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USCHO GAME OF THE WEEK: Minnesota State, led by German connections, hosts North Dakota this weekend

 (photo: Minnesota State Athletics)
Minnesota State senior Parker Tuomie returned to the Mavericks for his senior season and has posted one assist in one game so far this season (photo: Minnesota State Athletics).

Don’t worry, Americans. Although Oktoberfest is over, look no further than Mankato, Minn., where the celebration of German culture on the ice lasts all season.

Minnesota State forwards Marc Michaelis and Parker Tuomie, two of the most prolific scorers in the nation last season, both decided to return to Mankato for their senior years.

“It’s funny, they get lumped in together because of where they’re from, but they’re two completely different personalities,” MSU coach Mike Hastings said. “But when put together they’ve got a chemistry that’s pretty special.”

Michaelis, Tuomie and sophomore forward Julian Napravnik form Minnesota State’s virtual German consulate — a place where hard work and high skill go hand-in-hand to help the Mavericks score a lot of goals. Tuomie, Michalis and linemate Charlie Gerard scored a combined 45 goals playing on the top line last season.

“I think we just really compliment each other well,” Tuomie said of he and his countryman’s chemistry. “I think we’re both really hard workers. We both get after the puck. And I think our creativity is at the same level. It’s just one of those things where we know where we’re going to be on the ice so it’s very comfortable.”

This weekend, the Mavericks host North Dakota for a pair of nonconference contests at Verizon Wireless Center.

What is it about Germany that helped these players get so good and putting the puck in the net? According to Michaelis, it’s about focusing less on the goals and doing whatever it takes to win the puck.

“I think the players Germany produces, the culture is a hardworking mentality. America, Finland, Russia, they all produce more raw talent so for us Germans, it’s more about working hard and outworking somebody else to be better instead of just relying on beating someone talent-wise,” Michaelis said of the German hockey style and mindset. “I think that competitiveness is in our DNA, it’s what they try to teach young German kids and it’s what we do well.”

Although hockey isn’t the No. 1 sport in Germany (not surprisingly, it’s soccer by a landslide), it’s a big deal on some parts of the country — specifically Mannheim in southwest Germany where Michaelis grew up.

“In Mannheim, the soccer team is in the third division so everything is really about hockey,” Michaelis said. “They call it ‘hockeytown’ just like Detroit. It’s probably the biggest hockey city there is in Germany.”

It’s where he and Tuomie, originally from Bremerhaven in northwest Germany, originally met, playing for the Jungadler Mannheim U18 junior team. Both players wanted to come to the United States and play college hockey.

Tuomie, whose father Trey is American and played with Hastings at St. Cloud State, came over a year earlier and had decided to attend Minnesota State before Michaelis.

“He and I had a pretty long past together playing with and against each other in Germany,” Tuomie said. “Both of us always wanted to go the college route. He came over here a year after me and fortunately enough I was able to kind of get him over here.”

Hastings said Tuomie told MSU associate head coach Darren Blue about “another German” who was playing in junior hockey at the time.

“He said, ‘If you’re looking for players, there’s another German playing for the Minnesota Magicians (of the NAHL) that’s better than all the guys I’m playing with now,’” Hastings said. “And that wasn’t a shot at the guys he was playing with, it’s just a compliment to Marc about his abilities. And Todd followed up on it, went and watching him play and it wasn’t long after that that he committed.”

Michaelis knew he wanted to play college hockey but didn’t know much beyond that.

“I really had no clue about the teams or where they were at location-wise,” he said. “I didn’t really know anything about college. But Mankato started talking to me and Parker was committed there and I knew his dad, I really respect him and what he’s done over the years, and I knew he trusted Mankato and coach Hastings, so it ended up being a no-brainer.”

In his first year in Mankato in 2016-17, Michaelis netted 14 goals and 36 points in 39 games and was voted the WCHA’s Rookie of the Year. He followed that up with 40 points the next season and 41 in 2018-19. Tuomie had eight goals and 18 points 2016-17 but doubled that tally his sophomore season with 37 points before netting 39 points as a junior.

Perhaps it’s not a coincidence that both players started producing more when they started playing on the same line more regularly.

“I think as they have stayed longer I think they’ve become more comfortable in being vocal about wanting to play on each other’s line,” Hastings said. “As a coach, it’s great having guys that want to be held accountable because, OK, you want to play together then go play well. And I think they’ve taken that seriously.”

“We’re played together for so long and we’re both pretty competitive, so it’s always a battle between us,” Michaelis added of he and Tuomie’s dynamic. “Whoever gets more ice time, more points, more goals. We’re really good friends off the ice but on the ice we try and do better than each other in just about every aspect.”

The Mavericks have a plethora of scoring depth back from the team that won the WCHA title last season. They will be looking for a historic three-peat for the MacNaughton Cup this year — something that hasn’t been done since North Dakota in the late 1990s. But winning the MacNaughton Cup isn’t the only thing the Mavericks are after. They want to make a Frozen Four run.

That is one of the main reasons why both Tuomie and Michaelis decided to return to Mankato.

“Our entire senior class had a feeling of unfinished business,” Tuomie said. “We all felt that if we come back together it’s one more opportunity for us to play with each other, get our degrees done and continue to bring this program to a spot we’ve never been before.”

Atlantic Hockey Picks: October 17-19

Last week:

Dan: 14-2
Chris: 10-6

On the season:

Dan: 16-6-1 (.717)
Chris: 12-10-1 (.543)

This Week’s Picks

Thursday, October 17
Merrimack at Holy Cross
Chris: The Crusaders knocked off Providence last week and have two more games against Hockey East competition this weekend. In this one, I’m looking for a Holy Cross win on home ice.
Dan: Leave it to me to lay a Rubin jinx on Providence last week. As for Merrimack, last week’s loss to Wisconsin was a case of a game derailing after it was going very well. They scored three goals in two minutes’ time before the wheels blew off the wagon. I don’t necessarily think the 11-goal output is a true indication. So I’m going with Merrimack to win this one.

Friday, October 18 and Saturday, October 19
Robert Morris at Army West Point
Chris: Both teams are coming off strong showings last weekend: the Colonials with a sweep of Bentley and the Black Knights defeating Union and UConn. I expect a low-scoring series that could go either way, so I’m going with a split.
Dan: Brian Riley talked about goaltending as the key to Army’s bounceback this year. Early returns are showing how good this team can be. If this were in Pittsburgh, I’d pick against them, but I’m agreeing with Chris here. It’s a split.

Niagara at Minnesota
Chris: Niagara opens its season with a tall order against the Gophers at Mariucci. I wouldn’t be surprised with a split, but my gut tells me it’ll be a Minnesota sweep.
Dan: Niagara is my preseason pick to win the league, so I think they can hang with Minnesota. But it’s also opening weekend at Mariucci after a split against Colorado College that should’ve been a sweep. Minnesota sweeps.

Arizona State at Air Force
Chris:The Falcons gave Notre Dame all that it could handle last weekend, and look to build off that in its first home series. I’m picking a split.
Dan: Arizona State is in for a rude awakening when it goes up to the altitude. The dry, desert air is nothing like playing at 7,000 feet, and after the way Air Force played on the road last weekend, I’m going to pick a daring and absolutely not crazy pick here. Air Force sweeps.

Friday, October 18
American International at Sacred Heart
Chris: This is the first of four meetings between the teams this season. Both are picked to finish at or near the top of the standings, and they kick off conference play against each other. I’m picking the road team here. AIC wins.
Dan: For some weird reason, I think AIC played Sacred Heart four times last year for the first time since the new schedule went into effect. Don’t quote me on that though. Because of geographic proximity, it’s easier to slot these teams into one-off games since both play in AHL buildings. In the one-offs last year, AIC won each. I’m going with AIC based on that.

New Hampshire at Bentley
Chris: Bentley ran into a hot goaltender last weekend, handily outshooting Robert Morris but coming away empty. The Falcons always play Hockey East teams tough, but I think UNH pulls this one out.
Dan: There is no such thing as a Hockey East team that should feel comfortable playing Bentley, and I think the Falcons make me feel like an absolute nugget for missing this game on Friday. Shame on one of my best friends for getting married during hockey season (even though I got married in the middle of November). Bentley wins.

Saturday, October 19
Holy Cross at Northeastern
Chris: In its third straight game against Hockey East competition, I’m picking the Crusaders to drop this one against a No. 15 Northeastern team that knocked off UMass last weekend. Northeastern wins.
Dan: Northeastern is one of those teams that is turning into a machine. There’s a system that gets them to anywhere between 18-25 wins because they can handle games like this one. Of course I said the same thing about Providence. Northeastern wins.

Canisius at Rensselaer
Chris: RPI coach Dave Smith coaches against his old team and former assistant Trevor Large. RPI has show signs of improvement so far this season, and I like them to pull this one out on home ice. RPI wins.
Dan: RPI had a really good stretch at the end of last year where it picked off wins against Colgate and Princeton and tied Union, Cornell and Dartmouth. Coming off a win over UConn, I think Friday’s rematch at HFH against the Huskies will dictate a lot about this game. RPI wins.

Merrimack at Rochester Institute of Technology
Chris: RIT routinely sells more than 10,000 tickets to its annual Brick City Festival game, played at the Blue Cross Arena in downtown Rochester. I think the large crowd will spur the Tigers on to a win.
Dan: There’s not enough orange in the world to describe how Blue Cross Arena will feel on Saturday night. RIT wins.

No. 16 North Dakota at No. 2 Minnesota State preview with Fighting Hawks coach Brad Berry: Game of the Week Podcast Season 2 Episode 3

Head Coach: Brad Berry 24 March 17 University of North Dakota and Boston University meet in the NCAA West Region at Scheels Arena Fargo, ND (Bradley K. Olson)
Brad Berry’s Fighting Hawks started a four-year run of national championships in the NCHC. North Dakota looks to return to the NCAA tournament in 2020 (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

Fresh off a weekend sweep at home in the middle of a rare October blizzard, North Dakota coach Brad Berry is prepping his No. 16 Fighting Hawks for a weekend at No. 2 Minnesota State. Berry joins hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger for a preview. We also look at Alaska’s pair at No. 9 Penn State, No. 3 Minnesota Duluth at No. 17 Wisconsin, and No. 6 Boston College at No. 1 Denver among other games.

