Mark Workman helped Robert Morris reach its first NCAA tournament in 2014 after winning the Atlantic Hockey postseason championship (photo: RMU Athletics/Steven Copeland).
Former Robert Morris associate head coach Mark Workman passed away on Wednesday near his home in Minnesota, surrounded by family.
Workman was 47.
He was diagnosed with an advanced form of liver cancer just before the start of 2018 and had been undergoing treatments since the beginning of the year. The Colonials rallied around his fight, wearing his name on their jerseys in warmups last Friday night, and joined many Robert Morris alumni in sending him messages of support.
“Worky” – as he was known in the hockey community – was an assistant for seven years at Robert Morris, from 2009 to 2016. Workman handled many different areas of the Colonials program, including player development, scouting and game plans, all while primarily focusing on the team’s defensive units.
“We are heartbroken to hear the news of Mark Workman’s passing,” said Robert Morris head coach Derek Schooley in a statement. “Mark was loved by all at Robert Morris. Mark was one of the good guys in the hockey world and effected so many student athletes in a positive way.
“He was well-respected among all with whom he crossed paths and will be greatly missed. Our thoughts and prayers are with the Workman Family during this difficult time.”
Workman began his tenure as an assistant coach at Robert Morris in 2009 and spent his final three years at RMU as associate head coach, ending with the 2015-16 season. He departed the Colonials and joined the NHL’s Vegas Golden Knights as an amateur scout in the summer of 2016, where he remained for the last two years.
Workman was an assistant at Brown from 2003 to 2009 and also served as a volunteer assistant at Minnesota Duluth during the 2001-02 season.
From 1995 to 2001, Workman was the head coach at his alma mater, Division III St. Scholastica, after serving as an assistant from 1993 to 1995. W
Workman was a four-year varsity player at St. Scholastica, serving as the team’s assistant captain as a junior and as captain as a senior in 1993.
Details on arrangements will be available at a later time. The Colonials will hold a moment of silence in Workman’s memory prior to Friday’s 7:05 p.m. puck drop against Mercyhurst at Colonials Arena at the RMU Island Sports Center.
In its inaugural season in the Big Ten, Notre Dame clinched the conference’s regular-season championship last weekend on home ice (photo: Notre Dame Athletics).
There’s something poetic about the last-ever CCHA playoff champions capturing their first-ever Big Ten regular-season title in their first season of B1G conference play.
Notre Dame was a good citizen of the now-defunct CCHA.
The Fighting Irish were among the last holdouts trying to keep that conference together when it was announced that Penn State would build a new arena and play Division I hockey, a move that pulled Minnesota and Wisconsin from the WCHA and all but doomed the league that three other B1G teams once called home.
With Notre Dame’s admittance to the Big Ten, the landscape looks a little more familiar for fans of Michigan, Michigan State and Ohio State, and even Penn State’s Guy Gadowsky has CCHA roots from his days at Alaska Fairbanks. Last Friday, the Fighting Irish beat the Buckeyes 2-1 in South Bend to capture the regular-season crown; Notre Dame was the last team that Ohio State played a regular-season game against in the old Ohio State Ice Rink in 1999.
There’s a lot of history in a new league for the Fighting Irish, yet the transition from Hockey East to the Big Ten was still a little jarring for Notre Dame, a team full of players that had never seen the inside of Yost or Munn Arenas. Of course, you’d never know that from the way the Irish dominated B1G play in the first half.
“What we did so far this year was kind of a surprise, in a way, to me,” said coach Jeff Jackson. “We’ll probably go through what I expected a little bit more of with the Big Ten right now than we would have in the first half of the year, let’s put it that way.”
What they did, of course, was put together a 16-game win streak from Oct. 27 through Jan. 19, including a 13-game undefeated entrance into Big Ten play.
What they’ve done since that streak snapped is go 3-3-1, including a 1-0 overtime road loss to Minnesota and that one-goal win to capture the title against Ohio State. Bookending that seven-game stretch in which the Irish appear again to be mortal was a 5-0 loss to Wisconsin in Chicago Jan. 20 and last Saturday’s 5-1 loss to Ohio State.
“The game against Wisconsin in Chicago was kind of like the air being let out of the balloon,” said Jackson. “It was just the nature of that game. I actually think the game against Ohio State was the same thing. We clinched the league the night before. That’s no excuse, but I think our guys really had to battle to win that game the night before. We were only down a goal going into the third, but again, it was almost like the air going out of a balloon.”
Jackson has enormous respect for the Big Ten, calling the league “extremely competitive.” He’s quick to point out that seven of Notre Dame’s wins in that 16-game streak were won by a goal.
“It’s never been easy,” said Jackson. “Every night is a challenge.”
The Irish have built their season on defense, allowing 2.07 goals per game – third in the nation – and relying on a hot sophomore goaltender, Cale Morris. “He’s phenomenal,” said Jackson, who’s correct. With 21 wins to his credit, Morris is fourth-best nationally in goals-against average (1.75) with the top save percentage in the country (.950).
The low-scoring games and one-goal wins betray Notre Dame’s weakness; the Irish score on average 2.97 goals per game (26th) with the 19th-best power play in the country (20.2).
“We score by committee,” said Jackson.
What Notre Dame wouldn’t give for a player like forward Anders Bjork, who left after his junior season, taking his 21 goals with him.
Still, the Irish know how to play to their strengths, one of which is good leadership in the locker room with guys like seniors Jake Evans and Jordan Gross helping to keep things at an even keel, especially in the first half of the season when the Irish were plowing through Big Ten opponents.
“I give our kids credit,” said Jackson. “We haven’t talked about it much. It started getting more hype in the new year. We never really talked about it much. If we had been beating teams by three or four goals, maybe it would’ve been different, but we were fighting for our lives. It was never really a focal point, and I think that was partly because we knew we were getting by by the skin of our teeth. We didn’t really dwell on it.
“On every team I’ve ever had, I always knew that at some point, if you’re going to make the NCAA tournament, you’re going to have a good year and you’re going to have to have a little luck, but never 16 games. If we’d rattled off a seven- or eight-game winning streak or 10-game unbeaten streak, I’d have felt like now we were in good shape for the playoffs, for making the NCAA tournament. Every year, you always have to have a little run at some point, but in most cases it’s not 16 games.”
After the first of the year, Jackson told his team, “Things always elevate in the second half. The second half is always a little bit higher level, just because teams are jockeying for position for the playoffs. The intensity ramps up even more and maybe the fact that we had such a big lead might have worked against us a little bit, as far as maybe feeling a little too comfortable.”
This weekend, the Fighting Irish play a home-and-home series against Michigan, a Friday game in South Bend followed by a Sunday matinee in Ann Arbor. Jackson said his team knows well how hard this series will be, even though they swept the Wolverines earlier in the season.
“You’ve got a really desperate team against a team that’s already clinched the league,” said Jackson.
The Wolverines are fighting for one of the top four spots in the conference to secure home ice in the first round of the playoffs. With 32 points, Michigan is in third place in the Big Ten, five points behind Ohio State, three points ahead of Minnesota and four points ahead of Wisconsin. The Buckeyes and the Golden Gophers each have two games in hand on the Wolverines, who will close their regular season at home against Arizona State Feb. 23-24.
Jackson is looking forward to a renewed rivalry between Notre Dame and Michigan, one of the benefits of returning to somewhat familiar hockey landscape. At this point, though, the roles of each team are reversed. Michigan is chasing Notre Dame as the Wolverines are rebuilding.
“Generally, rivalries are only formed by two good programs,” said Jackson. “When we finally built this program up to this level, we started getting the rivalry with Michigan back in the CCHA. I think we’ll end up developing more than the rivalry with Michigan in the Big Ten, though.”
One way to begin to build those rivalries is to join a league and to become immediately the team to beat.
The Wolverines and the Fighting Irish face off at 7:35 p.m. Friday night in the Compton Family Ice Arena. Sunday’s game begins at 5:05 p.m. in Yost Ice Arena and will be televised by the Big Ten Network.
Three stars of the week
For the second straight week, it’s two goalies and a forward.
First star – Minnesota junior forward Tyler Sheehy
Sheehy (Burnsville, Minn.) led all Big Ten scorers with five points in Minnesota’s road sweep of Wisconsin. Sheehy had two goals Friday night including the game winner and added a goal and two assists Saturday. This is Sheehy’s sevenths career Big Ten weekly award, his first of the season.
Second star – Ohio State junior goaltender Sean Romeo
Romeo (Cary, N.C.) earned a .957 save percentage and 1.55 goals-against average in Ohio State’s road split with Notre Dame. Romeo made 27 saves Friday in the Buckeyes’ 2-1 loss and helped Ohio State kill all six of Notre Dame’s power plays in that game. In Saturday’s 5-1 win, Romeo’s 15th win of the season, he had a career-high 39 saves. This is Romeo’s fourth career Big Ten weekly award, his second week in a row.
Third star – Minnesota sophomore goaltender Mat Robson
Robson (Mississauga, Ont.) made 61 saves on 64 shots for a .953 save percentage and 1.50 goals-against average in the Gophers’ sweep of Wisconsin, including a career-high 38 saves in Friday’s 4-2 win. This is Robson’s third career Big Ten weekly award.
My ballot
1. Denver
2. St. Cloud
3. Notre Dame
4. Cornell
5. Minnesota State
6. Ohio State
7. Clarkson
8. North Dakota
9. Providence
10. Minnesota Duluth
11. Omaha
12. Minnesota
13. Michigan
14. Western Michigan
15. Northeastern
16. Boston University
17. Union
18. Penn State
19. Northern Michigan
20. Bowling Green
Sophomore Jason Cotton has recorded 12 goals and 17 points in 30 games this year for Sacred Heart (photo: Mike Miller/Sacred Heart Athletics).
With a roster comprised of a large number of freshmen and sophomores, Sacred Heart head coach CJ Marottolo knew his Pioneers would face a season of opportunistic growth.
Winning was important, but the team needed to adapt and learn. His message stood steadfast, emphasizing to his team to get better today to have a better day tomorrow.
Two weeks away from the end of the season, the Pioneers are now starting to hit their stride, both on the ice and in their consistency. And thanks to a recent run of points, they’re also back in the race for home ice advantage in the first round of the Atlantic Hockey postseason.
“I’ve been satisfied with our growth from the beginning of the season until now,” Marottolo said. “We’re starting to really find our consistency, and we’re finding our template to win hockey games. At the beginning of the year, we had some wins but would be up and down. But now our team has been through a lot, and it’s been great to watch that growth (as a team).”
