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This Week in the WCHA: Much-improved Northern Michigan squad taking aim at MacNaughton Cup

08 Dec 17: Mathias Israelsson (Northern Michigan - 32). The Bemidji State University Beavers host the Northern Michigan University Wildcats in a WCHA Conference matchup at the Sanford Center in Bemidji, MN. (Jim Rosvold)
NMU goalie Mathias Israelsson looks to make a save during a recent game against Bemidji State (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Their win streak ended, but the Northern Michigan Wildcats are glad they’re still on top.

A string of seven consecutive victories came to a close on Sunday, when the Wildcats dropped the second game of their series at Alabama Huntsville.

Despite that loss, the Wildcats continue to hold on to first place in the WCHA standings by a single point over second-place Minnesota State — still in striking distance of the program’s first MacNaughton Cup championship since 1991.

It’s not a place first-year head coach Grant Potulny necessarily thought his team would be this late in the season, but he’s glad his team has been able to play even better than the preseason expectations — the Wildcats were picked to finish seventh by both the coaches and media at the start of 2017 after an eighth-place finish the season before.

“Obviously there’s a lot of hockey left, but we’re happy where we sit,” Potulny said. “When the season started, the goal was to make sure you get home ice in the playoffs. We achieved that last weekend. Now you want to finish as high as you can and stay at home as long as you can.”

The Wildcats (18-11-3 overall) are in the midst of their best season since 2009-10, when they won 20 games and made the NCAA tournament. They’ve had just one other winning season since, and after they moved back to the WCHA in 2013 they’ve been mediocre, finishing no higher than fifth.

This season, that won’t happen.

The Wildcats clinched home ice in the first round of the playoffs for the first time since 2012 — back in the CCHA — and will finish no lower than fourth.

Potulny said he’s been most impressed by how his team’s mindset has evolved since the start of the season. Back then, the Wildcats would have trouble playing two complete games in a series. They were just 6-5-1 through the first two months until finally hitting a turning point in December.

“We were inconsistent. We’d have a great effort then the next night we wouldn’t be able to sustain it. I think that’s part of the maturation process of a team, trying to figure out how to win,” Potulny said. “Around Christmas time, I think we were getting two solid efforts two nights in a row.

“I always thought the potential was there. I didn’t know if we could get over that hump to be consistent every night and expect to win. That’s a hurdle that all teams have to go through. When you haven’t had the success you’d hoped in the past, when you start having that success now, you expect to win. I think our program is at a point where we go into every game and expect to give ourselves a chance to win.”

It helps that the Wildcats are scoring — they’ve got 97 goals through 32 games this season; NMU scored just 93 in all of last season.

Hobey Baker candidate Robbie Payne started the season hot, with 17 goals in 24 games. Since then he’s experienced a bit of a goalscoring drought, but NMU has found other ways to put the puck in the net when opponents focus on Payne. Junior Troy Loggins has 15 goals and 32 points, sophomore Darien Craighead has 15 goals and 28 points and junior Adam Rockwood has seven goals and 34 points (his 27 assists lead the WCHA). Loggins and Rockwood are the league’s co-scoring-leaders.

“Robbie had a great start to the year, and kinda came out of the gates on fire. Over the course of the year, there’s going to be a natural ebb and flow (to scoring),” Potulny said. “But Adam Rockwood and Troy Loggins have been outstanding the last two months of the year. Craighead has given us some real good production with 15 goals. We’re probably a little top-heavy, but we’re getting a little more depth in scoring lately.”

Forwards Zach Diamantoni and Joseph Nardi have both scored for NMU in the past two weeks, and the Wildcats are also getting good scoring production from defensemen. Sophomore Philip Beaulieu has nine goals to lead all WCHA defensemen. Jordan Klimek and Ryan Black each have 15 points and Robert Fosdick has just four points but scored a key goal to help NMU beat Alaska Anchorage two weeks ago.

“Those guys do a great job getting the poucknup to the forwards and giving them opportunities to create offense, but they do a great job entering the rush,” Potulny said of his defensive corps.

In all, it’s an exciting time to be a hockey fan in Marquette. The Wildcats are 10-2-0 at home — their best home record in a long time — and have a chance to win a title and make the NCAA tournament for the first time in years.

“There’s an incredible buzz about the program around town, and an incredible buzz about the season some of our players are having,” Potulny said. “In a community like ours, you’re not just the college’s team, you’re the community’s team, so for us it’s been so fun with the excitement and energy around our program.”

NMU hosts Alaska this weekend for a conference series and then takes a week off before a home-and-home with rivals Michigan Tech to close out the regular season. The Wildcats don’t control their own destiny for the MacNaughton Cup — Minnesota State has two games in hand on them — but they do have a legitimate shot at an at-large NCAA tournament berth if they keep winning.

“It would be awesome to get our chance at (the MacNaughton),” Potulny said. “Some of that stuff is out of our control. But in the national picture, every game is so important for us. Obviously you want to try and win the regular season, you want to try and win the playoff, but I think we can get into the tournament without winning the WCHA playoff. That only happens if we take care of business down the stretch here.”

Dot dominance

Possession is nine-tenths of the law, right?

If you have the puck, your opponent doesn’t, and it means the game is better tilted in your favor at that point. So which WCHA players are best suited at setting up their team for success in face-offs and winning key draws?

At first glance, there may not be a more dynamic face-off duo than Ferris State’s Coale Norris and Craig Pefley. The pair of Bulldog forwards lead the WCHA in face-off percentage. Norris is winning 62.2 percent of his face-offs, while Pefley is winning 58.3. The problem is the sample size for Norris, he’s yet to take 100 face-offs this season, meaning his success hasn’t yielded more opportunities.

So if we take a deeper look at the numbers, and the game film, we might have stumbled upon the top go-to face-off taker in the WCHA.

Minnesota State’s C.J. Suess has won 57 percent of his draws this season and is third in the league with 347 total wins to 262 losses. The two players with more overall wins also have more than 75 extra losses against Suess’ numbers.

Suess was always good at face-offs and was third in the league last season with 391 wins, but also lost 392 of them (he was still named C.J. Franklin at the time, he legally changed his named before his senior season).

“It’s just something that you continuously work on,” Suess told the Winnipeg Jets official site. “I feel like I’ve done a good job with them so far this season and I just need to keep it going.”

Suess’ heir apparent heading into next season? Likely Northern Michigan freshman Joseph Nardi, who is also up there when it comes to both quantity and quality of draws. Nardi has won 57.7 percent of his face-offs — 259 wins, 190 losses — and has been one of the most-trusted freshmen in the WCHA when it comes to re-starts.

Players of the Week

The WCHA players of the week were Michigan Tech junior Jake Lucchini (offensive), Alaska senior Zach Frye (defensive), Alaska sophomore Anton Martinsson (goaltender) and Minnesota State freshman forward Jake Jaremko (rookie).

Players of the Month

The WCHA players of the month for January were Northern Michigan junior Troy Loggins (offensive), Bowling Green sophomore Alec Rauhauser (defensive), Minnesota State senior Connor LaCouvee (goaltender) and Bowling Green freshman forward Brandon Kruse (rookie).

Ice Chips

— Alabama Huntsville’s 4-2 victory over Northern Michigan Sunday means that the Chargers are now 10-18-2. It’s the first time since 2009-10 that UAH has reached double-digit victories. They won 12 games that year and made an NCAA tournament appearance. Huntsville native Josh Kestner scored two of UAH’s four goals in the win and another Saturday, giving him 20 goals this season. He’s first in the WCHA in goalscoring and tied for second nationally.

— Alaska’s two wins over Ferris State gave the Nanooks their first home sweep of the season. UAF beat Ferris 4-2 and 4-1 to leapfrog ahead of the Bulldogs in the standings. The Nanooks are now in seventh place, one point ahead of FSU with two games-in-hand. The Nanooks’ Frye, who leads Alaska with 25 points, had another solid weekend against Ferris with a goal and three assists.

— Bemidji State’s two shutouts at the hands of Lake Superior State were the second and third for the Beavers this season but the first time BSU had been shut out at home since a 2-0 loss to Bowling Green in 2015.

— Lake Superior State junior Nick Kossoff (28 saves) and freshman Mareks Mitens (36) combined to give the Lakers a pair of 2-0 shutout wins last weekend at Bemidji State. It was the first time the Lakers had shutouts in consecutive games since March 2013. Additionally, LSSU had not blanked the same opponent for an entire weekend series since holding Ferris State scoreless Nov. 12-13, 2010 (1-0 and 4-0).

Pickin’ the Big Ten: Feb. 9-10

The top two teams in the conference meet and two series feature long-time rivals. This should be a very good weekend of B1G hockey. First, though, Drew Claussen and I have picks records to share.

Last week

Drew: 4-1-1 (.750)
Paula: 2-3-1 (.416)

This season

Drew: 81-43-12 (.640)
Paula: 84-40-12 (.662)

This Week

Notre Dame needs two wins this weekend to clinch the regular-season Big Ten title, but Ohio State is going to try to keep that from happening. Five points ahead of Minnesota, Wisconsin will try to hold onto third place — or catch up to the Buckeyes in second — in front of a sold-out house in the Kohl Center. After playing in East Lansing Friday night, Michigan and Michigan State will play for the Iron D trophy in Little Caesars Arena Saturday night. Penn State sits this weekend out. All times are local.

No. 19 Michigan vs. Michigan State

Drew: Both of these teams have struggled with consistency this season, so this one is pretty tough to pick. Despite having a 0.500 conference record in the second half of the season, I like the way Michigan has been playing. On the other side of the coin the Spartans’ victory over Ohio State last weekend was also very impressive. With the in-state rivalry factor in play, I’ll take the Spartans to win their home game and Michigan to win in Detroit.

John Lethemon of Michigan State (Andrew Knapik/MiHockeyNow) ((Andrew Knapik/MiHockeyNow))

Paula: These teams swapped shutouts in Ann Arbor the first weekend in December, with the Wolverines winning the first night and the Spartans winning the second, and Michigan bested Michigan State in the consolation game of the Great Lakes Invitational tournament 6-4. I think they’ll split, too, with the Spartans winning at home, but I can see Michigan sweeping. Friday’s game in Munn Ice Arena begins at 7:05 p.m. and is untelevised. Saturday’s 7:05 p.m. start in the LCA will be carried by Fox Sports Detroit.

Drew’s picks: Michigan State 4-2, Michigan 5-2.
Paula’s picks: Michigan State 4-3, Michigan 4-3.

No. 12 Minnesota at No.17 Wisconsin

Drew: I would not be surprised if this series mirrored the one that went down in early December in Minneapolis where the two teams split two one-goal games. It’ll be interesting to see how the Badgers handle the absence of Tony Granato for the rest of the regular season, but they shouldn’t have any problem getting pumped up for this series regardless of who is behind the bench. A split seems like the likely outcome, but I’ll predict a Badgers’ sweep.

Paula: A Wisconsin sweep is a bold call and I am not going there. Minnesota’s only 2-8-1 on the road this season, but the Golden Gophers are 3-1-0 in their last four games and they’ve knocked off the No. 1 team in the country twice in 2018, shutouts over St. Cloud (Jan. 7) and Notre Dame (Jan. 26). The Gophers can get up for big games, and these games are big, indeed. The Gophers are also well rested following a bye week. Friday’s game begins at 8:07 p.m. and is carried by the Big Ten Network. Saturday’s game begins at 7:07 p.m. and is carried by Fox Sport West Plus and Fox Sports North Plus.

Drew’s picks: Wisconsin 4-3, 3-2.
Paula’s picks: Minnesota 3-2, Wisconsin 3-2.

No. 6 Ohio State at No. 1 Notre Dame

Drew: Massive series here as Ohio State needs to sweep to have any hope of catching Notre Dame in the standings. Even if the Buckeyes do sweep I’d still put my money on the Irish capturing the top seed, though. I’ll pick a split.

Paula: The Buckeyes do play well on the road (10-2-1) and they’re 10-2-0 in their last 12 games, so there is a possibility of Ohio State picking up points this weekend. The Irish have managed to find ways to win games that have been close recently except for that 1-0 loss to Minnesota two weeks ago and a tie against Penn State last weekend. Notre Dame swept Ohio State in Columbus the first week in November. Friday’s game begins at 7:35 p.m. and is televised by NBC Sports. Saturday’s game starts at 7:05 p.m. and is not televised.

Drew’s picks: Notre Dame 4-1, Ohio State 3-2.
Paula’s picks: Ohio State 2-1, Notre Dame 3-1.

The standings, according to us

Should Drew pick every game correctly, this is how the B1G standings will look Sunday, with points in parenthesis:

1. Notre Dame (50)
2. Ohio State (37)
3. Wisconsin (34)
4. Michigan (30)
5. Penn State (25)
6. Minnesota (23)
7. Michigan State (17)

Given my record from last weekend, this is definitely not how the league will look on Sunday, but here’s how I’m picking it:

1. Notre Dame (50)
2. Ohio State (37)
3. Wisconsin (31)
4. Michigan (30)
5. Minnesota (26)
6. Penn State (25)
7. Michigan State (17)

Twitter us!

Follow both Drew (@drewclaussen) and me (@paulacweston) on Twitter. I’ll be live tweeting from the Little Caesars Arena for the Duel in the D Saturday night.