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

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

WCHA picks, Oct. 17-19

Brandon last week: 9-6-2
Jack last week: 9-6-2
Brandon’s record-to-date: 9-6-2
Jack’s record-to-date: 9-6-2

Thursday-Friday, Oct. 17-18

Alaska at Penn State
Who are these Nanooks and what did they do with the downtrodden punching bags the WCHA is used to seeing each year? Winning a game in Houghton is impressive. Winning two (2!) games in Houghton is unbelievable. Fairbanks gets a solid test when it visits Penn State this weekend. If it can steal another road win, we’d be willing to crown the Nanooks as a real threat in the league.
Brandon: Penn State sweeps Fairbanks, 3-1 and 4-2
Jack: PSU 5-1 on Friday; Alaska 3-2 on Saturday


Friday-Saturday, Oct. 18-19

Ferris State at Miami
The Bulldogs did an awesome job of closing out a game against Colgate last week that they would have more than likely lost a season ago. Coach Bob Daniels praised the upperclassmen for the win. Now it’s time to see if they can do it again against a rebuilding RedHawks squad with first-year coach Chris Bergeron, a really familiar face around the WCHA.
Brandon: Ferris sweeps Miami, 2-1 and 3-2
Jack: Miami sweeps, 3-1 and 4-2

Western Michigan at/vs. Bowling Green

It was disappointing to see how poorly the Falcons looked at times during the IceBreaker tournament last weekend, especially since they played the host in Toledo. What’s more, they lost to the Broncos 5-2 on Saturday. We expect them to look improved in Week 3.
Brandon: BG wins Friday, 4-2; WMU wins Saturday, 5-3
Jack: WMU 4-2 on Saturday; BG 5-2 on Sunday

Northern Michigan at Boston University
The Terriers will be coming off a 13-day layoff from the time they beat Union 7-3 on Oct. 5 to when the first puck drops against the Wildcats. That could be either great or bad for NMU, which split with Michigan  State last week. A rusty BU squad could be a boon for the Wildcats, who are looking steal a road win or two early on this season.
Brandon: NMU wins Friday, 2-1; BU wins Saturday, 5-0
Jack: BU sweeps 4-2 and 4-3


Lake Superior State at Michigan
After a pair of tough losses against Denver, the Lakers are in need of a statement win. Nothing says statement win quite like winning at Yost Ice Arena in Ann Arbor. Yes, LSSU lost a few talented bodies from last year’s squad, but coach Damon Whitten has the program on the upswing. This series is crucial in keeping LSSU on the rise.
Brandon: LSSU wins Friday 4-3; Michigan wins Saturday, 3-0
Jack: LSSU on Friday; UM 3-2 on Saturday

North Dakota at Minnesota State
Slow our beating hearts, but we get THIS kind of matchup in Week 3?! Mankato is a team trying to win a national title, and North Dakota is still a powerhouse, so it’ll be interesting to see who walks away with a win or two in this series. It could say a lot about how the rest of the season (and the NCAA tournament) will play out.
Brandon: Mankato sweeps, 3-0 and 3-2
Jack: MSU sweeps, 5-3 and 4-3

Pickin’ the Big Ten: Oct. 17-19

 

Hi y’all, happy Thursday.

Week one saw both of us pick a split the wrong way, so we’re already in mid-season form in that regard. Penn State and Alaska get the party started for this weekend tonight, so you get the picks a day early. First, let’s take a quick look back at last week.

Last week

Drew: 8-4-2 (.643)
Paula: 8-4-2 (.643)

This season

Drew: 8-4-2 (.643)
Paula: 8-4-2 (.643)

Still tied after the first week.

This week

Five Big Ten teams are in official action this weekend. Notre Dame takes the weekend off and Michigan State plays the US Under-18 Team, which we don’t care about for pickin’ purposes. All times are local.

Alaska at No. 9 Penn State
Thursday and Friday at 7:00 p.m.

Penn State coming into this series undefeated was decently-predictable. The Nittany Lions put a baker’s-dozen worth of goals on the board in their opening series against Sacred Heart, winning 8-2 and 5-4. The Nanooks, on the other hand, surprised everyone by sweeping Michigan Tech on the road last weekend. Even with that momentum, we all know that games at Pegula Ice Arena are a tall order for the opposition.

Drew: Penn State 8-2, 4-3
Paula: Penn State 5-2, 5-2

Niagara at Minnesota
Friday and Saturday at 7:00 p.m.

After two close games and a split at Colorado College Minnesota returns to Mariucci to open its home slate this weekend. The Gophers are 3-0-0 all-time against Niagara, for what that is worth. This is a good opportunity for a young Minnesota team to build on what worked last weekend. The Purple Eagles have yet to play a non-exhibition game this season.

Drew: Minnesota 4-2, 3-1
Paula: Minnesota 3-2, 3-1

No. 3 Minnesota Duluth at No. 17 Wisconsin
Friday and Saturday at 7:00 p.m.

With the defending champions coming to town for a top-20 battle, it’s nice to see big games with a lot of hype being played at the Kohl Center again. Wisconsin dropped its opener at Boston College 5-3 and rebounded by downing Merrimack 11-5. Granted there’s only one weekend as a sample-size, but it looks like the Badgers’ offense is going to be fun to watch and the defense could be the Achilles heel. The Bulldogs split their series with UMass-Lowell at home last weekend, dropping Friday’s game 3-2 and winning 2-1 on Saturday

Drew: Minnesota Duluth 4-3, 5-3
Paula: Minnesota Duluth 4-3, Wisconsin 4-2

Omaha at No. 12 Ohio State
Friday at 7:00 p.m., Saturday at 5:00 p.m.

A shootout “victory” against Western Michigan and a 3-1 win over RIT gave the Buckeyes the Ice Breaker title last weekend in Toledo. Now Ohio State returns home to entertain the Mavericks. The Buckeyes won last weekend like they did last season, good defense and timely scoring. Omaha got off the mark last weekend by routing Alabama Huntsville at home, winning 6-1 on Friday and 5-0 on Saturday.

Drew: Ohio State 4-2, 3-1
Paula: Omaha 4-2, Ohio State 3-2

Lake Superior at Michigan
Friday and Saturday at 7:37 p.m.

The Wolverines started the season with a tie and loss against Clarkson. This weekend Michigan welcomes in-state rival Lake Superior State to Yost. The Lakers started their season off by sweeping Merrimack at home and were swept by Denver last weekend. This will be their first road test of the year.

Drew: Lake Superior State 4-2, Michigan 3-2
Paula: Lake Superior State 3-2, 3-2

Twitter

Follow both Drew (@drewclaussen) and me (@paulacweston) on Twitter. I’m cheating on the B1G and checking out North Dakota at Minnesota State as a fan on Saturday.

Enjoy the games!

Graduate transfer Pantano giving Northeastern much-needed boost in net to start ’19-20 season

Craig Pantano (Jim Pierce/photo: Jim Pierce)
Craig Pantano has stepped in to give Northeastern some valuable experience this season between the pipes (photo: Jim Pierce).

Last February, Northeastern coach Jim Madigan was dealt news that was more than a cause for concern, as it impacted the short-term future of his program.

Though maybe not surprising, it was unwelcome to find out that standout goaltender Cayden Primeau would not be returning in 2019-20 for his junior season as instead, he would sign a professional contract.

The reality was, Madigan didn’t have any goaltender with experience to take Primeau’s place, despite having a team returning up front this season that had plenty of talent and ability.

Could goaltending, something that has been so strong during Madigan’s tenure, suddenly become this team’s Achilles heel?

Leave it to what has no become pretty famous in college athletics, the transfer portal, to save the day.

Craig Pantano, who was recruited at Merrimack by Mark Dennehy but now was playing under Dennehy’s successor Scott Borek, decided to test the transfer waters. Pantano had already earned his degree with one full season of eligibility remaining and could transfer as a graduate student anywhere in Division I without having to sit out a season like a typical college transfer.

“As we were starting to look [for a replacement for Primeau], we couldn’t get goaltending that we thought was going to give us an opportunity,” said Madigan.

“In early March, we found out Craig was going to be available. The fact that we were able to attract a goaltender who has won in this league, who has been into every building and, for the most part, has won, has won a playoff series, that was important for us.”

Madigan said he knew this year’s team was going to be somewhat young, having also lost standout defenseman Jeremy Davies. But he also felt that there were enough pieces in place to have some sort of continuity of success for a team that has made two straight NCAA tournaments, won back-to-back Beanpot tournaments and last year took home the Hockey East tournament title for the second time in four years.

“We knew we’d have some freshmen in the lineup, freshman defensemen, to have someone with experience [in goal] was important,” said Madigan. “He’s been good. He made the saves he needs to make.

“We don’t need him to be Cayden Primeau, we need him to be Craig Pantano.”

Thus far, Craig Pantano is plenty good. After a 3-1 upset of No. 4 Massachusetts in Northeastern’s Hockey East opener on Tuesday, the Huskies are now 3-0-0 on the young season. Pantano has been in net for all three games and has allowed just a single goal in each of his three starts.

That puts the Huskies in a solid position early. Particularly given the fact that the offense hasn’t exactly been gangbusters in its production – Northeastern has scored two goals in each game, excluding an empty-net goal on Tuesday – solidifying the backend has been paramount.

If Pantano continues to be successful for this Huskies team, he will join what is now a line of goaltenders to take on an elevated status of success while wearing the black and red for Northeastern.

Obviously, Primeau was one of the best as the predecessor. But prior to him, Ryan Ruck won the school’s first Hockey East title in 18 years back in 2016. Prior to him was Clay Witt, who began his career under coach Greg Cronin but emerged as a stalwart, posting a 17-12-3 mark in 2013-14, giving more than a glimmer of hope in Madigan’s early years that the Huskies could be moving in the right direction.

And while Madigan has been one constant through this era of goaltending success, so too has been goaltending coach Ed Walsh.

Walsh, who began his collegiate career at UMass Lowell helping turn Dwayne Roloson into an All-American in 1994 prior to Roloson’s 20-year professional career, has been successfully helped build the career of numerous student athletes at Lowell, Dartmouth and now Northeastern.

“He’s a calming influence,” Madigan said of the veteran goaltending coach. “He understands the position from a mental, philosophical perspective and the technical standpoint.

“He doesn’t try to change [a goaltender’s] style. He works with it. He sees where the areas of strengths are, where the areas of improvement are needed. He goes and attacks it with them.

Madigan likes Walsh’s approach from a geometric aspect, complimenting his ability to teach goaltenders angles and positioning. When you watch an Ed Walsh product, being positionally sound is typically one of the characteristics.

“He’s been really good at refining [goaltender’s] games,” Madigan said. “All of these goaltenders have their own goaltending coaches. Some have two of them. Eddie has been able to work with the goaltenders and knowing and communicating through the goalie coaches what the strengths and weaknesses are coming in, and he’s been able to work with them to make them better.”

Upset of the Week

There won’t be a lot of opportunities for a Hockey East team to go into the No. 1 team in the nation’s barn and take two points away.

For UMass Lowell, that was the situation this weekend as an opportunistic second period where the River Hawks scored three goals off Minnesota Duluth mistakes combined with a stellar goaltending performance by Tyler Wall led to the upset of the top-ranked Bulldogs.