If the Pioneers are finding their template, they’re not afraid to put it on display.
Three weeks ago, a win over Bentley preceded a 2-1 victory over Air Force in Colorado in a series where the second game was postponed due to the government shutdown. This past weekend, a sweep win over Niagara put them right back into the playoff hunt, and Tuesday’s makeup game win over the Falcons positioned Sacred heart for a late-season run at home ice.
“Niagara is a hard place to play, and we showed a lot of fight in our game,” Marottolo said. “We showed a lot of character, which bodes well for us at this time of year. But now our goal is just to keep rolling.”
It hasn’t been by accident. Sacred Heart sought to build a complete team capable of winning complete team efforts, and in their recent wins, they’ve seen a number of different goal scorers. They’ve scored 20 goals over the stretch with 11 different goal scorers, and only Jackson Barliant and Kory Kennedy tallied multi-goal games.
In goal, Brett Magnus is very quietly becoming one of Atlantic Hockey’s most dependable backstops. He made 30 saves or more in the victories over Air Force and Niagara, and the win over Bentley was his second 40-save performance of the season and third of his career. When he allows two or less goals, his team is 6-1, with the lone loss coming against Yale in a non-conference matchup.
“We’ve had good work ethic (as a team),” Marottolo said. “The guys have been playing with great enthusiasm. We’ve been very good on special teams. And our goaltender has made the key saves at the key moments when we’ve needed him to make them.”
Atlantic Hockey is always tight packed because every team, at some point, makes its move against the rest of the league. With four games remaining in the regular season, it seems the Pioneers are now making their move, which would enable them to peak at exactly the right time.
“Any time you win, you gain some confidence,” Marottolo said. “Especially in this league, it’s really not how you start but how you finish. We really have only been focusing on ourselves and not worry about who is doing what in the standings. That’s been helping keep our focus, especially because anyone can beat everyone within this league.”
Sacred Heart hosts RIT this weekend on Saturday at Webster Bank Arena, with Sunday’s game being played at Yale’s Ingalls Rink. The Pioneers then head to Army West Point for the final weekend next week.
Gridlock
The Pioneers’ win over Air Force on Tuesday only served to further muddy up the conference picture.
It pushed Sacred Heart over 20 points, meaning 2017-2018 is the first time in conference history every team has at least 20 points. Less than 10 points separate first from last place, and literally every place is still up for grabs.
Chris Lerch and I ran the numbers, and if our math is correct, the only team that’s clinched a first-round home series is Canisius. Every other team, from second place Mercyhurst down to the bottom of the standings, can still finish anywhere from a first round bye through a first-round road series.
Seven teams – Canisius, Mercyhurst, Holy Cross, Robert Morris, Army West Point, Air Force and RIT – can still finish as high as first place. AIC and Sacred Heart can still finish as high as second. The only two teams facing elimination scenarios for a first round bye and a quarterfinals home series are Niagara and Bentley.
Things will shake out a little bit more this weekend. But at this point in time, we would be analyzing clinching scenarios. The truth is that it’s almost impossible to look into it this point, but we’ll look into things on Saturday after what shakes down on Friday night.
The Other Bench’s Story
This weekend will be incredibly special at Bentley. The Falcons said goodbye last weekend to the John A. Ryan Arena, and the university is putting the finishing touches on the Bentley Arena in anticipation for its opening nights against Army West Point.
A building’s opening night has a special kind of distraction for both benches. But it’s worth noting that the Black Knights are no stranger to the circumstances. The Bentley Arena, after all, is the third new arena christened by the cadets in the last five years.
Back in 2013, Penn State skated by the Black Knights, 4-1, in the first game played at the Pegula Ice Arena. Three years later, Army tied Colgate, 2-2, to open the Class of 1965 Arena. Now they’ll skate against a familiar Atlantic Hockey rival this weekend in the Boston metropolitan area.
It’ll create a compelling storyline, especially since few teams had Army West Point’s success in Boston. The Black Knights went 1-0-2 in their last three games in the building and have never been swept in a two-game series featuring back-to-back games at Bentley. But that was all at the JAR and the Bentley Arena is, quite literally, a blank slate.
One More For Hinesy
The Army West Point-Bentley series features a “six degrees of separation” story worth telling this week.
St. John’s Prep High School in Danvers, Mass., retired the jersey this week of Derek Hines.
Hines, a West Point hockey graduate, was killed in action in Afghanistan in 2005 while serving the United States Army. He was a graduate of the high school, located approximately 20 miles north of Bentley University.
Hines’ jersey is the second jersey elevated to the rafters at St. John’s Prep, and he joins Pete Frates as the only other honoree. Frates is an international icon, a former college baseball player at Boston College who helped kickstart the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge that became a worldwide phenomenon in 2014. Frates’ brother, Andrew, is a Bentley graduate. When the Bentley Arena opens this weekend, the two stories will intertwine once again, on the backdrop of a retired jersey from Massachusetts’ North Shore.
Maybe it’s just me, but I always love when things intersect like that. It proves my theory that the world is small, and we’re all in it together. It’s amazing to me that these two icons, who gave and are giving so much to the world, came out of the same hockey program, and that they both have a connection to this weekend’s series in Waltham.
It’s All Just Geography
When Atlantic Hockey had 12 teams, the league used a divisional setup for scheduling (and one ill-fated playoff format in 2011).
Connecticut’s departure changed that, but a good lot of us still refer to the league’s geographical alignment when discussing matchups.
The end of the season always highlights the old divisional rivalries, and this year, save for RIT-Sacred Heart this weekend, will not disappoint.
Army West Point plays Bentley and Sacred Heart this weekend, while the Falcons draw a final game against American International next Friday (the two schools are Division II, Northeast-10 Conference rivals in all other sports). Holy Cross, meanwhile, finishes with games against those Yellow Jackets in a series where the campuses are separated by about an hour.
Canisius heads to Air Force this weekend, then returns to Buffalo for a home-and-home with Niagara in the Battle of the Bridge. RIT returns home next weekend to take on Mercyhurst, and Robert Morris plays the Lakers this weekend before heading to Air Force next week.
Players of the Week
Player of the Week – RIT’s Gabe Valenzuela: Valenzuela had three goals and an assist as RIT swept Robert Morris last weekend in Pittsburgh.
Defensive Player of the Week – Sacred Heart’s Liam Clare: Clare had a number of assists in Sacred Heart’s wins over Niagara, finishing the weekend at plus-5.
Goalie of the Week – Sacred Heart’s Brett Magnus: The Montreal native stopped over 50 shots on the weekend, recording a .927 save percentage as the Pioneers earned four points in Western New York.
Rookie of the Week – RIT’s Bryson Traptow: Get him the puck! Traptow scored the first goals of his college career and recorded a plus-3 in the RIT four-point weekend.
Denver is the defending national champion and would most likely open the 2018 NCAA tournament in Sioux Falls if the games started today (photo: Melissa Wade).
It’s time once again to do what we like to call Bracketology, college hockey style. It’s our weekly look at how I believe the NCAA tournament might look like come selection time, using what we know now.
It’s a look into the possible thought processes behind selecting and seeding the NCAA tournament teams.
This is not a be-all, end-all analysis of the bracket. I am trying to give you, the reader, an idea of what the committee might be thinking and not exactly what they are thinking.
We’ll be bringing you a new Bracketology every week until we make our final picks before the field is announced on March 18.
If you want to skip the inner workings and get to the results of the analysis, then click here.
Here are the facts:
• Sixteen teams are selected to participate in the national tournament.
• There are four regional sites (East – Bridgeport, Conn.; Northeast – Worcester, Mass.; Midwest – Allentown, Pa.; West – Sioux Falls, S.D.).
• A host institution that is invited to the tournament plays in the regional for which it is the host and cannot be moved. The host institutions this year: Yale in Bridgeport, Holy Cross in Worcester, Penn State in Allentown and North Dakota in Sioux Falls.
• Seedings will not be switched. To avoid undesirable first-round matchups, including intra-conference games (see below), teams will be moved among regionals, not reseeded.
In setting up the tournament, the committee begins with a list of priorities to ensure a successful tournament on all fronts, including competitive equity, financial success and the likelihood of a playoff-type atmosphere at each regional site. For this model, the following is a basic set of priorities:
1. Once the six automatic qualifiers and 10 at-large teams are selected, the next step is to develop four groups from the committee’s rankings of 1-16. The top four teams are No. 1 seeds and will be placed in the bracket so that if all four teams advance to the Men’s Frozen Four, the No. 1 seed will play the No. 4 seed and the No. 2 seed will play the No. 3 seed in the semifinals. The next four are targeted as No. 2 seeds. The next four are No. 3 seeds and the last four are No. 4 seeds.
2. Step two is to place the home teams. Host institutions that qualify will be placed at home.
3. Step three is to fill in the bracket so that first-round conference matchups are avoided, unless it corrupts the integrity of the bracket. If five or more teams from one conference are selected to the championship, then the integrity of the bracket will be protected (i.e., maintaining the pairing process according to seed will take priority over avoidance of first-round conference matchups). To complete each regional, the committee assigns one team from each of the remaining seeded groups so there is a No. 1, No. 2, No. 3 and No. 4 seed at each regional site.
Given these facts, here is the top 16 of the current PairWise Rankings (PWR), and the conference leaders through all games of February 13:
1 St. Cloud State 2t Notre Dame 2t Cornell
2t Denver 5 Minnesota State
6 Ohio State
7 Clarkson
8 Providence
9t Minnesota
9t Omaha
9t Minnesota Duluth
12 North Dakota
13 Western Michigan
14 Northeastern
15 Michigan
16 Northern Michigan 23 Boston College 35 Canisius
Current conference leaders based on winning percentage BOLDED Above:
Atlantic Hockey: Canisius Big Ten: Notre Dame ECAC Hockey: Cornell Hockey East: Boston College NCHC: St. Cloud State WCHA: Minnesota State (Northern Michigan does lead in points with two more games played)
Notes
• Bracketology assumes that the season has ended and there are no more games to be played — i.e., the NCAA tournament starts tomorrow.
• Because there are an uneven amount of games played inside each conference, I will be using winning percentage, not points accumulated, to determine the current leader in each conference. This team is my assumed conference tournament champion after applying the tiebreakers.
Step one
From the committee’s report, choose the 16 teams in the tournament.
We break ties in the PWR by looking at the individual comparisons among the tied teams, and add in any current league leaders that are not currently in the top 16. The only teams that is not is Canisius.
From there, we can start looking at the ties and bubbles in a more detailed fashion.