Feb. 9-12 ECAC picks

We are getting down to the final stretch of the regular season with some big games this weekend. All games are 7 p.m. starts unless otherwise noted.

Last time: 4-5-1

Overall: 53-38-8

Friday, Feb. 8

Princeton at Brown

The Tigers are one game under .500 on the road this season, but I think they get back to .500 on Friday night. Brown is 2-8-4 in their past 14 games. Princeton wins.

Cornell at Clarkson

The game of the weekend in the ECAC and one of the few Top 20 games in the nation this weekend. The Golden Knights defeated the Big Red in December 4-0 in Cornell. Both teams are coming off losses. I will take the home team. Clarkson is victorious.

Harvard at Union

If Cornell and Clarkson is the main event is weekend, Harvard-Union is the semi main event. The Dutchmen have an point advantage over the Crimson for third place. Harvard won the first game in early January at home. They are without Ryan Donato who’s on the Olympic team. Union wins.

Dartmouth at Rensselaer

RPI is coming off an upset over Cornell while Dartmouth is coming off a loss to Harvard on Friday. Overall the Big Green is playing some very good hockey and are battle to host a quarterfinal series. Dartmouth wins.

Colgate at St. Lawrence

This is a big game for the Raiders with Clarkson on Saturday. You are almost assured goaltending will be there, but will the offense step up. St. Lawrence while still taking losses are playing teams tough. Colgate wins

Quinnipiac at Yale

Both teams wish their seasons were going better as the two rivals meet, but there’s still plenty to play for. The Bobcats hold an one point advantage over the Bulldogs for that crucial No. 8 spot in the conference which all them to host a first round playoff series. The Bobcats have recorded points in five of their past six games. Quinnipiac wins.

Saturday, Feb. 9

Princeton at Yale

If the Bulldogs want to stay close to the Tigers in the standings this is a big game for them. It was a close game back in November down at Hobey Baker Rink where the Tigers won 5-4. I think the teams split the season series. Bulldogs win.

Colgate at Clarkson

This is another intriguing contest on the docket as two of the top goalies in the conference should be going at it. The Golden Knights won back in November 5-2, but I don’t think they will score five again, but need to put a couple in early on Point or the Raiders will have a puncher’s chance. Golden Knights win.

Cornell at St. Lawrence

The Big Red won’t let their guard down this weekend after last year’s result to RPI. I expect Cornell to come out a little slow after what should be a clash on Friday night. They should find their legs in the second period. Cornell wins.

Dartmouth at Union

Since their loss to Union on January 5, Dartmouth is 5-3 in their past eight games. Despite the two teams playing basically with in the past month, it should be a closer game as the Dutchmen won 4-1. Still I think Union will come out on top. Dutchmen win.

Quinnipiac at Brown

Both teams seem to be heading in opposite directions even those three points seperate them in the standings. A win is huge for both teams, but especially for the Bears if they want to get into the top eight. At the end of the day I believe the Bobcats sweep a weekend for the second straight week. Quinnipiac wins.

Monday, February 12

Beanpot Consolation Game

Harvard vs. Boston College, at TD Garden in Boston, 4:30 p.m.

It will be a rematch of the 4-4 tie back on Black Friday. It will be different dynamics in this game as both teams are playing for pride. Both could use a win for Pairwise rankings, but there’s a good chance if both teams want to make the NCAA Tournament, they will have to win their respective conferences. I expect Ted Donato to tinker with his lineup for the final stretch. BC wins.

Weekend picks: Feb. 9

Matthew and I picked the same winners last weekend, and we ended up going 4-2 (.667), because even though we picked a split for Miami vs. Western Michigan, we picked the wrong winner each night. On the year, I am 81-50-19 (.603) while Matthew is 79-52-19 (.590).Unfortunately for him, we see the games the same way again.Friday-Saturday, Feb. 9-10No. 4 St. Cloud State at MiamiCandace: I feel that last weekend was a big confidence boost for the Huskies and got them back on track. St. Cloud State 4-2, 4-3Matthew: St. Cloud isn’t as strong away from home, but I like the Huskies to win both games here. St. Cloud State 4-2, 4-2Colorado College at No. 8 North DakotaCandace: I have trouble picking against North Dakota at home, especially since they will be motivated against a Tigers team that has given them fits recently. North Dakota 2-1, 3-1Matthew: CC is on the up after a rough patch, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the Tigers steal a game here. I’m just not that confident that it’ll happen. North Dakota 3-1, 3-2

East picks: Feb. 8

It is absolutely go-time for every team looking to play in some playoff hockey, and many coaches would argue that the playoffs have already begun in contests between teams looking to assure qualification or improve their standing in the league. Last week, my 5-4-1 (.550) picks hardly qualified me for being playoff ready, but there are still a couple more weeks for redemption. The season total now stands at 71-33-11 (.665), which probably doesn’t earn me a home-ice berth so time to kick the prognostication game into high gear. Here are this week’s picks.Thursday, Feb. 8Worcester State at Salem StateBoth teams are looking to step up their game in the drive for the MASCAC playoffs. Expect this one to feature the skill of two terrific goaltenders in Josh Reinstein for the Lancers and Jason Pucciarelli for the Vikings. It will be close, and the home team gets it done on the power play. Salem State 2-1No. 15 Plymouth State at Massachusetts-DartmouthThe Panthers’ long winning streak was snapped by Fitchburg State last weekend, so look for a new sense of purpose and urgency from the visitors, who will want to jump out fast on the talented Corsairs. All phases of the game are working for the Panthers, who want to take the regular season title. Plymouth State 5-2Friday, Feb. 9No. 6 Salve Regina at NicholsThe Seahawks are right there in the battle for the top spot in the conference, but face a difficult Nichols team. Both teams have talent up front, but Blake Wojtala has proven to be a big-game goaltender and gets the nod here for the win. Salve Regina 3-2No. 12 Hobart at No. 11 NorwichThe Cadets appear to have the top seed in the NEHC sown up, but will want to send a message to the conference newcomers about where the title goes through. Braeden Ostepchuk keeps the visitors at bay, and a late goal sends the Northfield faithful home happy. Norwich 2-1No. 7 Geneseo at No. 4 OswegoThe Lakers have got it going good right now, as evidenced by last weekend’s sweep of Buffalo State and Fredonia. Geneseo made short work of Canton and should be ready for the battle between the two top teams in the conference. I would like to pick a tie here, but the home team gets some puck luck late. Oswego 3-2No. 9 Utica at StevensonThe battle in the UCHC is so close that you could go from first to sixth on the basis of a single weekend. Utica jumped back to the top after a four-point weekend last week and doesn’t want to lose focus on the road against a tough Mustangs team in contention. Close one goes to the visitors, maybe in OT. Utica 3-2Saturday, Feb. 10No. 10 University of New England at No. 8 EndicottThe Nor’easters are still within striking distance of the top spot in the CCC, and this weekend’s games against Endicott will go a long way in determining where they sit in the playoff seeding. The Gulls have stumbled recently against other competitors at home, and the Nor’easters are definitely aware of the opportunity to continue that trend. University of New England 5-4Connecticut College at HamiltonThe Camels are sitting in second place, but there are several teams within a couple of points that would love to move up. Connor Rodericks has been great in goal, and he will need to be against a resurgent Continentals squad that might be getting healthy at the right time. Hamilton 3-1Tufts at AmherstThe Jumbos have given everyone a battle, so the Mammoths better expect a playoff-style game. Nik Nugnes has found his game in goal and will keep things close, but I don’t think the visitors can mount enough offense. Amherst 2-1Lebanon Valley at ManhattanvilleThese two contenders both need these two points, but the home team actually needs them more. The Valiants prove they can protect a third-period lead and eke this one out in dramatic fashion to keep the drama going in the conference standings. Manhattanville 4-3The only thing you can control is how you play in the game you are in. Focus is critical right now, as are the points needed to stay in the playoff picture — “Drop the Puck!”

This Week in the NCHC: Western Michigan looking to secure home ice for NCHC playoffs

2018 Jan. 12 The St.Cloud State University Huskies host Western Michigan in a NCHC matchup at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center in St. Cloud, MN (Bradley K. Olson)
Before topping Miami last Saturday night, Western Michigan had lost five of six in NCHC play (photo: Bradley K. Olson).
With a month left in the regular season and three NCHC standings points separating third-place Western Michigan from North Dakota in fifth, WMU will take points wherever it can get them to try and stay in a home-ice spot.That is by no means guaranteed, though, especially with Western having lost five of its last seven games. The fifth loss came Friday in Oxford, Ohio, when the Broncos conceded three second-period goals in a 4-2 loss to Miami.Changes had to be made Saturday if WMU was to snap its four-game losing streak and keep Miami from taking three of the teams’ four regular-season meetings. Broncos coach Andy Murray jumbled his lines for the rematch – notably moving his first-line wingers from Friday to the bottom six – and got the response he wanted during a 3-2 Broncos win.Miami opened the scoring with 38 seconds left in the first period before Carter Johnson made it 2-0 1:46 into the second. After that, the middle frame belonged to Western.Freshman forward Ethen Frank flourished on a reimagined second line, scoring twice on assists from new linemates Austin Rueschhoff and Dawson DiPietro before third-line winger Lawton Courtnall – down from the first line to the third – scored the game-winner late in the period on a nifty individual effort. After creating a turnover in the Broncos’ zone, he raced down the ice and scored glove-side past Miami goaltender Ryan Larkin.Miami then outshot WMU 8-0 in the final 20 minutes. Unfortunately for the RedHawks, Broncos goaltender Ben Blacker (26 saves) was up to the task and picked up the win after sitting out of Friday’s series opener.Blacker and Austin Cain had also split the previous weekend’s series at Omaha, where WMU lost twice by a combined 13-5. The Broncos actually brought three goalies to Nebraska, and Blacker was relieved by Trevor Gorsuch midway through a 7-3 loss on Jan. 27.Murray noted this week, however, that Blacker performed well in practice after the Omaha trip and, when called upon Saturday, kept the game retrievable.The skaters in front of Blacker also stepped up in what could end up being a difference-maker in whether WMU stays home for the first round of the NCHC playoffs or hits the road.“We believed in the lineup we had Friday night, and as I tell our players, normally on game nights, the game’s at 7 o’clock and I sign that sheet with the official scorer about 6:10, and when I sign it, I trust every single name that I’ve put on the list there that’s going to be in the lineup that night,” Murray said.“We didn’t like our competitiveness of our team in the second period of the first game in Miami, and we talked about that trust and how we put a lot of faith in our players and you’re getting a great opportunity to play in a good program and we expect more. It was there a lot more on Saturday night than it was Friday.”

Berry excited for Gardner’s return from injury

After netting a goal and two assists in a 7-0 home win over Omaha on Jan. 6, North Dakota alternate captain Rhett Gardner picked up a lower-body injury in the Fighting Hawks’ next game six days later at Bemidji State.UND won 5-1 that night. The Hawks are 0-2-3 since then.They’ll get Gardner back this weekend, though, for an important home series against Colorado College. UND head coach Brad Berry confirmed during a press conference Wednesday that Gardner has participated in each day of practice so far this week and is set to go for CC.Berry wasn’t short on praise for a junior forward who has five goals and 15 points to his name so far this season, although Gardner’s presence extends much further than the score sheet.“Rhett’s a big part of our team,” Berry said. “He was a big part of our team two years ago as a freshman and progressively is an even bigger part now, and when you look on the penalty-kill side of it now, he’s a huge guy winning the initial draw trying to get a clear on that side of it, (and on) five-on-five and power play, too.“He plays all situations, he plays heavy minutes. He’s a big-body center that nullifies the other team’s usual top line, so he does a lot of things for us and, saying that, we haven’t won since he’s been out of the lineup, and I’m not saying it’s because he’s been out of the lineup, but he’s a direct influence on our positive result in games.”Fresh off a bye week after getting a win and a tie over Miami, Colorado College will be a tough out for UND, just as the Tigers during a series split near the start of the season. Gardner will remember it, having assisted on two UND goals in the Hawks’ 6-4 win on Oct. 28.There’s more riding on this series than there was in Colorado Springs, however. Two wins this weekend could catapult the Tigers from their seventh-place spot (20 points) above UND (24).As ever in the NCHC, but especially at this point in the season, there’s only a small margin of error.“The biggest thing is taking care of business and making sure you know everybody’s on the same level right now,” Berry said. “You look at Colorado College, we don’t consider them behind us. They’re right with us right there, and this is a huge weekend as far as standings and PairWise.”

Players of the week

Offensive player of the week: Mikey Eyssimont, St. Cloud State: The junior forward had a four-point weekend as SCSU completed a weekend sweep at home against Omaha. Eyssimont finished with two goals and as many assists against the Mavericks.Defensive player of the week: Louie Belpedio, Miami: Belpedio was a big reason the RedHawks managed a split last weekend against Western Michigan. The senior defenseman had a goal and three assists while helping limit Western to five goals in the series.Rookie of the week: Ethen Frank, Western Michigan: The freshman forward had just two goals on the season entering last weekend’s series with Miami but recorded three more against the RedHawks. His two goals in Saturday’s 3-2 WMU victory marked the first multi-goal game of Frank’s collegiate career.Goaltender of the week: Tanner Jaillet, Denver: Jaillet allowed just three goals last weekend against Minnesota Duluth and pitched his ninth career shutout Friday in a 1-0 win over the Bulldogs. This is now the 10th time the senior netminder has won the NCHC goaltender of the week award and his third this season.