In reality, it could have been two victories over the nation’s top team for Lowell. On Saturday, the River Hawks and Bulldogs were tied at 1 early in the third before host Minnesota Duluth scored the game-winning goal. In honesty, Minnesota Duluth was the better team on Saturday and earned the win, but it was a positive sign for the River Hawks to earn the weekend split and improve to 3-1-0 on the season heading into their Homecoming Weekend series with Colgate.

Lowell’s coach Norm Bazin called the weekend at test prior to Friday’s game. After the Saturday loss, he was comfortable surmising his team’s results.

“We stuck in there with a very good team and that’s a positive for a young club,” said Bazin. “That said, next weekend will be a different challenge from a different team.”

An area with the potential for improvement for Lowell is the power play, which went 0 for 9 at Duluth and is now 1 for 17 (5.9%) through four games.

“I thought we did better on the power play [on Saturday],” said Bazin. “Overall I liked the movement, I liked the chances, we just didn’t score.”

Replay Redux

If anyone had a chance to watch the UMass-Northeastern game on Tuesday night, the most prominent game of the opening weeks to be shown on the league’s broadcast partner, you know that highly thought of NESN color analyst Billy Jaffe was none too happy about constant interruptions in the game’s third period for stoppages related to video review.

The first came at the 6:48 mark of the third period when UMass scored a goal to cut the lead to 2-1. Referees Terrence Murphy and Cameron Lynch went it to review what most believe was a potential major penalty at the other end of the ice, possibly as much as a half minute before the goal.

Shortly thereafter, there was another review. The subject of which wasn’t obvious as it came after a scrum in front of the Northeastern net.

A third review was used late in the game, with a little more than three minutes left on a play that appeared to be a clear spear by Northeastern’s Brendan van Riemsdyk.

Of those three, the only penalty went to van Riemsdyk, someone the referees seemed prepared to already call on the ice. The other two incidents, despite taking a combined total of nearly 12 minutes to review, didn’t result in fouls.

Why do I bring this up? Mostly because, as Jaffe emphatically said on the broadcast, I agree that there are significant issues with video review in college hockey right now.

“We can’t quite tell what they’re looking for,” said NESN’s Tom Caron about the review following the UMass goal, the first of the three reviews.

“This is the issue I have with college hockey. There’s should be a [public address] announcement exactly what they’re looking for,” responded Jaffe. “We’re not getting word from the penalty box what they’re looking for.”

Jaffe guessed maybe the play was, at one point offside. It wasn’t for nearly three minutes that he figured out that maybe there was head contact, but even as a fan at home, that was disputable as it seemed that maybe the officials were reviewing a potential knee-on-knee hit nearly a minute before the goal.

The reality is that instant replay in its current state is possibly being overused.

Yes, this is a fast game and yes, calls will be missed, even with four sets of eyes from the respective officials.

But as replay has been expanded, it was mostly believed that reviewing a potential penalty that all officials missed typically would be triggered by an injury. In both cases on Tuesday, there wasn’t a player down on the ice that should have alerted the reviews.

I’m all for getting the call right, but if reviews take too long, the game itself become compromised. On Tuesday, the third period took an elapsed time of 41 minutes, 45 seconds to play. More importantly, in an excellent early-season college hockey game, the flow was lost and that was apparent on the ice.

Editor’s note: After submission, the following statement was released by Hockey East commissioner Joe Bertagna:

Women’s DI: Confident, comfortable senior class looks to leave New Hampshire with a legacy of success

 (Gregory Greene)
Hillary Witt is in her sixth season as the New Hampshire Women’s Hockey head coach. (Photo: UNH Communications/Gregory Greene)

The New Hampshire women’s hockey team started last season 1-9-2. It was a brutally tough stretch where Coach Hillary Witt said her team was playing pretty well, but could not seem to find the back of the net. Despite the rough and demoralizing start, the team did not let it tank their season.

The Wildcats went 7-0-2 over their next nine games, which felt a bit like righting the ship, before losing three more in a row. They responded with a five-game win streak, but ended the season on a seven game winless streak. The team showed fight, but ultimately it was a disappointing season that ended 13-7-6. It was mentally exhausting, but Witt knows her team is stronger this season for having battled through the last one.

There are eight seniors on the squad this year and they are the driving force of this UNH team that has started the year 3-1-1, including a 4-2 win over the No. 10 Boston University last week.

“We have great leadership. It starts there. Our senior class has been nothing but amazing this year. What they’ve (shown) this year is the confidence to be successful,” said Witt.

Wins like Saturday’s upset over Boston University, combined with a recent history of being able to beat or tie some of the top teams in Hockey East (oftentimes when they’re nationally ranked) are the things Witt and her staff point to during tough stretches.

“We want to take it one day at a day. Sometimes you look at the entire season as a whole, and you get ahead of yourself or you dwell too much on what’s already happened. For us, it’s just putting one foot in front of the other and taking one game at a time – being successful in small doses and building on that every single time we have a chance to play,” Witt said. “You can’t worry about what happened in the past because things can change in a second. You just have to worry about the task at hand. We just have to be able to let it go and be back, ready to go the next day.”

Focusing on the present and working day-by-day is key to Witt’s coaching philosophy, but it can be easier said than done for the players. But when the team is coming from behind and earning points in games against ranked opponents, it’s not difficult to get the players to buy in and understand the why and how of what makes Witt’s philosophy work.

The team plays with confidence and has chemistry, two things that can’t be taught. Witt said the cumulative four years of hard work of the large senior class puts them in a position to be not just successful, but confident in their skills. Four years of day-in and day-out work is paying out for the team has a whole, with the senior class is leading the team on the ice, using their years of acquired talent, but also mentoring the younger classes to be the same way.

Witt is in her sixth year at the helm in Durham, carrying the program through what she termed a major rebuild. Those moments of starting over and instilling culture have passed. She has the players she wants and the staff she wants and now it’s time for the hard work of the past few years to pay off. Now, Witt said, it’s time to put together continued success.

“I believe that everybody’s here to be here to be part of something bigger than themselves. We want everyone to want to be able to contribute in every way. In order to do that, you’ve got to feel confident and comfortable to go out there and perform. Our leadership has created a culture in our locker room to help younger players thrive. They’ve done a great job and our younger players feel comfortable and confident on the ice because of it.”

Robert Morris hires McLaughlin-Bittle to volunteer coaching role with Colonials men’s team

Brianne McLaughlin-Bittle garduated from RMU in 2009 and also played for Team USA in several international tournaments (photo: USA Hockey).

Former Robert Morris women’s goaltender and two-time Olympic medalist Brianne McLaughlin-Bittle has joined the men’s hockey staff as a volunteer coach.

McLaughlin-Bittle, who has previously served in assistant roles on the RMU women’s team for several seasons, will coach the Colonials goaltenders for the duration of the 2019-20 season.

“Her track record as a player is off the charts, and she’s taken strides that speak very highly of what she’s doing as a goalie coach,” said RMU men’s coach Derek Schooley in a statement. “It was a very easy decision and we’re extremely excited to have her. It was a natural fit.”

A native of Cleveland, the 32-year-old McLaughlin-Bittle runs her own goalie school and camp out of the RMU Island Sports Center. She graduated from RMU in 2009.

“It’s taking all these pieces that I’ve picked up from different programs and bringing them together and seeing what we can come up with here,” McLaughlin-Bittle said. “I don’t teach the boys or the girls any differently. It’s about stopping the puck.”

McLaughlin-Bittle is believed to be the first female assistant coach in the history of NCAA men’s hockey, Division I or otherwise. Schooley said the process in bringing her aboard was organic, as former associate head coach Kody Van Rentergem was unable to continue on as a volunteer goalie coach due to other work duties.

“I don’t care if the person is male or female, I wanted the most qualified person,” Schooley said. “Can’t say enough about her as a player, but her accomplishments as a coach are on the rise.”

Hockey East picks – Oct. 17-19

In the first full week of making Hockey East picks, Dave simply kicked my butt. Neither of us picked the upsets (though I had a split in the UMass Lowell/Minnesota Duluth series – unfortunately I picked the reverse split losing both). We’ve picked just 22 games and I’m already four games back. Not sure when, if ever, those will get made up.

Dave last week: 10-5-1
Jim last week: 7-8-1
Dave record-to-date: 16-5-1
Jim record-to-date: 12-9-1

Thursday, October 17

Merrimack at Holy Cross
The Warriors have struggled out of the gate, and though goal scoring showed up last Saturday, scoring five goals against Wisconsin, Merrimack allowed 11. At the same time, Holy Cross has started strong including an upset of then-No. 6 Providence in overtime.

Dave: Holy Cross 5, Merrimack 4
Jim: Holy Cross 4, Merrimack 2

Friday, October 18

Connecticut at Rensselaer
Last Saturday, RPI earned a 5-3 win in the first-game of a home-and-home with UConn (albeit separated by six days). UConn hasn’t looked good out of the gate and RPI has performed maybe a little better than some expected. Is this the game where RPI might falter and UConn finally gets in the win column?

Dave: RPI 3, UConn 2
Jim: UConn 4, RPI 3

New Hampshire at Bentley
The Wildcats earned a road win and tie against Miami last weekend, a solid start for a team with high expectations. Bentley on the other hand lost two league games out of the gate against Robert Morris. Home ice might be just what Bentley needs, though UNH showed last weekend the road doesn’t bother them.

Dave: UNH 3, Bentley 2
Jim: UNH 4, Bentley 1

Saturday, October 19

Holy Cross at Northeastern
These are two teams that have started the year strong. Northeastern twice won at Union, 2-1, and then beat Massachusetts on Tuesday, 3-1. Playing three games in five days is tough for an NHL team, forget about a college squad. So coming away 3-0-0 and allowing just a goal a game should be a very positive statement for the Huskies.

Dave: Northeastern 4, Holy Cross 2
Jim: Northeastern 3, Holy Cross 1

Merrimack at RIT
This is RIT’s annual Homecoming game and isn’t played on campus at its usual home rink, rather downtown at what is expected to be a sold-out Bleu Cross Arena. The 10,000-plus screaming fans should make this a great atmosphere. Merrimack could win this one but would need to be considerably better than they’ve shown to date.

Dave: RIT 4, Merrimack 2
Jim: RIT 5, Merrimack 2

Weekend series: Friday/Saturday, October 18-19

Providence/Vermont at St. Lawrence/Clarkson
The Friars and Catamounts will be travel partners for a visit to the always difficult trip the North Country. The trip is an easy one for Vermont, though a hike for Providence. Clarkson started strong last weekend taking a win and tie against Michigan. St. Lawrence earned a weekend split with Mercyhurst. These are certainly winnable games for Hockey East in the non-league battle but will certainly be tough tests.