The ties and bubbles consist of Notre Dame, St. Cloud State and Denver at 1, Clarkson and Denver at 4, Minnesota and Omaha at 9 and Providence and Minnesota Duluth at 11.
We break all of our ties based upon the RPI.
Therefore, the 16 teams in the tournament, in rank order, are:
1 St. Cloud State 2 Notre Dame 3 Cornell
4 Denver 5 Minnesota State
6 Ohio State
7 Clarkson
8 Providence
9 Minnesota
10 Omaha
11 Minnesota Duluth
12 North Dakota
13 Western Michigan
14 Northeastern 15 Boston College 16 Canisius
Step two
Now it’s time to assign the seeds.
No. 1 seeds: St. Cloud State, Notre Dame, Cornell, Denver No. 2 seeds: Minnesota State, Ohio State, Clarkson, Providence No. 3 seeds: Minnesota, Omaha, Minnesota Duluth, North Dakota No. 4 seeds: Western Michigan, Northeastern, Boston College, Canisius
Step three
Place the No. 1 seeds in regionals.
No. 1 St. Cloud State is placed in the West Regional in Sioux Falls
No. 2 Notre Dame is placed in the Midwest Regional in Allentown
No. 3 Cornell is placed in the East Regional in Bridgeport
No. 4 Denver is placed in the Northeast Regional in Worcester
Step four
Now we place the other 12 teams so as to avoid intra-conference matchups if possible.
Begin by filling in each bracket by banding groups. Remember that teams are not assigned to the regional closest to their campus sites by ranking order within the banding (unless you are a host school, in which case you must be assigned to your home regional).
If this is the case, as it was last year, then the committee should seed so that the quarterfinals are seeded such that the four regional championships would be played by No. 1 vs. No. 8, No. 2 vs. No. 7, No. 3 vs. No. 6 and No. 4 vs. No. 5.
No. 2 seeds
No. 8 Providence placed in No. 1 St. Cloud State’s regional, the West Regional
No. 7 Clarkson is placed in No. 2 Notre Dame’s regional, the Midwest Regional
No. 6 Ohio State is placed in No. 3 Cornell’s regional, the East Regional
No. 5 Minnesota State is placed in No. 4 Denver’s regional, the Northeast Regional
No. 3 seeds
Our bracketing system has one regional containing seeds 1, 8, 9, and 16; another with 2, 7, 10 and 15; another with 3, 6, 11 and 14; and another with 4, 5, 12 and 13.
We must place North Dakota first, since it is a host school.
No. 12 North Dakota is placed in No. 8 Providence’s regional, the West Regional
No. 9 Minnesota is placed in No. 7 Clarkson’s regional, the Midwest Regional
No. 10 Omaha is placed in No. 6 Ohio State’s regional, the East Regional
No. 11 Minnesota Duluth is placed in No. 5 Minnesota State’s regional, the Northeast Regional
No. 4 seeds
One more time, taking No. 16 vs. No. 1, No. 15 vs. No. 2, etc.
No. 16 Canisius travels to No. 1 St Cloud State’s regional, the West Regional
No. 15 Boston College travels to No. 2 Notre Dame’s regional, the Midwest Regional
No. 14 Northeastern travels to No. 3 Cornell’s regional, the East Regional
No. 13 Western Michigan travels to No. 4 Denver’s regional, the Northeast Regional
The brackets as we have set them up:
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
15 Boston College vs. 2 Notre Dame
9 Minnesota vs. 7 Clarkson
East Regional (Bridgeport):
14 Northeastern vs. 3 Cornell
10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio State
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
16 Canisius vs. 1 St. Cloud State
12 North Dakota vs. 8 Providence
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
13 Western Michigan vs. 4 Denver
11 Minnesota Duluth vs. 5 Minnesota State
Our first concern is avoiding intraconference matchups. We have Western Michigan vs. Denver.
We swap Northeastern with Western Michigan.
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
15 Boston College vs. 2 Notre Dame
9 Minnesota vs. 7 Clarkson
East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 Western Michigan vs. 3 Cornell
10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio State
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
16 Canisius vs. 1 St. Cloud State
12 North Dakota vs. 8 Providence
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
14 Northeastern vs. 4 Denver
11 Minnesota Duluth vs. 5 Minnesota State
How can we improve attendance at these regionals?
We can bring Providence back to the East. By creating a 5 vs. 12 matchup in Sioux Falls, the seeding falls nicely.
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
15 Boston College vs. 2 Notre Dame
9 Minnesota vs. 7 Clarkson
East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 Western Michigan vs. 3 Cornell
10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio State
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
16 Canisius vs. 1 St. Cloud State
12 North Dakota vs. 5 Minnesota State
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
14 Northeastern vs. 4 Denver
11 Minnesota Duluth vs. 8 Providence
While we are at it, why don’t we make more changes? Let’s look at Clarkson and Ohio State. While Clarkson is pretty much equidistant to Allentown, Bridgeport and Worcester, Ohio State is definitely closer to Allentown. But we can’t just switch Clarkson and Ohio State. So we move the entire matchups.
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
15 Boston College vs. 2 Notre Dame
10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio State
East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 Western Michigan vs. 3 Cornell
9 Minnesota vs. 7 Clarkson
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
16 Canisius vs. 1 St. Cloud State
12 North Dakota vs. 5 Minnesota State
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
14 Northeastern vs. 4 Denver
11 Minnesota Duluth vs. 8 Providence
One step further. We have two Hockey East teams in Worcester and no ECAC teams. We have two ECAC teams in Bridgeport and no Hockey East teams.
We swap again!
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
15 Boston College vs. 2 Notre Dame
10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio State
East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 Western Michigan vs. 3 Cornell
11 Minnesota Duluth vs. 8 Providence
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
16 Canisius vs. 1 St. Cloud State
12 North Dakota vs. 5 Minnesota State
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
14 Northeastern vs. 4 Denver
9 Minnesota vs. 7 Clarkson
I think I am good now.
BUT…
There is that question of “punishing” the overall number one seed here by placing them in a regional that has a host playing in it, even though it’s the closest regional to it.
We have that case this week where St. Cloud State is playing in a regional with host North Dakota.
Some say it’s not fair, some say that’s how to cookie crumbles by having host schools having to play there, etc. That’s a whole different argument that we won’t get into here.
But, what I want to talk about is, what happens if I, as the committee, say that this is unfair to St. Cloud. Therefore, I will not place them in Sioux Falls, even though it’s the closest regional to St. Cloud.
Therefore, when I start, I am going to place St. Cloud in Allentown. And I am also going to say that the lowest number one seed should play in the regional of the host school. In this case, it’s Denver.
Following all of this, let’s see what we get:
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
16 Canisius vs. 1 St. Cloud State
9 Minnesota vs. 8 Providence
East Regional (Bridgeport):
14 Northeastern vs. 3 Cornell
11 Minnesota Duluth vs. 6 Ohio State
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
13 Western Michigan vs. 4 Denver
12 North Dakota vs. 5 Minnesota State
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
15 Boston College vs. 2 Notre Dame
10 Omaha vs. 7 Clarkson
OK, let’s attack this again. We swap Western Michigan and Northeastern.
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
16 Canisius vs. 1 St. Cloud State
9 Minnesota vs. 8 Providence
East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 Western Michigan vs. 3 Cornell
11 Minnesota Duluth vs. 6 Ohio State
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
14 Northeastern vs. 4 Denver
12 North Dakota vs. 5 Minnesota State
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
15 Boston College vs. 2 Notre Dame
10 Omaha vs. 7 Clarkson
I swap the Providence and Ohio State matchups.
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
16 Canisius vs. 1 St. Cloud State
11 Minnesota Duluth vs. 6 Ohio State
East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 Western Michigan vs. 3 Cornell
9 Minnesota vs. 8 Providence
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
14 Northeastern vs. 4 Denver
12 North Dakota vs. 5 Minnesota State
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
15 Boston College vs. 2 Notre Dame
10 Omaha vs. 7 Clarkson
Can I be happy with this? I think so. It’s not a bad bracket at all.
The question becomes do you move out St. Cloud State or not?
For me, I do. I think it’s fair.
Debate away!
See you next week for the next Bracketology.
Here’s a summary of everything that we have covered.
This week’s brackets
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
16 Canisius vs. 1 St. Cloud State
11 Minnesota Duluth vs. 6 Ohio State
East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 Western Michigan vs. 3 Cornell
9 Minnesota vs. 8 Providence
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
14 Northeastern vs. 4 Denver
12 North Dakota vs. 5 Minnesota State
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
15 Boston College vs. 2 Notre Dame
10 Omaha vs. 7 Clarkson
Conference breakdowns
NCHC — 6
Big Ten — 3
Hockey East — 3
ECAC Hockey — 2
WCHA — 1
Atlantic Hockey – 1
Last Week’s Brackets
Midwest Regional (Allentown):
16 Canisius vs. 1 Notre Dame
10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio State
East Regional (Bridgeport):
14 Western Michigan vs. 4 Cornell
11 Providence vs. 5 Minnesota State
West Regional (Sioux Falls):
15 Boston College vs. 2 St. Cloud State
9 Minnesota vs. 8 North Dakota
Northeast Regional (Worcester):
13 Northeastern vs. 3 Denver
12 Minnesota Duluth vs. 7 Clarkson
Arlan: Reports are that it is flu season. Here in our sport, there was an upset bug going around a week ago, and that outbreak was still in evidence over the weekend, with cases reported in every league.
Mercyhurst didn’t lose a game, but it did lose ground in its title race with Robert Morris. The Lakers and Colonials entered the weekend even with six games remaining. RMU took care of its business, shutting out Lindenwood over the series, 1-0 and 5-0. Mercyhurst had to battle back for a 1-1 tie with Penn State on Friday, and then couldn’t hold a two-goal lead on Saturday, as the Nittany Lions rallied to tie on Natalie Heising’s second goal of the game. The six-on-four tally gave PSU its 11th tie of the season, and left the Lakers a game back in the standings as they prepare to host the Colonials with the title on the line.
No. 3 Boston College hadn’t lost in four weeks, but it fell for the second time on home ice to a Hockey East opponent, as New Hampshire took down the Eagles, 2-1, thanks to 34 saves by Ava Boutilier. That was only the second time this year that BC failed to score multiple goals, and not surprisingly, it lost both times. No. 9 Maine went to OT twice at Providence as the two squads jousted for second place. Both games went to overtime, as did the teams’ previous meeting in November, and the only win produced came Sunday, when Maureen Murphy found the net for the second time in the contest at 2:57 of the extra session. That result nudged the Friars a point ahead of the Black Bears.