This week in men’s D-III west: Ben Myers and St. Thomas on a roll

Benjamin Myers makes a save during a men's ice hockey game against the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire on November 9, 2017, in the St. Thomas Ice Arena in Mendota Heights. UST won the game by a final score of 5-3. (Mark Brown/University of St. Thomas)
Benjamin Myers makes a save during a men’s ice hockey game against the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire on November 9, 2017, in the St. Thomas Ice Arena in Mendota Heights. UST won the game by a final score of 5-3. (Mark Brown/University of St. Thomas)
Benjamin Myers was an All-American a year ago. The St. Thomas goalie is on pace to be one again this season, but the hype surrounding him isn’t something he puts too much stock into.Sure, he was humbled by the honor and appreciates the recognition, but he also knows that was last year. So he just goes out and does his job and does his part to keep the 13th-ranked Tommies in contention for the MIAC championship.”Everything has stayed the same for me this season,” Myers said. “I had a great season last year, and things are going well for me this year, but I give most of the credit to the defense and how we are playing as a team. Everyone is playing with confidence up front, and as long as they do their job, they trust that I’ll do mine.”Myers has started all 19 games this season in goal, fashioning a 1.83 goals-against average. He has 12 wins, four of which have come via shutout.His effort has been instrumental in helping the Tommies string together seven consecutive wins and climb to the top of the conference standings with a 9-2-1 record. They are 14-6-1 overall.”It’s been a good run,” Myers said. “We started off slow because it took us time to find our identity, but we’ve embraced the success, and at the same time, we’ve stayed even keel. We’re focused on taking it one game at a time.”The junior out of Milwaukee has already matched his win total from a season ago and points to his mentality and consistency as the biggest improvements he has made this season.”I’ve really improved the mental part of my game, and I’ve been more consistent,” Myers said. “I feel like I’m more mentally prepared for games, and it’s paying off.”Myers has always loved the game of hockey, but he was a pretty good baseball player in high school, too, helping his team win a conference championship.”I did think about playing baseball (in college) because my dad played a little college baseball,” Myers said. “But as my senior year got underway, I paid more attention to hockey, and there were more opportunities there.”Landing at St. Thomas after his junior hockey career was a decision he is glad he made.”I’m definitely honored to be a part of this great program, and I’m getting a great education at the same time,” Myers said. “It’s awesome to wear the purple and play in the MIAC.”St. Thomas has been dominant during its streak, winning twice by shutout and allowing just 10 goals in all. Offensively, Johnny Panvica has been a huge spark to the offense this year, punching in 13 goals to go along with 13 assists. Brett Gravelle has tallied 13 goals as well, while Cullen Willox has come through with 11.Four games remain on the schedule, including two this weekend against rival Saint John’s. The rivalry is one of the best in all of college athletics, particularly in football, and the excitement and energy generated by it has carried over to the rink.”I love the school spirit involved in it, and the fans have a good time with it,” Myers said. “It’s such a big series, and I love the atmosphere of it. I have a lot of fun playing in it.”The Tommies lost in the MIAC tournament title game last year and didn’t play in the NCAA tournament. They are hoping for a different outcome on both fronts this year.”Our confidence is high, but we have to stay humble and put in the work because we are a workhorse team,” Myers said. “If we lose sight of that, we lose our identity. We have to work to get better every day, and if we do that, good things will come our way.”Blugolds looking for strong finishWisconsin-Eau Claire has two games remaining in the regular season, including the finale against Wisconsin-Stevens Point, and currently sits in second place in the WIAC standings. They could tie for the regular-season title, but at the very least they are looking to stay in second place.Balance has been key to the Blugolds’ success. Five players have at least 12 points, including Colton Wolter, who has four goals and 13 assists. Wis.-Eau Claire has tallied 69 goals in all and has scored five goals twice in its last three games.Cross steps up for SabresClay Cross racked up four assists in Marian’s two games against Lawrence over the weekend, pushing his season total to eight. He has scored five goals as well this season for a Sabres team that has won its last five and is nationally ranked for the first time this year.Cross is only a sophomore and has made significant strides since last season when he scored five goals and dished out five assists. He played in a total of 26 games as a freshman and has appeared in 18 games this season.Already assured of a Harris Cup berth, Marian closes out its regular season with road games against St. Scholastica and Northland.In the pollAdrian, St. Norbert, and Wisconsin-Stevens Point remain the top three teams in the country. The Bulldogs received 16 first-place votes. The Green Knights, who are back up to No. 2 after sitting in third last week, and Pointers, who fell from second to third, received two points apiece. St. Thomas jumps into the poll this week at No. 13 in the country, and Marian checks in at No. 14 after being unranked last week.

This week in women’s D-III: Moran and Wisconsin-River Falls build on positives

Carly Moran of Wisconsin-River Falls (Kathy Helgeson)
Carly Moran of Wisconsin-River Falls (Kathy Helgeson)
Wisconsin-River Falls senior Carly Moran admits that last season’s NCAA opening round loss to Gustavus Adolphus is still a sore subject for her — something she doesn’t really want to talk about.Even as she said that, however, she was looking for positive ways to spin the upset. After trips to the Frozen Four her freshman and sophomore seasons, Moran knows she was a bit spoiled. With the national player of the year in Dani Sibley and Moran’s own offensive prowess and their recent success, maybe the Falcons got ahead of themselves.Whatever the reason, Moran’s determined that won’t be the case this season.”Every year is different. Obviously in the past we’ve had a lot of success. That expectation is always there,” she said. “It’s important that we deal with that kind of adversity and failure and know that we can bounce back from it. … (The loss) is a contributor to our attitude now and our work ethic. Just a reminder that nothing is going to come easy. Every year is a new year. You have to start clean and try not to let that pressure and expectation rule your attitude.”Wis.-River Falls is a young team this season — 14 of the 21 players are underclassmen. Moran leads the team with 22 goals and 17 assists. Much of the year she’s played on a line with Callie Hoff, a freshman who has quickly made a place for herself with the Falcons.She’s 12th in the country among all scorers with 18 goals and 14 assists. Not only does she lead all rookies in scoring, she’s eight points clear of the nearest freshman. She’s eighth in the country in goals scored. There are only two other freshmen that even crack the top 40.Hoff tore her a knee ligament her senior year in high school, meaning not only did she have to master the transition from prep to college, she did so while also recovering from an injury. She knew the college game would be faster, but said that even knowing that, she was still surprised by how fast it was. She spent her off season working with a skating coach to make sure she was as fit to skate at this level as she could be.A soft-spoken freshman, Hoff said she’s not focused on points, but on how she can help her team — in any way necessary.Despite some early bumps in the road, Hoff and Moran say they’re focused on how much their squad has improved over the course of the season.”I think the biggest thing for us is just we’ve grown a lot since the beginning of the season,” said Moran. “The team we are now is a much better team, and we’re continuing to grow. Hopefully, we’ll carry that growth in the playoffs.”Knowing where they are now, as a team, Hoff said she wishes they could go back and play Adrian (the team they lost to on their second weekend) again as the squad they are now. For Moran, it’s about not dwelling on what can’t be changed and instead focusing on what she is able to.”Some of those tough losses early on really encouraged us to work that much harder, and it’s shown here later in the season,” she said. “My thing is, I try not to control things that can’t be controlled. I really focus on my work ethic and my attitude. I know that if I show up every day and I work my hardest and I have a positive attitude, then that’s me filling my role as a senior captain. I don’t really focus on wins or points or anything. I just kind of trust that those things will fall into place if I show up every day and work my hardest.”Regardless of the record or the stat sheet, Moran believes the Falcons are in a good position as they play two final regular season games against Wisconsin-Eau Claire, the team that sits four points behind them in WIAC standings.She’s focused on making sure the team doesn’t get too far ahead of themselves. She doesn’t outright say it, but the “like we might have done last season” feels like the logical conclusion to that statement.It’s been necessary for Moran to step into a bigger leadership role on this young team this season. She’s mentoring players like Hoff and helping to guide a team whose young players had a very different experience in their first season or two than she did. She’s also trying to make the most of her own senior season, and maybe earn a bit of redemption from last season.”(We’re focused on) having fun with each other and not forgetting why we play hockey, (not letting) those pressures take the fun out of it,” she said. “The biggest thing for me is I don’t want to put too much pressure on myself. I just want to enjoy the experience and enjoy playing the sport that I love with all my best friends.”

This week in women’s D-I: Mercyhurst rebounds from slow start, in position for postseason

Maggie Knott of Mercyhurst (Photo by Ed Mailliard, Topps) (Ed Mailliard)
Maggie Knott of Mercyhurst (Photo by Ed Mailliard, Topps) (Ed Mailliard)
The Mercyhurst Lakers have earned a bid to the NCAA tournament in 11 of the past 13 seasons. They’ve won 12 of the last 15 CHA regular season titles and 11 of the last 15 conference tournament titles. They have four Frozen Four appearances in the last nine seasons, and coach Michael Sisti is just three wins behind Havard’s Katey Stone for the title of all-time winningest NCAA Division I coach.To say that Mercyhurst is a storied program would be an understatement. It was a bit of a surprise when they lost the CHA crown to Robert Morris last season, and it was widely believed the Colonials would repeat this year as champions — they returned much of their winning roster.The Lakers played one of the toughest schedules in the country to start the season. Coach Sisti has always been one to challenge his squad and focus on testing their limits. In the first four weeks of the season, Mercyhurst played two-game series against then-No. 2 Wisconsin, then-No. 6 St. Lawrence, and then-No. 5 Colgate.It was a rough road for Mercyhurst, which started the season 2-8-2 and was just 7-11-2 by the time winter break came around. The tough start kept the Lakers off most people’s radars, but what their overall record was shielding was a 5-2-1 conference record.Since the winter break, Mercyhurst has earned themselves a 6-2-0 record and a share of the CHA lead, tied with RMU with 21 points.The final series before the break was the turning point, said sophomore Maggie Knott. The Lakers lost the opening game to then-No. 7/6 Ohio State 2-1. The Buckeyes scored with less than two minutes remaining to earn the win, but the Lakers responded the following day, coming from behind and scoring four third-period goals to beat Ohio State, 6-4.”(The win against Ohio State) showed character,” she said. “After Christmas break, we were able to find our way and start finding how to score goals and work together as a team better. And I think we’ve carried that through into our league games, and that’s why we’ve had success in our league.”She credits the early losses against top-tier teams with preparing the Mercyhurst not only for their conference matches, but for the postseason.”We know what to expect and how hard we’re going to have to work to win playoff games,” she said. “It gave us confidence. A lot of those games just came down to a couple of moments.”Though Mercyhurst had hoped for a few more wins out of their early season, senior Brooke Hartwick said the squad focused on the reputation of their program and the knowledge of what they were capable of to help propel them forward. That same mentality is driving them now.”We’re trying to win all our games to get some momentum going into playoffs,” she said. “I think the key for us is to just focus on one game and not get ahead of ourselves. Learning from the past. You can learn something from every game. We’re all on the same page. We all know how important these games are. We have so many returners that remember making the tournament. We want to get back to the final eight.”Some might struggle to live up to the specter of successful teams that had come before, but Knott said she actually loves knowing that there is an expectation to win. Being part of a storied program that has produced some of the best players in the game is something she is proud of, and she takes motivation from working to not be the one who lets that reputation falter.Hartwick said that Lakers look a bit different this season then they may have in years past, but the new look allows them to use different tactics.”We have a lot of depth,” she said. “When you got through our roster, that’s why we’re able to win a lot of games. Because we’re able to keep coming. No matter who is going on the ice, they’re ready to win battles and score goals for us.”With just a handful of regular season games left to play, including two head-to-head with Robert Morris, the focus is on the details. From special teams to puck handling, practice to games, the Lakers are working to smooth out any bumps and head to the postseason in the best possible shape.”If you’re not competing in practice, then you’re not going to be playing in the lineup,” Hartwick said.What else will the Lakers be focusing on to secure the top spot in the CHA and earn the conference auto-bid? Hartwick isn’t saying.”We’ll keep a couple of things up our sleeves.”