Friday
Dave: Providence 6, St. Lawrence 2
Jim: Providence 4, St. Lawrence 3
Dave: Clarkson 3, Vermont 2
Jim: Vermont 3, Clarkson 2

Saturday
Dave: Providence 4, Clarkson 2
Jim: Clarkson 3, Providence 2
Dave: Vermont 3, St. Lawrence 2
Jim: Vermont 2, St. Lawrence 1

Colgate at UMass Lowell
Yet another Homecoming, for the River Hawks this one last two nights. They are coming off an impressive weekend split at Minnesota Duluth and returning home where they are already 2-0-0 on the season. They’re facing a Colgate team that has struggled out of the gate going 0-3-0 and scoring just two goals in three games.

Dave: UMass Lowell 6, Colgate 2; UMass Lowell 5, Colgate 1
Jim: UMass Lowell 4, Colgate 1; UMass Lowell 2, Colgate 1

Northern Michigan at Boston University
The Terriers have played just a single game but that was a seven-goal offensive explosion against Union two weekends ago. Northern Michigan split last weekend with Michigan State. What that tells us? Well, its difficult to be sure. But we know that Boston University has high expectations this year and might have the offensive firepower up and down the lineup to back those expectations up.

Dave: BU 4, Northern Michigan 3; BU 3, Northern Michigan 2
Jim: BU 5, Northern Michigan 2; BU 4, Northern Michigan 3

Boston College at Denver
Last weekend was an early statement weekend for the Eagles. A team that a one point hadn’t won a non-league game in more than two years knocked off Wisconsin and Colgate to start the season. At the same time, Denver has been red hot on an extended road trip sweeping Alaska before traveling to Michigan for a few off days, then earning two wins at Lake Superior. Which of these teams – if not both – will come away from this weekend with a blemish on their schedule?

Dave: Denver 4, BC 3; Denver 3, BC 2
Jim: BC 4, Denver 2; Denver 3, BC 1

Maine at Quinnipiac
The Black Bears responded well to a 7-0 opening game loss with a two-game sweep of Alaska-Anchorage. Goal scoring wasn’t as much of a problem. But there could be a problem lying ahead. Two games at Quinnipiac, a tough place to play and a team that last weekend swept a very good AIC team. Is this a place we might see a road upset?

Dave: Quinnipiac 5, Maine 2; Quinnipiac 4, Maine 1
Jim: Quinnipiac 4, Maine 0; Quinnipiac 3, Maine 1

Union at Massachusetts
Massachusetts looks to rebound from a midweek 3-1 loss at Northeastern, a game in which the UMass power play struggled. But they’re facing a Union team which, itself, has struggled in the opening weekends. The Union defense was much improved last weekend, allowing just two goals a game to Northeastern. But the Dutchmen mustered just a single goal each night.

Dave: UMass 5, Union 1; UMass 5, Union 2
Jim: UMass 4, Union 2; UMass 2, Union 1

A new season, but a familiar issue already plaguing Michigan: goal scoring

Michigan senior Nick Pastujov has scored one of the Wolverines’ two goals this season (photo: Michigan Athletics).

In a weekend that saw Wisconsin score 11 goals in a single game against Merrimack, Penn State net 13 in a sweep of Sacred Heart and Notre Dame score 10 in two wins over Air Force, Michigan’s two-goal performance in a tie and loss to visiting Clarkson stands in stark contrast, even for an opening weekend of play.

And maybe especially because it’s Michigan.

“You’ve got to work hard to get to the net,” said coach Mel Pearson, noting that Clarkson has a big, experienced defensive core, but adding, “You have to want to get to that hard ice, as we call it. It’s called ‘hard ice,’ because a lot of people just don’t want to go there. You’re going to get whacked and hacked and shoved and you’ve got to fight and battle to get in there. We’ll work on that in practice.”

It’s difficult to imagine a Michigan team that isn’t known for its scoring. Two seasons ago, the Wolverines powered their way to a Frozen Four appearance by scoring an average of 3.40 goals per game, sixth-best in the nation, in spite of giving up 3.02 goals per game on average (35th).

One of the more astonishing things about Michigan’s offensive performance in 2017-18 is that the Wolverines had just the 36th-best power play in the nation (18.0), with just two players on the team netting four or more power-play goals that year. Senior Tony Calderone was a man-advantage specialist that season with seven.

In 2018-19, the Wolverines continued to struggle on the power play, finishing with a 43rd-best power play (15.7). Last season, too, Michigan struggled with overall offense, losing about a third of a goal per game on average, something that was enough to drop them to 17th overall.

Against Clarkson last weekend, Michigan’s power play went 1 for 12, with senior Nick Pastujov finally breaking through early in the third period of the 3-1 loss.

“I think we were better at moving it,” said Pastujov. “Both units moved it a bunch more. We were getting more chances to the net. I think over time, when we get more comfortable with ourselves, you’re going to see a lot more goals.”

As for weekend’s overall offensive frustrations, Pastujov said that Clarkson was “older and a little more experienced.”

“They won more of those 50-50 battles where maybe we are just kind of expecting to win and they dig their noses in a little more,” said Pastujov. “If you look goals, that’s what it came down to, little things that paid off in a big way for them.

“I think over time, the guys working are going to get used to that and get used to the pace of play that we need to play at to win these games. I’m not worried about it. Sometimes, it’s not bad to get kind of punched in the nose early and then learn from that going on.”

The Wolverines aren’t dressing more freshmen than other Big Ten teams, but Michigan’s rookies are expected to make a big impact on a team that has struggled to replace offense in recent years. Pearson said he was pleased with the play of forward Eric Ciccolini and would have liked to have had forward Cam York, out with a lower body injury, in Saturday’s lineup. York’s status is day-to-day.

“We missed him, obviously,” said Pearson. “He played 27 minutes last night for us. Jake Gingell came in and I thought did a nice job but Cam York’s Cam York. He’s a special player and in a tight game where one goal makes a huge difference, you miss a player like that.”

Pearson said that he liked how hard the power-play units worked, even if they didn’t get the desired results. “A lot of good opportunities and that on the power play and that’s something that will have to continue. That’s one of the areas that we need to get better at. I think it’s going to be a positive going forward.”

Pastujov is even more optimistic than that. “I think we’re going to get a lot of chances where we have a lot of talent up front and in the D-zone, so I think we’re going to be drawing a lot more penalties, but we definitely power play a lot, so I think we can capitalize on a lot more on those chances. We’re going to get a lot more bounces and swing the game a bit more.”

The next two weekend see the Wolverines looking to improve its power play against old CCHA rivals. First up is a home series against Lake Superior State, a team that has killed 14 of 15 opponent power-play chances. The weekend of Oct. 25-26, Michigan plays a home-and-home series against Western Michigan, whose penalty kill has also allowed just one goal (8 for 9).

A new kid in net in South Bend

In South Bend, there was a new face in the Notre Dame net as the Fighting Irish swept Air Force to open the season. Freshman Ryan Bischel earned his first two collegiate wins, filling in for senior Cale Morris, the 2018 Mike Richter Award winner, who was out with an upper-body injury.

“I was pleased with his performance, the first time he’s played back-to-back in college hockey,” said coach Jeff Jackson after Sunday’s 6-1 win.

In the series, Bischel posted a 2.00 GAA and .932 save percentage, particularly impressive given the way the Falcons opened Friday’s game with a 2-0 lead, the first goal the result in part of fluky board action that caught the freshman goalie out of position.

Bischel’s play may complicate things for junior goaltender Dylan St. Cyr, who was expected to back up Morris this season but may redshirt instead.

“I expected that [Bischel] would get a game or two in the first month,” said Jackson. “We planned all along way back since we knew Cale was coming back [for his senior season], after some serious conversations with St. Cyr. Dylan’s a good goaltender, you know, and he certainly could have been playing these games, but he wanted to maintain his redshirt so that he has two full years to play, potentially, but he’s going to have some competition by the looks of it.”

In three years with the USHL’s Fargo Force, Bischel had a .909 career save percentage in 100 games.

A whole new game

After losing to Boston College 5-3 Friday night, Wisconsin rebounded with an 11-5 win over Merrimack. It was the first time since 1992 that the Badgers had scored 11 goals in a game.

“The players we have I think are elite,” said Wisconsin coach Tony Granato.

Are they ever.

Freshman forward Cole Caufield, chosen No. 15 overall by the Montreal Canadiens in the 2019 NHL Draft, had 29 goals in 28 games for the U.S. National Under-18 Team last season and scored 126 goals from 2017 to 2019 with the program. His classmate, Alex Turcotte, is a mere mortal by comparison, netting 45 with the USNTDP alongside Caufield. Last weekend, Caufield scored four goals and Turcotte two.

“We’re an exciting team,” said Granato. “We’ve got a lot of offensively talented players that can make plays and finish plays. Cole’s off to a great start. Turcotte’s off to a great start, even [freshman Owen] Lindmark’s off to a great start offensively. [Freshman Dylan] Holloway’s got a chance to get great numbers.”

Granato said that the team learned from its loss to Boston College Friday. That short learning curve can lead to a big season for a team with perhaps the best rookie class in the country.

“BC played better than us,” said Granato, “but I think that in a month or two, we should be able to play that same way and maybe have more skill, so the potential where we can go is exciting.”

North Dakota starts off with payback, opens ’19-20 season sweeping Canisius

Jordan Kawaguchi (North Dakota-29) 2019 January 12 University of North Dakota hosts Colorado College in a NCHC matchup at the Ralph Engelstad Arena in Grand Forks, ND (Bradley K. Olson)
Jordan Kawaguchi has recorded three assists in North Dakota’s first two games this season (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

Normally, a season-opening series against an Atlantic Hockey squad would have little of note for perennial college hockey power North Dakota.

That, however, was before the Fighting Hawks failed to qualify for the NCAA tournament the last two years. On top of that, last weekend’s series was against Canisius, which swept North Dakota last January in Buffalo, N.Y., and crushed North Dakota’s PairWise position in the process.

For coach Brad Berry, the weekend likely couldn’t have gone any better.

Last year, North Dakota often struggled to score, and in the series against Canisius in January the Hawks only scored once in each game. Chalk it up the friendly confines of Ralph Engelstad Arena, or a strong desire for vengeance, or not taking a team lightly, or whatever you’d like, but North Dakota opened with a sweep, winning 5-0 and 8-1.

“You know what? I thought we had a pretty good first weekend against Canisius,” said Berry. “One of the things that jumped out at me was team speed. I thought our group, it seems like have a lot more pace in our game than last year. I thought our execution was pretty good for the most part. I think the one thing too is the depth of our team as far as the scoring side of it. On Saturday night, we won 8-1 and there were eight different scorers in our lineup. I think it was spread all around the four lines and the D.”

Asked whether his team might have painted a bigger target on this series because of the results last January, Berry doesn’t shrink from answering some of that might have been present.