No. 1 Clarkson wasn’t immune either. The Golden Knights had the ECAC crown securely in their grasp, but two goals from Princeton’s Carly Bullock, and a 27-save shutout by Steph Neatby, dropped them into a tie at the top with Colgate.
In the WCHA, No. 5 Ohio State entered the weekend on a high after sweeping then No. 1 Wisconsin, but the Buckeyes were without All-American goaltender Kassidy Sauve as they traveled to Minnesota State. Two goals from Lindsey Coleman and 35 stops by Chloe Crosby allowed the Mavericks to flip the script and take a 4-1 verdict on Friday, just their third victory of the league slate. The Buckeyes needed third-period goals by Charly Dahlquist and Emma Maltais on Saturday for a come-from-behind 3-2 win to salvage a split. The zaniness extended throughout the league, as St. Cloud State didn’t let the fact that it trails Bemidji State in the standings deter it from an emphatic 4-0 and 4-1 sweep of the Beavers. Wisconsin looked to have shaken off being swept for the first time with a 5-0 trouncing of Minnesota Duluth, but the Badgers needed a couple of third-period goals by Sophia Shaver to gain a 3-3 tie on Saturday.
Where should we be looking first, at one of those results, or somewhere else?
Nicole: I think the Buckeyes’ loss has to be the most head-scratching, though Clarkson seemed to be on auto-pilot, so that one might have been more surprising. There seems to be a letdown in the week between the two Beanpot weeks, so I didn’t find the UNH win too crazy.
Consistency has been one of the big question marks for Ohio State all season. Their longest win streak was five games, and that included a win over Penn State and two over Robert Morris. I don’t have any idea how to wrap my head around their last three weeks. They were full bore against Wisconsin. The losses to Duluth weren’t too concerning for me — the Bulldogs have a lot of talent, and they sort of sneak up on teams at times. A gut-check type series for a somewhat inexperienced Buckeyes team — especially when it comes to the push for the postseason — at that point in the season wouldn’t have been too odd.
They followed that up with the wins over Wisconsin, and it felt like all had been redeemed. Lessons were learned and OSU was building — playing their best hockey. So how to explain this weekend at Mankato? Because as you said, it wasn’t just one loss. The Buckeyes had to dig real deep to salvage that second game. The Mavericks have just five wins all season. No offense to anyone at Minnesota State, but they just aren’t in the same class as a top-10 team.
How concerned would you be if you were Nadine Muzerall and the staff at Ohio State? Do you have any insights on what might have gone wrong for the Buckeyes this weekend?
Arlan: Muzerall can take solace in the fact that she was starting newcomer Amanda Zeglen in goal, and no offense to her, but she doesn’t have Sauve’s resume at this point of her career. But that doesn’t explain her team’s inability to generate more than one goal against the league’s most porous defense.
For Muzerall’s playing career, her team’s biggest rival was Minnesota Duluth. In those days, nobody was better than Shannon Miller at getting her team fired up to play a big series. However, it wasn’t unusual to see the Bulldogs bonk in subsequent seeks. That’s what OSU seems to be doing; get sky high one weekend, but not be able to play at the same level in its aftermath. Once the postseason arrives, the Buckeyes will need to avoid those pendulum swings. However, if they can find a way to advance to the Frozen Four without emptying the tank, they can be a dangerous team over those final two rounds.
And to be fair to Ohio State, the bottom of the WCHA, and really the lower-ranked teams around the country, are a bit of a moving target. Consider teams like St. Cloud State that have played at a 5-6-5 clip after starting out 2-12, and that schedule includes all four games versus the Badgers. The Huskies are done with their regular season and can now prepare for a likely quarterfinal series at Minnesota against a team that will be coming off of a rivalry series in Madison. Might that be an upset special?
This could be a year where a number of road teams do some damage in the playoffs. Even a heavy favorite like Boston College may have to debut by playing a team that has given it fits this season. Possible opponents include Vermont, Connecticut, and top rival Boston University, teams that have take either taken points from the Eagles thus far, or pushed them to the limit recently.
The season is a bit of a paradox. The top teams are clearly on top, but they also look far more vulnerable than we usually see. Maybe it’s just an illusion, caused by the fact that the lower-ranked teams are improving rapidly. Who stands out to you as a team that we’d quickly dismiss, but no top team would want to see come calling in the playoffs?
Nicole: I don’t think you even have to choose a specific team. If I’m in Hockey East, I’m not taking anything for granted. I feel like we could write a paragraph for each team in the bottom half of the table enumerating why they are a serious upset threat.
It almost feels unbelievable that Connecticut is a team that is still in danger of not making the HE tournament. They have two ties against Boston College and have beaten ranked Providence and Maine. They clearly know how to get up for a big game.
Above them is BU, then Vermont and Northeastern. At the moment, Northeastern is the only team to defeat both Wisconsin and Boston College, and they’re not even in the top half. They may have to hit the road in the opening round.
I don’t see things being that volatile in the other conferences, but I don’t think any of the regular season champions are anywhere near assured a tournament championship. Robert Morris and Mercyhurst are neck-and-neck atop the CHA. Wisconsin has been vulnerable. For any of the top teams, I’d be totally unsurprised if any of the top five in the ECAC win the autobid.
In years past, it was pretty clear that teams ranked 1-6 and often even the team at the seventh spot were feeling pretty secure in their postseason fates. This year, the teams currently ranked 4-8 in the PairWise have to be more than a little concerned, but it’s exactly that kind of uncertainty that can drive a team to an upset conference win.
Arlan: Overall, perhaps I’m judging the field too harshly this year, but it just seems like the top of the pyramid is lower this year. Wisconsin has set the pace for much of the year, but the Badgers don’t really have a true first line, nor do they have a Patty Kazmaier winner in net. As the season has unfolded, other teams have appeared to close the gap. Maybe it’s a home versus away situation, but Wisconsin has been much more vulnerable the second time around.
Clarkson is about on pace with where it was offensively last year, and its top scorers may even be clicking more regularly, but I don’t know that Loren Gabel and freshman Elizabeth Giguère will be able to match what Cayley Mercer and Geneviève Bannon brought to the national tournament last year. I know that Gabel made a big impact skating with that duo as a sophomore, but now she’ll be asked to carry more of the burden. Even if the Golden Knights aren’t at the level that they were in 2017’s Frozen Four, it may not matter because they could still wind up as the most complete team. Their players know how to get it done, and that is crucial.
Boston College looks nice, but the Eagles allowed only one goal over 120 minutes in their 2017 NCAA tournament. The offense is going to have to produce at a high rate, because the defense is much more vulnerable this time around. They have some wins over ranked opponents, or at least teams that are ranked some of the time, but there seems to be a fairly steep drop off from the top four teams to those that round out the top 10. Because that top four have faced each other so seldom, it’s hard to tell who will be the most prepared for the Frozen Four.
Perhaps Colgate and Clarkson have the edge. At least they’ve played each other a couple of times already, and they look to be on course to collide again in the ECAC playoffs, but the whole season has had so many unexpected results that it isn’t a certainty. Colgate will also be venturing into unfamiliar territory. Cornell in 2010 was the last team making its debut that really jumped in the NCAAs with both feet.
I would say that the fourth-best team from that quartet is likely better than was Minnesota, the fourth Frozen Four team a year ago, but after that, I see it dropping off very quickly. I don’t believe that the fifth and sixth teams are at the level of teams like Minnesota Duluth or St. Lawrence last season. Ohio State can certainly make the tournament unpredictable, because the Buckeyes can defeat just about anyone, but there is a wide variety of teams that can upend them as well.
What do you think? Am I underestimating the competition in 2017-18?
Nicole: When you lay it out as you did above, I’m not sure there’s a lot of argument, but I definitely didn’t have that feeling until I read this. I don’t know that I was judging each individual team against their prior incarnation. By that metric, I suppose there’s been drop off. While it’s left me total unsure oh what might happen next, what’s been great about this season is that the gaps have been so narrow. Sure, that undefeated Minnesota team or the one-loss Boston College team showed some of the most elite hockey we’ve ever seen, but I’m not sure that having a single top bar with a giant gap underneath necessarily means that competition was better.
The gap between the top five teams and the next five is certainly clear, but it’s also not surprising.
I’ve admittedly been snobby in the past about Olympic years, though I’ve since amended my stance. I don’t like making excuses for an Olympic year, but I do think some of the drop off you describe can be prescribed to it. Wisconsin not having a top line? Emily Clark and Annie Pankowski would fix that. BC needing to beef up their defense? Megan Keller, Cayla Barnes, and Kali Flanagan are the exact reason. Minnesota Duluth has shown they have a lot of potential — Maddie Rooney in net could very well be the thing that would make them that next-level you say is lacking.
Arlan: In addition to NCAA action, the 2018 Olympics got going this weekend. What did you think of the teams in general, and the United States in particular in its first round-robin game versus Finland?
Personally, I was surprised that the Finns were able to push the Americans around to a certain extent. If the game is officiated the same way when the U.S. and Canada clash, then that should clearly be to the advantage of the Canadians. The USA is more of a finesse team, while their neighbors to the north can bring more grit. I don’t remember any calls for body checking, even though Finland was able to stop some of the American skaters dead in their tracks at times. Obviously, Canada also has highly skilled forwards like Meghan Agosta and Marie-Philip Poulin, but it also has more size and strength throughout its roster.
Canada also has a big advantage in experience in goal with Shannon Szabados, who is capable of stealing a game if need be. You and I have seen Maddie Rooney deliver lights-out performances for UMD, but it is one thing to be a wall against an NCAA offense and another to shut down the Canadians. That is particularly true when she plays behind a blue line that is on the smaller side and will have to be very clean when handling the puck, because it may be vulnerable to some mismatches in front of the net.
Two of the bright spots, in my opinion, were twins Monique Lamoureux-Morando and Jocelyn Lamoureux-Davidson. They combined on the second-period goal that pulled their team out of a deficit. The latter also scored twice in six seconds to set an Olympic record and break open the team’s second game versus the Olympic Athletes from Russia. They have taken some costly penalties over the years, but the slightly rougher game played to their strengths. The Americans will need to get more players battling in a similar fashion to avoid getting steamrolled by Canada.
As much as I imagine you’ll be pulling for the Wisconsin players on Canada or the United States to bring hope gold, I’d guess that you’ll be rooting just as hard for the Koreans to score their first Olympic goal. They clanked a crossbar early versus Switzerland, but hockey isn’t one of those sports where close counts. Am I correct that you have a soft spot for the hosts?
