by COVID-19 and a win for its opponent in the conference standings.

The ECAC will deal with cancellations on a case-by-case basis.

“If an institution has an issue, those administrators will get together and see if they can reschedule the game,” said Hagwell. “If it doesn’t work, we may find ourselves possibly in a scenario with an uneven number of games and we go to win percentage based on the available points.”

Because of the conference’s big footprint, Hagwell said that the ECAC did entertain the idea of forfeits.

“I don’t think a team or players should be penalized because they had an issue on a given day,” he said. “I’m not a fan of forfeits.”

“We will have no contest as opposed to a forfeiture,” added Lucia. “We’ve discussed both, but we will go with the no contest if that were to happen and then we’d have to switch our standings to a percentage rates.”

What the CCHA is doing is identical to the ECAC’s policies.

“We will have no contest as opposed to a forfeiture,” said Lucia. “We’ve discussed both, but we will go with the no contest if that were to happen and then we’d have to switch our standings to a percentage rates.”

Neither Atlantic Hockey nor the NCHC has made a firm decision about potential cancellations, with both leagues leaning toward switching to percentages to determine final conference standings, if absolutely necessary. DiGregorio is a little concerned about the logistics of rescheduling games between opponents separated by great distances.

“We’ve got a little bit of a hang-up with that,” DiGregorio said. “Teams can’t keep traveling during the week. They’ll be missing too much school. We’re limited there.”

The NCHC, in particular, is saying that a cancelled game would be considered “no contest” if it couldn’t be rescheduled.

Hockey East is a different animal altogether.

“New England is doing really well” with COVID, said HEA commissioner Steve Metcalf. “Our institutions are doing really well, too.”

Because of that, the league hasn’t instituted anything COVID-specific regarding potential cancellations and will follow existing rules. According to the Hockey East by-laws, if a game is cancelled, the team responsible for the cancellation needs to reschedule no later than 72 hours before the cancelled game. If the team that cancels doesn’t reschedule, that team forfeits. Metcalf doesn’t foresee rescheduling problems.

“We have very, very high vaccination rates,” said Metcalf. “All of our men’s and women’s teams, all of our officials are vaccinated. When you kind of put all those together, it gives you really strong reason for optimism that you’ll be playing uninterrupted mostly.”

New Hampshire is the only Hockey East school that doesn’t require vaccinations for students.

“All but one of our institutions has mandated vaccinations for their student populations and in some cases their staff,” said Metcalf. “In some cases, you can’t get on the campus unless you’re vaccinated. When all those things are happening in concert when you’re trying to play college hockey, it’s a really good situation.”

The vaccination rates vary widely from state to state, region to region, which is the chief reason why policies vary from conference to conference. In Minnesota, the percentage of the population that is fully vaccinated is 59.2%. In Colorado, it’s 60.7%. In North Dakota, it’s 45.4%. Indiana, Ohio and Michigan all have rates that hover around 50%.

“Vaccination rates are up, but so is COVID,” said Lucia. “It’s an endemic. It’s something we’re going to have to live with. It’s not going away anytime soon.

“I’m just happy to see people back in the buildings. Some people are more comfortable than others. I think we’re going to have to be respectful of everybody as we go through this. We’ve done everything we can do from a conference standpoint.”

“The game-changer and why we’re having a different conversation from the one we had last year is the vaccine,” noted Fenton. “If the vaccine wasn’t in place and the case counts were what they are now, we’d be talking about essentially what we did last year. That’s the saving grace. I’m not here to tell anybody that they should or shouldn’t [get vaccinated]. That’s not my place. But I can tell you the path to competing in collegiate sports that is a little bit [of an] easier path is being vaccinated. It just is.”

The vaccination rate for every state in New England is above 60%, which Metcalf thinks bodes well for Hockey East and for the Frozen Four that conference hosts in Boston next April.

“What a difference a year makes, for so many different reasons,” said Metcalf. “To be playing hockey as scheduled on the dates and times that we planned to play those games is so refreshing.”

TMQ: Talking last weekend’s top games, college hockey scholarships, how this season differs from last season

Boston College players celebrate a goal during the Eagles’ 5-3 win over Northeastern last Friday night (photo: John Quackenbos).

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.

Dan: Alright, here we go with another week of TMQ.

It feels great to be back in full swing with college hockey season – although not full FULL swing because we haven’t picked up the Ivies yet – but for me, it’s been one heck of a start of the year. Also very excited to be part of our national coverage and already pretty proud of what we’re going to accomplish with this endeavor.