“Yeah, a little bit. I think the biggest part is we know that our league is a 24-game league, and then there’s 10 nonconference games. We have to treat the nonconference games just like our league games. They’re equally as important in the PairWise. There was a sense of urgency of getting out early out of the gate, and again, we have another big weekend in front of us here with Mankato this weekend and then Bemidji the following weekend. So, it’s one of those things where the early part of the season is nonconference, but we have to treat it like a conference matchup with the fact that it means a lot to PairWise.”

Of the 13 goals on the weekend, there were three players who scored twice: Dixon Bowen, Cole Smith, and Gabe Bast. UND also got contributions from former Colorado College standout Westin Michaud, who graduated from CC but had a year of eligibility left, and rookies Harrison Blaisdell (1-2-3) and Shane Pinto (1-1-2).

Said Berry: “I think there was execution not only from our incoming freshmen, but some of the guys that have gotten a year under their belt, guys like Jacob Bernard-Docker and Jordan Kawaguchi and some of our guys that are becoming upperclassmen and are a year older here. It’s a different year. Along with that, guys have an opportunity and are trying to get a bigger role on our team.”

Additionally, of the 13 goals only one was scored on special teams. Berry likes the five-on-five execution early, and thinks the weekend also provides a place to build from on special teams.

“The majority of the game hopefully you play five-on-five, and that’s where it’s so tough to score,” said Berry. “On a five-on-five situation, it’s nice to be active early and have some success on it early. Now, in saying that, it gets exponentially harder each and every weekend leading up to NCHC conference play. We have to keep getting better at that, we’ve got to keep working on things on that side of it, but I thought it was good.

“On the specialty teams side, I thought our penalty kill was good. We didn’t allow any power-play goals against us and did a good job of defending it. On the power play, we only scored one goal off it through the whole weekend, but I felt we had some really good looks. I think our shot count was up there in the double digits both nights. I think we’re going in the right direction with our power play with the pace and execution side of it, and I know we’ll be able to finish a few more plays here later on in the year.”

Just like last season, North Dakota’s second series is against Minnesota State, which is currently ranked second in the USCHO.com poll. This series is in Mankato and will present a staunch challenge. Berry thinks his team can take some lessons from last year where they split in Grand Forks.

“First of all, Mankato is a highly ranked team this year again. They retained a lot of their players from last year, and they play a fast-paced, heavy game, and we’re going into their building. It’s one of those same things as last year. We know what they’re all about as far as their team, how they play, and there are not going to be any surprises that way. For us, it’s about the way we have to play. I thought last year when they came into our building, they got a jump on us and dictated play a little bit, and then we got better as that game went on. Then leading into Saturday, I thought we did a pretty good job of responding and playing the way that we needed to win that game.

“It was a little bit of a learning lesson for us against an older team. They’re an older team; I believe they have a lot of older players in their lineup. We’ve got to make sure that we know that they’re experienced and they’ve been with their group for a while, and we’ve got to make sure that we get off to a start early on in Mankato like our Saturday night game at home here and not fall victim to playing catch-up hockey.”

Last-minute heroics

After building a 3-1 lead in the third period Saturday night against Lake Superior, the Denver Pioneers gave up two goals with less than seven minutes to play and seemed to be headed to overtime. However, Ryan Barrow finished a two-on-one with Brett Edwards with only 20 seconds to play to lift Denver to a perfect 4-0 start, good enough for the top spot in the polls this week after Minnesota Duluth lost its season opener to UMass Lowell.

Said DU coach David Carle: “We didn’t give up much for most of the night. Would we have liked to close it out a little simpler, for sure, but I’m happy with our resiliency to push back and ultimately find a way to win.”

So far, freshman Magnus Chrona seems to have picked up where countryman Filip Larsson left off last season, going 4-0 with a .935 save percentage and 1.75 goals-against. Chrona and the Pioneers will be tested this weekend when they host No. 6 Boston College for a two-game set.

CC splits with Minnesota

During his three years in the net, Alex Leclerc could be counted on to make several near impossible saves per game and keep a CC team that often struggled offensively in each game. For CC, it was a big hit when Leclerc decided to forgo his last year of eligibility and sign a tryout with the ECHL’s Utah Grizzlies. Leclerc had finished his degree in three years, and he led the country in saves last year with 1,140 while leading the team to the NCHC Frozen Faceoff.

Senior Ryan Ruck, who played three years at Northeastern and was the starting goalie in his freshman and sophomore seasons, got the call in both games against Minnesota this weekend and helped the Tigers earn a split. However, after building a 3-1 lead Saturday, CC was unable to hold it, giving up two goals in a 28-second span late in the second period and the game-winner halfway into the third. Two of Minnesota’s goals were on the power play.

A big plus for the Tigers was the play of seniors Nick Halloran and Chris Wilkie, both of whom were lost to injury in the second half of last season. Wilkie had three goals and two assists, while Halloran had five assists. Those two being healthy will give the Tigers a big boost in the quest to return to the Frozen Faceoff.

Strong offenses

It’s obviously early, but at least out of the gate NCHC teams are having strong offensive performances. Seven of the NCHC’s eight teams are in the top 20 in team offense, all averaging three goals a game or more. Only Minnesota Duluth is under three goals a game, but the Bulldogs usually with defense anyway.

It’s not just offense though. Five of the NCHC’s eight teams are in the top 20 in team defense, giving up two goals per game or less.

Nonconference winning percentage starts strong

On the weekend, the NCHC went 9-3-4 in nonconference play, and on the year is 11-4-4 in nonconference play for a .684 winning percentage. The NCHC has consistently been a leader in nonconference winning percentages since its formation, one of the reasons it places three or more teams in the NCAA tournament each year.

Former Wisconsin standouts Pavelski, Vetter added to Kohl Center Legends Walk

Joe Pavelski played at UW from 2004 to 2006, while Jessie Vetter was a Badgers goalie from 2005 to 2009 (photos: Wisconsin Athletics).

Two former Wisconsin hockey players have been added to the Legends Walk on the first level concourse of the Kohl Center.

Joe Pavelski (men’s hockey) and Jessie Vetter (women’s hockey) each now have a permanent spot on the concourse inside the building where “they cemented their legacies as some of the greatest performers in the facility’s history,” according to a UW news release.

The Kohl Center Legends Walk features permanent medallions inserted into the terrazzo concourse floor. Each medallion includes an individual’s name, years played/coached and some brief information about them.

Last year, former men’s coach Jeff Sauer was recognized, along with the building’s namesake, Sen. Herb Kohl.

The four new medallions are already in the floor and each individual will be recognized at different points in the coming months. Four of the eight total medallions are inside Gate B of the Kohl Center, while the other four are on the opposite side of the facility.

Over time, the Legends Walk will give the Kohl Center a “walk of fame” style addition while staying with the existing terrazzo flooring that has been in the facility since it was opened in 1998.

With new coach Eigner at helm, Bowling Green has goal of ‘leaving the program better than how we found it’

Frederic Letourneau recorded a pair of assists for Bowling Green in a 5-2 loss at Western Michigan last Saturday night (photo: BGSU Athletics).

Ty Eigner will never forget where he was when athletic director Bob Moosbrugger called him and offered him the head coaching job at Bowling Green.

Chris Bergeron coached the Falcons for nine seasons before stepping down after 2018-19 to take over Miami. He played for the RedHawks in the 1990s and spent 10 years as an assistant with them before taking over BGSU.

By Bergeron’s side for all nine years at BGSU was Eigner, who is still giddy about taking over the program that he once played for himself.

A season ago, Bergeron and Eigner helped take BGSU to the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1990. The Falcons haven’t won fewer than 21 games since 2013-14. They’ve consistently been knocking on the door for a WCHA title.

“That’s the responsibility I feel that I have to keep it going here, and I accept that,” Eigner said Tuesday morning. “But I’ve been talking with the players. We all appreciate and understand where the program is at right now, but they’re not satisfied.

“As good as a team as we were last year (third place in the WCHA), we didn’t win a regular-season championship, a playoff championship or an NCAA game. We played good hockey and had a good year, but there is a bitter taste in our mouths with how that season ended.

“The one thing we keep talking about is leaving the program better than how we found it. That’s our goal.”

And where Eigner found the program is in Chicago.

Normally, Eigner is recruiting on the weekends, especially in April when the USHL is holding its combine near Chicago. But it just so happened that his two daughters were playing in a club volleyball tournament close to the combine, so he and a few of his family members who drove down from their native Minnesota crammed into McCormick Place Convention to watch the Eigner girls compete.

“There were like 120 courts in there, and I was in the middle of it watching their club volleyball team,” Eigner said. “I got a call that came up with Bob’s name, so I knew I had to quickly get to a place where I could hear him.

“I’ll never forget that call.”

For most of the summer, it was business as usual for Eigner. The real duties of being a head coach didn’t start until a few weeks before the first puck dropped this season.

“The biggest surprise is all the stuff you have to do as a head coach,” he said. “When you’re an assistant, it’s recruiting on the weekend, running practices and watching tape. As a head coach, you’re doing meetings, media availability and other stuff.”

Eigner got a brief glimpse into head coaching life when the Falcons opened the season at Miami with a rare Sunday night matchup in Week 1.

But he’s happy to be on a regular routine now that they’re back to playing on Fridays and Saturday. Last weekend, they hosted the IceBreaker Tournament in Toledo.

“The biggest eye-opener is probably having to be aware of how you manage your time and all the responsibilities you have away from the rink,” Eigner said. “The first time the radio person wanted to talk to me before a game, that caught me off guard.”

Bulldogs leaders show growth

A year ago, Ferris State probably loses this kind of game.

The Bulldogs snapped a 1-1 tie by scoring twice late in their 3-1 victory over Colgate last Thursday.

All goals and assists came from upperclassmen, which shows the growing pains of last year’s 7-18-3 season actually yielded more growth than pain.

Joe Rutkowski notched the game-winner early in the third, and then the Bulldogs battled hard to maintain the 2-1 advantage for most of the period. Coale Norris threw in an empty-netter just before regulation ended.

For Ferris to maintain a late lead and keep Colgate at bay, that was impressive.

“It was good to see our veteran guys lead the way,” coach Bob Daniels said. “They’re doing a great job of leadership in the locker room. It’s good to see them do it on the ice as well.”

What happened in Houghton?

The biggest surprise of last weekend happened at Michigan Tech. Alaska Fairbanks swept the Huskies for the first time since 2014, picking up 3-2 and 2-1 wins.

Special teams aren’t always an indicator of success. But the Huskies went 0-13 on the power-play. That definitely played a role in a rebuilding team like the Nanooks stealing a pair of road wins.

“Our power play needs to get a lot better,” coach Joe Shawhan told MichiganTechHuskies.com after Game 2. “We need to be a lot faster and more determined, with faster puck movement and better reads. We need to continue to work on that and make it a strength of our team.”