Nicole: My love of an underdog is well documented, so I don’t think it’s any surprise that I’d like to see both the Korean team and the Japanese team make some strides. The Japanese were a great revelation in Sochi, and they’ve done a lot of growing in the four years since then.
I don’t think we should be too surprised about the Finns. They made it pretty clear at Worlds in March that the gap for them has narrowed considerably, and in interviews they made it clear that though they aren’t able to centralize, they were going to be on the ice together as much as possible. There was a hunger there, and their win over Canada in that tournament was like the reassurance and confidence they needed to push even harder in the intervening months.
I’m honestly still really unsure what to think about how this tournament will play out. I was incredibly concerned and skeptical over the past few weeks based on how the Americans played over the final few exhibition games. The passes weren’t there. The crisp puck-handling, the ice vision — all the sort of things that should have been second-nature — were a struggle. It was difficult to watch that and think this was a U.S. team that could win the medal.
That first game settled some of my fears, but not all of them. They looked a lot cleaner, but also tentative. Maybe that was an opening game-jitters sort of thing, but I don’t think we’ve seen Team USA play to that elite level like they were in Plymouth for the World Championships. If we don’t start seeing an inkling of that, I’m going to be very, very worried about their gold-medal chances. We can only hope the game against Finland shook them up a bit as well as shaking off some rust.
Arlan: I’ll be interested to read the analysis of you and Candace next week of the first meeting of the United States and Canada in preliminary play, as well as the women’s semifinal round.
Meanwhile, the Beanpot wrapped up. Harvard and Northeastern played a fairly sloppy contest in the third-place game. As with most meetings for third, neither team wants to be there, but at least in the Beanpot, they have a week to get resigned to their role. Mishandled pucks created prime scoring chances that just as quickly evaporated when the biscuit was fumbled in return. The result swung on a couple of goaltending breakdowns in the second period. Harvard’s Becky Dutton gave up too much of the short side that allowed Tori Sullivan to net her second goal of the game. The short-handed tally gave the Huskies seeming control of the game with a 3-1 lead, but a couple of minutes later, the Crimson jumped back into it. Ali Peper took a harmless-looking shot from the right point, but Northeastern’s Aerin Frankel was off her angle, and the puck snuck inside the near post. Becca Gilmore went to the blue paint in the third period, and her two goals two minutes apart gave Harvard a 4-3 triumph.
In the championship game, BC started much the way that it did in its semifinal win over Northeastern with a couple of goals from its top line. After Daryl Watts put the Eagles ahead while the fans were still finding their seats, Molly Slowe got a shift with the top unit ten minutes later. Caitrin Lonergan set the play up with a behind-the-back pass to Watts, who sent the puck across the crease for a tap-in goal for Slowe. The Terriers had a couple of prime opportunities to answer in the opening frame, but Katie Burt denied Victoria Bach on a breakaway and Rebecca Leslie from the low slot.
In the second period, after getting stoned by Burt yet again, Bach finally got the Terriers on the board with her 100th career goal. Regan Rust tied the score on a power play 45 seconds later, and Bach set up Leslie in the slot before the game reached its midway point for a 3-2 BU advantage. The Eagles had the better of play from that point, but the lead held into the second intermission.
Of course, BC was not going to go quietly into the night. BU was able to hold their edge through most of the final period of regulation, but with 4:08 to go, Slowe fed Watts coming down the middle and her shot went in off the far post for the 39th goal of her freshman campaign. What were your thoughts as the game went to a true sudden-death overtime, not the five-minute variety that we usually see during the season?
Nicole: We talked about my love of an underdog already, and BU hasn’t won a Beanpot in my lifetime, so as time carried on in that game, I was holding out hope for them. I think it’s clear that BC is the top team and it was assumed they’d win, but I couldn’t help but hope to see Bach and company get rewarded in some way for this crazy season. The Beanpot is a good primer for the true postseason. I’ve seen BC calling it trophy season on Twitter, and that made me smile. It’s the very first trophy given out, and it sort of sets the scene for the craziness of postseason, especially this particular iteration. When it comes down to who is going to score, I feel like the field evened a little more. BU has enough weapons that I didn’t feel like it was a given that BC would take it.
Boston College needed a big win, I think, to start to set the tone for the tournaments. This tournament means a lot to folks out East in a way I don’t think we here in the Midwest can totally grasp. This is a confidence boost and a point of pride and really sets the Eagles up for success moving forward.
Grant Potulny’s Northern Michigan Wildcats sit on top of the WCHA standings after winning nine of 10 in conference in 2018 (photo: Jim Rosvold).
Our guests on the February 13 edition of USCHO Live! are Northern Michigan coach Grant Potulny, whose Wildcats sit atop the WCHA standings and at No. 20 in the USCHO.com poll after winning nine of 10 league games since Jan. 1, and Rochester Institute of Technology coach Wayne Wilson, whose Tigers won all three games on a long weekend road trip to move into fifth place — yet still in reach of first — in Atlantic Hockey.
Be part of the conversation! Send your tweets to @USCHO or your emails to [email protected]. Each episode of USCHO Live! features a look at news around NCAA hockey, a look ahead at upcoming games and events, and conversation with people who coach, administer and play college hockey, and journalists who cover the sport.
About the hosts
Jim Connelly is a senior writer at USCHO.com and has been with the site since 1999. He is based in Boston and regularly covers Hockey East. He began with USCHO.com as the correspondent covering the MAAC, which nowadays is known as Atlantic Hockey. Each week during the season, he co-writes “Tuesday Morning Quarterback.” Jim is the winner of the 2012 Joe Concannon award. He a former color analyst for UMass-Lowell hockey’s radio network and studio analyst for NESN.
Ed Trefzger has been part of USCHO since 1999 and now serves as a senior writer and director of technology. He is the radio play-by-play voice for Rochester Institute of Technology hockey on the RIT Tigers Sports Network, and has been involved with the broadcasts as a producer, studio host, and color commentator since their inception. He is the owner and president of broadcasting company Dansville Media, and was general manager of the former Rochester, N.Y., sports radio station 97.5 The Team.
North Dakota and Minnesota are both nationally-ranked teams and both are also in the top 16 of the PairWise Rankings (photo: Jim Rosvold).
Each week during the season, we look at the big events and big games around Division I men’s college hockey in Tuesday Morning Quarterback.
Jim: Notre Dame’s 5-1 loss on Saturday to Ohio State did not cost the Irish their top spot in the USCHO.com poll, but it did cost them a number of first-place votes.
Four teams picked up top nods from voters with Notre Dame and Denver each grabbing 15, St. Cloud State taking 13 and Cornell earning the final seven.
What stood out to me, though, is how closely the top eight of the poll align with the top eight of the PairWise. Voters swapped No. 1 Notre Dame and No. 3 St. Cloud State, but otherwise, the top eight are identical to the PairWise.
I’d love to tell you that there is a good reason for this, but I honestly can’t. I feel like generally some team or teams grab too much respect from the voters and thus when placed next to the computer ranking system, there is some significant difference.
Right now, that’s not the case.
I guess when I look a bit further down, I see more disparity. North Dakota is ranked ninth in the poll, but is 12th in the PairWise. Omaha is 13th in the poll, but is tied for ninth in the PairWise. Both of those teams are probably ranked on reputation – North Dakota getting a boost and Omaha not getting as much respect.
But the point I’m taking a long time to get to: at this point in the season, is the PairWise more important and more relevant than any of the national polls?
Paula: Jimmy, that is an excellent question.
We’ve talked about the difference between the PairWise and the polls before, and I think they serve two different purposes.
At this point in the season, we see poll ballots synching up with the PWR, and I don’t know how much of that is a function of people consulting the PWR before submitting ballots or a natural process. I think it can be argued that at every point in the season, the PairWise is more important than any poll because the process is so aligned with selection of the field of the NCAA tournament. You and I both know that some coaches and programs put a lot of emphasis on the PWR from the very beginning of the season, while some coaches ignore it completely for most of the season, choosing to focus on other motivating factors.
The poll to me, though, is really more of a snapshot of how teams and programs are doing right now in addition to their overall progress and relative strength throughout the season, and North Dakota and Omaha are good examples of that – as well as examples of how things may function by reputation.
Look at Union. The Dutchmen received 49 votes in the poll, but are tied 22nd in the PairWise, not even a bubble team. I’m one of the people who voted them into the poll because they are 7-1-0 in their last eight games. They may play in a league that is considered to be a little less competitive than, say, the NCHC or Hockey East, but they are finding ways to succeed, and they have earned votes in the poll.
Jim: Union is one of a number of middle-of-the-pack teams that are streaking right now.
Mercyhurst brought itself back to Atlantic Hockey relevance with a 7-0-2 run that included a sweep this weekend of Holy Cross. (As of press time, Mercyhurst has another game tonight against RIT, a makeup of a snowed-out game.)
Minnesota State is on a 7-0-0 run that has the Mavericks within a game of Northern Michigan for first place in the WCHA.
And in Hockey East, Connecticut is 6-0-0 after losing five straight and Vermont is unbeaten in seven (5-0-2) to make the Catamounts relevant again after spending time in last place.
It’s strange to see teams that at one point were considered mediocre suddenly catch fire, but that’s now become trendy in college hockey late in the season.
Paula: What better trend is there to set than that?
Every coach says he wants his team to be playing its best hockey at this time of the year, and teams that are able to recover from mediocre first halves are sometimes able to play themselves into an NCAA autobid when March rolls around.
We’ve talked ad nauseam here about parity in college hockey and surely that is a contributing factor to this trend, but having covered the Big Ten for its first five seasons now, I’ve come to understand a little bit more (I think) about the way conference hockey works and how a conference hockey schedule may play into this as well. Given that until this season B1G conference play began at the very end of November or early December, I was fortunate to see a lot of nonconference play for a couple of months before the intensity of league play for the original six teams in conference.
For the third and fourth seasons of B1G play – after teams grew more accustomed to each other – there was a kind of familiarity among the conference teams that, I think, contributed to the ability of one team or another to use the second half to improve significantly. I’m sure there’s something to be said there for the Ivies as well.
I’m probably not saying this as elegantly or as clearly as I should, but once the hard end of conference play begins in the second half, some teams are able to hone in more efficiently of what they know of other teams and what they know of themselves when facing those opponents.
Of course, some of it is pure chance, the changing mix of players from year to year, a given team’s injury situation, the way that some teams sometimes need half a season to adjust.
A Tip of the Cap…
Jim: … to hockey alumni from New Hampshire that showed up in full force to support retiring head coach Dick Umile on Saturday night.
