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With Big Ten play nearing end of first half, several young teams playing mature, experienced games, leading to wins

Justen Close (Minnesota - 1), Liam Folkes (Penn State - 26) 15 Nov 19: The University of Minnesota Golden Gopher host the Penn State Nittany Lions in a B1G matchup at 3M Arena at Mariucci in Minneapolis, MN. (Jim Rosvold)
Minnesota’s Justen Close and Penn State’s Liam Folkes battle for the puck in front of Gophers goalie Jack LaFontaine on Nov. 15 at 3M Arena at Mariucci in Minneapolis (photo: Jim Rosvold).

When Wisconsin won its first game this season with an 11-goal performance and followed that up with a sweep of Minnesota Duluth in which the Badgers outscored the Bulldogs 9-3, there was a lot of talk about a high-powered offense and what a fast start could mean to a season.

After all, the Badgers had welcomed a freshman class that included forwards Cole Caufield and Alex Turcotte, players who put up impressive numbers for the U.S. National Team Development Program – 126 career goals for Caufield, 46 for Turcotte – and each player made significant contributions to Wisconsin’s promising start.

By the end of October, Caufield had eight goals. Turcotte scored three in his first four games, and their classmate Owen Lindmark had three in his first three games.

Fast-forward to the fourth week of the season, though, when Penn State swept Wisconsin, limiting the Badgers to three goals on the weekend. After the 6-1 loss the first night, Wisconsin coach Tony Granato said of the Nittany Lions, “They’re a mature team. A lot of upperclassmen in their lineup. They played like an experienced team that was ready for this game.”

Mature.

Experienced.

Penn State has three freshmen forwards that play regularly, but the Nittany Lions have 13 skaters that have seen 10 or more games this season plus senior goaltender Peyton Jones. The Badgers have 14 freshman and sophomores who have played 11 or more games this season with sophomore Daniel Lebedeff having emerged as the starter in net.

The Nittany Lions are 6-2-0 in Big Ten play, the Badgers 2-5-1-1.

“I do know that that is one constant that’s really happened in hockey over the last decade, that younger teams have struggled and older teams are doing much better,” said Minnesota coach Bob Motzko. “There are some exceptions, but that’s how it is.”

Motzko’s team is the greenest in the Big Ten with eight freshman and seven sophomore skaters that have played 10 or more games – and nine underclassmen who have played every game this season.

The youthful rosters have led to rocky first halves for both the Badgers and the Golden Gophers. Wisconsin is 2-3-1 in its last six games; Minnesota is 1-4-1.

Granato said that his team has been stymied by slow starts in recent games. In their last four, the Badgers have been outscored 5-1 in first periods.

“It’s just been frustrating for the players and frustrating for us as coaches to watch where you just don’t come out of the gate and have a lot of energy into your game,” said Granato. “You’re sitting back and watching and waiting. There’s teams that play that style of hockey and be patient, but we can’t play that way.”

In Minnesota, Motzko said that the coaching staff working on keeping an even keel.

“We’ve got 19 freshmen and sophomores, and almost all of them play,” said Motzko. “We’re trying to stay off the yo-yo, and it’s kind of been an every-other-week ordeal for us. We have a real strong week and then we have our foot off the gas and we’ve had three just terrible Friday games.”

One of those Friday games was actually a Thursday – the 9-3 Thanksgiving Day loss to visiting North Dakota in which the Badgers gave up four second-period goals. The following night, though, Minnesota played far better in a 3-2 loss, pressing in the third period to tie the game but coming up short.

“We’ve had moments when we’ve been a really solid hockey team and we’ve had weekends where’s we’ve been very solid,” said Motzko. “We’ve had moments in games, but consistency in a long stretch has been our struggle. We as a staff are trying to stay off the roller coaster.”

In spite of being the largest class on the ice, the eight Minnesota skaters have 11 of the Gophers’ 41 total goals among them. Junior Scott Reedy and sophomores Sampo Ranta and Sammy Walker account for 17 of the team’s total goals. This, Motzko said, is where any experience can be an advantage.

Motzko said he’s confident that all of the Gophers will improve as the season progresses, but he’s especially eager to see the kind of magic that a midseason break can work, turning rookies into more capable freshmen.

“We’re in dire need of that and I subscribe to that wholeheartedly that a lot of hockey players,” said Motzko. “The common denominators that have great second halves all have the ability. Every good player goes through a slump or a downturn, but they all come through it. Sometimes a little break helps.”

The Badgers will take a true break at midseason with nearly a month away from D-1 play. This weekend, Wisconsin will play its final two games of the first half when the Badgers travel to Michigan State. Wisconsin will play a New Year’s Day exhibition game against the U.S. Under-18 Team and plays its next games that count at home against Ohio State Jan. 10-11.

Minnesota travels to Ohio State this weekend, takes a couple of weeks off, and then hosts the Mariucci Classic Dec. 28-29. Motzko is excited for the all-Minnesota slate – Bemidji State, St. Cloud State, and Minnesota State – and is looking forward to what the second half may bring.

“We’ve got good hockey players,” said Motzko. “I really don’t believe we’re going to stay where we are. I wish I could sprinkle some dust and we could get there quicker, but I’ve been through this before. I like our team. I like our guys. They’re really a good group to be around. I see hope in there. I see there’s pieces that can turn this. The future’s going to be fine.”

Flirting with rankings

Michigan State made an appearance in USCHO Men’s Division I Poll for the week of Nov. 25, entering at No. 20.

After being swept on the road by Ohio State, the Spartans dropped out of the rankings again.

That single appearance marked something significant for Michigan State. It was the first time since 2013 that the Spartans had made a poll appearance.

“It’s a nice thing,” said coach Danton Cole. “I didn’t realize it had been that long, so I guess it’s good in that sense. We try not to have external validity. Internal is more important and then the computer poll [the PairWise Rankings] is the most important. I thought the progress we were making in the computer poll was real good. It’s nice that people are recognizing that we’re doing some good things.

“Right now, our interim goal is to be in that discussion. Our long term – which hopefully we get to sooner rather than later – is to be there all the time and be disappointed when we’re not in the top 15.”

Goalies finishing strong

This has been said before but it bears repeating: Michigan State’s John Lethemon and Penn State’s Peyton Jones are defining what it means to have career seasons, both playing their best hockey by far in this senior seasons.

Lethemon is 17th nationally in goals-against (2.02) and sixth in save percentage (.940). His previous best GAA was 2.88 his sophomore year and he posted his previous career-best .905 SV% las season.

Jones’s 2.40 GAA is slightly better than his once-best 2.60 from his rookie season, but his .920 save percentage eclipses the numbers he posted in his first three season. Jones has the seventh-best win percentage in the country.

Jones also has two assists this season, tying his point total for his freshman season but two shy of his career-high four assists in his sophomore season. He’s also recorded his first two career penalties, two minutes for interference against Sacred Heart Oct. 12 and two for tripping against Wisconsin on Halloween night.

Mustangs hit reset button

Forward Dominc Brenza leads the offense for the Stevenson Mustangs (Photo by Sabrina Moran – Stevenson Athletics)

The Stevenson College Mustangs finished last season with a disappointing 10-15-0 overall record and finished 7-11-0 in UCHC play just one season removed from competing near the top of the league standings. So far this season the team is 7-1-0 overall and 4-1-0 in the league and benefiting from “hitting the reset button” after last year’s unsatisfactory results.

“We just knew that last season was not where we wanted to be as a team,” stated head coach Dominick Dawes. “We had some key injuries to some forwards that impacted us not only on the ice, but I think also in the locker room and we just couldn’t overcome that as a group. So, we all hit the reset button after last year and committed to be better overall as a team. I give the boys in the room all the credit that they have put in the work to get us off to a good start this season.”

The 7-1-0 record includes some quality wins over perennial powers and NCAA tournament participants like Manhattanville and last Weekend, St. Norbert. The home win over the Green Knights was an important win for the team in building momentum in the first half but also benchmarking where the program would like to be competing regularly against pedigreed D-III programs.

“We have played St. Norbert’s a couple of times now,” said Dawes. “It is important as a still young program that we play teams like St. Norbert and Geneseo, so our kids know what it takes to compete with the elite programs at the D-III level. Those teams are perennially competing for their conference championship and on the national stage in March. We want to evolve into one of those teams. I thought it showed a lot of character for team to rally from a 3-1 deficit against St. Norbert last weekend and earn a very exciting 6-5 win.”

One of the key differences in the reset Mustangs has been the offensive productivity exhibited by the team early in the season. They have scored five or more goals five times already this season and are a +125 in shots versus their opponents in their first eight games. Forwards Dominic Brenza and Ryan Patrick already have 13 points ion the season and five different players have scored four goals or more on the young season.

“There is a big difference in the productivity from last year to this year,” noted Dawes. “Certainly, being healthy and having some of our key skill guys back in the line-up that we have missed since last Thanksgiving is a key element in the offense. We also have seen the benefit of the hard work in the off-season with some of the younger guys who had to step up into more playing time and situational play due to injuries last season which has improved our depth and balance in the line-up. Last year we outshot many opponents by big margins but were losing a lot of one-goal games. This season the pucks seem to be going in the net with the continued outshooting opponents and that has helped us with our confidence in winning hockey games.”

This weekend the Mustangs close out their first half with a pair of important UCHC opponents at home. Friday night they host perennial favorite Utica fresh off their winning their own Thanksgiving tournament and close out before the break with a tough Nazareth squad.
“It’s a big weekend but we can only focus on Friday and a tough Utica team coming in here,” stated Dawes. “We would like to carry our momentum from last week and know how important points are in this league since always gets tight in the race for playoff positions and standings. It would be great to close out the first half on our home ice with more points, but we are focused on Friday and getting ready for another one of those quality teams that we want to show we can compete with and win.”

Stevenson currently sits tied for second in the conference standings behind Wilkes and just two points ahead of Utica and three points ahead of Nazareth, this week’s opponents.

Robert Morris adds NAHL defenseman, local product Love, who will be eligible Dec. 15

Corpus Christi IceRays defenseman Tyler Love played for Team NAHL at the 2019 Sirius Ice Hockey World Cup in Sochi, Russia (photo: NAHL).

Robert Morris announced Wednesday that Moon Township, Pa., native Tyler Love will enroll at RMU for the spring semester and join the team this month.

Love, a 19-year-old defenseman, will be first eligible to play for the Colonials on Sunday, Dec. 15, for the second game of a two-game series against Army West Point at the RMU Island Sports Center.

“We are excited to add a local player that grew up around Robert Morris hockey,” said RMU coach Derek Schooley in a statement. “He has tremendous upside that will help our team immediately.

“(Love) is a good defender that makes good first passes. He is currently a captain and will fit in well with the Colonial hockey family.”