With season-opening split, St. Lawrence ‘in a real good place’ with team leadership

St. Lawrence sophomore forward Zach Risteau was named the ECAC Hockey player of the week on Monday (photo: CA Hill Photo).

A series split on the road is never a bad way to start a season, but it’s especially positive for St. Lawrence.

The Saints were just 2-18 on the road last year, part of a disastrous 6-29-2 overall record that cost coach Mark Morris his job.

Former Clarkson assistant Brent Brekke was hired in May to replace Morris and will have his hands full trying to turn around a program that has really struggled over the last few seasons.

“Our mentality is excellent,” Brekke said prior to the start of the season. “The cultural piece is something that you are always trying to instill when you take over a program as a new staff and that’s something that I think we’re in a real good place with our leadership.”

Brekke credited the Saints upperclassmen will helping make the newcomers feel welcome. But one of those upperclassmen played a big role in his first win as a head coach. Senior goalie Daniel Mannella made 40 saves in Saturday’s 3-2 win at Mercyhurst, giving the Saints a season-opening split with the Lakers.

This season has not only been a new start for Brekke, but for the returning Saints players as well.

“I think it’s been more of a reset button and a fresh start for a lot of the guys,” Brekke said. “We told them right from the start, we have no preconceived notions for any players coming in. Your opportunity is there. Go earn it.”

Part of that has been teaching the players to not only play fast, but think fast as well.

“You’ve got to think the game at a high level,” Brekke said. “It’s not just as skating as fast as you can. That’s not playing game the game with pace. You want to think the game with pace and your mind has to be the catalyst for that. That’s something we tried to instill; be relentless but be confident to make plays.”

Thinking fast and making plays should be beneficial for a team that wasn’t able to sustain consistent offensive pressure last season. That lack of puck possession resulted in extra stress on the defense, as St. Lawrence was outshot by an average of 39-23 per game last year.

“We want to get up and go,” Brekke said. “The reality is we don’t want to be defending. We want puck possession, that’s a big piece of some of the steps we want to take moving forward. But with that, you’re still responsibility defensively.”

St. Lawrence not only has a new coach, but its home rink is getting an upgrade as well. Appleton Arena is currently in the midst of being renovated, as the building’s lobby, men’s and women’s locker rooms, training facility, media room, and event spaces will all be upgraded thanks to a completely funded donor project that raised over $18 million dollars thus far.

“When you look in our conference, there are a lot of buildings that have been around a long time, but many of them have had renovations and still kept the tradition,” Brekke said. “For us to to have the upgrades will be tremendous from a recruiting standpoint.”

However, the school announced last month that the renovation is behind schedule, meaning that St. Lawrence will play its first four home games at nearby Canton, as well as shift the Nov. 1 game against Clarkson to Cheel Arena. The first game at Appleton Arena is scheduled for Nov. 29.

Marotte shines for Clarkson

In the past, Clarkson had several talented teams held by subpar goaltending. That changed three years ago with the arrival of Jake Kielly, who quickly became one of ECAC Hockey’s top goalies.

Then Kielly gave up his final season of college eligibility to sign with Vancouver last spring, leaving the Golden Knights with a gaping hole in net entering this season.

But if last weekend is any indication, Clarkson should be just fine.

Graduate transfer Frank Marotte stopped 70 of 72 shots in a 1-0-1 weekend for Clarkson at Michigan, earning the ECAC Hockey goalie of the week award.

“Frank was real good in net,” Clarkson coach Casey Jones said. “He gave us a chance with his composure back there.”

Marotte, who comes to the Golden Knights after four seasons at Robert Morris, has the chance to take on a heavy load for Clarkson. He played 95 percent of the minutes last season for the Colonials, and appeared in 107 games in his career at Robert Morris.

Homecoming game for Zieky

Coming home has been productive for RPI’s Chase Zieky. The Engineers senior scored twice and added an assist in a 5-3 win at Connecticut Saturday in Hartford. Zieky, who is from nearby Avon, posted an identical stat line in a win over the Huskies at the XL Center last year.

It’s been a productive start to his RPI career for Zieky, who lead the team with eight goals in 21 games last season despite not playing in the first half after transferring from Providence. Overall, he has 10 goals in 23 games with RPI after not scoring in eight games over two seasons with the Friars.

Zieky, along with Shane Bear and Mike Gornall, all gave the Engineers a boost as transfers last season and helped give RPI some needed veterans for this season.

“We feel really good about our team chemistry and have a lot to prove,” Engineers coach Dave Smith said prior to the start of the season. “Approaching the top half of the standings is a reasonable goal.”

Yale building from the back

The Ivy League schools haven’t started games yet, but when they do, Yale will be looking to finish above .500 for the first time in four seasons.

“We’ve been mired in .500 seasons that’s not a place where we want to be,” said Yale coach Keith Allain, whose Bulldogs have finished at exactly .500 the last two seasons. “Our guys are focused and committed to breaking out of that mold.”

If Yale does end that streak, it could do so on the back of its defense, which Allain said is one of the strongest groups at Yale in a long time. That group will be lead by junior Phil Kemp and sophomore Jack St. Ivany, who was a member of the U.S. National Team at the 2019 IIHF World Junior Championship.

Freshman Brandon Tabakin, who Allain said is good with the puck and could be a key part of the power play, is also poised to be an important part of the Bulldog defense this season.

Wednesday Women: Welcome to the 2019-20 season

BOSTON, MA - SEPTEMBER 28: NCAA woman's hockey at Walter Brown Arena between Boston University and the Durham West Lightning on September, 2018 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Rich Gagnon) Jesse Compher of Boston University (Rich Gagnon/Boston University Athletics)
Jesse Compher led Boston University in scoring last season, but hasn’t played for the Terriers yet this season. (Photo: Rich Gagnon/Boston University Athletics)

Note: We’re trying something a bit different with Wednesday Women this year. Instead of focusing on just week-to-week results, Wednesday Women will be an ongoing conversation about the season, with thoughts and insights from Nicole and Arlan that publishes every other week. 

Nicole: Hey Arlan – and readers – welcome back to another women’s college hockey season! The season is young, but we’ve already seen some interesting results and breakout performances. We’re still two weeks away from the Ivy League teams starting their full schedule, so top-ten action has been somewhat limited thus far. Where should we start?

Arlan: For the first time since the season that I first shared this column with Candace Horgan, Wisconsin is our defending NCAA Champion. Wisconsin and Minnesota were nearly equal for most of last year before the Badgers separated in the postseason. It looked to me like Annie Pankowski really led her team’s charge, making one huge play after another, and she was the catalyst for Wisconsin in ultimately subduing the Gophers and everyone else. How important do you think it was that the Badgers added Daryl Watts via a transfer to provide many of the same talents, such as a quick release, a sniper’s aim, and the instincts to find the soft spots in a defense?

Nicole: I said in my season preview that the Badgers wouldn’t struggle to replace Pankowski’s scoring, but they would need to find someone to be that big moment player and I stick by that. I’m not sure yet if that Watts is that particular player, but she is certainly adding another level of dynamic play for them. She’s scored in each of her first six games and has seemed to find early chemistry on their top line. She will certainly be incredibly important to any success the Badgers have, but I’m not sure she has that take-charge, step-it-up personality. 

That being said, there are other Badgers that I think have the ability to become that kind of top-tier forward that has the skill and the personality that takes charge and shows up in big spots again and again. But they’re still young and a bit untested. Britta Curl and Brette Pettet are the two that have both the skills and the personality to be that player, I think. Sophie Shirley certainly has the skills to be a breakout player, but I’ve not seen the same brashness from her. Those that have watched them more say Grace Shirley is actually more dynamic than Sophie, so I think she has to be on the watch list. 

Arlan: Of course, Pankowski wasn’t Wisconsin’s only loss to graduation. They graduated other veterans up front in Emily Clark, Sam Cogan, and Sophia Shaver. On the blue line, the Badgers are now without Maddie Rolfes and Mikaela Gardner. As redshirt seniors, both Pankowski and Rolfes brought an extra dose of experience to the team. How is this year’s edition adjusting in the early going?

Nicole: The results say the transition is going well. I think the best sign for them was the four unanswered third-period goals on Saturday at Ohio State. The Buckeyes had come back twice in that game and it was tied 3-3 and a tight game. But much like we talked about above, Wisconsin found another gear and just pulled away in the final frame. Their biggest question right now is who will center the second line. They’ve tried out a few different combinations and obviously even with line tinkering, things are going well.  

I feel like Wisconsin may be adjusting better to their new roster than Minnesota has. The Gophers have technically come out of the first few weeks unscathed, since they’re still undefeated, but there certainly seem to be some things to be concerned about. What have you seen from the team so far? Is it just early season adjustments and slow starts or is there more going on there?

Arlan: Actually, I think that Minnesota has fewer adjustments to make. The only new addition in the top 15 skaters who play heavy minutes has been blueliner Madeline Wethington, who leads the team with two game-winning goals. From the blue line, it will be tough to live up to her preseason nod as WCHA Rookie of the Year, but it looks like she’ll make a smooth transition.

Looking at the rest of the Gophers, the seven-member sophomore class looks to be making good progress and filling larger roles. There really weren’t any concerns of note through the first two weeks.

As for the Robert Morris series, I think that the Colonials were kind of beat up when they arrived in Minneapolis in December and were outscored, 11-1. Coming off a bye week this time, I think that they wanted to give a better account of themselves in their own barn. Good for them, as they hung right with the No. 2 team in the country, and it wasn’t until the final period that the visitors finally pulled away. 

I’ve been impressed with Jaycee Gebhard throughout. Many want to write off her production and say, “It’s just the CHA,” but I think that the RMU senior, who has at least a shot at reaching 200 points in her career, would find success in any league.

Nicole: Alex Gulstene has missed the last few games, leaving Sydney Scobee to take on the bulk of the playing time. The two split time last season and it looked like that was the plan this year. Do you think, should it come to that, Scobee can be the full-time goalie the Gophers need to have a successful season? 

Arlan: You know how it is with goaltenders; we have a world of confidence until the red light goes on behind them. Scobee allowed a single goal over her first four games, before yielding some second-chance goals on Friday and starting Saturday’s game off by surrendering a goal that was beyond weak. She seemed to rebound fine, and I expect that the Minnesota D corps will be easier to play behind than in recent years.

What have you seen beyond the top two teams?

Nicole: An early season surprise for me has been Boston University. I expected the Terriers to be vying with Northeastern for the top spot in Hockey East. Obviously that could still happen, but they’ve started 1-1-1, with a loss to New Hampshire and a tie with Merrimack. Do you think the Terriers can shake this off and get back on track?