This Week in ECAC Hockey: Struggling Quinnipiac hoping passionate play emerges down the stretch

 (Melissa Wade)
Quinnipiac, despite scenes like this, may wind up this season with a losing record for the first time in nearly 25 years (photo: Melissa Wade).
For one weekend at least, Quinnipiac looked liked its old self.One of the more consistent contenders in ECAC Hockey over the last several years, the Bobcats entered the final month of the regular season on pace for the program’s first losing record since 1995-96 when Quinnipiac was a Division II independent during Rand Pecknold’s second year as coach.After what Pecknold deemed an “embarrassing” loss Tuesday against Princeton, the Bobcats took down then-No. 3 Clarkson 4-1 Friday and beat St. Lawrence 5-2 on Saturday.“It was a tough test for us and I thought we played really well,” Pecknold said of Friday’s win against the Golden Knights. “We didn’t play perfect, but the battle level was excellent. I think probably the biggest thing was the care and the passion; guys were really excited to play top-five team in the nation. If we can bottle that and do that every night, we’re going to be a better hockey team.”On Saturday, the Bobcats (11-13-4, 6-8-2) trailed early against St. Lawrence but scored five unanswered goals to en route to a 5-2 win.“I liked our demeanor on the bench when we went down 1-0,” Pecknold said. “I thought there was no panic. We handled adversity really well tonight — it’s been an issue this year.”Last season was the first time since 2011-12 that the Bobcats did not make the NCAA tournament – a “down” year that included 23 wins and a trip to the league semifinals. But that is a team that has upperclassmen who played in the national championship two years ago against North Dakota.“It brings back so many great memories of teams my freshmen and sophomore year and you know you were going to go out and be confident in the way you play,” junior captain Chase Priskie said. “Getting rewarded for that is an awesome feeling. It’s hard to describe.”But this team simply doesn’t have the depth or top-line scoring of past Quinnipiac teams. The Bobcats are averaging just over two and a half goals per game.QU lacks an elite playmaker or goal scorer in the mold of a Matthew Peca or Sam Anas, although freshman Odeen Tufto is averaging over a point per game, while sophomore Alex Whelan has 13 goals.Still, Quinnipiac showed some signs this weekend of play the right way, something that could have a big impact down the stretch run. The Bobcats are currently in eighth place, the last home ice spot for the playoff, and host Princeton and Yale this weekend. The Tigers are a point ahead of Quinnipiac in the standings, while the Bulldogs are a point behind the Bobcats.“I think we just have to look at what we did well [Friday],” Pecknold said. “It’s passion. I use the phrase ‘you can’t fake passion’ and we had it tonight. If we’re going to have that kind of passion, we’ll win a lot of games. “

League down on the national stage

Quinnipiac’s struggles this year mirror the conference as a whole.While Cornell and Clarkson have been among the best teams in the country for much of the season, no other league team is currently included in the top 16 of the PairWise rankings. Harvard (25th) and Union (27th) are the next highest ranked teams following the Big Red and Golden Knights.If that pattern holds, it would be the first time since 2012 that the league has placed less than three teams in the NCAA tournament.ECAC Hockey simply hasn’t been very good in out-of-conference play. It currently has a 38-50-15 nonconference record, a mark that is only better than Atlantic Hockey and the WCHA. The league went 45-49-11 last year in nonconference play and 56-42-10 in 2015-16.As a result, only four teams – Cornell, Clarkson, Union and Harvard – currently have winning overall records, although Colgate, Yale, and Princeton are all .500 overall. If that holds, it would be the lowest number of league teams with an overall winning record since 2011-12, when five teams finished with an overall winning record.However, it’ s worth noting that any wins in the league playoffs are added to a team’s overall record, so teams at or near .500 could eclipse that mark with a deep postseason run.

Clarkson, Cornell both looking to get back on track

The depth of the league might not be the same as in past seasons, but there’s still no given wins.Just ask Cornell, who ascended to No. 1 in the USCHO.com poll for the first time since 2003 last week, but lost Saturday to a Rensselaer team that entered last weekend with two wins over the last two months.That loss snapped an eleven-game unbeaten streak for the Big Red, who dropped to third in this week’s poll.Cornell will travel to Clarkson on Friday. The Golden Knights were swept on the road last weekend and are 1-3-2 since their fourteen-game winning streak came to an end on Jan. 19.

Around the league

• It took Yale two overtimes to sweep Arizona State this weekend at Ingalls Rink, but the Bulldogs certainly weren’t lacking in chances. Yale outshot the Sun Devils 47-25 Friday and 56-27 Saturday.“Average players get frustrated, elite players get determined,” Yale coach Keith Allain said following Friday’s game, when the Bulldogs had 24 shots on goal in the first period but did not score a goal.Saturday was also the last game for Allain before he headed to South Korea for the Winter Olympics as a member of the coaching staff for Team USA.• Harvard won’t have a chance to defend its Beanpot title this season. The Crimson lost 3-2 to Boston University in double overtime Monday night in the opening round of the tournament. It was the last game before the Olympics for junior forward Ryan Donato, who leads the country with 21 goals.• Cornell freshman goalie Matthew Galajda was named the Hockey Commissioners’ Association National Division I Rookie of the Month for January. He had a .973 save percentage and four shutouts in the month, including a shutout streak of 227:11.• The league’s weekly awards went to Princeton’s Ryan Kuffner (player), Rensselaer’s Linden Marshall (rookie) and Union’s Jake Kupsky (goalie). Kuffner had six goals in wins against Quinnipiac, St. Lawrence and Clarkson and is among the national leaders with 19 goals this year.

This Week in Hockey East: Vermont finding its rhythm, Catamounts veterans ‘starting to come around’

Jarrid Privitera (UVM - 19) celebrates his goal early in the third period. (Melissa Wade)
Jarrid Privitera has 10 points in 27 games this season for Vermont (photo: Melissa Wade).
Truth be told, Jan. 19 could have been the day that broke Vermont.Could have.The Catamounts hadn’t won a game since Nov. 25, going 0-5-3 over an eight-game stretch. Vermont was hosting Lowell and held a 2-0 lead heading into the third period at Gutterson.Then everything began to go wrong. Lowell scored a goal near the midway point of the period. Vermont got a power play shortly thereafter with a chance to seemingly put the game away.Instead, the River Hawks picked off a pass and scored short-handed. When the River Hawks scored midway through overtime, Vermont’s winless skid had extended to nine, and this was likely the most difficult to stomach.No one would be surprised if that game killed Vermont’s spirit, making the final month and a half an exercise in futility.Instead, the Catamounts responded, beating Lowell 6-3 the following night. They earned a road sweep at Merrimack the following weekend. Last Friday, Vermont tied then-first place Providence at home. The following night, Vermont upset the Friars to take three points on the weekend.Somehow, this Catamounts team found their rhythm.“This is one of the most fun groups that I’ve had to work with,” said Vermont coach Kevin Sneddon. “Just when you think that Monday I’ve got to be the super hero in lifting up their spirits (after a difficult weekend), they’re the ones lifting us up as coaches.“They’re so eager to get better and so eager to learn. As a coach, what more can you ask?”The recent turnaround has taken Vermont from dead last in Hockey East into a tie for eighth place with New Hampshire. Those two schools will square off this weekend in a two-game set in Durham each knowing that a sweep could be key in the standings race to finish eighth place or better and earn a home-ice spot in the first round of the Hockey East playoffs.“This group is oozing with character,” said Sneddon. “It’s nice to see that start to get some reward for that.”A major key to recent success has been Vermont’s offense showing signs of life. In the nine-game winless skid, Vermont scored just 16 goals. They’ve scored the same number in the five-game unbeaten streak (4-0-1) since.“We knew coming into the season, we’d be extremely young on the blueline and we’d have to weather some storms,” said Sneddon. “But we thought we’d at least have some scoring. We just had a lot of veteran players who were cold. Now they’re starting to come around, which is great news for us. And at the same time, our young defensive corps is getting better and better.”While the end of the season is on the horizon and the thought of possibly hosting an opening playoff series is running through minds, for Sneddon, he still has to take things day by day. Really, nothing has changed from when his team was desperately looking for wins.“I think the best approach we’ve had with our team this year is one day at a time,” said Sneddon. “We really haven’t talked about the standings. Certainly I know the guy would like nothing more than to play a playoff series in front of our fans who, I’m sure, have been disappointed at times in the season.“But to be playing our best hockey heading into the stretch, so rewarding the fans with a home playoff series would be great. But it’s not something that we really talk about now.“We’ve learned to be really good on Mondays after a tough weekend. Now it’s being really good on Mondays in preparation after a good weekend.“If we continue that approach, the points and climbing in the standings will take care of themselves.”

New Hampshire’s Sato scores a first for college hockey

Skating past the right post of the net, Kohei Sato caught the eye of fellow New Hampshire rookie Max Gildon.Gildon was on the far side of the offensive zone, but knew he had Sato streaking towards the back door. With a quick snap of the wrist, Gildon found Sato who directed the puck into a near empty net.With that play, it is believed that Sato is the first Japanese-born player to score a college hockey goal.The goal stood up for the game-winner in a 3-1 decision against Massachusetts, a much needed win for UNH ending a 12-game winless skid.“It felt unreal,” said Sato of scoring his first collegiate goal. “It took me 20 games, but I got it done.“[Gildon] made a really great pass. It was all [my linemates].”Sato, who was born in Japan, has been in North America since age 12 and came here with the pure intent of playing hockey. He’s moved around the continent with stops in Quebec, Ontario, Iowa and Massachusetts before landing at UNH. Last year, he played his junior hockey in the NAHL and was invited to play in the top prospects game.Saturday’s goal, though, has been a long time coming.“The last time I scored was probably last year around this time [playing juniors],” said Sato.Here’s hoping it’s the first of many.

Massachusetts offense struggling to finish

On Tuesday night, UMass struck for five goals in a 5-2 win against Merrimack.It was probably one of the betters feelings of the season for coach Greg Carvel.Prior to that, UMass had scored three or more goals in a game just twice since Jan. 12, something that wasn’t lost on Carvel.“We still have a hard time scoring rebound goals,” said Carvel after Saturday’s 3-1 loss to New Hampshire. “It’s taken ‘til after Christmas to realize that [finishing is] where we’re lacking. As young as we are, that’s where you notice how physically weak you are or how young you are. You can’t win those battles around the net and score those goals.“That’s how most goals are scored. We don’t score a lot of goals because we don’t score the ugly ones. We score some nice goals. Believe me, it is a focus for us to get to the net to score some of those goals, but it’s easier said than done.”Even in Tuesday’s five-goal outburst, most of the goals came off first shots. There was a nice finish of a 2-on-1 with the finish coming right at the crease and there was also a redirect in front of the net.But rebound goals are so often what make teams successful and will certainly be something the Minutemen continue to make their focus.

Amonte’s Beanpot legacy

Ty Amonte’s goal in double overtime will be one that will be memorable in Boston University Beanpot lore.But it also continues a family legacy in the tournament started by his father Tony, the Beanpot MVP in 1991.Many of the younger readers may not remember Tony Amonte’s performance in the 1991 Beanpot final. And if that game were played with today’s concussion standards, there’s a strong possibility that Tony’s MVP performance may never have happened.In the championship game against Boston College, the elder Amonte was bulldozed early in the game and laid on the ice for an extended period of time. Finally to his feet, he skated to the bench.In today’s era of hockey, Amonte would have likely headed to the locker to undergo a series of concussion tests. In 1991, Amonte was back on the ice by the time the second period started and then scored a hat trick in the span of 5:24.On Monday, with father Tony in the stands and likely seeing more clearly than 1991, son Ty kept the legacy going, firing a shot from the right half-wall at 1:55 in the second overtime that found the net to set off the celebration and send the Terriers to next Monday’s title game.“I wanted to make a backhand saucer pass to Dante (Fabbro), but I knew Coach (David Quinn) would cut my head off,” Amonte said. “So I just turned it up ice. We’ve been talking a lot about beating guys down to the hash marks and taking the puck wide. I just wanted to get the puck on net, and it went in. It’s a good feeling.”

This Week in the Big Ten: Roller coaster ride through ’17-18 season continues for Michigan