Love was in the midst of his second full season of junior hockey with the NAHL’s Corpus Christi IceRays and had posted 20 points (six goals, 14 assists) in 87 NAHL regular-season games and also competed in two Robertson Cup tournaments.

Prior to that, Love played with the Pittsburgh Penguins Elite AAA organization, and is also an alumnus of the Arctic Foxes Hockey Association, which is based at the Island Sports Center, where he started his playing days in the in-house league.

“It’s very special to me to have the opportunity to play Division I hockey for RMU in my hometown,” Love added. “I have so many great memories of playing in their home rink for most of my youth hockey. I have always been a fan of RMU hockey and I’m excited for a top-notch education as well.”

First-year RMU assistant Ryan Cruthers was Corpus Christi’s head coach last season.

Cornell, Harvard renew age-old rivalry Friday night in Cambridge in what promises to be a ‘real electric environment’

 (Tim Brule)
Harvard and Cornell have had many hard-fought battles over the years, including this one during the 2018-19 season at Madison Square Garden that saw the Crimson down the Big Red 4-1 (photo: Harvard Athletics)

As a freshman defenseman at Cornell, Mike Schafer experienced the bitter side of his school’s rivalry with Harvard.

“I was on the ice and coughed up the game-winning goal in overtime,’’ said Schafer, now the longtime Cornell coach, referring to a 3-2 loss in 1983.

As the home crowd at Harvard celebrated the win, a full beer can heaved from the seats hit Big Red goalie Darren Eliot in the head, knocking him flat. It took several minutes to break up the melee that followed.

Afterward, The Harvard Crimson quoted Harvard coach Bill Cleary: “I’ve never been this upset about a win before. If those are the fans we’ve got, then we’ll play in an empty rink.”

Thankfully, it never came to that. But the bottom line is stuff happens when the Big Red and the Crimson collide. It’s one of college hockey’s great rivalries, and it will be renewed at Harvard on Friday night.

Adding extra spice to an already fiery mix is the fact that Cornell at 9-0 is the only unbeaten team in the country. It’s their best start since the 1969-70 season, when they rolled to a 29-0-0 record and the school’s second NCAA title. (No, Ken Dryden was not the goalie that year. It was Brian Cropper. Just sayin’.)

At 6-2, Harvard is off to a good start this season, too. They won their first six games, before losing to a strong Boston College team on Friday and to Boston University on Tuesday.

“The rivalry exists because they’re a good hockey team and we’re traditionally a good hockey team. Without that, it’s not a rivalry,’’ said Schafer.

Like his counterpart, Harvard coach Ted Donato knows Harvard-Cornell from the inside out.

“These are two programs that have a lot of history and have played some hard-fought games, two programs that hope to remain standing at the end of the season and compete for the ECAC playoff championship,’’ he said.

The Big Red have overwhelmed opponents in the second period this season, scoring 22 times while giving up only six. It’s not by design.

“I think it’s more random than anything else. We’re not doing anything different. It’s not something where we come in (after the first period) and start changing things up. It has a lot to do with us having depth on our team where we can keep playing the same way,’’ Schafer said.

As usual, Cornell has good size, plays with structure and defends well, even with three freshman defensemen in the lineup. They have a top goalie in Matthew Galajda, who has given up just 12 goals in nine games and has a .944 save percentage. They have a balanced attack, with 17 players who have at least one goal. And their power play is third in the country at 30.8 percent.

Going into Tuesday’s game against BU, Harvard was averaging five goals per game. They were scoring on 17.3 percent of their shots – best in the country (Cornell is second at 14.5 percent). The Crimson have a pair of terrific defensemen in Reilly Walsh and Jack Rathbone and use freshmen in key roles. Their goalie tandem of freshman Mitchell Gibson and senior Cameron Gornet has combined for a .944 save percentage.

“We have a lot of respect for Cornell,’’ said Donato. “We know they are sound defensively. They are scoring a lot of goals this year. They’ve got great goaltending. They’ll pose some challenges. We know their fan base also travels well, so we expect it to be a real electric environment here.’’

Said Schafer: “We’ll probably have more fans than they’ll have there.’’

This should be fun.

Bobcat rollercoaster

Quinnipiac has had its ups and downs, but headed into the holiday break on a high note, beating UMass 2-1 on the road on Saturday one night after dropping a 3-0 decision to the Minutemen at home.

“We’re young and we’ve been playing well lately and not getting rewarded, so we’ll take it and move on,’’ said Bobcats coach Rand Pecknold. “We feel fortunate to come to UMass and win one here, I know they don’t lose a lot at home.’’

In fact, Quinnipiac’s win snapped a 15-0-1 streak at home for UMass.

Offense unplugged

Coming off a 1-0 loss at Bentley in which they mustered only 16 shots, offense continued to be a problem for Brown in its 4-2 loss at Providence College in the annual Mayor’s Cup.

The Bears, who were without injured top-six winger Chris Berger against PC, have scored a measly 20 goals in 10 games.

“Up front we’re not generating enough. Our margin is very thin, between winning and losing. We’ve got to find a way to generate a little more than one or two goals a game,” said coach Brendan Whittet.

Twenty-five of Brown’s 51 shot attempts against the Friars were by defensemen, with captain Zach Giuttari posting a game-high 10.

Shooting pains

Three goals against on three shots within 55 seconds put Colgate in a deep hole in the opening nine minutes against Northeastern in the championship game of the Friendship Four tournament in Belfast on Saturday, but the Raiders didn’t throw in the towel.

They battled back and made a game of it before losing 4-3.

“Aside from a couple of minutes in the first period, we played probably our most complete game. To limit a skilled team like Northeastern to 19 shots on goal says a lot about how our guys competed and played to our structure,’’ said Colgate coach Don Vaughan.

Sacred Heart surging in Atlantic Hockey standings as Pioneers’ ‘intensity and ability to really crank up our work ethic is helping’

Mike Lee (3 - Sacred Heart) (2019 Omar Phillips)
Mike Lee leads Sacred Heart from the back end and is averaging better than a point per game for the surging Pioneers (photo: Omar Phillips).

The rise of Atlantic Hockey’s eastern teams has always been a long-standing discussion point among my USCHO colleagues.

We always liked talking about parity during the regular season, but the posteason always came with the understanding that western dominance would balance it out. Recent years pointed towards cracks in the glass ceiling, and it felt like every program had its moment in the league spotlight.

Holy Cross represented its tradition and annual excellence, and Army West Point was always an easy program to get behind. Bentley built a new arena, and AIC’s Cinderella run to both a regular-season and postseason tournament win made national headlines.

If every team gets a turn in the spotlight, then the first half of the season is making sure Atlantic Hockey is turning a very clear shade of red and white.

The Pioneers rolled past Hockey East’s Boston University last week, 4-0, then returned from Thanksgiving break by beating AIC last night. Those three points now means SHU is tied for first with Robert Morris and Army West Point. More than that, they’re one of the nation’s hottest teams, a surging force worthy of attention from every corner of college hockey with six wins in their last seven games.

“Going up to BU, on the road, and coming away with that result is something we were very happy with,” head coach CJ Marottolo said. “We played a full 60 minutes in that game, and our special teams got it done. We had two power play goals and two four-on-four goals. In those types of games, you need your special teams, and you need to win that game within the game. BU has dynamic forward and (really talented) guys on the back end. So I’m happy with that result and how we competed for the full 60.”

Those special teams are quickly becoming the team’s calling card. Forward Austin McIlmurray is tied with BU’s David Farrance for the national lead with eight power play goals, part of a larger power play ranked in the top five nationally with a success rate approaching 30%.

It’s big production paying big dividends. Sacred Heart has at least one power play goal in almost every game played, and the Pioneers are a perfect 5-0 when scoring multiple times with a man-up advantage, including the last two games against BU and AIC. It’s become an early-season reinvention of the team’s reputation, adding another layer to the team’s depth and size.

“I have to give my assistant coaches credit,” Marottolo said. “We’ve always had talent and skill on the power play, but we felt like it should’ve been better. It became a focus of ours as a staff to make it better (this year). Scott McDougall runs it, and he’s done a good job getting our players in spots where their skills can shine. A lot of the success is coming from second and third chances. We’re not getting goals on initial shots, but our intensity and ability to really crank up our work ethic is helping.”

The Pioneer power play is only part of the package. Sacred Heart entered this season boasting plenty of returning depth, and the offense is responding in kind. The team is averaging between three and four goals per game, a number placing it right alongside No. 1-ranked Minnesota State.

Players like Marc Johnstone and Braeden Tuck are turning into assist machines up front, and defenseman Mike Lee leads the team in points despite only having two goals – both on the power play. McIlmurray is a special teams wizard this year, but he’s also a proven goal scorer with almost 40 career goals in approximately 120 games played. And others, like Jason Cotton, Matt Tugnutt and Vito Bavaro, are all at or approaching 10 goals scored on the season. That would potentially give Sacred Heart four 10-goal scorers before Christmas, and they only had four all of last season.

“It’s a work in progress,” Marottolo reiterated. “We didn’t lose too many guys up front, but the lines that we returned from last year got stale, so to speak. We tinkered and found chemistry within the group that we have. We feel our depth is our greatest strength, and the guys find a way to create their own identity on each line. Each line has a guy that can score, another guy who can go get the puck, and a guy who can make a play. Right now it’s working, but we know that we may need to tinker again (later in the season).”

But SHU is more than a one-trick pony. The scoring defense is averaging under 2.60 goals per game and broke a tie with Brown for 27th-best in the nation with its win on Tuesday. It’s one of the four best defenses in the conference, and the special teams boast a success rate over 80%

“Paul Kirtland runs our PK, and he does a great job of preparing it all week,” Marottolo said. “The goalie always has to be one of the best penalty killers, and Josh (Benson) has been really good in the pipes.”

The Pioneers, who had Thanksgiving off after playing three games in six days, played AIC on Tuesday night, kicking off another three-game week before they host league-leading Robert Morris over the weekend.

Fighting through the jinx

For years, the #RubinJinx was a tongue-in-cheek way to blame me for a team’s success or misfortunes. It started when I continually picked against Robert Morris one year in the second half of the season, and the Colonials wound up winning the league title after I picked against them in every round of the postseason.

Before the season, I picked Niagara and Bentley to finish 1-2 in the league standings, and both promptly started the season by struggling to consistently win hockey games. Then I started talking about Air Force’s struggles, and the Falcons promptly went on a winning streak. I ranted about RIT not getting love in the national poll, and ever since, the Tigers have run into tough sledding.

This past weekend, I jokingly danced around using the word “shutout” to describe Fraser Kirk’s bid for a clean sheet for Bentley against Holy Cross; the Crusaders scored immediately after I talked about it on air with 12 seconds left in the game. I guess I should apologize in advance to Sacred Heart for featuring its success this week.