Arlan: Through the years, fast starts haven’t really been BU’s thing. Jesse Compher is coming off a 61-point season as a sophomore, but she hasn’t been in the lineup as of yet. If the Terriers don’t have her, then it puts a lot of pressure on Sammy Davis to carry the offense, because none of the other forwards reached 20 points last season. If Compher remains out, the recipe for success will necessitate some staunch defending.

Nicole: Syracuse and Robert Morris have gotten off to strong starts and been pleasantly surprising early on. The CHA hasn’t been the strongest against out-of-conference opponents in recent years, but here these two are pushing teams like Minnesota and Boston College to their limit. What are your thoughts on these sometimes-overlooked teams taking another step in development recently?

Arlan: For me, the jury is out on whether or not the Orange are taking a step forward. Other than the 2-1 loss to Northeastern, they’ve allowed at least four goals per game. Women’s college hockey is not a sport where a team can be successful if 10 percent of the opponents’ shots find the net. Until Syracuse finds next-level goaltending, there is a limit on how high it can climb. 

Robert Morris is continuing the trend of CHA contenders to schedule tough out of conference to hone the squad for the conference battles ahead. The Colonials follow up the Minnesota games with series versus Clarkson and Cornell, before facing Wisconsin and either Northeastern or Colgate to start the new year.

If any of these teams, and I think that we can add in Mercyhurst and Penn State, can separate in the goal crease, then I’ll like its chances come the CHA Tournament. What about in the ECAC? As you said, we’ve only seen half of the picture because Cornell, Princeton, and the rest of the Ivy League teams are still focused entirely on their book learning, but where should we be looking in that circuit?

Nicole: Not only are we waiting on the Ivies, but Clarkson has only played four games, so we’ve got a lot of incomplete information to go off of at this point. With a close game against Syracuse and a loss to Minnesota Duluth, I’m definitely hoping to gather more information before I feel like I have a handle on Clarkson this season. With their schedule, I’m not sure we’ll have that until mid-November, so I guess I’m reserving judgement until I can watch some more games.

I really liked what I saw from Princeton last season, so they’re the team I’m most interested in seeing once they hit the ice. There sure seem to be all the pieces there for them, but we also know that how things look on paper rarely translate directly to play on the ice. 

What have you seen from the other group of teams out East?

Arlan: In Hockey East, New Hampshire looks improved, and I’d expect Providence to at least play a spoiler role, but I think that the race will come down to Northeastern and Boston College. Maybe I’m a creature of habit, but I see the Eagles bouncing back this year. Am I wrong?

Nicole: I don’t know, I’m definitely leaning more towards Northeastern. You mention the importance of the goalie earlier and I think I just have more faith in Aerin Frankel. But I’ve also been high on the Huskies because of their scoring capabilities, but BC rookie Hannah Bilka has showed up big time early on. She could be a big game-changer for them, so maybe you’re right and it’ll be back to BC. I suppose that’s not an answer, but at least it should be a really interesting race all season.

Arlan: In your column last week, you offered the opinion that Watts transferring from BC to Wisconsin is the most high-profile transfer in the sport. From what I saw, much of the splash focused on the Eagles, as Watts’ transfer came on the heels of former teammate Caitrin Lonergan, herself a top-three finisher in the Kazmaier voting, moving to Clarkson for her senior season. The Badgers were champions last year and were the likely favorites this year even without her. In that sense, there isn’t much room left for Watts to elevate Wisconsin.

Maybe it is perspective, but there have been a couple of times in Minnesota’s history where players left the Gophers and made other programs that weren’t even on the radar instant contenders. The first was when Jenny Potter and Brittny Ralph jumped to Minnesota-Duluth in 1999, followed by Jocelyne and Monique Lamoureux heading home to North Dakota in 2009. Three of those players were already Olympic medalists and had three seasons of eligibility remaining, and the transfers helped to spark intense rivalries with Minnesota where none had previously existed.

In my opinion, those in-conference transfers, like Jenn Wakefield moving from New Hampshire to BU, are always going to add some extra spice. When Kassidy Sauvé opted to leave Ohio State for a senior season at Clarkson, she helped the two-time defending champs get back to the Frozen Four, while her former team fell short. However, the move didn’t have the same intrigue, because the two programs didn’t play each other. Watts will see her old teammates in November in Nashville, but the players I mentioned above had seasons where they collided with the Gophers six times.

As you stated, being a Kazmaier winner does make Watts’ change of teams unique, and given that the other Kazmaier winners have been juniors or seniors, the opportunities for any to transfer have been limited. Perhaps it seems slightly less noteworthy in my mind because so much of Watts’ bio is still unwritten. For example, I know that Jocelyne and Monique wound up with 285 and 265 points, respectively, and that they were at least three-time Olympians. Having now watched her in person, what do you think Watts might add to her resume? Another Kazmaier Award? Could she challenge Meghan Agosta’s 303 career points?

Nicole: I can’t imagine anyone touching Agosta’s record in today’s hockey landscape. But that doesn’t mean that it’s a stretch to think that Watts could put up some pretty significant numbers. She had 82 points as a freshman and 48 points last year. Part of me thinks averaging those might be fair to figure out what she might do this year, but Pankowski had 50 points last season and her highest total at Wisconsin was 58, so 65 points feels like it could be a stretch. The depth of scoring on the Badgers doesn’t lend itself to one player racking up huge numbers. Thus far, Watts is averaging three points a game, which is a ridiculous pace that we know won’t last. But she’s got 18 points after just six games. That’s a pretty solid start to 50 or more.

All that info makes it difficult for me to feel like I can predict what her point total might be. But if she just stays on pace of her first two years, that’s 260 career points, which would be good for 8th all-time. Even a significant drop off to 220 points would still put her in the top-20 all time.

But even if she does none of that, I still think it’s a landmark transfer. You’re tying significance to performance, which is fair, but I also think the national MVP leaving her program is a big deal no matter what happens next. Sure, the transfer is, I suppose, more momentous if she wins a title at Wisconsin while BC does not, or if she completes a record-setting career. But it’s also just something I’ve not been able to find any precedent for in college sports, and that makes it noteworthy to me. 

With Marotte gone, Kapelmaster making ‘very good first impression’ in net for Robert Morris

Robert Morris goaltender Justin Kapelmaster is off to a fast start this season for the Colonials (photo: Justin Berl/RMU Athletics).

Every team starts with unknowns to open the season, and Robert Morris is no different.

The Colonials lost two of their top three scorers and their top defensemen to graduation. Returning players are in new roles and freshmen are looking to fit in.

One area that had provided continuity for three seasons at RMU was in net, where Francis Marotte started over 100 games in three years, helping to extend RMU’s streak to six consecutive appearances in the Atlantic Hockey semifinals.

But Marotte finished his undergraduate work early and transferred to Clarkson for this final year of eligibility.

“It was a surprise,” said Robert Morris coach Derek Schooley, in his 16th season behind the RMU bench. “Our returning goalies had played a total of 96 minutes.”

Schooley was able to find a graduate transfer of his own. Coming to RMU in this season is Justin Kapelmaster, who played in 48 games over three seasons at Ferris State.

Kapelmaster made an immediate impact, especially this past weekend. He stopped 80 of 81 shots in a two game series with Bentley, leading the Colonials to a 3-0 and 4-1 sweep of the Falcons. Robert Morris was outshot in the series 81-38 but came away with a sweep.

Kapelmaster was also in net for a 2-1 overtime loss to Michigan Tech the weekend before, where he made 29 saves.

“(Kapelmaster) made a very good first impression,” said Schooley. “Three games as a Colonial and a save percentage of 97 plus (.973)”.

Goaltending has a been especially important while RMU finds its footing offensively. The Colonials are averaging only two goals a game so far.

“We’re not scoring as much as we’d like,” said Schooley. “Our power play has been getting good chances, but we’ve had some trouble finishing.”

On the other hand, the RMU penalty kill has been outstanding. The Colonials held Bentley’s power play off the scoresheet last weekend, perfect in 13 attempts including all nine on Saturday.

The Robert Morris-Bentley series was the first Atlantic Hockey conference games of the season, so the Colonials sit atop the standings, six points ahead of the rest.

It’s a six point lead now that the AHA has adopted the same overtime/shootout format used by the NCHC, WCHA and Big Ten. Wins in regulation and the five-on-five overtime are now worth three points. Wins in the second three-on-three overtime and potential shootout are worth two points, with the loser awarded a single point.

“It’ll get some getting used to,” said Schooley. “I’m used to saying, ‘Let’s get the four points.'”

Schooley says that it’s important for his team to get off to a fast start in conference play. The last few seasons, RMU has managed to make it back to the AHA tournament semifinals despite an average regular season campaign. RMU has been to the last six AHA final fours, tied with Air Force for the most in a row.

“We want to be better in the regular season,” Schooley said. “We’ve ended well but during the season we’ve been inconsistent.”

The Colonials stay in conference play this weekend with a trip to Army West Point, which has also gotten off to a good start with opening wins over Union and Connecticut.

“This is our senior’s first trip to West Point,” said Schooley. “So we’re all excited to play there. It’s a great atmosphere and Army is a good team, off to a great start.”

Expect Kapelmaster to be in net for the Colonials, but Schooley says you’ll see his other goalies as well this season. Things didn’t go so well out of the gate for Reid Cooper and Dyllan Lubbesmeyer, who shared goaltending duties in a 7-0 loss to Michigan Tech.

But Schooley remains optimistic about their potential as well.

“I said before the season that weren’t going to take a step back in goal,” he said. “We’ve got three good goalies who are going to push each other and compete for time.”

Since You’ve Been Gone

At the end of the 2013-14 season, Connecticut bid farewell to Atlantic Hockey for greener pastures in Hockey East.

Since leaving, results have been mixed. UConn hasn’t had a winning season since departing the AHA, in part because wins against its former conference haven’t been easy to come by.

A loss to Army West Point and a tie with Sacred Heart so far this season contribute to a UConn record of just 4-7-1 against its former conference foes.

The Huskies have especially struggled against in-state rival Sacred Heart. Connecticut hasn’t managed a single win in six meetings with the Pioneers (0-5-1) since leaving Atlantic Hockey.

Sacred Heart and Connecticut could possibly tangle again this season. UConn, SHU, Quinnipiac and Yale will square off in the Connecticut Ice Festival in Bridgeport on Jan. 25-26.

The Century Mark and Beyond

One hundred career points is a milestone for a college hockey player. Only a handful of players achieve the century mark each season, usually during their senior campaign. The very rare player will surpass 100 points prior to their senior season.

In Atlantic Hockey, only Mercyhurst defenseman Joe Duszak came close last season, ending his junior campaign with 99 points. Duszak won’t get a shot at the 100 point plateau, however. He elected to forgo this senior year in favor of a professional contract with the Toronto Maple Leafs.