12 Jan 18: The University of Minnesota Golden Gophers host the University of Michigan Wolverines in a B1G matchup at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, MN (Jim Rosvold/USCHO.com)
Michigan celebrates a goal during a recent game on the road against Minnesota (photo: Jim Rosvold/USCHO.com).
Michigan went through something last weekend that it hadn’t experienced in a while — a conference split.The Wolverines defeated Wisconsin 5-3 on Friday night and dropped Saturday’s game 4-2. The previous four Big Ten series for Michigan ended in a sweep, either for or against. They play Michigan State this weekend.“They maybe feel like they should have won Friday’s game and we did, and we probably felt we should have won Saturday night’s game and they did,” Michigan coach Mel Pearson said of the Wisconsin series. “It had playoff intensity, the games were really intense. They were fast and physical and had a little bit of everything in them, which you would expect this time of year, especially since we’re all jockeying in the middle there.”Even with all the sweeps the Wolverines have played their 2018 conference games at an even .500 clip. Michigan was swept by Notre Dame in early January before it swept Minnesota on the road and Penn State at home. The Wolverines then lost their third and fourth game of the season to Ohio State before splitting with the Badgers at home.Pearson said the coaching staff has tried to make sure players keep an even-keel attitude regardless of the results and felt that they had been successful doing so this season.“That’s the one thing we’ve tried to do and I think we’ve done a good job, is to not get too high when you have a good weekend and not get too low when things don’t go your way,” he said. “We had two tight games with Notre Dame to start the roller coaster down and lost both games but played well. Then the next weekend you go to Minnesota and have a really good weekend and that sort of carried over to Penn State where we had another good weekend. Then we went on the road and Ohio State brought us back down to earth a little bit, but the good thing about it is we stayed in the moment.”Goaltender Hayden Lavigne has started all but one game in the second half, with the exception being the first game of the Great Lakes Invitational, which means that he has had a front seat on the roller coaster that the team has been riding.“Obviously he had some good games in there and a couple games where he probably would like to have a couple shots back,” Pearson said. “As he goes, we go, there’s no secret there. When he plays well we’ve got a chance and when he doesn’t we just can’t seem to outscore our mistakes. But he’s done a nice job, he’s really come along and made great strides, to me, from where he was at the start of the year to where he is now.”One positive that could come from the Wisconsin series was the play of the power play, which scored three goals on the weekend. Over the whole season the Wolverines’ power play has been near the bottom of the barrel, converting on 18 of 111 attempts, but Pearson is hoping that the second unit’s production last weekend is a sign of good things to come.“Big time, yeah, no question about it,” he said. “It’s interesting because we were being carried by (Cooper) Marody, (Tony) Calderone, (Dexter) Dancs and that line and that power-play unit and now the other group is chipping in too, with (Jake) Slaker, (Josh) Norris and (Jack) Becker. Which is good for us because we’re a little bit more dangerous and it gives us a little more depth.”Michigan currently sits fourth in the Big Ten standings with 27 points. Notre Dame leads the conference with 47 points followed by Ohio State (34) and Wisconsin (28). Penn State (25), Minnesota (23) and Michigan State (14) are behind the Wolverines. The Irish, Buckeyes, Gophers and Spartans have six conference games remaining while the Badgers, Wolverines and Nittany Lions have four.A change in the conference postseason format this season means that the second through fourth place teams will host the bottom three for a three-game series with the conference champion receiving a bye. The semifinals and finals will be one game hosted by the higher seed.“You want to play at home,” Pearson, who went through a similar playoff format last season when he was coaching in the WCHA, said. “I experienced that last year, it really helped us in our situation at Michigan Tech being at home. I think it puts a whole lot more urgency, I guess would be the best word, in your games because, let’s face it, I think every one of us if you asked us would rather be at home than have to travel and play in someone else’s rink.“Especially in our league because you’ve got the big sheet in Minnesota and you’ve got the sort of half or whatever you want to call it in Wisconsin, the hybrid. It’s not a single game at a neutral site like it was last year. You’ve got to try and beat somebody two of three in their own barn so the emphasis on home ice and the urgency to get it, especially these last few games, is ratcheted up big time.”This week, the Wolverines will complete their season series with in-state rival Michigan State. The two teams split a home-and-home series in early December and Michigan defeated the Spartans 6-4 in the GLI consolation game. Pearson praised the way the Spartans have played under first-year head coach Danton Cole this season, citing their defensive prowess.“They’ve taken on the identity of Danton, Chris Luongo and Joe Exter, which is defense-first,” he said. “They’ve given up less goals than we have in league play. You can see it in their systems and the way they play, they want to play well defensively first-and-foremost. They’re going to create their offense through their defense and create their offense through their power play. You can see they’ve won more games this year than they did all of last year, so they’re trending in the right direction and they’re doing a good job up there.”Friday’s game will be played in East Lansing and Saturday’s will be the “Duel In The D” at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. Pearson said that playing at a NHL arena, as they also did for the GLI, is something that the players enjoy and is a good way for both teams to attract more fans.“They really enjoy it, they get even, if you can, you even get more pumped up to play in a NHL building and what a great place to do it in, Little Caesars Arena,” he said. “The reason we did that way back when was because you can only get 6,000 into Yost and you can only get 6,000 into Munn and we wanted to showcase our teams and we’ve gone there and played in front of sold-out crowds before. I think we’re going to have a great crowd and it’s a great place to showcase college hockey, but also to showcase our two programs.”

Wisconsin preps for Border Battle; Granato preps for Slovenia

When Wisconsin plays Minnesota at home in Madison this weekend there will be at least one person on the other side of the world that is very interested in the games — the Badgers head coach Tony Granato, who is also the head coach of the U.S. Olympic team.Granato spoke about being away from the team at Wisconsin’s Monday press conference. With the men’s gold medal game slotted for Feb. 25, he will more than likely miss the rest of Wisconsin’s regular season.“I do wish I was here, but, obviously, we’re in a good position,” he said. “I’m excited for our kids for what’s gone on the past few weeks. To put ourselves in a really good position now and now it’s time to show up and show that we deserve to be a top team in our conference.”Granato said that he planned on watching the games but didn’t want to micromanage the team from South Korea. He said that he would be available if assistant coaches Mark Osiecki or Mark Strobel needed to call him, but added that they “know what to do,” and “know how to run our team.”The head coach also took time to talk about the Wisconsin and Minnesota rivalry and how special he feels it is, he said he was looking forward to see how big the crowds are at Kohl Center this weekend.“Just these six games we’ve played since I’ve been back, every one of them has been a one-goal game that’s been down to the last second of every game,” he said. “The energy, the emotion, the change in momentum, the fans, the excitement, the anticipation leading up to the series, the amount of people in the buildings, we’re going to have close to a sellout or maybe a sellout on Saturday a great crowd is going to be here on Friday as well and when we went to Minnesota it was the same thing.“This is college hockey, when Minnesota and Wisconsin get together. Especially now with the meaning of these points and we’re all kind of clogged together in a four-team race, it makes it that much more exciting. You don’t want to take that excitement away from it and say it’s just another game, you want them to appreciate the history and the tradition that’s led up to why this series is so special.”

Three stars of the week

First star — Notre Dame sophomore goaltender Cale Morris: Morris stopped 103 Penn State shots last weekend as the Irish took five of six Big Ten points from the Nittany Lions. He made 48 saves during Friday’s 5-3 win, including 21 in the first period. Saturday’s 55-save effort was a career high and included a stopped penalty shot in overtime to preserve the tie. This is his eighth career Big Ten weekly award.Second star — Wisconsin sophomore forward Trent Frederic: Frederic tallied six points last weekend when the Badgers split their series at Michigan. He had a goal and two assists in both games and was on the ice for all seven Wisconsin goals. This is his fourth career Big Ten weekly award.Third star — Michigan freshman forward Jack Becker: Becker recorded four points in the Wolverines’ split with Wisconsin. He scored the game-winning goal on Friday and added a goal on Saturday. This is his first career Big Ten weekly award.

B1G in the poll

No. 1 Notre Dame, No. 6 Ohio State, No. 12 Minnesota, No. 16 Penn State, No. 17 Wisconsin and No. 19 Michigan represent the Big Ten in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.My ballot1. Notre Dame2. Cornell3. Denver4. St. Cloud State5. Minnesota State6. Clarkson7. Ohio State8. North Dakota9. Providence10. Northeastern11. Minnesota12. Minnesota Duluth13. Bowling Green14. Western Michigan15. Omaha16. Boston College17. Penn State18. Wisconsin19. Northern Michigan20. Michigan

This week’s matchups

Michigan at Michigan State (Friday at Munn Ice Arena, Saturday at Little Caesars Arena)Ohio State at Notre Dame (Friday and Saturday, Compton Family Ice Arena)Minnesota at Wisconsin (Friday and Saturday, Kohl Center)

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Mercyhurst improving on weekly basis, still ‘a work in progress’

Mercyhurst coach Rick Gotkin. (Mercyhurst Athletics)
Mercyhurst coach Rick Gotkin has the Lakers sitting fourth in the AHC standings, with games in hand on the three teams ahead of Mercyhurst (photo: Mercyhurst Athletics).
Mercyhurst coach Rick Gotkin enjoyed his weekend off.Thanks to an uneven number of teams in Atlantic Hockey, there’s usually an odd team out. So the Lakers were idle last weekend, part of a stretch of 13 days without any action.”It was nice,” said Gotkin. “I got to take care of some things around the house, have a little down time. Watched the Super Bowl.”But part of Gotkin wishes he was behind the bench, because his Lakers were on quite a roll before taking a break, currently riding a seven game unbeaten streak (5-0-2), second longest in the nation.That’s moved Mercyhurst from the middle of the pack in Atlantic Hockey to sole possession of fourth place, just four points out of first with at least one game in hand on the three teams ahead of it.”We would rather have played,” Gotkin said. “But on the other hand, we had played a lot of hockey to that point. Playing at Army (the weekend before last) was physical, it was a grind.”The Lakers came away with three points at West Point after a 2-2 tie last Friday and a 6-1 win the following evening.”We’ve played pretty well last few weeks,” said Gotkin. “I don’t think we played poorly before Christmas, but there was certainly improvements that needed to be done and still needs to be done. Like everybody, we’re a work in progress.”That series with Army West Point had an added dimension. Mercyhurst senior Jack Riley and his brother, sophomore Brendan Riley, are the sons of Army West Point coach Brian Riley.Both played well in the rink that they grew up in, combining for five goals and two assists. Jack had a hat-trick on Saturday, probably his last collegiate game at his home town rink.”I think there was a point that (playing against his father) was hard for Jack,” said Gotkin. “It’s such a cool but difficult dynamic. I think it’s been a little easier for Brandon. I think the guy it’s hardest on is Brian. When they’re your kids, it’s hard.”Gotkin has a unique perspective as the coach that recruited the Rileys.”I’m honored that Brian and Marybeth (Riley) trusted Mercyhurst,” he said. “(Sister) Dani is here as well as a grad student and lacrosse coach.”They’re just a great family. They’re hockey royalty and we all know that, but they’re great, great people. The best part for me has been getting know the Rileys”.The downtime also allowed Gotkin to more closely follow the story of former Laker goaltender Ryan Zapolski, the Erie native and former Mercyhurst goaltender (class of 2011) who will be playing for Team USA in the Winter Olympics in PyeongChang.”He’s here right now,” said Gotkin. “He’s been here working out on the ice every day. He’s leaving for South Korea on Wednesday.”Zapolski was a walk-on at Mercyhurst who won the starting role his sophomore season and moved up the ranks in pro hockey, eventually landing in Finland and becoming a top goalie in the Kontinental Hockey League with Jokerit.”He’s a unbelievable story,” said Gotkin. “Forget the fact that he didn’t play in the National Hockey League. He’s from Erie (Pennsylvania), which isn’t Minnesota, or Massachusetts, or upstate New York. He played high school hockey and then in the NAHL in Youngstown.”He reached out to us. A hometown guy, wanted to stay in Erie, would like a chance.”Zapolski started as a third-string practice goalie, waiting for his chance that eventually came. When he graduated from Mercyhurst, he had over 100 games under his belt.”He just kept working. We were really excited in his development. Some guys are better pro players than college players and for whatever reason, Ryan just got better and better. And he was a very good college player.”Gotkin says that when the NHL elected not to send players to the Olympics, Zapolski was an easy choice.”He’s been on (USA Hockey’s) radar,” he said. “He’s played for the national team in some international tournaments. The folks in USA Hockey thinks he’s the best goalie in Europe.”It’s exciting to see. (Zapolski) thrives on being a guy that no one really knows. We’re proud that he started here at little Mercyhurst College.”Just as Zapolski has flown under the radar, so has Mercyhurst this season. But the Lakers’ play as of late is getting noticed. They’ll be put to the test down the stretch beginning Friday when the Lakers will play five games in nine days.”Everything is so tight in our league that you need to be playing well this time of year,” said Gotkin. “We’ve played against some really good teams. Everyone we’ve seen from top to bottom has been good. It’s going to be an exciting finish.”

Hobey hopefuls

It’s that time of year when Hobey Baker speculation begins in earnest. Will the list of ten finalists include any players from Atlantic Hockey?Here’s the list of AHC players who have been Hobey finalists:2004 Reid Cashman, D, Quinnipiac2007 Eric Ehn, F, Air Force (Hobey Hat Trick finalist)2008 Simon Lambert, F, RIT2009 Jacques Lamoureux, F, Air Force2011 Paul Zanette, F, Niagara2012 Tim Kirby, D, Air Force2013 Carsen Chubak, G, Niagara2015 Matt Garbowsky, F, RIT and Cody Wydo, F, Robert Morris2016 Zac Lynch, F, Robert Morris2017 Charles Williams, G, CanisiusThere are three players who merit serious consideration this season:Dylan McLaughlin, Canisius: McLaughlin is currently tied for third nationally in points per game (1.44).Brady Ferguson, Robert Morris: The senior is tied for 11th nationally in points per game (1.32).Scott Pooley, Holy Cross: Pooley has 18 goals so far this season, tied for sixth nationally.My guess is that if McLaughlin can keep pace, he’ll make the list of finalists. But overall it’s been a down year for the league in terms of standout players, so it wouldn’t be shocking to see Atlantic Hockey shut out of the race for the first time since 2014.Surprisingly, in a league known for goaltending, there aren’t any goalies in the conversation this year. Holy Cross senior Paul Berrafato is having the best season in terms of save percentage: his .922 is seventh in the country.The best the league has to offer in terms of GAA are Air Force’s Billy Christopoulos and American International’s Stefano Durante. They’re tied for 18th nationally at 2.35.

Here we go again?

Back in January, the government shutdown forced Air Force to postpone its Jan. 20 game against Sacred Heart. The plan is to make that game up on Feb. 13.The Falcons are at Bentley this weekend, and will stick around New England and play the Pioneers on Tuesday afternoon at Quinnipiac.That is, of course, unless there’s another shutdown. The latest temporary agreement expires on Feb. 8. That would certainly wreak havoc on Air Force and the rest of Atlantic Hockey so close to the end of the season.Fingers crossed.