The single-file group stretched from one goal line to the other at Towse Rink to honor Umile’s 28 seasons behind the bench at his alma mater.
Personally, I hope there are more Dick Umile’s in life. His personality, which combines the fiery Italian with a compassionate friend that everyone loves being around, will be missed when he retires at the end of this season. Hopefully, like former Massachusetts coach Don “Toot” Cahoon, he might find the desire to keep his foot in the game through a TV role (or really anything that keeps him in hockey rinks).
Paula: What an amazing display from the New Hampshire alumni – amazing, but not surprising to anyone who knows Dick Umile.
He is one of the warmest, friendliest coaches in Division I hockey and I know I will miss the opportunity to run into him occasionally through nonconference and tournament play.
Finally, there is some clarity. I did say some clarity, as a couple of conferences are done with the regular season and playoff qualification and seeding is done. Others still have another week to battle, and the leagues are so close that a single point won or lost might make the difference in playing at home in the playoffs or getting on a bus somewhere else. The playoffs to begin the playoffs are being played in earnest. Here are the highlights.
CCC
Salve Regina faced Nichols hoping to cement the top seed in the conference and was backed by a pair of shutout performances from Blake Wojtala in 4-0 and 2-0 wins. Erik Udahl led the way on Friday with a pair of goals for the Seahawks, while Timothy Sweeney and John McLean scored in the third period to break a scoreless tie and give Salve Regina the weekend sweep and regular season title.
Nichols needed some points to avoid dropping out of fourth place, but a strong final weekend for Curry vaulted them past the Bisons for the fourth seed. The Colonels downed Wentworth, 4-2, on Friday, but needed extra time on Saturday to capture a 4-3 overtime win and a four-point weekend. Goals by Adam Lane and Jake McDonough gave the Leopards a lead in the third period, but Curry’s Lionel Mauron tied it and Shane Tracy won it with a power-play goal in overtime.
Endicott continued to struggle down the stretch as their weekend series with University of New England went to the Nor’easters, who took three of four points. Special teams were the difference on Friday, with UNE scoring twice shorthanded and adding a third goal on a power play. Brady Fleurent’s empty-net goal sealed the win. On Saturday, the Gulls built a 4-1 lead on the strength of Ross Olsson’s hat trick, but UNE scored three unanswered goals, including a power-play goal and one shorthanded, to earn a 4-4 tie. Ryan Bloom scored twice to bring UNE back from the third-period deficit.
Independents
Canton hosted Bryn Athyn for two games over the weekend, with each team earning a hard-fought victory. On Saturday, the Kangaroos got a power-play goal from Tyler Bullard and Kasey Kulczycki added an unassisted marker in the third to give goalie Austin Washkurak the win, 2-0.
On Sunday, the visitors returned the favor with a 2-1 win led by a goal and assist by Brycon Johnson and 36 saves from McKenzie Chalmers in goal. Tyler Bullard scored late for the ‘Roos with the goalie pulled, but it was too little, too late.
MASCAC
Plymouth State had already wrapped up the top seed in the conference, but there is a lot to play for among the teams in spots two through six. Just two points separate Fitchburg State and Worcester State in second and third, while two points also separate Massachusetts-Dartmouth, Salem State, and Westfield State in fourth, fifth, and sixth.
Worcester State picked up a big two points with a 2-1 win over Salem State on Thursday. Josh Reinstein out-dueled Jason Pucciarelli in goal, and Mike Moran scored the game-winner early in the second period.
Fitchburg State saw the offense on display in Saturday’s 10-2 win over Framingham State. Six different Falcons recorded three-point games, with Patrick Germain leading the way with a pair of goals and a pair of assists in the blowout win.
NE-10
Just a single point separates St. Anselm, St. Michael’s, and Assumption at the top of the leaderboard in the NE-10. The Hawks moved to the top with a pair of weekend wins over Franklin Pierce. On Friday night, the Hawks won 4-0, and on Saturday, they raced to an early 4-0 lead behind two goals from John Femia en route to a 4-2 win.
On Tuesday in the battle for bragging rights in Worcester, Massachusetts, Assumption downed cross-town rival Worcester State, 3-2, behind a goal and an assist from Cam Laughlin and two assists from Matt Damelio.
NEHC
Norwich had what seemed to be a comfortable four-point lead in the standings entering the final weekend of conference play. Second-place Hobart needed to win out and get some help if the newcomers were going to take the top seed away from the Cadets. On Friday, the Statesmen won at Northfield, 5-4, with Andrew Longo breaking a 4-4 tie in the third period for the win. The Statesmen won out by downing Castleton on Saturday, 4-2 but Norwich got the point they needed in a 2-2 tie with Skidmore to earn the regular season title and quarterfinal match-up next week with travel partner Castleton.
Other playoff pairings include No. 2 Hobart hosting No. 7 Southern Maine, No. 3 Babson hosting No. 6 Skidmore, and No. 4 Massachusetts-Boston hosting No. 5 New England College in a repeat of last Friday’s game won by the Beacons, 4-2.
NESCAC
Trinity is the only sure thing, having wrapped up the regular season title and top seed in the NESCAC tournament despite Saturday’s 3-0 loss at Colby. After that, it is going to be a wild final weekend of play next week with just four points separating second-place Amherst from seventh place Williams.
The Mammoths jumped into the second spot on the strength of back-to-back wins over Tufts and Connecticut College. On Saturday, Joey Lupo scored shorthanded to erase a 1-0 Jumbos’ lead and Patrick Daly and Thomas Lindstrom added power-play goals in the 3-1 win. On Sunday, Lindstrom was again prominent on the score sheet, scoring twice, including the game-winner, to give Connor Girard his eighth win of the season, 4-1.
Hamilton jumped to the highly coveted fourth seed with a three-point weekend that saw the return of Evan Buitenhuis to the Continentals’ netminding duties. Buitenhuis picked up a win and a shutout in Sunday’s 2-0 win over Tufts, where he made 25 saves.
SUNYAC
Oswego has clinched the top seed in the SUNYAC tournament along with a first-round bye. On Friday night, they sent a message to Geneseo in a 4-2 win that saw the Lakers jump out to an early 3-0 lead behind goals from A.J. D’Orazio, Mitchell Herlihey, and Cameron Berry. Two third-period goals from the Knights closed the gap, but Herlihey’s second of the night into an empty net sealed the win.
Geneseo needed to bounce back the next night against Cortland as they are in a neck-and neck battle with Buffalo State for the second seed and first round bye. The Bengals jumped ahead in the standings with Friday’s 4-2 win at Plattsburgh, only to stumble the next night in a 3-2 loss to Potsdam, where Sean Winikates and Ben Mariano erased a 2-1 Bengals lead for the Bears. Geneseo handled the Red Dragons 6-1 and both teams enter the final weekend tied with 21 points each in the standings, and the Knights having one league game remaining with Brockport to try to earn the second seed outright.
UCHC
The UCHC is going to come down to the final horn in the final games this weekend to provide any semblance of clarity. Utica, Lebanon Valley, and Stevenson sit tied at the top with 20 points each, but Manhattanville and Neumann are just two points back, and Elmira sits in sixth, just three points back.
While most teams had mixed results, Manhattanville picked up two very important wins over the weekend. On Friday, the Valiants downed Kings, 7-1, and on Saturday beat Lebanon Valley, 5-4. Jared Martin and Cory Anderson each scored twice in the see-saw battle that saw the host team lose a two-goal lead in the second period and rebuild it in the third period to hold off the Dutchmen and keeping Kyle Redmond unbeaten in goal for Manhattanville.
Three Biscuits
Charles Costello, Becker: No relation to this scribe for the Hawks forward that scored two goals and added two assists in the 6-3 win over Western New England last Thursday night.
Roman Ammirato, Utica: Recorded a hat trick in the Pioneers’ 6-4 win over Stevenson on Friday night. Ammirato scored his first two while Utica was shorthanded and finished off the hat trick with an empty-net goal to secure the win.
Evan Buitenhuis, Hamilton: The Continentals’ star goalie returned to the lineup and helped Hamilton pick up three valuable league points. On Sunday Buitenhuis stopped all 25 Tufts’ shots he faced in a 2-0 shutout win.
Some conferences are done with jockeying for position and now face the real challenge of “win or go home” hockey starting next weekend. Others still have their own version of the playoffs to determine who is in and out and where are they playing the following week. It is playoff time, and the season just got very real for everybody!
ECAC Hockey announced Monday that St. Lawrence sophomore forward Carson Gicewicz has been assessed a one-game suspension as the result of his actions in the Cornell-St. Lawrence game from Saturday, Feb. 10.
The league action was taken after review of an incident that occurred at the 15:04 mark of the third period in the Saints-Big Red game where Gicewicz was assessed a major penalty for butt-ending and a game misconduct penalty.
Gicewicz is not eligible to play in St. Lawrence’s next game on Friday, Feb. 16, when the Saints travel to Harvard.
First-place Northern Michigan and second-place Minnesota State — separated by just a point in the standings at the moment — both took six points on the weekend to stay where they are, at least for the time being. The Wildcats needed overtime to beat Alaska 2-1 on Friday and then toughed out a 4-1 win on Saturday that was much closer than the scoreline. The Mavs also needed overtime to win 3-2 Friday in Huntsville before getting a 6-1 win Saturday. So at least for one more week, the Wildcats remained atop the standings. However, NMU has next week off while MSU hosts Ferris State, which means the Mavericks can jump ahead of the Wildcats with yet another sweep. Bowling Green, which was off this weekend, can also gain on NMU with a positive series in Anchorage. The Falcons are eight points behind the Mavericks and nine points behind the Wildcats.
2. Lakers eliminate Seawolves
The first team officially out of WCHA playoff contention if Alaska Anchorage. The Seawolves, who have not made the playoffs since 2014, will miss out for the fourth straight season. They were swept away by Lake Superior State, 3-2 and 2-1, during their home series in Anchorage. UAA has just two wins this season and are officially locked in to the No. 10 slot for the second consecutive season. Since they made their Final Five run in 2014, they’ve finished last three times and ninth once — both out of playoff contention.
3. Three spots still up for grabs
The top five teams in the conference have clinched playoff spots, and the top three have clinched home ice. And with UAA eliminated, that leaves four teams battling for three slots: Alabama Huntsville, Alaska, Ferris State and Lake Superior State. How touch and go is it going to be for those four teams in the last two weeks? Well, those teams are separated by just four points. UAH has 30 points, UAF 29, Ferris 28 and LSSU 27. (Yikes!) Alaska and Ferris will each be in action this weekend for a chance to leap ahead of Huntsville (and each other) but nothing will be decided for sure until the final weekend of the season. (What else did you expect.)