Jimmy, you and I had an interesting weekend up here in the Northeast, but this felt like one of those weekends where some teams really asserted themselves.

For me, the game of the weekend was Bentley’s win over Boston College, largely because it was a seismic win for the Falcons, who have a history of knocking those teams off, but I know you were at Conte Forum the night before watching the Eagles take on Northeastern. That game already feels like a frontrunner for game of the year, but take me back to Friday night. You don’t know that BC is going to lose on Saturday night, what are your observations walking out of that building?

Jim: The atmosphere was excellent at Boston College – as it has been at a number of buildings thus far this season – on Friday night. For me, that was my first return to a packed arena and some sense of a return to normalcy, so that stood out in my head.

The game itself, as you said, was incredible. Northeastern used a strong second period to seemingly take control of the game. But BC scored a late goal in the middle stanza and then two in short order midway through the third to take the lead it wouldn’t relinquish.

I felt coming out of that game that BC deserved mention as one of the nation’s best teams.

And then Saturday happened.

I’m not taking an ounce away from Bentley, but BC had a letdown between Friday and Saturday and the Falcons pounced. You were in the building, but five goals in the third period tells me one thing — BC got run over by momentum.

And while those two games standout to us, it’s likely the biggest game of the weekend might have been played in front of almost no one as Michigan beat Minnesota State, 3-2, behind two third period goals. That gave the Wolverines the IceBreaker (the western version) title and helped them ascend to No. 1 in the USCHO poll.

Michigan is now 4-0-0 and boasts the best roster of talent in college hockey. My question to you is how high should be set the bar for Michigan?

Dan: I agree with you wholeheartedly about momentum. The crowd was a big part of Saturday night’s upset, especially in the third period, and while that building at Bentley is certainly smaller than Conte Forum, the 2,100-plus people in the arena returned the life to college hockey that we all missed.

So, welcome back everybody. It felt, if you’ll indulge me up here in Boston, so good, so good, so good (despite the fact that I notably loathe the eighth inning singing at Fenway Park).

I’m subject to hyperbole, but I believe Michigan is the best team in college hockey.

That was the hyped billing entering the season, and this weekend proved it with the way that team won the IceBreaker. Beating Minnesota Duluth decisively is one thing, but I thought Minnesota State outplayed the Wolverines for a long swath of that game and still lost. Dryden McKay, a goalie who recorded a shutout as I was typing this up, made less than 20 saves and lost. That’s one statistical sign, to me, how efficient Michigan was in their moments, but the Mavs were also much better in the faceoff circle.

We all know how staggering the talent levels are at Michigan, but it’s not easy to navigate those players into a single, cohesive unit. There’s a lot riding on each of those individuals when seven were first round draft picks and 13 of the 28 players on the roster are, in some capacity, selections by NHL franchises.

Four of the first five picks all play for Michigan, and a fifth player – Mackie Samoskevich – was the 24th overall pick. Brendan Brisson scored two goals on the weekend and was the only player to strike in both games, and he was on the U.S. World Junior team last year with Matty Beniers.

That pressure is compounded by the weight of expectations that we’re all placing on this team. When you have that talent, there’s an expectation to go out and beat every opponent, but Mel Pearson has clear buy-in to blend that talent beyond playing as an al-star team. They skated with flow and creativity. Michigan faced adversity against Minnesota State but overcame it after a huge win over Duluth.

At some point, a loss will be a teaching moment and another opportunity for us to see how the players’ elevate their game in response. One look at that team, though, and yes, this is the best team in college hockey right now, and if they stay on this trajectory, we’re all just living in Michigan’s world for the foreseeable future.

I want to switch gears altogether to something Ed Trefzger pointed out in his Monday 10 recap this week. During an interview with RIT this weekend, athletic director Jackie Nicholson remarked about RIT’s partnership with Union to apply for a full complement of scholarships for men’s and women’s hockey. Each of the six conferences are supporting those programs, and the vote is scheduled for the end of January.

That caught me by surprise, but it was, to me, a clear indicator of how college hockey continues to shift under the surface. How much of a game changer would this be in those leagues considering the track records of both Rick Bennett and Wayne Wilson in building their brands of success those two programs?

Jim: I realize that scholarships are a game-changer for any program, but my understanding is that schools that don’t offer scholarships can often gain an advantage.