Weekly Awards

Here’s what the league came up with this week.Player of the Week — Kyle Schmidt, Bentley:The senior had a five point weekend to lead the Falcons to a sweep of Rochester Institute of Technology. In Saturday’s 5-2 win, Schmidt recorded his second career hat-trick. He now has 53 career goals.Goalie of the Week — Billy Christopoulos, Air Force:Christopoulos stopped 51 of 53 shots last weekend to help the Falcons to a win and a tie against AIC. He recorded his second career shutout on Friday, stopping all 29 shots in a 3-0 victory.Defensive Player of the Week — Eric israel, Robert Morris:The junior blueliner scored a pair of goals in the Colonials sweep of Sacred Heart. He currently has 15 points so far this season (four goals and 11 assists).Rookie of the Week — John Laurito, Army West Point:The freshman had four points in last Friday’s win over Niagara. He registered a pair of goals and a pair of assists in a 6-2 win. Laurito now has three goals on the season, tops among rookies for the Black Knights.

This week in men’s D-III East: Connecticut College rediscovers fun, finds success

Hamilton vs. Connecticut College Camels Men's Hockey at Connecticut College, New London, Connecticut. Connor Roderick of Connecticut College (Geoffrey Bolte / Clarus Studios Inc. Connecticut College Athletics)
Hamilton vs. Connecticut College Camels Men’s Hockey at Connecticut College, New London, Connecticut. Connor Roderick of Connecticut College (Geoffrey Bolte / Clarus Studios Inc. Connecticut College Athletics)
Sometimes it is easy to forget why you play this game — it is fun. It can be grueling going through the daily practices and physical aspects of a very demanding sport like ice hockey, but that is why kids start to play the game in the first place –- because it is fun! That is a fact that is not lost on the Connecticut College Camels, who enter the final two weeks of the regular season in second place in the NESCAC standings with a solid chance for home ice in the playoffs and maybe more.”This is a lot of fun,” exclaimed coach Jim Ward. “These guys are young and excited to play, and our winning results continue to increase the fun factor for this team. We certainly aren’t used to being in this position at this point of the season, but this team has learned and continues to learn more about what it takes to win, and did I mention they are having fun?”The first half ended with the Camels owning a 3-4-0 record overall and a very respectable 3-3-0 record in conference play. Four nonconference games against very good competition of Hobart, Manhattanville, Elmira, and St. Thomas left them at 3-8-0 in early January, but since then, the Camels are 6-1-2, including an overtime win over Worcester State and a solid road win over Williams. Ward’s team now sits at 9-9-2 overall and a solid 8-4-2 in NESCAC play with just four league games remaining. So, what, or more importantly, when, did things change for the Camels?”It is hard to pinpoint when exactly we started figuring it out,” noted Ward. “I think I can go back to the Colby-Bowdoin weekend in December that really was a turning point for us this season. I thought we had played our best game of the season at that time against Colby in a 2-0 loss. The very next day against Bowdoin it was clear we had put the disappointment of the Colby loss behind us, and we did some very good things on the ice in a 7-1 win. I keep reminding myself about how young a team we are, and those two games really showed our starting to mature as a team and learning to be in the present as a group. I think that is where we started to put things together.”So, what have been the keys to success for the “fun-bunch” in a conference that has historically been very difficult from top to bottom?”Our youthful enthusiasm really has gone a long way with this team,” said Ward. “They don’t know what they don’t know but are learning quickly, and every night someone else has stepped up to help us find a way to win, rather than trying not to lose a close hockey game.”During their recent run of good play, the Camels have won five one-goal games and held their opponents to two goals or less in seven of the last nine games. While that speaks to a strong commitment from the team to the defensive end of the ice, the coach is happy to point out the stellar play of the guys in the crease as a big part of their success.”We have really good goaltending,” stated Ward. “The team has a lot of confidence in both Connor [Rodericks] and Avery [Gobbo] and their ability to shut teams down. Connor has been really effective in the second half, and that has just increased our confidence as a team overall. That ability to go find a win in a close hockey game is something we have been doing a lot of over the last month, and it becomes contagious with different guys stepping up with big plays and goals.”Rodericks is 8-4-2 on the season with three shutouts and an outstanding save percentage (.940) and goals-against average (1.95) entering the final four games in conference play. This past weekend, the Camels picked up three points in a home-and home series with travel partner Tufts. Friday night, Rodericks needed to stop everything he saw just to keep pace with Nik Nugnes in the other goal for the Jumbos as the game ended in a 0-0 overtime tie. On Saturday, Rodericks had to support the Camels comeback from a two-goal third-period deficit on their way to a 4-3 overtime win behind three unanswered goals from Ryan Glantz, Brenden Russ, and William White in the extra session. The points kept them in second place, but there are several teams hot after a home-ice berth, so the team is not chalking up any accomplishments just yet.”This league is just so competitive every night,” said Ward. “Parity really isn’t a fair term with how good all the teams are in our league, so we can’t take anything for granted on the ice. We need to stay focused starting this weekend on the road against Hamilton and Amherst and try to get as many points as we can. There are only four points separating second from sixth in the league, so a good weekend might keep you where you are but a bad one could find you dropping a long way down. It’s great to be in the thick of the playoff picture, and we would love to be as high up as we can get and hopefully get a home-ice spot for the playoffs. There is a lot of hockey in front of us, and we need to keep playing our game with the fun and excitement these guys have shown in the second half.”Saturday night, the Camels face a resurgent Hamilton squad that currently sits in fifth place, just three points back. The fun continues for one more road trip before the Camels return home to close the regular season and hopefully stay there for some fun playoff hockey.

Colorado College scoring machine, Utah native Halloran ‘has the skill to lead the nation’

Colorado College vs North Dakota, Broadmoor World Arena, Oct. 28, 2017 (Casey B Gibson/Casey B. Gibson)
Colorado College sophomore Nick Halloran has compiled 39 points so far for the Tigers during the 2017-18 season (photo: Casey B. Gibson).

The NHL scouts know who Colorado College winger Nick Halloran is.The nation’s college hockey fans should, too.

The only sophomore in the top three in NCAA Division I in points (39) and points per game (1.5) also tied for the lead in the well-regarded NCHC despite last weekend’s bye. He was tied for the national lead in both categories before Monday’s Beanpot semifinals.Halloran made history in the five-year-old league by becoming the first to win consecutive league player of the month honors (Dec. 2017 and Jan. 2018). Denver 2014-15 Hobey Baker finalist Joey LaLeggia (Feb., March 2015) shared the award once during his two-month surge.But despite the league recognition, the soft-spoken Halloran, 20, plays on a seventh-place team and remains a relative unknown outside the NCHC.

The Draper, Utah native is not concerned. He credits his teammates for his performance that has helped the Tigers go from averaging 1.94 goals per game last season to 3.02 so far this year.

“I am playing with good players and that is key,” Halloran said. “I knew I had the capability to do something special this year and I am glad I am kind of proving myself here. It is a blast because we are winning more. That is much more important (than his points).”The combination of Halloran, junior co-captain Mason Bergh (15 goals, 34 points) and junior Trey Bradley (five goals, 25 points) gives CC its first potent line in years.That and Halloran’s surging confidence, coupled with his dynamic offensive abilities — a quick shot release, skate speed and ice vision — are behind his breakout season.

“He is obviously an elite player and he can make players around him better,” Bergh said. “We have benefited from each other, but he could step into any line and help those guys produce and still produce himself. He creates space for the other players and makes life easier for (his linemates).”

Halloran’s rise from a disappointing nine points (five goals) in 26 games as a freshman to 39 (16 goals) in 26 games this season leads D-I in the points improvement category (plus-30).

The seeds were sown this past summer when the undrafted Halloran stayed in Colorado Springs to dedicate himself to offseason training. He entered the fall stronger and confident.

“We knew he would come back ready to go and a little pissed off,” Bradley said. “Nine points was disappointing for him. You credit the line a little bit, but you have to give him respect. He is one of our hardest workers and he has the skill to lead the nation.”

The coaching staff didn’t expect this much improvement.“We thought he could be a 25-point guy this year,” Tigers coach Mike Haviland said. “You saw glimpses of it early on last year before he had a setback with an injury. Nick really did a good job preparing this offseason. His confidence coming back was outstanding and when you put that line together, it’s been great.”

Colorado College vs Arizona State, Broadmoor World Arena, Dec. 17, 2017 (Casey B Gibson/Casey B. Gibson)
Halloran, a Utah native, has a shot to best Rylan Schwartz’s 53-point season in 2012-13 as tops for a Tigers player (photo: Casey B. Gibson).

The sophomore’s potential emerged while playing for the British Columbia Hockey League’s Trail Smoke Eaters. The former Colorado Rampage youth standout had lived in the area while his older brother, Alex, played for Air Force.

“He took a chance on us and it has worked out for both,” Haviland said. “There is a lot of NHL attention on him and rightfully so. He put himself in a position to play on a team that was on the rebuild when he got here. That is a smart decision by a young man. Whether it is college or the pros, you look for a team where you have the opportunity to play.”

Now, Halloran has a chance to record the best individual season performance by a Tiger since another No. 13 (Rylan Schwartz) led D-I in points (53, including 20 goals) during the 2012-13 season. Those Tigers finished one league title game win from an automatic NCAA tournament berth.

“There is a ton of potential and I don’t see any signs of him slowing down offensively,” Bergh said. “I expect him to be very good for us over the next two months and next season as well.”

That top line, led statistically by Halloran, are a big reason why the seventh-place Tigers (11-11-4, 5-8-3-2 NCHC) are more confident as the postseason nears.

“We like to put a load on our shoulders and try to carry the team for the team’s success as much as ourselves,” Halloran said. “Whoever is the hero that night, it’s awesome. It doesn’t matter who as long as it leads to a win. We believed from Day 1 we could do something great here.

“We still believe.”

Bracketology: No new teams in or out, but matchups starting to get interesting

26 Jan 18: The University of Minnesota Golden Gophers host the University of Notre Dame Fighting Irish in a B1G matchup at 3M Arena at Mariucci in Minneapolis, MN. (Jim Rosvold/USCHO.com)
If the NCAA tournament began today, Minnesota would most likely start in Sioux Falls, S.D., against North Dakota (photo: Jim Rosvold/USCHO.com).
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.Here are the NCAA’s guidelines on the matter, from the 2015 pre-championship manual:

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 6:1t Notre Dame1t St. Cloud State1t Denver4 Cornell5 Minnesota State6 Ohio State7 Clarkson8 North Dakota9t Minnesota9t Omaha11t Providence11t Minnesota Duluth13 Northeastern14 Western Michigan15 Penn State16 Michigan22 Boston College33 CanisiusCurrent conference leaders based on winning percentage BOLDED Above:Atlantic Hockey: Canisius (Holy Cross is tied in points, but with 2 more games played)Big Ten: Notre DameECAC Hockey: CornellHockey East: Boston CollegeNCHC: St. Cloud State (Denver does lead in points though)WCHA: Minnesota State (Northern Michigan does lead in points though)

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 Notre Dame2 St. Cloud State3 Denver4 Cornell5 Minnesota State6 Ohio State7 Clarkson8 North Dakota9 Minnesota10 Omaha11 Providence12 Minnesota Duluth13 Northeastern14 Western Michigan15 Boston College16 Canisius

Step two

Now it’s time to assign the seeds.No. 1 seeds: Notre Dame, St. Cloud State, Denver, CornellNo. 2 seeds: Minnesota State, Ohio State, Clarkson, North DakotaNo. 3 seeds: Minnesota, Omaha, Providence, Minnesota DuluthNo. 4 seeds: Northeastern, Western Michigan, Boston College, Canisius

Step three

Place the No. 1 seeds in regionals.No. 1 Notre Dame is placed in the Midwest Regional in AllentownNo. 2 St. Cloud State is placed in the West Regional in Sioux FallsNo. 3 Denver is placed in the Northeast Regional in WorcesterNo. 4 Cornell is placed in the East Regional in Bridgeport

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.But we must place the hosts first, and that means North Dakota is to be placed first.No. 2 seedsNo. 8 North Dakota is placed in No. 2 St. Cloud State’s regional, the West RegionalNo. 7 Clarkson is placed in No. 1 Notre Dame’s regional, the Midwest RegionalNo. 6 Ohio State is placed in No. 3 Denver’s regional, the Northeast RegionalNo. 5 Minnesota State is placed in No. 4 Cornell’s regional, the East RegionalNo. 3 seedsOur 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.No. 9 Minnesota is placed in No. 8 North Dakota’s regional, the West RegionalNo. 10 Omaha is placed in No. 7 Clarkson’s regional, the Midwest RegionalNo. 11 Providence is placed in No. 6 Ohio State’s regional, the Northeast RegionalNo. 12 Minnesota Duluth is placed in No. 5 Minnesota State’s regional, the East RegionalNo. 4 seedsOne more time, taking No. 16 vs. No. 1, No. 15 vs. No. 2, etc.No. 16 Canisius travels to No. 1 Notre Dame’s regional, the Midwest RegionalNo. 15 Boston College travels to No. 2 St Cloud State’s regional, the West RegionalNo. 14 Western Michigan travels to No. 3 Denver’s regional, the Northeast RegionalNo. 13 Northeastern travels to No. 4 Cornell’s regional, the East RegionalThe brackets as we have set them up:Midwest Regional (Allentown):16 Canisius vs. 1 Notre Dame10 Omaha vs. 7 ClarksonEast Regional (Bridgeport):13 Northeastern vs. 4 Cornell12 Minnesota Duluth vs. 5 Minnesota StateWest Regional (Sioux Falls):15 Boston College vs. 2 St. Cloud State9 Minnesota vs. 8 North DakotaNortheast Regional (Worcester):14 Western Michigan vs. 3 Denver11 Providence vs. 6 Ohio StateOur first concern is avoiding intraconference matchups. We have Western Michigan vs. Denver.We swap Northeastern with Western Michigan.Midwest Regional (Allentown):16 Canisius vs. 1 Notre Dame10 Omaha vs. 7 ClarksonEast Regional (Bridgeport):14 Western Michigan vs. 4 Cornell12 Minnesota Duluth vs. 5 Minnesota StateWest Regional (Sioux Falls):15 Boston College vs. 2 St. Cloud State9 Minnesota vs. 8 North DakotaNortheast Regional (Worcester):13 Northeastern vs. 3 Denver11 Providence vs. 6 Ohio StateHow can we improve attendance at these regionals?I can swap Clarkson with Ohio State. This brings Ohio State a little closer to home, and for Clarkson it’s almost the same distance.Midwest Regional (Allentown):16 Canisius vs. 1 Notre Dame10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio StateEast Regional (Bridgeport):14 Western Michigan vs. 4 Cornell12 Minnesota Duluth vs. 5 Minnesota StateWest Regional (Sioux Falls):15 Boston College vs. 2 St. Cloud State9 Minnesota vs. 8 North DakotaNortheast Regional (Worcester):13 Northeastern vs. 3 Denver11 Providence vs. 7 ClarksonThe other thing I would like to do is put another Eastern team in Bridgeport. Right now Worcester has three Eastern teams, so let’s move one to Bridgeport. Let’s swap Minnesota Duluth with Providence.Midwest Regional (Allentown):16 Canisius vs. 1 Notre Dame10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio StateEast Regional (Bridgeport):14 Western Michigan vs. 4 Cornell11 Providence vs. 5 Minnesota StateWest Regional (Sioux Falls):15 Boston College vs. 2 St. Cloud State9 Minnesota vs. 8 North DakotaNortheast Regional (Worcester):13 Northeastern vs. 3 Denver12 Minnesota Duluth vs. 7 ClarksonLooks like a plan here to me.