Anyways, I write about this because I’m about to do the unthinkable and cycle back to Niagara and Bentley. The Falcons went 3-0-0 last week (shoutout to a win in the Rubin Bowl), and Niagara, which was 0-8-1 two weeks ago, enters a bye week this week with a 4-0-1 stretch of hockey (though the tie is a shootout loss for Atlantic Hockey purposes).

Both runs are putting the teams in advantageous spots as first semester ends. Niagara was tied for sixth entering Tuesday and is within one good weekend of jumping up into the top four spots. Bentley jumped from 10th to eighth with its sweep over Holy Cross and is now within a weekend of moving into a bye spot as it heads out to Army West Point, which is 6-1-0 in its last seven games with a pair of three-game winning streaks.

I suppose it speaks to the aforementioned parity. Or maybe it speaks to my ability to kill a team’s momentum. Chris annually blew me out in the weekly picks, until we stopped last year, and even though I’ve gained some mojo with this year’s restart, I am 100 percent positive I’m going to have an epic fall from grace at some point.

Bring ‘em out

I remember a time when talking about attendance at Atlantic Hockey games was akin to a fashion faux pas. There were so many worthwhile discussions that talking about getting people in the gate seemed secondary. Then came the league’s collective initiative to invest and improve from a hockey infrastructure standpoint, and now there’s a byproduct worth talking about.

Three Atlantic Hockey programs are now in Division I’s top half of attendance when sorted by drawing capacity. Compare that to five years ago, when RIT was the lone entry as the last team in the top half of Division I. This year alone, Holy Cross, Bentley and Air Force are filling their respective arenas at a reported clip of 75% or higher, and Mercyhurst is right behind them at 64%.

I wholeheartedly agree that the number, by itself, is almost impossible to fully measure. A 68% capacity attendance at the Kohl Center in Wisconsin, for example, is going to have a substantially-larger number than the Mercyhurst Ice Center, and there are always going to be other factors in place when it comes to the actual reported number, such as if a team plays a neutral site game or anything else along those lines.

But I can objectively state the following: Atlantic Hockey programs are growing, and more people are taking interest. The league’s initiatives to create hockey infrastructure worked, and more people are coming through the turnstiles (do teams still use turnstiles in 2019?).

What I’m Watching This Week

Coming back from a holiday week sets the table for a hockey feast in the upcoming days. Here’s some of what I’m catching this weekend:

-The Sacred Heart-Robert Morris clash is going to be absolutely epic. The two teams match up really well against one another when it comes to strength-on-strength discussions, and the goaltending duel between Justin Kapelmaster and Josh Benson is worth the price of admission alone. That first place hangs in the balance gives it just enough dramatic air to complete the perfect recipe.

-Bentley heads to Army West Point for a series between two teams that are both riding aforementioned hot streaks. The Falcons historically play really well at Tate Rink, which makes this series super intriguing. Also, shoutout Army one week before the Black Knights play Navy in football…Go Army! Beat Navy!

With roster chock-full of youngsters, Alabama Huntsville charging forward as ‘guys are getting it’

Alabama Huntsville celebrates its first win of the 2019-20 season, a 4-2 triumph over Northern Michigan last Friday at home (photo: Doug Eagan/UAH Athletics).

To say this season has been trying for Alabama Huntsville would be an understatement.

The Chargers have struggled on both ends of the ice and haven’t been able to find much consistency.

But much of that was to be expected from such a young team. With a freshman class of 10 newcomers, coach Mike Corbett hasn’t hesitated to let them play a big role. Four of them have played in each of UAH’s games this season while two more have played in 13.

It’s something Corbett was expecting to happen with such a young group — for a team like Alabama Huntsville, getting players experience is going to pay off big time in the long run.

“That’s what you want, and that’s maybe why there were certain games where maybe the score got away from us a little bit,” Corbett said. “But that experience is huge. You don’t bring freshmen in to not play them. For the most part, you bring your freshmen in and you want them to compete for ice time. We had a lot of spots available in our lineup, and guys who wanted to come in and be staples in our lineup.

“Part of our recruiting is being able to sit down with guys and tell them they have an opportunity. I’m not guaranteeing anything, but they’re going to have an opportunity to come in here and be the player they want to be.”

According to College Hockey Inc., the Chargers have one of the youngest groups of underclassmen in the country with 18 freshmen and sophomores — by far the biggest number in the WCHA.

Even though playing all those youngsters hasn’t helped the Chargers on the scoreboard most weekends, it paid dividends this past weekend, as Alabama Huntsville beat Northern Michigan 4-2 on Friday night. It was a big win for the Chargers against one of the WCHA’s top teams — especially since UAH was coming off a weekend at Bemidji State in which they were swept by scores of 5-3 and 7-0.

“We had that stinker in Bemidji on Saturday, but for the most part for the past month or so we’ve felt like we’ve deserved better fates,” Corbett said of the Chargers getting their first win of the year. “So beating Northern on Friday was good for us.”

Charger freshmen scored twice in Friday’s game against NMU, with co-leading scorer Josh Latta (who has eight points on the season) netting the game-winner. Freshman Daneel Lategan added a goal, while another underclassmen, sophomore Tyr Thompson, also scored.

Corbett noted that the Chargers have had six underclassmen defensemen playing regularly to go along with five freshman or sophomore forwards who have played in every game — including Latta, freshman Liam Izyk and sophomores Thompson, Bauer Neudecker and Jack Jeffers.

Corbett and his coaching staff have also been adding some new systems this season. So it’s understandable that, with so much youth on top of everybody doing something new, the learning curve would take a while to get used to. And although the Chargers are 1-11-1 and haven’t been consistent so far, Corbett hopes the learning will manifest itself in results soon.

“We’re at the point with some of the systems that we’re doing is that our guys are getting it. We just have to keep them fresh,” Corbett said. “I think our kids understand our structure now, it’s just having consistency within that structure. Hopefully, through some tough lessons and some tough losses, through some embarrassing losses that we’ve had, that these guys have learned and we can come back in the second half of the season and put it all together.”

Mavs cement No. 1 credentials

Minnesota State visited defending national champions Minnesota Duluth this past weekend with a raging snowstorm shutting down most of the Duluth area.

The teams still played on, and it turned out that not even a blizzard could stop the Mavericks. MSU swept UMD 4-1 and 3-1 to complete the sweep of their instate rivals. The Mavericks were the first nonconference team to sweep a series at AMSOIL Arena in more than 10 years (Bemidji State was the last team to do that, all the way back in 2005).

MSU was dominant in the first game and got goals from Marc Michaelis, Parker Tuomie, Nathan Smith and Josh French to get the victory. The second game was a little trickier for the Mavericks, as they were on the penalty kill for almost 10 minutes of the second period. But MSU’s penalty kill held UMD off the scoreboard until the third period and held on for a 30-1 win.

Mavericks goaltender Dryden McKay stopped 64 of 66 shots on the weekend for MSU. In turn he improved his goals-against average to 1.15 — first in the nation — and has a save percentage of .955 — second in the country.

“[McKay] gave us a chance,” Mavericks coach Mike Hastings said after Saturday’s game. “When those guys are slinging the puck around the way that they were, they’re really good at finding back doors, finding seams, so he had to make a few that he shouldn’t have had to make.”

Falcons frustrate Fighting Irish

Minnesota State wasn’t the only WCHA team to get a big nonconference sweep this weekend. Bowling Green bulldozed Notre Dame by identical 5-2 scores in their home-and-home series.

The Falcons, who already had three wins over ranked teams (two over Western Michigan and another over Minnesota State), added to their already-impressive resume by beating their former CCHA rivals for the first time since 2013.

Senior defenseman Alec Rauhauser had a goal and an assist in the series, bringing his career total to 101. He notched a goal in Friday’s nationally-televised tilt in South Bend to reach the century mark. Rauhauser was held without a point the previous weekend in BGSU’s split with Lake Superior State.

“Everybody thought it would happen last weekend but it didn’t, so it was a great individual effort to get it tonight on a big-time goal by Alec,” BGSU coach Ty Eigner said after Friday’s game. “You can see how his peers think of him and how proud they are of him, how happy for him they are.”

Rauhauser, who was named the WCHA’s defender of the week, now has 14 points on the season and continues to lead the WCHA in defenseman scoring.

Postponed Gustavus Adolphus-UW-Superior women’s game of Nov. 26 rescheduled for Feb. 18

The Gustavus Adolphus-UW-Superior women’s game that was postponed on Nov. 26 has been rescheduled for Feb. 18, 2020, at 7 p.m. CST in Superior, Wisc.

The game was postponed last week due to inclement weather.

Army West Point’s Brian Riley talks Black Knights, AHA expansion, 3v3 OT adoption, video: USCHO Spotlight Season 2 Episode 9

RILEY

Army West Point reaches the mid-point of the 2019-20 season with a 10-4-0 record, solid goaltending, and a stingy penalty kill. Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined by Black Knights coach Brian Riley to talk about his team, possible Atlantic Hockey expansion, 3v3 overtime adoption, video review, and Riley’s work with the NCAA D-I ice hockey committee and the American Hockey Coaches Association.

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

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TMQ: Looking at last weekend’s sweeps, nonconference winning percentages, surprise players of ’19-20 season

Evan Bell (Penn State - 7) 15 Nov 19: The University of Minnesota Golden Gopher host the Penn State Nittany Lions in a B1G matchup at 3M Arena at Mariucci in Minneapolis, MN. (Jim Rosvold)
Penn State’s Evan Bell has been solid on the back end, helping the Nittany Lions to an early-season first place position in the Big Ten standings (photo: Jim Rosvold).

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

Paula: What an eventful holiday weekend, Jimmy! There is so much to unpack and digest – no pun intended – and it’s difficult to know where to start.

I think I’ll dive right into a couple of sweeps.

First is Bowling Green’s sweep of Notre Dame. Not only can this be considered a legitimate upset, but it may prove to be one of those weekends where each team can look back later in the semester and trace its fate to the outcome. For the Falcons, the sweep gives them a 5-1-0 record in their last six games and they’re now one of seven teams with 10 or more wins this season.

After the losses, the Irish are now 1-4-1 in their last six games after starting the season 7-0-1. Notre Dame has been outscored 16-6 in the four losses and the Irish have been held to two or fewer goals in their last six games – while falling to 33rd defensively after finishing the 2018-19 season 12th in that category. Notre Dame remains in the top 10, though, in spite of the recent skid, perhaps because voters see this as an anomaly.

Two other top programs, though, solidified their places at the top of the polls with decisive road sweeps. Minnesota State beat Minnesota Duluth on the road, limiting the Bulldogs to a goal in each game while North Dakota swept Minnesota, outscoring the Golden Gophers 12-5 in the contests. Both the Mavericks and the Fighting Hawks were each impressive in their own ways; Minnesota State went 5 for 10 on the power play for the weekend and North Dakota demolished Minnesota in the first game 9-3 and held off the Gophers in a tighter game for the sweep.