Years ago, I was told by a coach at a non-scholarship school that there is ability to give what schools call “grant-in-aid,” in other words if a player can qualify for aid, there are ways to give that player a grant. Said grant wouldn’t count against an 18-scholarship limit that every school currently faces. So if you can find a large number of student athletes that qualify for some sort of grant-in-aid, there is the potential to have almost equal or more scholarship power.

Now this was in the days when Atlantic Hockey teams were limited to significantly less than 18 scholarships, so I understand that schools like RIT and Union would feel like they could get on equal footing to their opponents if they were allowed the full complement of 18.

Let’s be real. It’s not like RIT and Union were never successful without scholarships. RIT reached a Frozen Four and Union won a national title. There had to be creative ways for each school and many others – the Ivies come to mind – to entice students to enroll that made those programs successful. Would adding scholarships make the whole accounting a lot easier? Yes. And I think most coaches in the nation would prefer that approach.

Dan: I guess that’s my whole thing.

Programs without scholarships have a path towards success if they develop creative ways. That doesn’t mean we’re implying nefarious methods or anything like that, but the fact remains that those teams had to develop systems and workarounds to build winners. In Union’s case, it took over a decade since it wasn’t like the reclassified program enjoyed these massive layers of success. I remember when the Dutchmen routinely struggled to consistently break into the ECAC elite class, and none of those first coaches – Bruce Delventhal, Stan Moore and even Kevin Sneddon – were able to build consistent winners.

It wasn’t until Nate Leaman was able to sustain the build that Union earned a first round bye and then won a league regular season championship, and Rick Bennett took it to the next level with two Frozen Four appearances and the national championship.

RIT is more mercurial to me because the jump to Atlantic Hockey came against a conference that had three or four programs struggling to even stay afloat at the time. That team made the jump and immediately won the league regular season championship despite being ineligible for the postseason, and within four years, it won a league championship and advanced to the league’s only Frozen Four appearance.

As the years have marched on, RIT was able to rediscover its sustained success after it opened the Gene Polisseni Center. The rest of Atlantic Hockey hadn’t invested as firmly in facilities or advancements at that point, and in the five years since, RIT’s been a factor but not the same dominant team within the league. Granted there are other factors, but the elevation of scholarships in 2016 clearly had a dramatic effect on other teams that concurrently moved into new facilities.

I reiterate that there are other factors, but I do agree with one major, overlay here. A team without scholarships still has to get creative, and it requires a much different buy-in at the university level. We don’t know the intricacies or inner workings of those institutions, but we all have to think that the scholarships would make a much bigger deal and simplify a process that is often mysterious and misunderstood, especially, probably, by me.

As we look ahead for this week, I know it’s way too early to talk about the national tournament, but every coach tells us how league points are always important but you want to play your best hockey at the end of the season. Is the truth more in the middle?

Jim: I feel like my most dramatic cliché surrounding college hockey is that games in October matter just as much as games in March. It’s difficult, sometime, to become motivated for the early-season games, but I feel like this year is a bit different.

After last year’s disaster and the multiple cancelations due to COVID, it seems like upper-class players understand that each game is a moment that was and is never guaranteed. I have only been in attendance for five games thus far, but every time a team takes the ice, there feels like there is significantly more energy. Is that because so much hockey was lost to COVID? Maybe.

But I know as an observer, I enjoy it. I want to see teams play in October with the energy they would later in the season. Sure, the play can be sloppy, but you want to see desire and right now my experience says teams are playing with plenty of desire.

RIT changes dates, venues for upcoming women’s hockey games vs. St. Lawrence

RIT’s women’s hockey game scheduled for Thursday, Oct. 21 at 6 p.m. against St. Lawrence will change dates and venues.

The Tigers will next play Friday, Oct. 22 at St. Lawrence at 6 p.m. to move up an originally scheduled game from Saturday, Oct. 23 at 3 p.m.

The postponed home game against St. Lawrence from Thursday, Oct. 21 is rescheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 23 at 6 p.m.

Michigan takes over top ranking in latest USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll

Thomas Bordeleau has posted two goals and seven points in four games this season for Michigan (photo: Jonathan Knight).

Michigan received 45 of 50 first-place votes in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll and moves up two spots to sit No. 1 in the rankings.

Minnesota State is down one to No. 2 and garnered two first-place votes.

St. Cloud State is also down one to No. 3 this week and picked up one first-place vote, as did No. 4 Minnesota, which held steady in that position.

Minnesota Duluth sits fifth this week, the same spot as the Oct. 11 poll.

USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll – October 18, 2021

North Dakota is up one to No. 6, Quinnipiac is up one to No. 7, Denver moves up three to No. 8 and collected one first-place vote, while Massachusetts is again ninth and Boston College tumbles four places to go to 10th this week.

No new teams enter the rankings in this week’s poll.

In addition, 17 other teams received votes outside of the top 20.

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

IceBreaker shows Michigan is the best among several very good teams: Weekend Review college hockey podcast Season 4 Episode 3

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

• Last weekend’s IceBreaker: How good is Michigan and how good is Minnesota State?

• The North Dakota/Bemidji State series;

• What teams aren’t getting the attention they should?

• Bentley’s upset of then-No. 6 Boston College;

• The controversial ending to Saturday’s OT Minnesota-St. Cloud State game;

• The postponement of the LIU-UMass Lowell series and what it portends for COVID;

• Analysis of this week’s USCHO.com men’s Division I ice hockey poll.

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

Sponsor this podcast: https://www.advertisecast.com/USCHOWeekendReview

Women’s Division I College Hockey: Weekend Recap, October 18, 2021

(1) Wisconsin at (7) Minnesota Duluth

The Badger power play was working well on Friday as Makenna Webster scored in the opening seconds of the player advantage two different times in the game. She opened the scoring midway through the first. Maddi Wheeler doubled the lead and Webster made it a 3-0 win with seconds remaining in the second period. On Sunday, Minnesota Duluth jumped out to a 2-0 lead after one thanks to goals from Anna Klein. The Bulldogs dominated the period and had more goals than the Badgers had shots. But Wisconsin seemed to find their rhythm in the second as rookie Sarah Wozniewicz scored twice to tied the game headed into the third. The Badgers took their first lead of the game four minutes into the frame with a goal from Nicole LaMantia, but Giguere tied it up almost immediately. Wheeler put Wisconsin up 4-3 with under eight to go, but a too many player penalty late gave UMD the opportunity they needed to tie it up once more and force overtime. It was Giguere again for the Bulldogs. But just 23 seconds into overtime, Casey O’Brien won the game for the Badgers on a pass from Daryl Watts that gave Wisconsin the 5-4 win and weekend sweep.

Bemidji State at (2) Ohio State

The Buckeyes won coach Nadine Muzerall her 100th career win with a decisive 7-0 win over Bemidji on Friday. Gabby Rosenthal tallied a third-period natural hat trick, Jenn Gardiner added two goals and Liz Schepers and Lauren Bernard each lit the lamp. Ohio State ensured the best start in program history, winning their sixth in a row to open the season with a 3-1 win over the Beavers. Raygan Kirk got her first start in goal for OSU and made 13 saves. Jenna Buglioni, Sophie Jacques and Rosenthal scored for Ohio State and Taylor Nelson had the goal for Bemidji State.

(3) Colgate vs. Syracuse

On Thursday, Dara Grieg scored 40 seconds into the first and Sammy Smigliani scored with less than twenty seconds left in the period to give Colgate a 2-0 lead at the first intermission. Darcie Lappan extended the lead to 3-0 before Madison Primeau put Syracuse on the board to make it 3-1. Smigliani got a second before Danielle Serdachny added two in a row to make it 6-1 heading into the third. Noemi Neubauerova scored in the final frame to make it a 7-1 win. On Saturday, it was Kalty Kaltounkova who scored in the opening minute to get the Raiders on the board first. Primeau responded for Syracuse to make it 1-1 less than a minute later. Katie Chan gave Colgate the lead with a late power play goal in the first. Delani MacKay extended the lead to 3-1 late in the second, but Syracuse responded once again, as Anna Leschyshyn’s goal made it 3-2. Serdachny scored :34 seconds later to put the game out of reach and Neena Brick’s third period tally gave the Raiders a 5-2 win and weekend sweep.

(4) Boston College at New Hampshire

Jillian Fey scored midway through the third to put Boston College on the board first. Brianna Brooks tied the game late in the third, but Kelly Browne’s response just :13 later proved to be the game-winner as BC took game one 2-1. Sidney Fess had two assists in the victory. On Saturday,

(5) Northeastern at Maine

Katie Pyne scored her first career goal on the power play to put Boston College up 1-0 midway through the first. Willow Corson extended the lead early in the second. Madison Oelkers got Merrimack on the board with an extra attacker goal early in the third, but the Warriors could not complete the comeback. BC won their only game of the weekend 2-1. In the second game, UNH jumped out to a two-goal lead thanks to a power play goal from Kira Juodikis in the first and an even strength goal from Brooks in the second. BC scored twice in :30 in at the end of the second period to tie the game up. Abby Newhook and Willow Corson made it a new game for the final frame and Newhook’s goal with less than four minutes left in the game gave BC the 3-2 win and weekend sweep.