Three things from last weekend in Atlantic Hockey:
Farewell, old friend
On Saturday, Bentley University played its last game in the John A Ryan Skating Arena, affectionately known (well, maybe not “affectionately” by visiting teams) as the JAR.
It’s been the Falcons’ home for over 40 years, but Bentley is opening a new, on-campus rink next weekend.
Bentley hosted Air Force in it final home stand at the JAR, winning 2-0 on Friday behind Jayson Argue’s second career shutout. On Saturday, it looked like Bentley was going to put a final win on the scoreboard, leading 2-0 after the first period.
But Air Force spoiled the party, scoring four unanswered goals to close the book on the JAR with a 4-2 win. Brady Tomlak’s empty net goal with 12 seconds left sealed the deal.
Air Force coach Frank Serratore’s postgame comments recalled some college basketball history.
“I remember the great John Thompson went into Syracuse when (the Orange) won something like 50 games in a row at their old building,” he said. “When Georgetown beat Syracuse, he said, ‘(Manley Field House) is officially closed.’ So I get the distinction of saying the JAR is officially closed. As silly as it seems, it’s a big moment, and to win the last game here in the way that we did was kind of cool.”
The Air Force Falcons will stay in New England and face off against Sacred Heart on Tuesday at Quinnipiac, making up a game postponed from Jan. 20 due to a government shutdown.
Bentley will christen its new building this weekend, hosting Army West Point.
Reversal of fortune vs. more of the same
As I said in my predictions for this past weekend’s games, Rochester Institute of Technology’s series at Robert Morris was a classic case of teams moving in opposite directions. The Tigers had lost three of their last four, including being swept at home by Bentley the week before, while Robert Morris was on a roll, going 5-1-1 in its last seven coming into its series with the Tigers.
But the Tigers threw both those trends in reverse with a 4-3, 6-2 sweep of the Colonials.
On Friday, RIT used three second period goals to build a 4-1 lead and then withstood an RMU comeback attempt. Abbott Girduckis had a goal and an assist for the Tigers, while Eric Israel had three assists for the Colonials. RIT goaltender Christian Short, making his first appearance since Jan. 13, made 25 saves for the win.
Short again started on Saturday, making 17 stops in a 6-2 RIT win. Gabe Valenzuela had two goals and an assist for the Tigers.
“I thought we really worked hard and used a strong team effort to get the win tonight,” said RIT head coach Wayne Wilson after Saturday’s game. “I thought we got stronger and took over as the game wore on.”
Unfortunately for Niagara, it was not able to reverse its downswing. Instead, it was more of the same as the Purple Eagles were swept at home by Sacred Heart, 5-3 and 7-1. Niagara has just one win in its last 12 games, and has fallen from first place to a three way tie for sixth.
SHU’s Jackson Barliant had three goals in the series, while teammates Marc Johnstone and Kory Kennedy potted two each.
Niagara, which has a bye next weekend, was missing starting goaltender Brian Wilson, who’s suffering from a lower body injury. He’s expected to return for the Purple Eagles’ final series of the regular season against Canisius.
Here come the Lakers
On Monday, the teams tied for the longest unbeaten streak in the nation will both be in action. Boston University, unbeaten in nine games (7-0-2), will take on Northeastern in the Beanpot final. But there’s also some non-Beanpot college hockey on the slate when Merchurst, also on a nine game unbeaten streak (7-0-2), hosts RIT.
The nine game streak is the longest for Rick Gotkin’s team since 2002.
Like RIT, the Lakers are coming off a weekend sweep, defeating Holy Cross, 6-5 and 4-0. Saturday’s shutout was the third of the season for Mercyhurst goaltender Brandon Wildung and sixth of his career.
Junior Derek Barach had a pair of goals on Saturday to reach the century mark for career points.
Mercyhurst moved into a tie with Holy Cross for second place in the standings, just two points behind Canisius with a game in hand.
1. Notre Dame surprises no one in earning the regular-season title.
Congratulations to the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, the 2017-2018 Big Ten regular-season champions! With a 2-1 win over visiting Ohio State Friday night, the Irish captured the crown in their first season of Big Ten play. Senior defenseman Jordan Gross’s seventh goal of the season at 9:36 in the second period held up to be the game-winning goal and sophomore Cale Morris made 31 saves in his 21st win of the year. Notre Dame made an impressive undefeated Big Ten run in the first half of the season and have 16 conference wins and 50 points. With the championship, the Irish earn a first-round post-season conference playoff bye.
The Irish fell to the Buckeyes 5-1 the following night and fell to third in the PairWise Rankings after the weekend. In the past six games, Notre Dame is 3-3-1.
2. Minnesota sweeps, Michigan earns five points and Ohio State gets that split.
Four of the five teams in the middle of league standings pushed for points to solidify or gain home ice in the first round of the playoffs. Minnesota did itself the biggest favor this weekend with a road sweep of Wisconsin, 4-2 and 7-1 wins. The six points bumped the Gophers ahead of both the Badgers and idle Penn State; Minnesota is now in fourth place, one point ahead of Wisconsin, four ahead of Penn State and three behind Michigan. The Gophers also have two games in hand over the Badgers and the Wolverines. Teams that finish in second, third and fourth places will host a first-round Big Ten series.
The Wolverines earned five points in their series against the Spartans with a 1-1 tie plus shootout point in East Lansing followed by a 3-2 win at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. In second place with 32 points, the Wolverines have one B1G series left, a home-and-home affair with Notre Dame next weekend. Michigan will end its season with two home games against Arizona State.
And the Buckeyes rebounded from Friday’s loss to Notre Dame with an impressive 5-1 road win over the Irish Saturday. Ohio State remains in second place with 37 points, five ahead of Michigan and eight ahead of Minnesota, the team the Buckeyes travel to face this weekend.
All of this is interesting for each of these teams in the PairWise Rankings. As I said, Notre Dame dropped from a three-way tie for first in the PWR to third place after that loss to Ohio State, but the Buckeyes remain a solid sixth after the weekend. Minnesota is tied for ninth, and No. 14 Michigan is well aware that success against Notre Dame in this upcoming series could do good things for the Wolverines in the PWR — just as losing to Arizona State at the end of the season may do irreparable harm.
3. Saturday was a good night for college hockey in Detroit.
The announced attendance for the Michigan-Michigan State game in Little Caesars Arena Saturday was 19,515, a sellout crowd for hockey. That figure includes all ticket sales and doesn’t reflect the number of bodies in seats, as anyone who watched the televised game can attest. The place wasn’t completely full, but there were well over 12,000 people there and it was buzzing. I talked to a lot of people who work in the arena, from vendors to ushers to folks with Olympia Entertainment, and they were impressed by the turnout for college hockey — and very pleased, given that the attendance at Red Wings games has been rightly criticized in the arena’s inaugural year.
It was a loud, enthusiastic crowd, too. After each of Michigan State’s two goals, the crowd erupted into a chant of “Go Green Go White” and the players commented on that after the game as well. It was a fun night reminiscent of the sellout nights of college hockey in Joe Louis Arena, a really good hockey game between the state’s premier Division I rivals and a knowledgeable crowd in a beautiful venue.
It was good to see after the abysmal turnout for the final Big Ten championship playoffs in Joe Louis Arena at the end of last season.
Tigers earn split at UND
Colorado College and eighth-ranked North Dakota have split their four-game season series after CC managed a road split last weekend in Grand Forks.
Goals from Alex Pernitsky and Westin Michaud helped the Tigers break a 2-2 tie Friday night and gave the visitors a 4-2 win. UND starting goaltender Cam Johnson lasted 28 minutes before being relieved in the second period by Peter Thome, who was called upon again Saturday and made 20 saves in a 5-1 Fighting Hawks victory. Joel Janatuinen scored twice in the rematch while Shane Gersich recorded a goal and an assist.
UND hits the road later this week to face No. 13 Omaha, while CC is preparing for a home-and-home with second-ranked Denver.
Huskies roll on the road
The only other series last weekend in a short docket involved two wins at Miami for No. 4 St. Cloud State.
A three-goal first period on Friday proved to be enough for SCSU in a 5-2 win. Robby Jackson scored twice and three Huskies teammates also got in on the fun.
Saturday provided even smoother sailing for St. Cloud in a 4-0 victory. Stopping a third-period penalty shot was among Dávid Hrenák’s highlights in a 30-save shutout performance before Patrick Newell scored twice and Judd Peterson fired into an empty net to cap a good trip for SCSU.
The Huskies are away from home again later this week against No. 15 Western Michigan, while Miami travels to 10th-ranked Minnesota Duluth.
Huskies, Bulldogs share spoils
At the time of writing, six NCHC teams are either firmly favored to get into the NCAA tournament or are at least on the bubble, according to the PairWise Rankings.
SCSU and Denver are Nos. 1 and 2, currently, while Omaha and UMD are tied for 10th. North Dakota is 12th after its home split last weekend with Colorado College, and Western Michigan stands to move up from 13th if the Broncos can put together results at home against St. Cloud.
CC is tied with Union for 22nd, while Miami and Harvard are tied for 26th.
Kevin Entmaa of Adrian (Mike Dickie/Adrian Athletics)
Adrian clinched the NCHC, Wisconsin-Stevens Point clinched the WIAC, and St. John’s moved to the top of the MIAC standings. In the East, No. 4 Oswego held off No. 7 Geneseo, while No. 10 University of New England beat No. 8 Endicott.
There is a new team atop the MIAC. Saint John’s completed a sweep of rival St. Thomas over the weekend to skate to the top of the conference standings.
A pair of 4-1 wins did the trick for the Johnnies, who are now 15-6-2 overall and 10-4 in the conference. They hold two-point lead over the No. 13 Tommies with one weekend remaining in the regular season.
In Saturday’s game, Sam Valerius helped propel the Johnnies to the victory behind a goal and two assists.
Garrett Riebling also came through with a goal and dished out three assists. Robb Stautz came through with the other goal for the Johnnies, who cooled off the hottest team in the conference. St. Thomas came into the weekend riding a seven-game winning streak.
Andrew Lindgren did his job in goal, stopping 25 shots for his 10th win. He helped Saint John’s sweep the season series against the Tommies for the first time since the 2004-05 season.
Friday’s game was a thriller for the Johnnies, who scored three goals in the final 5:44 of the game to secure the win. Riebling scored the game-winner at the 14:16 mark of the third period.