We’ve talked before about how good programs win games they should win and how a weekend can make a season. Do these series strike you as potentially pivotal for any of the teams involved? Did you see anything else from the weekend that may be an “ah-ha!” moment for someone else?

Jim: I think of all the games and series you mentioned, Paula, the two that stand out to me are the sweeps by Minnesota State and Bowling Green.

The Mavericks silenced any of the critics that didn’t believe they belonged in the top spot in the USCHO.com poll. We all know that Duluth can be a tough place to play (though admittedly, a massive winter storm maybe took some electricity out of the building – both in terms of fans and a loss of power in the middle of the game – on Saturday).

When you combine that win with Bowling Green’s sweep of Notre Dame, I think we can also silence WCHA critics. Admittedly, the WCHA isn’t that strong top to bottom as other conferences, but the upper echelon – Minnesota State, Bowling Green, Michigan Tech and Northern Michigan – are very competitive and will crush opponents who take them lightly.

Speaking of strength of conferences, I took a look this morning at out-of-conference winning percentages for the six conferences. Not surprisingly, the NCHC remains on top with a .605 mark. Hockey East isn’t far behind at .597.

The Big Ten is close as well at .571 and the WCHA is slightly below .500 at .434.

Then there’s the ECAC. With a 19-32-7 mark out of conference, they are below .400. Now, it’s been some time since the ECAC had an above .500 winning percentage, but to drop to .388 with not too many nonconference games remaining to improve that mark, this is certainly a down year top to bottom for the ECAC. Sure, Cornell, Harvard and Clarkson all seem pretty darn strong, but the rest of the conference? Not very good at this point.

Paula: That has been my impression of the ECAC as well – and sadly so, as the ECAC for a while looked to be emerging as a conference that would remain prominent on the national scene. With Yale’s 2013 national championship followed by Union’s the year after, plus Quinnipiac’s Frozen Four appearances in 2013 and 2016, not only did the conference look promising in and of itself, but it brought variety and interest to the national tournament field.

Quinnipiac is a team that appears to be adjusting to its own youth. The coaches pegged the Bobcats to finish second in the ECAC and they earned three first-place votes, but their performance this season has been erratic, which you might expect from a squad with a team with three freshman forwards and two freshman blueliners seeing regular play, plus nine sophomores seeing time in all or most of the games this season. They split this past weekend with Massachusetts and lost a one-goal game to Cornell Nov. 22 and they’ve managed to keep it close in many contests, but they’re averaging a little over two goals a game and can’t seem to find any consistency.

Back to the standings game, though, the NCHC seems to be a league in which the top tier is pulling away from the rest, but that rest of the league is so good. Five of the conference’s eight teams are among the top 20 in the PairWise right now. I look at Omaha – 1-2-1 in league play but 6-4-2 overall – and that is a team currently in seventh place in its eight-team league that is someone I wouldn’t want to play in the NCAA tournament, should they remain in that spot and somehow win the NCHC playoff tournament.

Jim: Your last comment got me thinking and made me take a look at the standings around each conference.

And I can decidedly say that in all six conferences, there are teams in the lower half of the conference currently that I expect to make a run at the league title still. Now, I understand that there are a lot of games in hand as no conference has a uniformity as to how many games teams have played, but for each of these teams, they have ground to make up – something that’s not always easy.

In Atlantic Hockey, you can point to Niagara. I had high hopes for this team, and they began 0-8-1. A 4-0-1 stretch in the last five has them headed in the right direction.

Wisconsin perplexes me in the Big Ten. Plenty of talent and an offense that looks explosive at times, but they’re 10 points (3-plus games) behind Penn State already.

Quinnipiac, as you mentioned, is a lot better than their record. Last Saturday’s win at UMass should prove that. But they need to make up seven points (two points per win) in their final 16 games.

Speaking of UMass, they at least are above .500 in Hockey East at 4-3-1, but there are five teams standing between the Minutemen and first-place Providence. The good news? UMass still has 18 league games left.

The WCHA is a little tighter among the top six teams, but the sixth-place club is that same Bowling Green team we talked about sweeping Notre Dame this weekend. Being seven points behind in a three-point-per-win league isn’t very daunting.

Then there is the NCHC. Forget about Omaha, which as you mentioned is a powerhouse. Denver has to make up 11 points (three points for a win) on North Dakota. Again, 18 games is plenty of time, but I’ve always called the NCHC a battle of attrition as all of the teams beat up one another in league play.

Paula: That is a good list of teams, Jimmy, that may climb the standings in the second half – and a good turn of phrase, “battle of attrition.” So true in that conference.

You’re getting me thinking now of other dark horses throughout D-I hockey and also players that are under the radar, at least for now. We both know that the second half often feels like a different season, when freshmen are no longer rookies, and everyone has seen enough video of everyone else to anticipate what to expect.

Who are some of the players who are surprising you now or may in the second half?

I am blown away by Michigan State senior goaltender John Lethemon, who is defining the term “career season.” With a .940 save percentage, Lethemon is playing the best hockey he’s ever played and he looks every bit as confident as he should be.

Boston University junior defenseman David Farrance has eight power-play goals, which is one more goal than he scored altogether in his first two seasons. He leads the Terriers with 10 goals in 15 games after scoring seven in 68 as a freshman and sophomore.

These are just two players off the top of my head that are impacting their teams in unexpected ways in the first half.

Jim: Oh, I love this question this time of year. There are a number of players who have impressed thus far who I never really gave much thought to before the season.

Let’s start with North Dakota’s Jordan Kawaguchi. Through 15 games, he has 22 points and seven goals. Last season, as a sophomore he posted a career high with 26 points in 37 games. Obviously, we knew he had talent. But his numbers to date are impressive.

A lot of people are talking about Jack Dugan at Providence, but Tyce Thompson is equally as impressive. He is tied for the nation’s lead in goals with 12, and that goes along with 12 assists.

I don’t think a lot of people were overly familiar with Justin Kapelmaster before he took over the job between the pipes for Robert Morris. The graduate transfer from Ferris State has a 1.83 GAA and a .951 save percentage, third nationally, and has been a major reason for early success for the Colonials.

And in a year we’ve talked a lot about high-end rookie talent, no one was mentioning UMass Lowell’s Matt Brown. Brown’s 17 goals are second nationally for freshmen behind Wisconsin’s Cole Caufield.

Told you I like this question!

USCHO.com presents its NCAA Division I Plays of the Week, Nov. 25-Dec. 1

Connecticut freshman Vladislav Firstov has compiled four goals this season, including a highlight-reel goal last Friday night against Miami, for the Huskies (photo: Stephen Slade).

Each week, USCHO.com will present its Plays of the Week via our YouTube channel.

Weekend Recap, D-III East: December 2, 2019

Middlebury goaltender Brian Ketchabaw backstopped the Panthers to a thrilling overtime win over No. 1 ranked Norwich (Photo by Will Costello, WC Images)

Tournament play and rivalry games where just about anything can happen and usually does. Case in point, Middlebury knocked off in-state rival and No. 1 ranked Norwich in the first round of the Primelink tournament. Salve Regina lost to Utica in tournament play and Williams upset Geneseo in non-conference action. Lots of hardware handed out to tournament winners and several teams showed that their strong play is certainly trending consistency.

Here is this week’s recap of the terrific tournament and other action in the East:

CCC
Wentworth won the PAL Cup Tournament at Southern New Hampshire with a pair of resounding wins. On Saturday, George Gorodetsky scored two goals and added three assists for the leopards in a 7-2 opening round win over Massachusetts-Dartmouth. On Sunday, before a snow storm hit the Northeast, Wentworth captured the tournament tile with a 6-1 win over Morrisville. Defenseman Dante Flori led the way for the Leopards with two goals and an assist in the championship game.

After a 5-2 win on Tuesday night over Bowdoin where 10 players recorded a point, the University of New England played another non-conference rival in state with a Saturday win over Southern Maine. Ryan Bloom and Brett Mecrones each scored a pair of goals in the 7-2 win for the Nor’easters.

Demitrios Stefanou scored twice and goaltender Kyle Carducci made 26 saves for Western New England in a 5-3 non-conference win over Post.

Independents
Bryn Athyn picked up a pair of wins over NE-10 opponents. The Lions downed Stonehill 8-5 with Cameron Shorrock scoring two goals and adding an assist and teammates Tanner Congdon, Vojtech Luza and Zach Pamaylaon also chipped in three-point nights in the win. On Sunday, Bryn Athyn downed Post 5-3 with Nikita Smirnov scoring a goal and adding three assists to move the Lions to 5-2-1 on the season.

Anna Maria moved to 5-1-2 on the season with Tuesday’s win over Worcester State. In the 6-2-win, Jack Sitzman and Sam-Cyr Ledoux each had a goal and two assists to keep the AmCats on their winning ways.

Canton took both ends of an extended home-and-home series with Hamilton winning on Tuesday and then post-Thanksgiving on the road. The Kangaroos raced to a 4-0 lead on Tuesday with two goals coming from Jesse Farabee and held on to down the Continentals, 4-3. On Saturday, the Kangaroos were outshot by a 34-19 margin but rallied from a one-goal deficit in the third period to win 3-2. Kelly Routledge and Kyler Matthews scored for the visitors to earn the two-game sweep.

MASCAC
Jake Ratcliffe’s hat trick and Justin Alves’ three assists led the Westfield State Owls to a non-conference win over Johnson & Wales on Tuesday night. The 6-2 win leveled the season record at 3-3-2.

Salem State’s Joe Smith scored an extra-attacker goal at 18:46 of the third period to help the Vikings rally from a 3-0 deficit and earn a 3-3 tie with Southern Maine on Tuesday night. On Saturday, the Vikings again played the comeback kids sporting New England College a 2-0 lead before coming back to earn another tie with goals from Callum Hofford and Billy McGwin to extend their unbeaten streak to three games.

NE-10
Franklin Pierce opened the holiday week with a 4-1 win over Framingham State before playing in the Steve Hoar Memorial Tournament over the weekend. The ravens continued their hot play with an opening round win over the host team, Becker. Five different players scored in the first period for the Ravens as they cruised to a 7-2 win. In Sunday’s title game against Wilkes, the Ravens again got out to a fast start with first period goals from Sean Crowley and James Morrissey. Goaltender Ian Wallace made that stand up as he turned away 45 shots in the 4-1 win over the Colonels to earn the Ravens the championship.

St. Anselm hosted their own tournament over the Thanksgiving weekend and opened with a big win over Wesleyan on Saturday. Ryan Spillane and Anthony Iacullo scored two goals each in the 7-1 opening round win for the Hawks. On Sunday, the Hawks faced unbeaten Trinity in the championship game. After a scoreless first period, the Bantams scored three unanswered goals in the second period on their way to a 4-1 win over the Hawks. Matt Chisholm, with an assist from Jack Murphy, scored for the Hawks and goaltender Nick Howard made 35 saves in the title game loss.