(6) Minnesota at Minnesota State

The Gophers scored a power play goal in each period to take a 3-0 win over the Mavericks on Friday. Madeline Wethington scored in the first, Gracie Ostertag scored in the second and Taylor Heise lit the lamp in the third. Minnesota completed their first sweep of the season on Saturday with a 6-2 win. Ostertag, Savannah Norcross and Peyton Hemp all scored in the first period to get the Gophers ahead 3-0. Amy Potomak lengthened the lead to 4-0 early in the second. Sydney Langseth scored on the power play and Kennedy Bobyck lit the lamp at equal strength to cut the lead to 4-2, but that’s as close as it would get. Potomak scored once more before the second ended and Emily Oden added one in the third.

(9) Providence at (8) Quinnipiac

After two games between these two closely ranked teams, things are not much clearer as they tied both. On Friday, Caroline Peterson scored eight minutes into the game to give the Friars a 1-0 lead at the first intermission. Taylor House tied the game for Quinnipiac four minutes into the third. Brooke Becker lit the lamp on the player advantage to put Providence ahead once again. But 11 seconds later, Courtney Vorster brought it level for the Bobcats and overtime could not break the 2-2 tie. In the second game, Corinne Schroeder stopped a penalty shot by Becker just 22 seconds into the game. All the action in this game happened within 64 seconds into the second. Hayley Lunny scored for Providence at 6:21 and House tied it up at 7:25 and that would be the end of the scoring. Sandra Arbstreiter had a season high 37 saves for the Friars in the game.

Monday 10: Michigan the potential new No. 1 in this week’s poll, Bentley gains upset, Denver goes on scoring run

Denver’s Sean Behrens and Air Force’s Bennett Norlin battle for the puck during the two team’s weekend series (photo: Denver Athletics).

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

1. Michigan stakes claim to this week’s No. 1 ranking with IceBreaker championship

Michigan won the first of what it hopes will be more championships this season by downing No. 1 Minnesota State, 3-2, on Saturday after a 5-1 victory over No. 5 Minnesota Duluth on Friday. Coach Mel Pearson’s Wolverines, stacked with NHL first-rounders, came from behind in both contests.

Brendan Brisson, selected 29th overall by Vegas in 2020, had a highlight-reel goal and an assist in the win over the Bulldogs and scored with 4:20 left in the contest on Saturday. Each goal was a game winner, giving Brisson three consecutive GWGs.

“A lot of the guys in the locker room call (Brisson) Ovi Jr., just because he has such a good one-timer,” Wolverines defenseman Nick Blankenburg told the Michigan Daily.

Michigan should be the favorite to be voted No. 1 in today’s USCHO Men’s Division I Poll, but probably not unanimously.

2. Minnesota State is nevertheless an outstanding team

Mike Hastings’ Mavericks battled Michigan to the end and handily outshot the Wolverines 29-19 on Saturday, while winning 40 of 68 faceoffs. But once Michigan took the lead, it was difficult for Minnesota State to score the equalizer.

“We learned we can play from behind and win,” Hastings told the Mankato Free Press. “We also learned that if you fall behind a team that defends very well, you can lose that one, too.”

The Mavericks are 4-2 in six games against ranked teams, with the only other loss coming to No. 2 St. Cloud State in a split the previous weekend. Minnesota State starts CCHA play next weekend at Northern Michigan.

3. Minnesota Duluth, Providence also very good teams

The Bulldogs came out of the gate strong on Friday night, taking an early 1-0 lead over Michigan and dominating the pace of the game. But a contact to the head major and a game misconduct to Noah Cates coupled with a surge by Michigan turned the momentum in the opposite direction.

Cates returned on Saturday and scored the game-winning goal at 3:20 of the third as UMD responded to a Providence power-play goal just 30 seconds into the final frame. Providence outshot Minnesota Duluth and won the battle on the faceoff dot, but couldn’t solve Bulldogs goalie Ryan Fanti late in the contest.

4. Bentley upends No. 6 Boston College in not-as-big-an-upset-as-it-used-to-be

We’re long past the era when every Atlantic Hockey non-conference win would instantly be labeled an “upset.” But any unranked team putting a 6-2 smackdown on No. 6 Boston College would undoubtedly have their win categorized that way. (Even though the last time they played, it was a Bentley 4-2 victory at Conte Forum.)