Gusties salvage split
Gustavus kept its MIAC tournament hopes alive by salvaging a split with Concordia Saturday night. The Gusties took down the Cobbers, 5-1, in a must-win game. Gustavus is in fourth place in the standings with 24 points and is four points ahead of fifth-place Concordia in the standings.
Colin Hernon scored twice, with both goals coming in the first 3:06 of the game. He now has eight goals on the year and helped the Gusties improve to 9-11-3 overall and to 8-6 in the MIAC.
Robbie Goor, who is only a freshman, stepped up in goal, making 20 saves to notch his third win of the year.
Pointers win the WIAC
Wisconsin-Stevens Point took down Wisconsin-Stout, 2-1, Friday to clinch the WIAC championship and then finished off the weekend by playing rival Wisconsin-Eau Claire to a 4-4 tie in the regular-season finale.
Against the Blue Devils, Tanner Karty scored the game-winner to lead the second-ranked Pointers to the win. It’s his 18th of the season. Logan Fredericks scored the other goal. Max Milosek made 22 saves. The Pointers went into the season picked to finish second.
In Saturday’s showdown with the Blugolds, the Pointers got 33 saves from Milosek and two goals from Brennen Miller as they finished out the regular season at 18-4-3 overall and 6-0-2 in the league. They are unbeaten in their last seven games. Willem Nong-Lambert tallied a goal and an assist.
Jake Bresser paced the preseason conference favorite Blugolds with a goal and an assist. Adam Parsells came through with a goal and an assist as well.
Zach Dyment made 17 saves for the Blugolds. Wis.-Eau Claire finishes the regular season at 15-9-1 overall and 5-2-1 in the conference, good enough for second place.
Bulldogs win regular-season crown
The Peters Cup belongs to Adrian.
The top-ranked Bulldogs clinched the title with an impressive 6-0 win over the Milwaukee School of Engineering Friday night. It’s the third championship in the last four seasons and the 10th in program history.
The Bulldogs improve to 20-4 overall and to 16-4 in the conference and will be the No. 1 overall seed in the NCHA tournament.
Kyle Brothers fueled the offense with a pair of goals and Bryan Yim dished out three assists. Cory Dunn added two assists as the Bulldogs stretched their win streak to 12 games. Adrian has outscored the opposition 54-16 during its impressive win streak.
Kevin Entmaa has been instrumental to the defensive success of the Bulldogs, stopping 24 shots to earn his third shutout of the season. His record now stands at 13-2.
Adrian and MSOE will meet again in the quarterfinal round of the NCHA tournament.
Vikings headed to the postseason
Lawrence assured itself of a spot in the Harris Cup playoffs with a 1-1 overtime tie against Northland Friday night. The Vikings went into the game needing either a win or a tie to secure a postseason berth.
Lane King, who leads the NCHA in points, scored with just 3:47 left in the game to forge the tie against the Lumberjacks. The Vikings are now 10-12-2 overall and 8-8-1 in the NCHA.
Lawrence held a 40-32 advantage in shots. Kalib Ford scored the lone goal for the Lumberjacks.
Evan Cline made 31 saves for Lawrence, including a key one late in overtime. A.J. Smith stopped 39 shots for Northland.
Vorva records another shutout
Hunter Vorva was at his best for No. 14 Marian Saturday, helping the Sabres blank Northland, 3-0, in the final game of the regular season Saturday night.
Vorva stopped 27 shots as he recorded his fifth shutout of the season.
Marian has won its last seven games and is 18-6-1 overall and 12-6 in the league.
Carly Bullock (Princeton – 20). ((c) Shelley M. Szwast 2016)
With No. 1 Clarkson falling to Princeton, No. 3 Boston College falling to New Hampshire, and No. 5 Ohio State falling to Minnesota State, it was a not a good weekend for the favored teams, and will likely lead to some shuffling in the rankings.
No. 1 Clarkson at Princeton
Carly Bullock, Annie MacDonald, and Sharon Frankel combined for two goals to lead Princeton in a 2-0 upset win. It ended Clarkson’s 15-game winning streak. The Tigers hadn’t upset a number one team since they beat New Hampshire in November 2007.
No. 1 Clarkson at Quinnipiac
Elizabeth Giguère scored the game-winner on a power play in the second period and Rhyen McGill’s short-handed goal to start the third secured the 2-0 win for Clarkson.
No. 2 Wisconsin at Minnesota Duluth
On Friday, Caitlin Schneider, Maddie Rowe, Lauren Williams, Presley Norby, and Baylee Wellhausen scored for the Badgers in a 5-0 win. On Saturday, Jayln Elmes and Naomi Rogge had Minnesota Duluth up after the first period. Claudia Kepler narrowed the lead in the second, but Anna Klein scored less than two minutes later to give UMD another two-goal lead. In the third, Sophia Shaver tallied two power-play goals to tie the game and force overtime. The game could not be decided in 65 minutes and ended a 3-3 tie. Sam Cogan scored the only shootout goal to earn the extra WCHA point for Wisconsin.
New Hampshire at No. 3 Boston College
Meghara McManus put New Hampshire on the board first with less than a minute left in the first period. National points leader Daryl Watts tied it up for Boston College in the second, but that was all the offense the Eagles could muster. Carlee Turner scored the game-winner for the Wildcats just about halfway through the game to earn the upset win for UNH.
Brown at No. 4 Colgate
Megan Sullivan and Jessie Eldridge scored to lead Colgate to a 2-0 win.
Yale at No. 4 Colgate
Bailey Larson had a goal and an assist and Breanne Wilson-Bennett also lit the lamp as Colgate won 2-0. It was the Raiders’ third-straight shutout.
No. 5 Ohio State at Minnesota State
Lindsey Coleman scored her first of the game 29 seconds into the game and the Mavericks didn’t look back in their 4-1 win on Friday, despite being outshot, 36-20. Amanda Conway and Rebekah Kolstad also scored for MNSU. On Saturday, the Mavericks again scored first. This time it was Kolstad who put Minnesota State on the board. Ohio State responded with a goal from Rebecca Freiburger. Tristen Truax put MNSU ahead one more time before the end of the second, but Ohio State scored two unanswered — from Charly Dahlquist and Emma Maltais in the third to earn the 3-2 win.
Yale at No. 6 Cornell
The Big Red capitalized on a 50-10 shot advantage to earn a 4-0 win. Madlynne Mills and Kristin O’Neill each had a goal and an assist to lead Cornell.
Brown at No. 6 Cornell
Cornell again peppered the net, putting 52 shots on net in this 6-1 win. Grace Graham, Paige Lewis, Madlynne Mills, Joie Phelps, Finley Frechette, and Willow Slobodzan scored for the Big Red. Kaitijane Blumberg was the goal-scorer for Brown.
No. 8 St. Lawrence at Quinnipiac
Sarah-Eve Coutu-Godbout put Quinnipiac up 1-0 6:02 into the game and Nadine Edney responded for St. Lawrence just more than 10 minutes later. Another 49 or so minutes wasn’t enough to break the stalemate as this one ended 1-1.
No. 8 St. Lawrence at Princeton
St. Lawrence opened the scoring with a goal by Kennedy Marchment right before the buzzer at the end of the first. Princeton responded to tie it on a goal by Keiko DeClerck. Amanda McClure and Claire Thompson traded goals in the third to tie it at two. Nadine Edney scored in the extra frame to earn the 3-2 win for St. Lawrence.
Lindenwood at No. 9 Robert Morris
Brittany Howard’s goal just 3:29 into the game was the only tally as Robert Morris won 1-0 on Friday. Her power-play tally opened the scoring on Saturday and gave her 74 career goals for the Colonials, setting a new program record. Emily Curlett, Amanda Pantaleo, Anjeclia Diffendal, and Jaycee Gebhard also scored en route to RMU’s 5-0 win. With the weekend sweep, Robert Morris took a two-point lead atop the CHA standings.
No. 9 Maine at Providence
Catherine Tufts scored for Maine and Ariane Julien responded just about two minutes later and that was the only scoring in Saturday’s 1-1 tie.
Hamilton at No. 9 Amherst
On Friday, the game was tied 1-1 until midway through the final frame. Olivia Hawes had Hamilton up after one before Katie Savage tied it for Amherst, but the Mammoths exploded with three goals in eight minutes to close out the game and earn a 4-1 win. Kaitlin Hoang had a goal and two assists for Amherst. On Saturday, Alex Toupal had the opening goal for Amherst, but Hamilton responded by Hawes and Madie Bologa. Toupal scored her second of the game to earn the tie for Amherst.
Morrisville at Endicott
On Friday, Endicott outshot Morrisville, 44-21, but goals from Maddison Devlin, Maria deWilde, and Claire Newman gave Morrisville the 3-1 win. It was much of the same in game two, as Endicott held the shot advantage, but Morrisville won, 2-0, with goals from Kylie Cameron and Ciara Lark. With the sweep, Morrisville tied Endicott with 18 points at the top of Colonial Hockey.
Manhattanville vs. No. 3 Elmira
Zoey Pellowitz put Manhattanville on the board first, and they had a 1-0 lead after the first. It was a quick beginning to the second as Elmira responded with goals from Jess Adams and Emma Crocker before Tianna Lopes tied it up at two before seven minutes had passed. Sarah Hughson scored the game-winner late in the second to give Elmira the 3-2 win. It was all Elmira in game two. Six different Soaring Eagles scored in their 6-0 win. Shannon Strawinski led Elmira with a goal and two assists.
Wisconsin-Eau Claire vs. Wisconsin-River Falls
Wis.-River Falls twice took a one-goal lead, but Wis.-Eau Claire was able to respond each time and this game ended 2-2. With the tie, the Falcons have clinched the WIAC regular season championship. Molly Illikainen and Carly Moran were the goal-scorers for Wisconsin-River Falls, Lexi Wilson and Holly Turnbull scored for Wisconsin-Eau Claire.
Bowdoin at No. 8 Connecticut College
Erin Healey put Connecticut College up 1-0 in the second and Brigit Bergin tied it up on the power play for Bowdoin in a game that ended tied 1-1. On Saturday, Bowdoin ended the Camels’ 13-game D-III win streak with a 5-4 win. Sammi Estes and Erin Dillon put Connecticut College up 2-0 early, but Bowdoin responded with goals from Julie Dachille and Maureen Greason to tie it. Caitlyn Wilkin put the Camels up in the second, but from there Bowdoin took control. Dachille scored twice to earn a hat trick. Dillon scored once more for Connecticut College to close the gap, but it was not enough.