NEHC
Skidmore played host to a holiday tournament and captured the title with wins over Brockport and Tufts to earn the title. Against Brockport, the Thoroughbreds fell behind 1-0 before scoring three goals in the opening 20 minutes of play. Brockport closed the gap to 3-2 before Matt Wolf and Mike Gelatt broke open the game with a shorthanded goal and an empty-net goal in the 5-2 win. On Sunday, Skidmore again fell behind early to Tufts. Second period goals from Matt Muzyka, Nicholas Charron and Matthew Rutigliano gave goaltender Brandon Kasel all the offense he would need to earn the championship win. Kasel finished with 32 saves in the 4-2 win.

Babson faced off against three NESCAC teams during the week picking up two wins and a tie. After downing Tufts 2-1 on Tuesday, the Beavers played an unbeaten Williams squad on Saturday and raced to a 3-0 first period lead. Andrew Holland scored twice and goaltender Brad Arvanitis made 41 saves to earn the shutout win, 5-0. On Sunday, Babson finished their NESCAC tour with a 1-1 tie at Amherst. Ryan Black tied the game in the first period and goaltender Aidan Murphy stopped 50 Mammoth shots to preserve the tie.

NESCAC
Middlebury pulled the stunner of the weekend when they downed previously unbeaten Norwich in the opening round of the Primelink Tournament hosted by Plattsburgh. The Panthers used 36 saves from goaltender Brian Ketchabaw and an overtime goal from Zach Shapiro to stun the Cadets, 2-1. In the Primelink championship game, the Panthers couldn’t quite pull off the upset over Wisconsin – Eau Claire who held off a Panther third period rally to earn the title with a 4-3 win. Emack Bentley and Shapiro’s late third period goals weren’t quite enough to catch the BluGolds.

In the Bowdoin-Colby Face-off, the Polar Bears came out as the top team after wins over Albertus Magnus and Massachusetts – Boston. Six different players scored, and goalie Alex Zafonte made 28 saves in the shutout win over the Falcons. On Sunday, Zafonte was again strong in net making 31 saves. Ethan Kimball’s goal with just 57 seconds remaining in regulation gave the Polar Bears the 2-1 win over the Beacons.

SUNYAC
After an opening round 6-3 loss to Salve Regina in the Utica tournament, Oswego bounced back with a strong 8-0 win over Plymouth State in the consolation game on Saturday. Eight different players scored for the Lakers and Anthony Passero picked up three assists in the runaway win.

Geneseo hosted a pair of NESCAC schools over the weekend earning a split with Amherst and Williams. On Saturday, Tyson Empey’s shorthanded goal in the third period proved to be the game-winner in a 3-2 win over the Mammoths. On Sunday, there were a lot of goals in a seesaw battle between the Ephs and Knights. After Empey’s power play goal tied the game at 4-4, Williams’ Connor Kucharski broke the tie at the 12:32 mark of the third period and then sealed the win with an empty-net goal with just 53 seconds remaining in regulation. Evan Ruschil made 37 saves for the Ephs who were outshot 41-20 by Geneseo.

Fredonia used strong play and great play beyond overtime to earn the Castleton Invitational title. Against Curry, Anton Rosen made 28 saves in a 0-0 overtime tie that progressed through a 3-on-3 overtime session to a shootout where the Blue Devils’ Jasper Korican-Barlay scored in the second round to advance Fredonia to the title game. In a very up tempo final, Fredonia and Nazareth battled to a 5-5 overtime tie before Fredonia’s Victor Tracy knocked home a rebound shot in the 3-on-3 overtime period to give the championship to the Blue Devils.

UCHC
Utica hosted a tournament that included three ranked teams. On Friday, the Pioneers outshot Plymouth State by a 43-20 margin but had only goals from Justin Allen and Joey Rustkowski to show for it. JR Barone closed the gap for the Panthers in the third period, but Utica held on for the 2-1 win to advance to the title game against Salve Regina. On Saturday, Utica again carried a big shot advantage over the Seahawks and scored twice early in the first period on strikes by Cameron Bartkoski and Dante Zapata. Brandon Osmundosn and Cameron Ott extended the lead to 4-0 in the second period and the Pioneers cruised to a 5-1 championship win.

Stevenson hosted teams from the west for the holiday weekend with games against St. Norbert and Lawrence. On Friday, a crazy game saw the Mustangs come back from 3-1 and 5-4 deficits to tie the Green Knights at 5-5 on a power play goal from Christian Ripley before Chris Lee’s game-winner at 13:33 of the third period. Ripley and Lee both had two goals each in the 6-5 win. On Saturday, the offense kept rolling for the Mustangs with Dominic Brenza picking up five points and Houston Wilson and Ripley scoring two goals apiece in the 8-3 win over Lawrence. The Mustang special teams accounted for five goals with three power play tallies and two shorthanded goals.

Three Biscuits

Brian Ketchabaw – Middlebury – recorded 36 saves including 19 in the first period for the Panthers who defeated No. 1 ranked Norwich 2-1 to open the Primelink tournament.

Jake Ratcliffe – Westfield State – the Owls forward opened the scoring against Johnson & Wales with two first period goals and completed his hat trick in the third period in a 6-2 win.

Dominic Brenza – Stevenson – picked up five points for the Mustangs on a goal and four assists to lead the offense in an 8-3 win over Lawrence.

Some great games everywhere this past weekend and tournament play certainly brings out the competitive spirit in all teams. The number of unbeatens is dwindling as are the number of games in the first half of the season to build some momentum.

Minnesota State goalie Stauber leaves team, returns to USHL’s Stampede

STAUBER

Minnesota State freshman goalie Jaxson Stauber has left the team and returned to the USHL’s Sioux Falls Stampede.

Stauber will be entering his third season with Sioux Falls after previously playing there from 2017 to 2019.

This season, Stauber made his debut with the Mavericks in a 4-1 win over Alabama Huntsville on Oct. 26. He made 14 saves in his lone start with a 1.00 GAA and .933 save percentage.

Cornell stays ‘Red Hot;’ Minnesota State, North Dakota, BGSU, BC all on a roll: Weekend Review podcast Season 2 Episode 9

Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger look at the weekend of November 28-December 1, starting with No. 2 Cornell’s 2-0 win over Boston University at Red Hot Hockey at MSG.

We also review No. 1 Minnesota State’s sweep of Minnesota Duluth on the road, No. 14 Boston College’s win over Harvard to up the Eagles’ win streak to seven, sweeps by No. 3 North Dakota and No. 16 Bowling Green, the Friendship Four and Turkey Leg tournaments, surges by Army, AIC, and Niagara in Atlantic Hockey, and Arizona State’s move up the PairWise Rankings.

Speaking of PairWise, who’s surprising and who’s not as the calendar flips to December?

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

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

With 44 first-place votes, Minnesota State still No. 1 in USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll; unbeaten Cornell remains No. 2

Ian Scheid (Minnisota State - 18). ((c) Shelley M. Szwast 2016)
Ian Scheid and Minnesota State took both games last weekend against Minnesota Duluth (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

After sweeping defending national champion Minnesota Duluth over the weekend, Minnesota State earned 44 first-place votes to stay No. 1 in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

Cornell, the nation’s lone undefeated team, defeated Boston University at Madison Square Garden and remains No. 2 in the weekly rankings.

North Dakota stays No. 3, as does Denver at No. 4, and Clarkson is up one spot to No. 5.

Penn State is up one to No. 6, Ohio State moves up four to sit seventh, Northeastern won the Friendship Four and is up four to No. 8, Notre Dame falls four to No. 9, and Boston College moves up four places to enter the top 10 at No. 10 this week.

USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll – Dec. 2, 2019

Michigan State falls out of the rankings after being ranked No. 20 last week, while Arizona State cracks the poll this week, coming in at No. 20 as the lone new team in the rankings.

In addition, 14 other teams received votes.

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

Women’s D-III wrap Dec. 2: Middlebury wins first Panther/Cardinal Classic since 2005

Middlebury celebrates its first Panther/Cardinal Classic title since 2005 (Middlebury Athletics)
Middlebury celebrates its first Panther/Cardinal Classic title since 2005 (Middlebury Athletics)

Upsets abound in Panther/Cardinal Classic
The Panther/Cardinal Classic proved to be the burying ground for the top two teams in the country entering the weekend. No. 8 Middlebury had not won the tournament since 2005. No. 1 Plattsburgh State, the defending national champion, had won eight of the previous 13 iterations, though had not claimed it since 2016. No. 2 Adrian, the defending tournament champion, entered the tournament with one of the top-ranked offenses in the country and the second-best power play in the country. No. 7 Wisconsin-River Falls was 0-1-1 against ranked teams entering the weekend.

Ultimately, it was the top two teams that fell, and Middlebury won the tournament, proving again that often it is defense that wins championships. Adrian was held to just a goal in each game, a 1-1 tie with Middlebury Saturday in the semifinal and a 4-1 loss to Wis.-River Falls on Sunday. Maggie Mitter got the Bulldogs the early lead with a power-play goal at 5:09 of the first against Middlebury, but the Bulldogs could not build on that lead, and Middlebury tied it with a power-play goal at 3:16 of the third when Madie Leidt scored. Middlebury goalie Lin Han made 19 saves. Middlebury fired 44 shots on Adrian goaltender Denisa Jandová, including three in the OT session. Middlebury advanced to the title game via a 1-0 win in the shootout, as Anna Zumwinkle scored the only goal in three rounds.

In the other semifinal, Plattsburgh advanced to the title game with a 3-1 win over Wis.-River Falls. Erin McArdle scored on a power play for the Cardinals at 5:07 of the first, and Annie Katonka made it 2-0 just over two minutes later with a five-on-three strike. Callie Hoff pulled the Falcons within one at 14:35 of the first, but Taylor Whitney gave the Cardinals a 3-1 lead with a goal at 5:30 of the second, and goaltender Lilla Nease made 17 saves over the last two periods to preserve the win.

On Sunday, Wis.-River Falls beat Adrian, 4-1, in the third-place game. Abigail Stow struck twice for the Falcons in the first. Une Bjelland pulled the Bulldogs within one at 18:40 of the second, but Bella Wagner scored a power-play goal at 1:07 of the third, and Callie Hoff scored at 6:45, chasing Jandová from the net. Mia Glassco came on in relief and made four saves. Sami Miller made 23 saves in the win.