The Falcons never trailed in the game and scored five goals in the third period, leading by 5-1 with under 10 minutes left in regulation. Nicholas Grabko, who got a win against Ohio State in his last start, was stellar in net for Bentley with 38 saves.

5. Bemidji State shows it’s a top contender in split with North Dakota

Bemidji State’s upset of high-flying Wisconsin in last season’s NCAA tournament woke up a few casual fans to how good a team Tom Serratore had put together. Proof about how good the No. 20 Beavers are this season came this weekend in a split with North Dakota.

The Fighting Hawks prevailed on Friday night, 4-3, in a game that was statistically close but required a late, extra-attacker goal for the Beavers to make it a one-goal game. On Saturday, North Dakota needed its own 6-on-5 score with less than a minute remaining to force overtime, but BSU needed only :53 to score to win 4-3.

Does this make Bemidji a top-ten team? Probably not, but the Beavers certainly belong in the national rankings and the national conversation.

6. Minnesota and St. Cloud belong among the early logjam at the top

Voters in this week’s USCHO poll, due out later Monday, no doubt will have difficulty ranking the top five teams, and that was made more muddy by the split weekend between No. 2 St. Cloud and No. 4 Minnesota.

Following a pattern around college hockey over the weekend, visiting teams won both ends of the series. The Huskies won 2-1 on Friday, with David Hrenak stopping nine of 10 Gopher shots in the third.

Minnesota got the split on Saturday winning 4-3 in overtime in a  game that ended in controversy as one or more penalties should have been called leading up to the game-winning goal, as the NCHC admitted Sunday night. The non-call led to fans throwing debris the stands and to criticism from St. Cloud coach Brett Larson.

Monday’s USCHO poll should again select four of the top five teams from the state of Minnesota, but overall, it’s not going to be easy for voters top-to-bottom after a few splits and a couple of upsets.

7. Notre Dame prevails in OT in an epic battle at Michigan Tech

It took the No. 16 Fighting Irish all but the last five seconds of overtime to down the No. 17 Huskies, 2-1, in a thriller in Houghton Friday night. MTU had forced the 3-on-3 OT with Ryland Moseley’s extra-attacker goal at 19:06. Cam Burke scored both goals for Notre Dame, including his fourth career game-winner.

Notre Dame remained perfect at 3-0 on the season with a 5-2 win Saturday at Northern Michigan. Jeff Jackson’s Irish host Rochester Institute of Technology for a pair of games Thursday and Friday before hosting Minnesota in Big Ten conference play Halloween weekend.

8. No. 11 Denver is scoring in buckets

The 4-0 Pioneers are lighting the lamp like crazy so far this season, averaging six goals per game. Denver put up four goals at Air Force on Friday and blanked the Falcons 8-0 at Magness on Saturday.

Denver averaged fewer than three goals per game in last season’s COVID-shortened, NCHC-only campaign. A better scoring touch from David Carle’s squad should help Denver turn things around from last season, but the going will get tougher with a road trip to Providence and Boston College next weekend, and a weekend at North Dakota to start NCHC play following that.

9. Some other good wins besides BC for Atlantic Hockey, but the league needs to get over the hump

In addition to Bentley’s upset over BC on Saturday, other Atlantic Hockey action saw Canisius split at Rensselaer, Sacred Heart split at No. 12 Boston University, and RIT defeating St. Lawrence, 2-1, in front of nearly 7,000 at its annual Brick City weekend homecoming game at the AHL Blue Cross Arena in downtown Rochester, N.Y.

Yet these quality wins still fall short for the league. Atlantic Hockey stands at 7-23 out of conference and probably needs to be closer to .400 to earn an at-large NCAA bid in addition to the automatic qualifier. The conference has mostly closed the gap in talent and has the full complement of 18 scholarships for schools allowed to offer them. Somehow, Atlantic Hockey has to make the next step, and – adding another metaphor – get over the hump.

10. Speaking of scholarships …

During an interview on RIT’s radio network Saturday, new athletic director Jackie Nicholson said that RIT and Union have joined together to ask that they be allowed to offer a full complement of 18 athletic scholarships each for men’s and women’s hockey. Both schools moved their programs to Division I well after a 1983 NCAA Division III waiver that allowed existing D-III institutions with D-I programs to have their scholarships grandfathered. (That waiver withstood a challenge in 2004.)