At the start of this season, Duszak finds himself on the roster of the ECHL’s Newfoundland Growlers alongside Atlantic Hockey standouts Brady Ferguson (Robert Morris), Scott Pooley (Holy Cross) and Todd Skirving (RIT). The Growlers won the Kelly Cup last season.

Here are the current Atlantic Hockey seniors within striking distance of the century mark:

Blake Christensen (AIC): 92 points
Luke Lynch (Robert Morris) 91
Noah Delmas (Niagara): 84
Adam Brubacher (RIT): 81
Nick Hutchison (Canisius): 81
Dominic Franco (Army West Point): 75
Jonathan Desbiens (Bentley): 73

Not expected to break this 100 mark this season, but well on their way are:
– Niagara sophomore Ludwig Stenlund: 42 points in his freshman season
– Bentley junior Luke Santerno: 66 points through two seasons
– AIC junior Brennan Kapcheck: 52 points through two seasons

Games to Watch This Week

Some intriguing matchups to follow this weekend:

– Merrimack at Rochester Institute of Technology: This is the homecoming game for RIT and typically sells out Blue Cross Arena (capacity: 10,556). Merrimack comes in 0-3 and will face Holy Cross on Thursday before coming to Rochester. RIT is 2-1 coming off a win over Bowling Green and a loss to Ohio State in the IceBreaker Tournament.

– Arizona State at Air Force (two-game series): Both teams got swept by ranked opponents last weekend. The Sun Devils lost a pair to No. 3 Minnesota State, while the Falcons were swept by No. 8 Notre Dame.

– Holy Cross at Northeastern: The Crusaders knocked off a ranked team last weekend (a 3-2 overtime win at No. 6 Providence). Can they do it again over the 15th-ranked Huskies?

Ohio State coach Steve Rohlik talks Buckeyes, Ice Breaker, Big Ten: USCHO Spotlight Season 2 Episode 2

Ohio State's Steve Rohlik directs from the bench. (Jamie Sabau)
Ohio State’s Steve Rohlik is in his seventh season behind the Buckeyes bench (photo Jamie Sabau).

Fresh off an Ice Breaker tournament championship, Ohio State coach Steve Rohlik joins hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger to talk Buckeyes hockey and the Big Ten.

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

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

College Hockey Inc. hires longtime ACHA coach Hogan as new director of education

HOGAN

College Hockey Inc. announced Tuesday that it has named Sean Hogan as the organization’s new director of education.

Hogan, a native of Waterford, Mich., will lead College Hockey Inc.’s efforts to promote NCAA hockey to talented young players and their families.

“Sean’s passion for the college hockey experience is obvious the moment you meet him,” College Hockey Inc. executive director Mike Snee said in a statement. “He comes highly recommended from many people involved in college hockey including several current coaches. We were fortunate to have several strong candidates interested in joining College Hockey Inc. but Sean stood out and we are looking forward to his contributions.”

Hogan comes to College Hockey Inc. with an extensive coaching background, having served as an ACHA head coach at Ohio (2014-19), Arizona (2011-14) and Oakland (2005-09). He served on the coaching staff of USA Hockey’s Men’s National University Team three times, including head coach in 2017, and was a volunteer assistant coach with Western Michigan in 2010-11.

“I am excited about the opportunity to work with Mike Snee, Nate Ewell and College Hockey Inc.,” Hogan added. “Their passion for college hockey is evident, and the work we will do with CHI is of vital importance to growing college hockey. I can’t wait to get started.”

The 41-year-old Hogan played college hockey at Iona (1996-97) and graduated from Michigan State in 2001. He earned his master’s degree from Ohio in 2016.

Hogan will be based out of the offices of USA Hockey’s National Team Development Program in Plymouth, Mich.

TMQ: What to make of several teams’ fast starts to open 2019-20 season

Penn State's Cole Hults (2) against Princeton in the third period on Oct. 26, 2018. No. 10 Penn State defeated No. 13. Princeton 4-2.  Photo/Craig Houtz Cole Hults (photo: Craig Houtz/Penn State Athletics)
Penn State’s Cole Hults has scored four goals in the early going for the Nittany Lions (photo: Craig Houtz/Penn State Athletics).

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

Paula: Well, Jimmy, last week we were speculating about what we might reasonably take away from a weekend of hockey that was earlier than usual. Now with two straight weeks of play for some teams, we have evidence that the poll voters are speculating, too.

Denver is the new No. 1 with a vast majority of votes with Minnesota State and Minnesota Duluth picking up multiple votes and one lone vote for Penn State.

Even though it feels as though Duluth has been dominant forever, it wasn’t that long ago in terms of poll history that they were not the top team; St. Cloud State had 43 votes and the top spot March 25, and all of this is a reminder that the poll is such a snapshot of current events.

Having said that, Denver earned that top spot with two more wins and a hot 4-0 start to the season with road sweeps over Alaska and Lake Superior State. The Pioneers are averaging 3.50 goals per game – ironically, same as the 2-2 and Lakers through four games so far.

Another story of the weekend is the sheer number of goals that some teams scored: Wisconsin beat Merrimack 11-5, North Dakota beat Canisius 8-1 and scored 13 on the weekend, Omaha beat Alabama Huntsville 11-1 in two games, Maine rebounded from a tough opening weekend to sweep Alaska Anchorage while scoring seven goals in one game.

And there are three players who scored four or more goals in their season-opening series – Providence’s Greg Printz with five goals in two games, Cole Hults from Penn State with four and Cole Caufield with four.

What do you make of some of these seemingly fast starts?

Jim: Well, we all want goal scoring, right?

In all seriousness, I think often times we see some big offensive numbers early in the season because of the fact that teams are still working on breaking players into their defensive systems. That said, I’m impressed with some of the offensive totals.

Obviously, Greg Printz and his four-goal outburst last weekend for Providence, coupled with a goal in the Friars loss to Holy Cross this weekend stands out. But Caufield, to me, is the player to watch. He was drafted lower this summer than teammate and classmate Alex Turcotte, also a great talent, but I think Caufield is the player at Wisconsin we are going to be talking about the most.

Caufield has such offensive talents and is almost undoubtedly a one-and-done player for the Badgers. That said, he might as well re-write the record book as much as possible. According to our colleague Todd Milweski, Caufield is the first player in the modern era for Wisconsin to record back-to-back multiple goal games as he scored two against both Boston College and Merrimack.

Getting back to your point about the poll, I have always thought the inaugural poll each season is a dart game. For the second straight year, Minnesota Duluth began the season atop the poll but fell in the first weekend. Friday’s 3-2 loss to UMass Lowell was sloppy. But the fact that the Bulldogs trailed 3-0 after 2 and nearly tied the game shows the talent this team has. The Bulldogs – and for that matter, the River Hawks – likely will be among the top clubs in college hockey when this season ends.

Paula: I have no doubt that the Bulldogs and River Hawks will be in the mix at the end of the season. I’m starting to think that maybe after years of some parity-related changing landscape, some usual suspects are emerging in the top tier of college hockey. We’ll never return to the decades-long dominance of certain teams that we’ve seen the past, I think, because preparation for the game itself has changed so much, but I wouldn’t be surprised to see more familiarity than not at the top of conference standings for the next few years.

On that subject of growing pains, I do want to give a shout out to Alaska for its road sweep of Michigan Tech. In their opening game of the season two weeks ago, the Nanooks lost to Denver 4-3 but was in that game for its entirety. Last Friday’s win over the Huskies was the first for Alaska since 2014, snapping a 16-game losing streak against Tech.

Also, it’s an indication that the Nanooks may be starting this season where they left off last year. Alaska had 12 losses in the first half of 2018-19 and rallied to finish the season 12-21-3 overall with eight of those wins coming in the second half. For the Nanooks, too, it was an important conference-opening weekend. Given the uncertainty that Alaska, Alaska Anchorage and Alabama Huntsville are facing with the direction the WCHA wants to take and budget cuts to the Alaska university system, these wins must take on even greater importance for the Nanooks and I wonder if Alaska will progress even further this season.

Who do you see poised to make a move toward significant improvement this season? In the Big Ten, everyone’s money is on Wisconsin and with good reasons, two of whom you’ve already mentioned. Are there teams we should be watching that may be under the radar?

Jim: There are teams whose upwards direction is more obvious than others. You and I already said Wisconsin, I think that Western Michigan fits into that group. I’m not sure that any teams are that obvious, but I do have a few true dark horses in mind.

On Hockey East, I think New Hampshire is greatly overlooked. They have talent and good, young coaching in Michael Souza. Clarkson has been knocking on the door for a while both in the ECAC and nationally. Coaches weren’t high on Mercyhurst this year, but I think they’ll be a top 3-4 team in Atlantic Hockey.

The WCHA has become a bit predictable, but you mentioned Alaska and I feel like that team will be stronger than most expect. If Western Michigan isn’t the surprise team in the NCHC, don’t put that job past Colorado College as I feel like that program has played everyone tough in the last few years. And in the Big Ten, if there isn’t a favorite, can there be a dark horse? That said, I like Michigan State to be better than expected.

I have to think you and I have a couple of similarities in our dark horse list, no?

Paula: Yes, I think you and I are on the same page about the dark horses. It’s felt as though Colorado College has been on the verge of breaking through in the NCHC for the past couple of years, and that may be the issue with playing in such a strong league from top to nearly bottom. CC in several other leagues would make some significant noise, and the Tigers certainly benefit from the level of play in the NCHC.

I have to think that Michigan State is close to making a big jump. The team is exceptionally well coached, and Danton Cole and his staff get the best out of the players. With improvements in their game and the renovations that have just begun to Munn Ice Arena, the Spartans will begin to look like a very attractive destination for top recruits interested in landing in the Big Ten.

I liked what I saw of Clarkson against Michigan, especially with Francis Marotte in net. Marotte played three seasons with Robert Morris and is a graduate student now at Clarkson. I also like the way both RIT and Mercyhurst have started, but it’s early.

Jim: Switching gears from dark horses back to the now-favorite. I want to tip my cap to Denver and it’s 4-0-0 start. Folks may not think they have faced the toughest talent (I think we both somewhat disagree), but the time on the road they have accumulated in the first to weeks is unprecedented.

The Pioneers began the year in Fairbanks, Alaska playing Saturday and Sunday. Instead of flying home on Monday, David Carle wisely took his club to Detroit where it practiced for a couple of days before heading to the U.P. to take on Lake Superior State.

Four wins later, Denver finally arrived back home on Sunday afternoon with approximately 9,000 miles traveled. I guess a reward of being No. 1 in the country is a decent payday.

USCHO.com presents its NCAA Division I Plays of the Week, Oct. 11-13

Army West Point junior goaltender Trevin Kozlowski made 27 saves for the Black Knights in a 2-1 win over UConn last Friday night (photo: Army West Point Athletics).

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

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