In the championship game, it was all about defense. Anna Goldstein made 29 saves for the Panthers in the win, as Middlebury continued to platoon its two goalies. Leidt gave the Panthers the lead at 9:47 of the first on a strike from the slot, and Katie Hargrave scored the game-winner on a rebound at 4:31 of the second. That was all on the night for Plattsburgh goalie Chloe Beaubien, who gave up two goals on just seven shots. Nease came on in relief and made 11 saves over the last two periods. Abby Brush gave the Cardinals some hope down the stretch, pulling Plattsburgh within one at 17:23 of the third. It was the first goal allowed by Goldstein all season. Plattsburgh pulled Nease with just over a minute to play, but Goldstein came up big on Plattsburgh’s best chance, a shot from McArdle with 34 seconds left.

Leidt was named tournament most outstanding player. Zumwinkle and Goldstein were also named to the all-tournament team, as were McArdle, Stow, Jandová, and Plattsburgh’s Nicole Unsworth.

Wisconsin-Eau Claire likely moving up rankings after big weekend against ranked teams
The No. 6 Wisconsin-Eau Claire Blugolds will be moving up the rankings Monday, thanks to a 1-1 tie with No. 10 St. Thomas and a 2-0 win over No. 5 Elmira in the Lake Forest Invitational. On Friday, Ella Ierino scored the tying goal for the Blugolds at 14:50 of the second after Isabel Bianchi had put the Tommies up 1-0 at 8:17 of the second. Erin Connolly made 17 saves for the Blugolds. Elmira blanked Lake Forest in the other Friday game, 3-0, thanks to a goal and assist from Devyn Gilman and 31 saves from goalie Elizabeth Hanson.

On Saturday, Emily Bauer got the Blugolds the lead at 11:17 of the first with a power-play goal, and Hann Zavoral added a power-play goal at 13:06 of the second. That was enough of a margin for Connolly, who made 10 saves in the win. The Blugolds only allowed three shots in the third period. In the other game, Lake Forest upset St. Thomas, 2-1, thanks to an overtime goal by Megan Lyke. Olyvia Opsahl had pushed the game into OT with a goal at 15:18 for the Foresters, who fired 35 shots on Tommies goalie Eryn Cooley.

Nazareth stays hot
After taking a major step forward the previous weekend by beating Elmira and William Smith, Nazareth stayed hot with a 2-1 win over Castleton and a 1-1 tie with Amherst. Against Castleton, Nikolle Van Stralen scored the game-winner at 14:52 of the third period. Nazareth fired 50 shots on Castleton goalie Alexis Kalm, including 13 in the third period. Both teams were 0-for-4 on the power play. Against Amherst, Keeley Rose gave Nazareth the lead with a goal at 18:34 of the second, but Carley Daly scored just 55 seconds into the third to tie it. Nazareth goalie Adrianna Brehm made 28 saves, including four in the OT to preserve the tie.

Williams wins Codfish Bowl
Williams won the other holiday tournament, taking the Codfish Bowl thanks to a 5-0 win over host UMass-Boston and a 2-0 win over Stevenson. Marissa Anderson made 15 saves Saturday and 14 on Sunday. Williams dominated offensive play, taking 46 shots against UMass-Boston and 35 against Stevenson. Against UMass-Boston, Williams got three power-play goals and a four-on-four goal in the win. Five different players scored, and Meghan Halloran and Amanda Reisman each had a goal and an assist. Against Stevenson, Williams got all the scoring it would need when Liz Welch scored at 5:02 of the second, and Brianna Hill gave the Ephs a cushion with a goal just 2:45 later.

D-III West Region Weekend Wrap

Wisconsin-Eau Claire won the Primelink Great Northern Shootout over the weekend. (Photo courtesy of Plattsburgh State)

It was a tough weekend for the reigning national champs. Both Marian and Concordia Wisconsin pulled off upsets against the sixth-ranked team in the country.

Wisconsin-Eau Claire and Wisconsin-Superior both looked good on the road, with the third-ranked Blugolds winning the Primelink Great Northern Shootout behind two dominant performances.

Lake Forest earned a weekend sweep to keep its strong start rolling along. Weather forced two series to be wiped off the slate. St. Thomas and St. Scholastica saw their series canceled. Northland and Finlandlia had their series postponed.

Here are some of the storylines from another weekend of hockey.

Blugolds dominate Great Northern Shootout

Wisconsin-Eau Claire turned in an impressive performance in the Great Northern Shootout, capping the tourney with a 4-3 win over Middlebury Saturday.

The Blugolds became just the second invitational team to win the title in the 22-year history of the tourney.

The Blugolds erased a 1-0 deficit by scoring the next four goals. Nick Techel, Jarrad Vroman, Derek Hammer and Cole Paskus all scored to put Wis.-Eau Claire in front 4-1.

Zach Dyment stepped up big in goal, stopping 25 shots and helping Wis.-Eau Claire survive a late rally by Middlebury.

Jon Richards and Scott Munro both earned all-tournament team honors. Dyment was named the MVP. Techel was tabbed as the top rookie in the tournament.

Wis.-Eau Claire opened the tourney with a 6-1 win over host Plattsburgh on Friday. Richards scored twice in the win and Dyment stopped 29 shots.

Yellowjackets continue to roll

Wisconsin-Superior completed a sweep of Chatham Saturday with a 3-1 win, stretching their win streak to three games. The Yellowjackets won the opener 5-1 on Friday.

In Saturday’s win, Bruno Birzitis scored a goal and an assist. Levi Cudmore and Andrew Durham both tallied goals.

Oscar Svensson came through with 29 saves and now has four wins on the season.

On Friday, Troy York scored twice and Jordan Martin tallied a pair of assists.

Falcons stun the champs

Concordia made program history Saturday with a 5-4 win over Wisconsin-Stevens Point, the reigning champs in NCAA Division III.

The win is all the more impressive considering it happened on the road. It’s also the first victory in program history for Concordia against the Pointers.

Concordia head coach Jasen Wise called it an “unreal effort” for all of the boys and noted that goaltending and special teams were key.

The Falcons wasted little time setting the tone, scoring three times in the first period. Concordia eventually led 4-0 but the Pointers tied the game before Cole Pickup scored at the 13:42 mark of the third period to lift Concordia to the win.

Nick Guiney scored twice, both times off the power play. Brandon Picard and Dante Hahn also punched in goalsl for the Falcons, who improved to 5-4-1.Concordia went 3-for-3 on the power play while holding the Pointers to an 0-for-5 showing on the power play.

Bo Didur made 41 saves to help the Falcons win their first game over a ranked opponent since December of 2018. The Falcons are unbeaten in their last three games.

Sabres continue dominance of ranked teams

Marian won its third consecutive game over a ranked opponent Friday, taking down Wis,-Stevens Point 5-4 in non-conference play.

Salvatore Scalise scored his first goal of the year and it proved to be the game winner, giving Marian a 5-4 lead at the 12:48 mark of the third period.

Dylan Hutton dominated early, scoring twice in the first two periods of play to help the Sabres erase a 1-0 deficit. Ty Ennis also punched in a goal. The goals by Huttton were his first two of the season. Ennis now has three goals on the season.

Hunter Vorva made 22 saves and the Pointers went 0-for-3 on the power play. Marian was outshot 25-22.

Marian is rolling in the right direction heading into December, having won its last four games. The Sabres swept a series against St. Norbert last weekend. They have scored four goals three times during the win streak.

Bulldogs notch big win over Spartans

Adriran rose to the occasion Saturday in a 4-2 win over Aurora, which came into the game as the top team in the NCHA. 

Rex Moe paved the way for Adrian, scoring twice. Trevor Coykendall also scored a goal and Cameron Gray made 26 saves.

Adrian won 4-2 on Sunday as well to overtake Aurora as the top team in the league.

Bryce Van Horn came through with the first multi-goal game of his career to help the Bulldogs complete the sweep.

Gray made 30 saves and has four wins on the year.

With the effort, Adrian keeps its unbeaten streak against Aurora intact. The Bulldogs are 10-0 all-time against the Spartans, with six of those wins coming on the road.

The eighth-ranked Bulldogs are now 6-1-1 overall and 5-1 in the league. Aurora fell to 7-3-1 overall and 4-3-1 in the league.

Lake Forest sweeps St. Olaf

The Foresters dominated the Oles in a weekend series, winning 3-1 and 7-1.

Aaron O’Neill led the way with a four-point night. He scored two goals and two assists in the win and has five goals on the year.

The Foresters improved to 7-2-1 overall with the two wins. They held a 35-18 advantage in shots. Boyd DiClemente made 17 saves.

Cullen Kane, David Cohen, Drew Shields and Joey Sardina also scored goals for the Foresters, who have won four of their last five games. The seven goals by Lake Forest are the most it has scored in a game this season.

Weekend Wrap: December 2

Abbie Ives  (Quinnipiac - 35). ((c) Shelley M. Szwast 2016)
Abbie Ives stopped 76 shots this weekend to lead her team to a Nutmeg Classic title. (Photo: Shelley M. Szwast)

(1) Minnesota vs (6) Boston College

Delaney Belinskas scored a short-handed goal – her third of the season – near the end of the first to put Boston College up 1-0. Minnesota responded less than a minute later with a goal from Taylor Wente to tie the game at one. Boston College dominated the second period and finally capitalized with a second short-handed goal near the end of the second to take the lead. Kelly Browne showcased her speed and went bar down to make it 2-1 BC. The Gophers dominated the third, out-shooting BC 15-1. Alexie Guay took two penalties in the third period, putting BC as a defensive disadvantage and the team looked visibly tired. The Gophers were able to take advantage and scored just as a penalty expired, as Grace Zumwinkle tipped in a puck that Maddy McArthur was unable to cover up. McArthur finished with 41 saves. The game goes down as a 2-2 tie, but the teams agreed to sudden-death penalty shots, where Hannah Bilka “won” it for the Eagles.

(2) Wisconsin vs (9) Harvard

The Badgers out-shot Harvard 57-15, but took a bit of the game to build up momentum and find the back of the net. Crimson goalie gave the Badgers difficulty in a two-game series last season and they once again needed patience to find their opportunities to beat the 6’0’ netminder. Presley Norby scored midway through the second and to open the third to put Wisconsin up 2-0. Harvard cut the lead on a goal from Kristin Della Rovere, but the Badgers found their groove as the third period progressed. Daryl Watts, Brette Pettet and Alexis Mauermann all scored in the final 10 minutes to help Wisconsin pull away and give them the 5-1 win.

(1) Minnesota vs (9) Harvard

Sarah Potomak opened the scoring with a redirect past Lindsay Reed. Alex Woken doubled the lead in the second period and Abigail Boreen’s third period goal was her first of the season. Potomak added an empty-net goal to ice the 4-0 win. Reed made 39 saves in the loss.