Three D-III athletic conferences are supporting the move according to Nicholson: the Liberty League – of which both RIT and Union are members, along with Clarkson, St. Lawrence, and Rensselaer – as well as the nearby SUNYAC and Empire 8 conferences.

All six D-I hockey conferences have written letters of support to the NCAA on behalf of the two schools.

The vote is scheduled for January 22, 2022 at the NCAA national convention.

Rankings roundup: How the top 20 NCAA hockey teams fared, Oct. 15-16

Michael Lombardi celebrates a goal last season. He also scored in Quinnipiac’s 2-0 win over Vermont last Saturday night (photo: Rob Rasmussen).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll of October 11 fared in games over the weekend of Oct. 15-16.

No. 1 Minnesota State (4-2-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 10 Providence 2 vs No. 1 Minnesota State 5 (IceBreaker at UMD)
10/16/2021 – No. 1 Minnesota State 2 vs No. 3 Michigan 3 (IceBreaker championship at UMD)

No. 2 St. Cloud State (4-2-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 2 St. Cloud State 2 at No. 4 Minnesota 1
10/16/2021 – No. 4 Minnesota 4 at No. 2 St. Cloud State 3 (OT)

No. 3 Michigan (4-0-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 3 Michigan 5 at No. 5 Minnesota Duluth 1 (IceBreaker at UMD)
10/16/2021 – No. 1 Minnesota State 2 vs No. 3 Michigan 3 (IceBreaker championship at UMD)

No. 4 Minnesota (3-1-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 2 St. Cloud State 2 at No. 4 Minnesota 1
10/16/2021 – No. 4 Minnesota 4 at No. 2 St. Cloud State 3 (OT)

No. 5 Minnesota Duluth (3-1-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 3 Michigan 5 at No. 5 Minnesota Duluth 1 (IceBreaker at UMD)
10/16/2021 – No. 10 Providence 2 at No. 5 Minnesota Duluth 3 (IceBreaker third place at UMD)

No. 6 Boston College (2-1-1)
10/16/2021 – No. 6 Boston College 2 at Bentley 6
10/15/2021 – No. 18 Northeastern 3 at No. 6 Boston College 5

No. 7 North Dakota (3-1-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 7 North Dakota 5 at No. 20 Bemidji State 3
10/16/2021 – No. 20 Bemidji State 4 at No. 7 North Dakota 3 (OT)

No. 8 Quinnipiac (2-0-1)
10/16/2021 – No. 8 Quinnipiac 2 at Vermont 0

No. 9 Massachusetts (2-2-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 9 Massachusetts 5 at RV AIC 1
10/16/2021 – RV AIC 2 at No. 9 Massachusetts 4

No. 10 Providence (3-2-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 10 Providence 2 vs No. 1 Minnesota State 5 (IceBreaker at UMD)
10/16/2021 – No. 10 Providence 2 at No. 5 Minnesota Duluth 3 (IceBreaker third place at UMD)

No. 11 Denver (4-0-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 11 Denver 4 at Air Force 1
10/16/2021 – Air Force 0 at No. 11 Denver 8

No. 12 Boston University (2-2-0)
10/15/2021 – Sacred Heart 3 at No. 12 Boston University 2
10/16/2021 – Sacred Heart 1 at No. 12 Boston University 4

No. 13 Omaha (5-0-0)
10/15/2021 – Alaska 2 at No. 13 Omaha 3
10/17/2021 – Alaska 1 at No. 13 Omaha 5

No. 14 Harvard (0-0-0)
Did not play.

No. 15 Cornell (0-0-0)
10/16/2021 – Princeton 0 at No. 15 Cornell 5 (exhibition)

No. 16 Michigan Tech (2-1-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 17 Notre Dame 2 at No. 16 Michigan Tech 1 (OT)
10/16/2021 – US Under-18 Team* 2 at No. 16 Michigan Tech 1 (exhibition)

No. 17 Notre Dame (3-0-0)
10/16/2021 – No. 17 Notre Dame 5 at RV Northern Michigan 2
10/15/2021 – No. 17 Notre Dame 2 at No. 16 Michigan Tech 1 (OT)

No. 18 Northeastern (2-2-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 18 Northeastern 3 at No. 6 Boston College 5

No. 19 Western Michigan (2-0-0)
Did not play.