BUT…

The previous weeks we looked at distances to the regionals for the number one seeds. Let’s do that again.Refreshing ourselves from last week we asked – What is the distance for Notre Dame to the regionals?Allentown – 640 milesSioux Falls – 677 milesBridgeport – 761 milesWorcester – 855 milesNotre Dame is more than 500 miles to any regional site. That means, according to the NCAA Handbook, that they need to fly.What do always talk about here at Bracketology? That a flight is a flight so it doesn’t matter where you go. We always say that about Denver, don’t we?Let’s take a look at the current number two seed in Cornell. What is the distance for Cornell to the regionals?Allentown – 179 milesBridgeport – 260 milesWorcester – 293 milesThe closest regional for Cornell is actually Allentown, the Midwest Regional.Let’s take this into consideration with the caveat added – all teams in the number one seed band are placed in the closest proximity to their campuses – as long as it’s by bus.So, let’s see:Notre Dame – more than 500 miles, needs to fly to any regionalCornell – 179 miles to AllentownSt. Cloud State – 222 miles to Sioux FallsDenver – more than 500 miles, needs to fly to any regional.If you look at it this way, you really only get a change of two games in two different places – Canisius vs. Notre Dame in Bridgeport now and Western Michigan vs. Cornell in Allentown.Midwest Regional (Allentown):14 Western Michigan vs. 4 Cornell10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio StateEast Regional (Bridgeport):16 Canisius vs. 1 Notre Dame11 Providence vs. 5 Minnesota StateWest Regional (Sioux Falls):15 Boston College vs. 2 St. Cloud State9 Minnesota vs. 8 North DakotaNortheast Regional (Worcester):13 Northeastern vs. 3 Denver12 Minnesota Duluth vs. 7 ClarksonMy thoughts? I prefer the first set of brackets for attendance purposes.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 Notre Dame10 Omaha vs. 6 Ohio StateEast Regional (Bridgeport):14 Western Michigan vs. 4 Cornell11 Providence vs. 5 Minnesota StateWest Regional (Sioux Falls):15 Boston College vs. 2 St. Cloud State9 Minnesota vs. 8 North DakotaNortheast Regional (Worcester):13 Northeastern vs. 3 Denver12 Minnesota Duluth vs. 7 Clarkson

Conference breakdowns

NCHC — 6Big Ten — 3Hockey East — 3ECAC Hockey — 2WCHA — 1Atlantic Hockey – 1

Last Week’s Brackets

Midwest Regional (Allentown):16 Canisius vs. 1 Notre Dame11 Minnesota vs. 8 OmahaEast Regional (Bridgeport):15 Boston College vs. 2 Cornell10 Minnesota Duluth vs. 7 Minnesota StateWest Regional (Sioux Falls):14 Northeastern vs. 3 St. Cloud State12 North Dakota vs. 6 Ohio StateNortheast Regional (Worcester):13 Western Michigan vs. 4 Clarkson9 Providence vs. 5 DenverThis week’s movement:Out: NoneIn: None

Wednesday Women: Shakeup at the top?