(2) Wisconsin vs (6) Boston College

The Badgers jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first period thanks to goals from Sophie Shirley, Britta Curl and Abby Roque. Shirley got the credit on a shot that was deflected in front of the net and ended up behind Lindsay Reed. Curl’s goal was a spectacular individual effort where she gloved the puck out of the air in the neutral zone and took it in to beat Reed on the short side. Roque blasted a shot on the power play for the third goal in the first. But Boston College were not out of this game. In the second, Savannah Norcross tapped in a pass from Hannah Bilka and then Caroline DiFiore made a great play on the defensive end and then took off for a breakaway to beat Kristin Campbell. In the third, Delaney Drake also beat Reed on a tight angle from the short side to increase the lead to 4-2, but BC responded again with a power play goal from Cayla Barnes. The Eagles had a number of chances in the final minutes, but Daryl Watts’ scored an empty-netter on a great steal and feed from Shirley to secure the 5-3 win for Wisconsin.

(3) Cornell at (7) Ohio State

Kristin O’Neill scored midway through the second to give Cornell the 1-0 lead, but from there it was all Ohio State. Emma Maltais netted two goals before the second period was through and Madison Bizal added a third midway through the final frame to earn the 3-1 win for the Buckeyes on Friday. In game two, despite being out-shot 49-23, Cornell took control of the game early and never looked back en route to a 5-1 win. Paige Lewis redirected a shot right in front of the net less than three minutes into the game to set the tone for the Big Red. Ohio State responded on the power play with a goal from Liz Schepers midway through the first period. But that’s as close as the Buckeyes would get. Maddie Mills responded with a power play tally on her own less than a minute later and Finley Frechette scored on an assist from her sister Gillis before the end of the second period to make it 3-1 Cornell. Mills added a second with a player advantage and then Kristin O’Neill assured the win with an empty-net goal to make it a 5-1 Cornell win.

Holy Cross at (4) Northeastern

Chloe Aurard had three goals and two assists while Katy Knoll added a goal and four assists to lead Northeastern to an 11-0 win over Holy Cross on Friday. It was Northeastern’s largest shutout victory in the NCAA era. The teams will play again on Wednesday.

Windjammer Classic

Minnesota State vs (5) Clarkson

Clarkson cruised through their first game of the Windjammer Tournament with a 4-0 win over the Mavericks. Elizabeth Giguere scored twice while Taylor Sawka and Brooke McQuigge each added a goal in the win.

Vermont vs Penn State

It took the Nittany Lions a little while to get going, but a goal by Katie Rankin midway through the third was ultimately the game-winner. Julie Gough scored once and Abby Welch scored twice in the third to ensure the win. Mallory Uiehlein’s three assists tied a program single-game record as Penn State won 4-0 and advanced to the finals of the Windjammer Classic.

Clarkson vs Penn State

Elizabeth Giguere scored five minutes into the first to give Clarkson a 1-0 lead that they took into the first period break. Kayla Friesen doubled the lead late in the second, but Penn State did not go quietly. Mallory Uiehlein scored on the power play and the Nittany Lions kept up the pressure, but Kristy Pidgeon’s empty-net goal ensured a 3-0 win and Windjammer Classic title for the Golden Knights.

Minnesota State vs Vermont

The Maverick penalty kill was tested, but did not allow a goal. Freshman Calla Frank earned her second career shutout and goals from Anna Wilgren and Claire Butorac ensured a third-place finish for Minnesota State in the Windjammer Classic.

Nutmeg Classic

(10) Minnesota Duluth vs Quinnipiac

Senior netminder Abbie Ives made a career-high 42 saves and Lexie Adzija had two goals and an assist to lead Quinnipiac over Minnesota Duluth in the opening round of the tournament. Adzija put the Bobcats up 1-0 midway through the first, but Minnesota Duluth responded less than three minutes later with a goal from Jaelyn Elmes to make it 1-1. Renee Saltness and Sarah Coutu-Godbout extended the lead to 3-1 in the second period and Adzija made it 4-1 late in the third. The Bulldogs got one back on a power play goal from Ashton Bell to make it 4-2, but they could not complete a comeback, despite outshooting the Bobcats 44-21.

Yale vs Connecticut

This game looked to be all Connecticut as they jumped out to a 2-0 lead before four minutes had passed thanks to goals from Taylor Wabick and Natalie Snodgrass. But Yale responded in a big way, reeling off six unanswered goals to earn a 6-2 win. The Bulldogs advance to take on Quinnipiac in the finals of the Nutmeg Classic. Charlotte Welch had two goals and an assist, Claire Dalton had a goal and two assists and Greta Skarzynski had two goals to lead Yale in the win.

Quinnipiac vs Yale

The Bobcacts won their own tournament with a 3-1 win over Yale. Goalie Abbie Ives stopped 76 of 79 shots faced over the weekend and was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player. Yale scored the only goal of the first period as Grace Lee found the back of the net midway through the period. In the second, Sarah Coutu-Godbout scored to tie the game and then Brooke Bonsteel scored twice to give Quinnipiac the win and tournament title.

(10) Minnesota Duluth vs Connecticut

Connecticut had a 1-0 lead after the first period thanks to a goal from Savannah Bouzide, but Minnesota Duluth took control of the game from there. Ashton Bell and Sydney Brodt scored in the second and Brodt added another goal early in the third period to make it 3-1 Bulldogs. Kailee Skinner and Kylie Hanley also scored in the final frame to give UMD the 5-1 win.

 

Monday 10: Top-ranked Minnesota State sweeps defending national champs, Bowling Green sweeps Notre Dame, Boston College upsets Harvard

DURHAM, NH - NOVEMBER 1: The Boston College Eagles visit the New Hampshire Wildcats during NCAA men's hockey at the Whittemore Center on November 1, 2019 in Durham, New Hampshire. The Wildcats won 1-0 in overtime. (Photo by Rich Gagnon/USCHO) (Rich Gagnon)
No. 14 Boston College defeated No. 9 Harvard on Friday night in Cambridge, Mass. (photo: Rich Gagnon).

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

1. No. 1 Minnesota State makes statement with road sweep of Duluth

If there was any doubt that Minnesota State deserves to be called the top team in the nation at the season’s current state, the Mavericks put that to bed this weekend.

Minnesota State defeated Minnesota Duluth 4-1 on Friday and 3-1 on Saturday in Duluth.

A big reason for the sweep was Mavericks’ goaltender Dryden McKay. The sophomore had 27 saves on Friday night and 37 on Saturday.

Minnesota State’s special teams was also key all weekend, scoring five goals on the power play. The Mavericks also successfully killed off a five-minute major late in the second period of Saturday’s game to preserve a 1-0 lead. The Bulldogs eventually evened the game in the third period, but Lucas Sowder and Jake Jaremko netted goals to secure the sweep.

2. Winter weather, power outage, make Saturday’s game difficult

The series between Minnesota State and Minnesota Duluth was arguably one of the most highly touted of the entire season, but only a handful of people saw the Mavericks complete the sweep live.

That was for good reason, as the Duluth area was hit with a major blizzard Saturday evening into Sunday. More than a foot of snow and high winds off Lake Superior made getting to the game difficult. Attendance, which is based on tickets sold, was announced at 5,103 but about one in five tickets went unused.

Amsoil Arena also lost power about three minutes after the puck drop in the first period. Both teams went back to their locker rooms and the delay lasted roughly 15 minutes.

3. Mercyhurst and Robert Morris postponed

Duluth wasn’t the only team with arena issues this weekend. Friday’s game between Mercyhurst and Robert Morris at the Mercyhurst Ice Center was postponed when a protective covering over a light fixture came loose prior to the game beginning. The game was postponed in the interest of safety, as the covering was above the playing surface.

The two teams were able to play Saturday, at Robert Morris, and ended up tying 2-2. Friday’s game will be made up on Tuesday, Jan. 14, before the weekend where the two teams were scheduled to play their second home-and-home series of the season.

4. North Dakota wins both ways against Minnesota

With a blowout victory on Thanksgiving and a tight one-goal victory on Friday, North Dakota got full value out of its series at Minnesota this weekend.

Thursday’s game had a football score, with UND winning 9-3. The Fighting Hawks got goals from eight different players in the game and, somewhat shockingly, all were even-strength except for Colton Poolman’s power-play tally late in the first period. Minnesota’s Bob Motzko used all three of the goaltenders he had on the bench at some point in the game.

Friday’s game was more competitive. The Gophers took the lead with an unassisted goal by Tyler Nanne, but UND scored the game’s next three goals. Minnesota clawed to within one goal early in the third period but was unable to come up with the game-tying goal.

5. Bowling Green downs Notre Dame in home-and-home series

Minnesota State wasn’t the only WCHA team that enjoyed a big nonconference sweep this weekend. Bowling Green swept its series against Notre Dame by winning 5-2 on the road Friday and also picking up a 5-2 home win on Saturday.

The Falcons were able to chase Notre Dame goaltender Cale Morris after two periods on Friday. Freshman Ryan Bischel got the start for the Irish on Saturday, but didn’t fare much better.

Eight players lit the lamp for the Falcons this weekend. Frederic Letourneau and Brandon Kruse each scored a goal in both games. Goaltender Eric Dop picked up both wins, making 27 saves on Friday and 25 on Saturday.

6. AIC picks up important points against RIT

Last year’s NCAA tournament Cinderella, AIC, hasn’t exactly set the world on fire early this season but the Yellow Jackets picked up a big Atlantic Hockey sweep this weekend at home against RIT.

AIC won 4-2 on Friday and 5-1 on Saturday. Joel Kocur scored two first-period goals, the second short-handed, to get the Yellow Jackets off the mark on Friday. On Saturday, AIC used power-play goals by Austin Albrecht, Janis Jaks and Martin Mellberg to score the first five goals of the game before RIT scored late in the third period.

AIC currently sits fifth in Atlantic Hockey with 15 points.

7. Boston College downs Harvard

In the lone upset in games played between two ranked opponents, No. 14 Boston College downed No. 9 Harvard on Friday night in Cambridge, Mass.

Harvard looked to be the team in control when Jack Drury scored a power-play goal at the 17:15 mark of the second period to take a two-goal lead, but it would be the Eagles that ended the period with the lead. Aapeli Rasanen scored at the 17:35 mark of the period, Alex Newhook tied the game at the 18:30 mark and David Cotton gave BC the lead at the 19:27 mark. Mark McLaughlin gave the game its final score with a short-handed tally in the third period.

8. Cornell blanks Boston University at Madison Square Garden

Matthew Galajda’s big performance in the Big Apple was more than enough to give Cornell a 2-0 victory over Boston University in the Red Hot Hockey game at Madison Square Garden.

Galajda picked up a 28-save shutout as Cornell improved to 9-0 for the first time since the 1969-70 season. Michael Regush and Brenden Locke scored the goals in the game.

Cornell will try to go undefeated in the first half of its schedule. The Big Red will play their final two games of 2019 next weekend at Harvard and Dartmouth.

9. UConn sweeps Miami at home

UConn may currently rest in the bottom of the Hockey East standings, but the Huskies picked up an impressive sweep of a NCHC opponent this weekend.