No. 20 Bemidji State (1-3-0)
10/15/2021 – No. 7 North Dakota 5 at No. 20 Bemidji State 3
10/16/2021 – No. 20 Bemidji State 4 at No. 7 North Dakota 3 (OT)

RV = Received Votes
* = Team not eligible for USCHO poll

NCHC says ending of Oct. 16 Minnesota-St. Cloud State game should have included penalties

Minnesota and St. Cloud State split their weekend home-and-home series (photo: Brad Rempel).

The NCHC issued a statement Sunday night, saying that the league has determined a minor penalty or penalties should have been issued on the sequence immediately leading up to the game-winning goal in overtime during the Minnesota-St. Cloud State game on Saturday, Oct. 16.

NCAA hockey rules and interpretations do not allow for judgment calls of minor penalties to be reviewed through the video replay criteria. Disciplinary action for any game officials will be handled internally by the conference office.

The NCHC also has a policy that outlines acceptable conduct and behavior for all parties taking part in a game. The actions by some fans within the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center at the conclusion of the contest were unacceptable under any circumstance and inconsistent with our mission, vision, and shared values. Endangering student-athletes, coaches, staff, officials, and other fans by projecting objects on the field of play will not be tolerated.

The conference will conduct a review of related policies with all member institutions to avoid these incidents in the future.

“Although it is not and will not become conference protocol to provide public comment on judgment calls made by game officials, this statement is being issued due to the significant impact on the game’s outcome, along with the dangerous aftermath,” NCHC commissioner Josh Fenton said in a statement.

Bentley shocks No. 6 Boston College, 6-2; No. 3 Michigan wins IceBreaker with 3-2 win over No. 1 Minnesota State; No. 20 Bemidji St. knocks off No. 7 North Dakota in OT

Bentley goaltender Nicholas Grabko stopped 38 shots as Bentley pulled of the biggest upset of Saturday, a 6-2 win over No. 6 Boston College (photo: Bentley Athletics)

Saturday was a wild night in college hockey and nowhere could you find a bigger upset than at Bentley Arena.

A night after No. 6 Boston College handled No. 18 Northeastern on home ice with three third-period goals, the Eagles fell at the hands of Bentley, which tallied five times in the final frame to break open a tight contest with a 6-2 win.

Cole Kodsi scored twice for the host Falcons, while his teammate had great responses to Boston College goals in the victory. Trailing 3-0, Jack McBain scored for Boston College at the 4:54 point of the third. But Bentley responded with goals from Eric Linell at 6:15 and Drew Bavaro struck a crushing blow at 10:20.

Bentley netminder Nicholas Grabko stopped 38 of 40 shots for Bentley, which also defeated Power Five school Ohio State at home eight days ago.

No. 3 Michigan 3, No. 1 Minnesota State 2

It was billed as the battle of the best early in the season and the championship game of the IceBreaker was everything to live up to that billing.

Michigan scored twice in the third period to overcome a 2-1 deficit and knock off the nation’s top team, Minnesota State, 3-2, to capture the IceBreaker title.

The Wolverines improve to a perfect 4-0-0 on the young season and are likely to take over the top spot in the national rankings in Monday’s polls.

Despite opening the scoring just 54 seconds into the second period on Nick Blankenberg’s goal, Michigan trailed heading into the final period after Julian Napravnik and Ryan Sandelin tallied late in the middle frame to give the Mavericks the lead heading to the third.

Thomas Bourdeleau scored his second goal of the season to even the game at 4:20 of the third before Brendan Brisson netted his fifth of the year and second of the weekend with 4:20 remaining. That goal stood as the game-winner.

Goaltender Erik Portillo played a major role for the Wolverines, stopping 27 of 29 shots.

Host No. 5 Minnesota Duluth defeated No. 10 Providence, 3-2, in the consolation game.

No. 20 Bemidji State 4, No. 7 North Dakota 3 (OT)

Despite jumping to an early 3-1 lead, Bemidji State required a goal from Ross Armour 53 seconds into overtime to secure a 4-3 road victory over North Dakota to split the weekend series.

The game might have looked easy for the Beavers early as Kyle Looft and Tyler Kirkup each tallied in the opening 88 seconds of the games.

And while North Dakota struck back quickly on a Ashton Calder goal at 3:17 of the first, Bemidji State regained the two-goal advantage on Kirkup’s second of the night late in the first.

North Dakota chipped away, though cutting the lead to one in the second on Riese Gaber’s second of the year and then on Calder’s tying goal, his second of the night, with the extra attacker on the ice with 48 seconds left.

Michael Carr posted 31 saves to earn the victory.

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