UConn downed Miami 6-4 on Friday and 4-3 on Saturday. The Huskies trailed 3-1 after one period and 4-3 after two on Friday, but scored three goals in the third period. Vladislav Firstov scored two goals in the contest, including the game winner.

The Huskies surrendered a one-goal lead in the third period on Saturday, but were able to build a two-goal lead thanks to goals from Brian Rigali and Yan Kuznetsov. Miami’s John Sladic cut that lead back to one, but Miami was unable to tie the game.

10. Ohio State sweeps newly-ranked Michigan State

A string of impressive performances helped Michigan State climb back into the rankings this week, but Ohio State put the Spartans back in their place.

The Buckeyes picked up the home sweep, winning 3-1 on Saturday and 2-0 on Sunday. Ronnie Hein picked up two goals during Saturday’s contest. Tanner Laczynski and Gordi Myer provided the offense on Sunday.

Ryan Snowden and Tommy Nappier each picked up a win in net. Snowden made 26 saves on Saturday and Nappier pitched a 23-save shutout on Sunday.

Rankings roundup: How the top 20 teams fared, Nov. 28-Dec. 1

Shane Pinto (North Dakota-22) 2019 November 22 St. Cloud State University and University North Dakota meet in NCHC conference game at the Ralph Engelstad Arena Grand Forks, ND (Bradley K. Olson)
North Dakota went into Minnesota over the weekend and outscored the Gophers 12-5 in getting the weekend sweep in a battle of former WCHA schools (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll of Nov. 25 fared in games over the Nov. 28-Dec. 1 weekend.

No. 1 Minnesota State (12-1-1)
11/29/2019 – No. 1 Minnesota State 4 at No. 8 Minnesota Duluth 1
11/30/2019 – No. 1 Minnesota State 3 at No. 8 Minnesota Duluth 1

No. 2 Cornell (9-0-0)
11/30/2019 – No. 2 Cornell 2 vs RV Boston University 0 (Red
Hot Hockey, Madison Square Garden)

No. 3 North Dakota (12-1-2)
11/28/2019 – No. 3 North Dakota 9 at RV Minnesota 3
11/29/2019 – No. 3 North Dakota 3 at RV Minnesota 2

No. 4 Denver (9-3-2)
Did not play.

No. 5 Notre Dame (8-4-2)
11/29/2019 – No. 16 Bowling Green 5 at No. 5 Notre Dame 2
11/30/2019 – No. 5 Notre Dame 2 at No. 16 Bowling Green 5

No. 6 Clarkson (10-3-1)
Did not play.

No. 7 Penn State (11-4-0)
11/29/2019 – No. 7 Penn State 7 at Merrimack 0
11/30/2019 – No. 7 Penn State 2 at No. 15 UMass Lowell 3 (OT)

No. 8 Minnesota Duluth (7-6-1)
11/29/2019 – No. 1 Minnesota State 4 at No. 8 Minnesota Duluth 1
11/30/2019 – No. 1 Minnesota State 3 at No. 8 Minnesota Duluth 1

No. 9 Harvard (6-1-0)
11/29/2019 – No. 14 Boston College 4 at No. 9 Harvard 2

No. 10 Massachusetts (9-4-1)
11/29/2019 – No. 10 Massachusetts 3 at RV Quinnipiac 0
11/30/2019 – RV Quinnipiac 2 at No. 10 Massachusetts 1

No. 11 Ohio State (9-4-1)
11/30/2019 – No. 20 Michigan State 1 at No. 11 Ohio State 3
12/01/2019 – No. 20 Michigan State 0 at No. 11 Ohio State 2

No. 12 Northeastern (10-4-2)
11/29/2019 – No. 12 Northeastern 4 vs RV New Hampshire 0
(Friendship Four, Belfast, NI)
11/30/2019 Colgate 3 vs No. 12 Northeastern 4 (Friendship
Four Championship, Belfast, NI)

No. 13 Providence (8-4-3)
11/30/2019 – Brown 2 at No. 13 Providence 4 (Mayor’s Cup)

No. 14 Boston College (9-4-0)
11/26/2019 – Yale 2 at No. 14 Boston College 6
11/29/2019 – No. 14 Boston College 4 at No. 9 Harvard 2

No. 15 UMass Lowell (9-3-4)
11/29/2019 – Rensselaer 0 at No. 15 UMass Lowell 4
11/30/2019 – No. 7 Penn State 2 at No. 15 UMass Lowell 3 (OT)

No. 16 Bowling Green (10-5-0)
11/29/2019 – No. 16 Bowling Green 5 at No. 5 Notre Dame 2
11/30/2019 – No. 5 Notre Dame 2 at No. 16 Bowling Green 5

No. 17 Western Michigan (7-5-2)
Did not play.

No. 18 Omaha (6-4-2)
Did not play.

No. 19 Wisconsin (7-8-1)
11/30/2019 – Michigan 2 at No. 19 Wisconsin 3
12/01/2019 – Michigan 3 at No. 19 Wisconsin 1

No. 20 Michigan State (6-7-1)
11/30/2019 – No. 20 Michigan State 1 at No. 11 Ohio State 3
12/01/2019 – No. 20 Michigan State 0 at No. 11 Ohio State 2

RV = Received Votes

GOTW: Behind 28-save shutout by Galajda, Cornell prevails in Red Hot Hockey at MSG, 2-0

A deflection by Michael Regush (19 - Cornell) goes just wide of the Union net (2019 Omar Phillips)
Cornell’s Michael Regush scored one of two goals for Cornell as the Big Red shutout Boston University to capture the 2019 edition of Red Hot Hockey and remain a perfect 9-0-0 (File photo: Omar Phillips)

NEW YORK – Red Hot Hockey was all Big Red Saturday night.

Michael Regush and Brenden Locke scored 20 seconds apart in the second period and Matthew Galajda made 28 saves as Cornell blanked Boston University, 2-0, in the seventh biennial edition of the series in front of 15,142 at Madison Square Garden.

Sam Tucker stopped 26 shots for the Terriers (4-6-5).

After a scoreless first period, Regush took a feed from Yanni Kaldis in the right circle and beat Tucker to the goalie’s left at 7:39 of the second for his fifth goal of the season. Morgan Barron also had an assist on the play.

Locke followed with his fourth of the year at 7:59, scoring from the high slot off passes from Ben Berard and Cam Donaldson.

Galajda’s perfect night enabled the Big Red (9-0-0) to continue its perfect season. However, he was quick to give credit to his teammates on defense.

“They (BU) came out really strong in the first period and they had some chances, but it was about our defense,” he said. “They (Cornell defense) kept them [BU] to the outside and were on them the whole game, and that’s all you want from your team.”

While Cornell coach Mike Schafer was pleased with the outcome, he felt that his team started slowly before picking up the pace.

“They (BU) have a skilled team, and you can’t give them too much time and space to get up and get going,” he said. “I thought we gave them way too much time and space in the first period, but we did much better with that in the second and third.”

– Stuart Baron

Friendship Four championship game (Belfast, N.I.)

No. 12 Northeastern 4, Colgate 3
Northeastern mustered just three shots in the opening period of the Friendship Four championship game, but all three came in less than a minute and all three found the back of the net.

That was enough to pace the Huskies to a 4-3 victory over Colgate to capture the Belpot Trophy.

Jayden Struble and Matt Demelis scored the game’s first two goals at 7:43 and 7:55 of the first. Colgate’s Liam Watson-Brawn was whistled for tripping at 8:30 and it took just eight seconds for Tyler Madden to extend the Northeastern lead to 3-0.

John Snodgrass drew the Red Raiders within a goal at 11:31 of the first and Ben Sharf’s goal at the 1:00 mark of the second pulled Colgate closer at 3-2.

Neither team scored until Ryan Shea’s shorthanded empty net goal with 56 seconds left and Bobby McMann’s goal for Colgate with 18 seconds left that proved too little too late.

Northeastern takes home the championship in the fifth edition of the Friendship Four. It is the third title for a Hockey East school, following previous champions UMass Lowell and Vermont.

New Hampshire defeated Princeton, 3-2, in the tournament’s third-place game.

Turkey Leg Classic championship game (Lowell, Mass.)

No. 15 UMass Lowell 3, No. 7 Penn State 2 (OT)
Chase Blackmun’s power play goal with 2:17 left in overtime propelled 15th-ranked Lowell over No. 7 Penn State as the River Hawks captured the inaugural Turkey Leg Classic, a tournament co-hosted by Lowell and Merrimack.

Penn State forced overtime with an extra-attacker power play goal with 23.3 seconds left in regulation. Nate Sucese deflected a puck that was originally ruled no-goal for a high stick, but allowed after video review.

Lowell never trailed in the game, jumping to a 1-0 lead on an Anthony Baxter goal with 18:14 of the first. Even Barrett evened things in the second on a 4-on-4 tally at 3:27. But less than two minute later, Andre Lee notched his fourth goal of the year to give Lowell a 2-1 lead.

The game remained that way through the final seconds of regulation, despite Penn State doubling up the River Hawks in shots, 36-18.

Tyler Wall stopped 34 shots to earn his ninth win of the year.

In the consolation game, Merrimack earned a 5-1 victory over RPI to earn third place in the tournament.

No. 16 Bowling Green 5, No. 5 Notre Dame 2
Cameron Wright’s goal at 11:09 of the second period broke a 2-2 tie and No. 16 Bowling Green scored the game’s final three goals as the Falcons completed the weekend sweep of the No. 5 Fighting Irish.

It was the first time Notre Dame has been swept since January 11-12, 2019, when Minnesota beat them twice.

Frederic Letourneau led the way offensively for the Falcons registering a goal and an assist. Eric Dop made 25 saves to earn the victory.

Quinnipiac 2, No. 10 Massachusetts 1

Quinnipiac rebounded from a home loss on Friday night to earn a weekend split with the 10th-ranked Minutemen, 2-1.

Nick Jermain’s second period goal got the Bobcats on the board. Alex Whelan extended the lead at the 6:06 mark of the third.

UMass made the game interesting in the closing minutes when John Leonard scored with an extra attacker with 2:29 left. But Quinnipiac netminder Keith Petruzzelli shut the door making 10 third period saves and 25 in the game to earn the victory.

No. 1 Minnesota State 3, No. 8 Minnesota Duluth 1
Top-ranked Minnesota State likes to be the team that delivers the punch. But on Saturday it proved it can throw quite a counterpunch.

After Justin Richards scored for host Minnesota Duluth at 7:23 of the third, Lucas Sowder’s goal at 9:04 and Jake Jaremko’s second goal of the game at 12:40 were enough to propel the Mavericks to a 3-1 victory, earning the weekend sweep of the defending national champions.

Dryden Mackay was stellar in net for Minnesota State, stopping 37 shots earning the win.

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