The Boston University Terriers defeated the Harvard University Crimson 3-2 in the opening game of the 2018 Beanpot at Kelley Rink in Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. (Melissa Wade)
The Boston University Terriers defeated the Harvard University Crimson 3-2 in the opening game of the 2018 Beanpot at Kelley Rink in Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. (Melissa Wade)
Arlan: The story of the week has to be No. 1 Wisconsin losing more games in a 24-hour period in Columbus than it had in its first 28 contests. Certainly, losing on the road to a sixth-ranked team is not all that damning, but there are a few concerning trends.Prior to last weekend, the Badgers had failed to score multiple goals in a game only twice; it happened both days at Ohio State, including suffering their first shutout this season. There may be cause for concern at the other end of the ice as well. Through 24 games, UW only allowed more than two goals once: the loss to Northeastern. Opponents have scored three times in half of the last six games. Combining the recent drop in effectiveness both offensively and defensively, the Badgers have only one win by a multi-goal margin in going 3-2-over their last six games.Ohio State outscored Wisconsin, 4-1, over the series, after being handled by a 10-1 margin when it visited Madison in November. This comes on the heels of Bemidji State reducing its deficit versus Wisconsin to 7-6 a couple of weeks back, after being thumped by a 10-2 composite in the fall. The Badgers can take comfort if that is just a result of playing on the road versus at home; they’ll make their final true road trip of the season this weekend to Duluth. However, it may be more of a cause for concern if it is an indication that the field is gaining on Wisconsin, as it did over the course of the 2016-17 campaign.Meanwhile, this was the most promising week of a season that has been a renaissance for OSU. The Buckeyes gained their 19th win and sit on the brink of their first 20-win season since 2006-07. After opening 2018 with a 5-1 beat down at the hands of Penn State that completed a 1-3-2 stretch, it appeared that hopes of a first national tournament berth were slipping away from Nadine Muzerall’s team. However, the sweep of the Badgers washed away the bad taste of getting swept by Minnesota Duluth the previous week and positions Ohio State solidly in the NCAA picture.In your opinion, will the Wisconsin at Ohio State series have a bigger impact on the Badgers or Buckeyes going forward?Candace: I think it has to be the Buckeyes. Yes, getting swept might be a confidence blow for the Badgers, but this is a team that made the national championship game last year. Wisconsin is going back to the NCAA tournament, and I don’t see whoever wins the CHA tournament defeating them, so they will advance to the Frozen Four. In those games, defense is huge, and Wisconsin’s defense is terrific. The one concern is that as Nicole pointed out a few weeks ago, Wisconsin could only muster a single goal in two Frozen Four games last year. Their offense has tended to disappear just when it is needed, as the Badgers don’t attack enough. If this weekend is a sign of that tendency creeping in, it could foreshadow another exit for Wisconsin.After getting swept by the Bulldogs, I was beginning to think that the Buckeyes were just going to be too inconsistent this year. Their top forwards are freshmen, and it would be natural for the exuberance of youth and the players’ inexperience to hurt them down the stretch. However, I think this weekend shows the Buckeyes that they do belong and should give them boatloads of confidence heading into the postseason. I think the weekend for sure solidifies Ohio State’s position for qualifying for the NCAA tournament, and it could give them the boost to perhaps dethrone Wisconsin in the WCHA tournament. At this point, a home ice spot in the first round of the tournament is a possibility.Ohio State’s sweep wasn’t the only surprise this weekend. Honestly, I was watching the scoreboard and at one point thought to myself, I don’t think I have ANY sort of handle on the game right now. In the ECAC, Cornell played to a draw with Harvard, and Rensselaer beat Princeton, but those results were tame compared to what went down in Hockey East. That conference really does seem to be BC and everyone else right now. I think BU is getting stronger again, and they get crushed by Vermont. Northeastern has beaten Wisconsin and BC, but lost this weekend to Connecticut. Maine seems to be coming on and then fades again, playing to a tie in one game with New Hampshire before winning. Then there’s Providence, which lost two games it couldn’t afford to.Of those results, I think the first to zero in on is Connecticut beating Northeastern. What did you take away from that?Arlan: The only thing I can conclude with any certainty is that two Hockey East teams not named Boston College played a game and one scored more goals than the other. Whatever I may try to read into it beyond that will have been proved incorrect by the next time I participate in this column.So before I venture deeper into the analyst’s quicksand of Hockey East, I’d like to follow up on your point about Wisconsin. The odds are very good that the Badgers will be hosting a team from the WCHA, rather than the CHA champion. If Minnesota gets into the tournament, the Gophers will be heading to Madison because that pairing does not require a flight. The same would also be true of Minnesota Duluth, another candidate to bus to Madison. A CHA team like Mercyhurst or Syracuse could play an Eastern host without flying, so even though it may not maintain bracket integrity, the selection committee would leave the Lakers or the Orange in the East and match Wisconsin with the Gophers or Bulldogs, and if neither of those teams are in the field, then the Buckeyes are the next likely choice.With that point made, let’s go back to the topsy-turvy world of Hockey East. UConn took until almost mid January to win its first league game, and a couple of weeks back, it was languishing with a 1-10-5 conference mark. Then the Huskies rattled off a four-game winning streak on home ice, and they are now positioned well to not only reach the playoffs, but avoid BC in the first round. The good news is that they have four winnable games remaining versus teams that trail them in the standings. The bad news is that if the pendulum swings once more, as it does with regularity in Hockey East, and Connecticut cools off as quickly as it heated up, then the Huskies could be passed by both Vermont and Merrimack. It would be the kind of cruel joke that the HEA hockey gods like to play to give the Huskies hope only to snatch it away.Over its recent hot streak, Connecticut has been scoring three goals per game while allowing only one. Much of the credit for the latter goes to senior goalie Annie Belanger, but sophomore Morgan Fisher, who has slightly better numbers, got the start and the win over Northeastern. Offensively, the same names keep popping up in the scoring column in the recent wins. Natalie Snodgrass, Leah Lum, Briana Colangelo, Kayla Mee, Theresa Knutson, and Morgan Wabick are the team’s top six scorers, and they’ve netted all but one of the dozen goals over the last four games. If the players you count on to score do so, and your defense is on its game, then you can enjoy success.As far as the other Huskies are concerned, Northeastern is only 1-4-1 after upsetting Boston College on Jan. 12. Why? Northeastern simply is allowing too many goals, 23 over that stretch. It has a good offense, but it is difficult to win if scoring four goals won’t be enough. On one hand, the goaltending has been inconsistent. Junior Brittany Bugalski held the Eagles to two goals one day, and then surrendered three on just seven shots in 13-plus minutes the next. She picked up the team’s only recent win versus UConn, but didn’t make it through the second period in her next start versus Vermont before being pulled. It seems like Bugalski is the best option when she’s on, but freshman Aerin Frankel has been more consistent. Offensively, nobody is averaging a point a game, although seniors McKenna Brand and Denisa Krížová have done so in past years.It all adds up to Northeastern being a point shy of fourth place and an opportunity to host a quarterfinal, with three league games remaining to try to improve its lot. New Hampshire is only one point ahead, but the Wildcats have to travel to BC before finishing with a home-and-home series with Boston University. Normally, that would be a daunting road, but BU is as likely to frighten its supporters as its opponents this year. The Terriers will need to get points from the Wildcats, because it isn’t out of the realm of possibility that they could be the team that finishes ninth if they remain stuck on 17 points.How do you see it unfolding? Will Northeastern thwart UNH and get to host? And which team will be left without a chair when the music stops in Hockey East?Candace: I have no idea which team will not make the playoffs, except it won’t be Boston College. I could honestly almost see it being Boston University, and wouldn’t that be a shocker, except the teams trailing BU don’t have a favorable schedule, as they all play each other. BU is three points up on Merrimack in that last spot; the Warriors also trail Vermont and Connecticut by a point. Connecticut has four games left, and Merrimack and Vermont each have three. The Terriers play a home-and-home with New Hampshire, Merrimack has a game with Northeastern and a pair with Connecticut, UConn has those two games with Merrimack and two against Vermont, and Vermont has the two with UConn and one with Northeastern.Based on those remaining games and the recent play of Connecticut and Vermont, I think Merrimack will be the team on the outside looking in. Merrimack has had some good wins, beating Boston University, Maine, Minnesota, Providence, and Vermont, but has too many losses as well, and it seems like the Warriors just weren’t consistent enough. It will definitely play out in an interesting way.As for the remaining home ice spot, Northeastern has the more favorable schedule than New Hampshire, closing with Merrimack, Providence, and Vermont. However, the Huskies have been so inconsistent. They should be able to take at least two of those games, but it’s also possible they could lose two and if UNH can get one win against BU, the Wildcats will hold that last spot. Really though, I don’t think home ice makes much of a difference. It certainly hasn’t in previous games.Let’s move to the ECAC right now. Rensselaer scored a big win over Princeton to throw more of a tangle into the bottom three spots in that race. Who do you see on the outside looking in there?Arlan: I’ll get at least half the teams correct, because Brown and Dartmouth are mathematically out of it. The Big Green are nine points out of the final playoff spot, and all teams have only four games left. As for the Bears, it never came together for them this season.The numbers aren’t favorable to Union at this point either. The Dutchwomen finish at home for the final series, but that will be versus the ranked pair of Cornell and Colgate. They did pick up a tie earlier in Ithaca; it’s unlikely that we’ll see that repeated. So even if Union is able to go on the road this weekend and sweep at Harvard and Dartmouth, that alone won’t be enough, as the Dutchwomen are five points down.That leaves us with four teams competing for the final three playoff spots. Princeton sits alone in sixth place with 17 points, followed by Harvard and Yale tied with 16, and RPI chasing with 14. The Engineers are Union’s travel partner, so they have the same path remaining. Harvard could go a long way toward locking up a spot if it can get wins on home ice over Union and Rensselaer this weekend, but the Crimson will have to deal with the distraction of the Beanpot bookending that series.Yale has the toughest schedule remaining. The Bulldogs games will all be against teams that sit in the top half of the standings: Cornell, Colgate, Princeton, and Quinnipiac. They lost the first meeting to each of the first three teams in that list. Oddly, they’ve already met in-state rival Quinnipiac three times and have found that to be a favorable matchup, earning two wins and a tie. I think Yale is going to need at least one point along the way, because RPI owns the head-to-head tiebreaker, and I think the Engineers are the favorite even on the road at Dartmouth.Princeton should be okay. Not only are the current standings on the Tigers’ side, but after hosting the North Country duo, they finish the season at Yale and Brown. That final game should be enough to earn them two points if they need them.Sorting through all of that, I see Brown, Dartmouth, Union, and RPI missing out. If there is a surprise to be sprung, then it will be the Engineers getting in at Yale’s expense.On the other end of the standings, do you think that Clarkson will be able to parlay its one-game lead over Colgate into a regular-season ECAC title?Candace: I think it’s likely, yes. The Golden Knights have a favorable schedule, playing Princeton, Quinnipiac, Dartmouth, and Harvard, and I don’t see them losing to any of those teams. Colgate has an equally good schedule down the stretch, with Rensselaer, Union, Brown, and Yale. I’m assuming both Colgate and Clarkson will run the table, which will leave the Golden Knights two points ahead. The two teams split their season series, with Colgate winning in OT and Clarkson winning earlier this month.Clarkson owns the goal differential between the two, but more importantly, looking at the tiebreaker procedures Clarkson only has one loss to the top four teams, while Colgate has three, losing to Cornell in December and St. Lawrence in October. Clarkson’s two losses are to Colgate and Quinnipiac. Even if one of the teams on Clarkson’s schedule were to beat them, it’s a team outside the top four. The tiebreakers in order are head-to-head record (a wash), wins (would be a wash if Colgate runs table and Clarkson loses one to leave the two tied), and then comparison of results against top four teams, which Clarkson owns. For Colgate to pass Clarkson and win the regular season, Clarkson needs to lose twice.The CHA was off last weekend, but the race is heating up. Mercyhurst and Robert Morris are tied at the top of the standings with 21 points, and the two have a series coming up in two weeks. Mercyhurst’s other two series are Penn State and RIT, and Robert Morris has Lindenwood and Syracuse. It would seem the Lakers have the edge then, unless Robert Morris sweeps the series in two weeks. What is your opinion on the CHA right now? It seems as chaotic as Hockey East to me!Arlan: At least in Hockey East, we can always count on knowing that BC will be on top. I guess from that perspective, it has been just as clear of late that RIT will be languishing in the CHA’s basement.Other than that, Lindenwood and Penn State are waging quite a battle for fourth place, but with the playoff format that the CHA has used in recent years with a single-elimination tournament at a single site, there isn’t much riding on it other than last change if they meet as the No. 4 and No. 5 seeds. I guess it’s possible that one of them could still catch Syracuse, but even if the Lions could sweep Syracuse in two weeks, they’d still need help to catch the Orange, who currently hold a five-point lead. It looks highly likely that Lindenwood and Syracuse will clash in a quarterfinal for the right to advance and face the regular-season champion.Meanwhile, if the Orange can sweep when they host RMU during the final weekend, they could move up from third place. But if they hope to contend for the title, they’ll also need help, as they’ve completed the head-to-head with Mercyhurst. It’s difficult to make up two games in the standings against two teams with so few games remaining.It definitely looks like the crown will be worn by either the Lakers or the Colonials, and if they split as they did in their first series, then perhaps they’ll wind up as co-champions. You’re correct that the schedule favors the Lakers, as Robert Morris will be on the road for that crucial series at Mercyhurst. The Colonials also finish on the road at Syracuse. They’ll have to avoid a letdown after what figures to be an emotional series versus their rivals, and both of the leaders have already dropped a game to the Orange.Even beyond all of that, I just get the sense that Mercyhurst has been the steadier team over the last couple of months. The Lakers definitely had their struggles early, losing 10 games in a nonconference schedule that included 10 games versus teams currently ranked eighth or higher. Perhaps that experience tempered them and made them that much stronger, and it’s paying dividends now.We talk often about parity, and for the most part, we’ve seen a lot of it this season. At times, it seems like nobody can hold onto the spots in the rankings from No. 5 on down. However, I’m not sure I remember a season where there has been such a clear gap between the top four and everyone else. The top four teams all have winning percentages of .850 or above; the next best is Ohio State at .700. Do you have any theories as to why such a clear divide has emerged?Candace: I really don’t. In an Olympic year, normally you’d expect the teams to be even closer as the top squads lose their best players to centralization. BC lost three defensemen to Team USA, and Wisconsin had one player on Team Canada and another on Team USA, as did Minnesota. Yet BC and Wisconsin are both chugging along and dominating, and Minnesota is poised to make the NCAA tournament. I suppose it could be that three of the teams in the top four, BC, Clarkson, and Wisconsin, have been dominant programs for the last decade or so. They are established as teams that are well-coached and that go to the NCAA tournament every year, and, along with Minnesota, are the teams that in any given year have a good chance to win the national championship. When that’s the case, the programs are what Air Force coach Frank Serratore once called “reload programs.” Good players graduate, and then good players come in. Look at BC this year, getting an offensive powerhouse like Daryl Watts. Wisconsin graduated a Patty Kazmaier Award-winning goalie, and then got a transfer who is doing outstandingly well.Players want to play for these programs, and as such, these schools can afford to pick the absolute best players. In that regard though, the emergence of Colgate and Ohio State has been refreshing, and it would be outstanding if one of those two schools went to the Frozen Four. However, we still have only four schools that have actually won the national championship: Clarkson, Minnesota, Minnesota Duluth, and Wisconsin. Whether that will change any time soon is anybody’s guess.Let’s turn to something more local. The Beanpot happened tonight. I always have a soft spot for that tournament, having gone to school in Massachusetts. Those schools are also very good teams. What did you take away from those games tonight?Arlan: I took away that the players who sit atop the scoring stats are there for a reason, or, more accurately, a number of reasons.Nobody has found the net at a higher rate than the Terriers’ Victoria Bach, and she needed only 6:09 to do sufficient damage to knock Harvard into the consolation bracket. Bach scored 3:48 into the game, she made it 2-0 a couple of minutes later, and she had the primary assist on Jesse Compher’s goal after another 14 ticks off the clock. After that brilliant start, BU’s offense was done producing, and within a period, the Crimson had narrowed the margin to a single goal. The Terriers managed to make that 3-2 lead stand up until the final horn, in spite of Harvard’s best efforts, including a minute plus with an extra attacker. Their reward is BU’s first appearance in a Beanpot Championship since 2012; it’s actually played in an NCAA final more recently.The second game started out in very similar fashion. Daryl Watts is BC’s most prolific scorer, and she matched Bach’s early performance with two goals, although hers were spread over more than 15 minutes. The Huskies’ defense didn’t play with enough discipline, getting constantly caught out of position and allowing one two-on-one break after another, and the Eagles are too good to be given so many chances. Northeastern tightened up from that point and responded with more energy and better judgement. Shelby Herrington scored to tie it midway through the game, but BC regained the lead with a pair of pretty snipes from McKenna Newkirk, one in each of the final two periods. Newkirk completed her hat trick into an empty net for a 5-2 final.So that gives us a championship game that will match BU vs BC, each led by a dynamic duo: Bach and Rebecca Leslie for the Terriers, Watts and Caitrin Lonergan for the Eagles. The big difference is that the young stars for BC have a much stronger supporting cast than do the two seniors of BU. The Eagles can fire another barrel with a second line featuring Newkirk and Kenzie Kent. For BU, there are fewer options, as Compher is the only other forward with more than 13 points. Perhaps the biggest advantage for BC is that it is backed by Katie Burt, who will be going for her third straight Beanpot.What were your Beanpot observations?Candace: My observations were more about how that tournament is usually competitive, no matter the relative strengths of the teams. Perhaps it’s because they play each other a lot anyway, so some natural rivalries have developed. Harvard looked out of the first game after one period, but like you said, the Crimson clawed their way back and made it a game. BC was only up a goal on Northeastern heading into the third period before pulling away. There’s something special about the Beanpot that seems to bring out the best in the four teams that play it.As for the results, I do agree that BC is the likely favorite. The Eagles have so much depth. However, BU has give the Eagles fits all season long, no matter what the Terriers were doing elsewhere. The first game was a 4-3 win for BC, the second a 2-2 tie, and the third a 4-2 win for the Eagles. As we have noted before, BC’s defense is not as strong with three players off playing for Team USA, so Bach and Leslie can definitely exploit that. BC’s superior depth may win the day, but it won’t be easy.In the consolation, both Harvard and Northeastern have struggled with inconsistency, so I don’t feel comfortable picking a winner in that one. It could go either way.

Pierog donning No. 6 for Clarkson a fitting tribute to late Golden Knights captain Morrison

 (William Cherry)
Clarkson captain Nic Pierog accepts the championship hardware after the Golden Knights won the Friendship Four tournament last November in Belfast, Northern Ireland (photo: William Cherry).
Clarkson senior captain Nic Pierog joined the program four years ago with a clear picture of what is expected of anyone who plays for the Golden Knights.“Coming here as a freshman you learn the culture of what this program is all about, which is blue collar, hard working,” he said. “Our coaching staff embodies that approach, and it kind of trickles down to the team.”To put it another way, you play like Mike Morrison, a scrappy, relentless center who gave it his all for the Golden Knights from 1985 to 1989.Morrison joined the program as a walk-on and finished up as the team captain. Nearly 30 years later, he remains an inspiration.Morrison, a Massachusetts native, died on July 27, 1989, when he fell from some scaffolding while working a summer construction job. The Clarkson community mourned the death of one of its most respected student-athletes with a heartfelt loss of the person and everything he came to represent.To that end, no Clarkson player again wore Morrison’s No. 6 jersey, a tribute that remained unchanged for 28 years before taking on a new form this season.
 (Clarkson Athletics)
Mike Morrison started his Clarkson career as a walk-on and graduated a senior captain (photo: Clarkson Athletics).
On Sept. 30, when the Golden Knights stepped onto the ice at Cheel Arena for an exhibition game against the University of Guelph, they were led by Pierog — wearing No. 6.Clarkson coach Casey Jones approached Morrison’s brother, Pat, with the idea of having the number worn again by a deserving member of the team. Morrison talked it over with his sisters, Colleen and Maureen (their parents had passed away), as well as a few of Mike’s Clarkson teammates.Everyone agreed that it would be an appropriate tribute.“Nic embodies what Mike represented to Clarkson hockey,” Jones said when the announcement was made. “He plays the game hard, is diligent in his school work and treats people the right way. With Nic being captain for his senior year, this is the perfect person to reintroduce No. 6 back into Clarkson hockey in the memory of Mike Morrison.”Pierog, a power forward, considers it one of the biggest honors in his career so far. “Every time I put on the jersey I’m playing for Clarkson and honoring Mike,” he said.Pat Morrison was in the stands for a game at Brown on Nov. 10 when he saw the No. 6 on the ice for Clarkson for the first time in 28 years. Yes, it was emotional, and it felt right.“I’m so glad we did it,” Morrison said. “We’ve gotten to know Nic, and he’s an awesome young man.”Mike Morrison graduated with a degree in marketing in the spring of 1989, and according to his brother, he was making some money that summer in advance of going to Finland to play professional hockey.”He loved the game,” Pat Morrison said. “He would have played as long as he could, and then he would have worked with children, coaching in some way.”A year after Mike’s death, the family started the Mike Morrison Memorial Golf Tournament, which continued for 20 years. The proceeds went to local charities, as well as a scholarship program at the local high school.Pat Morrison decided to start the Mike Morrison Foundation in 2004, the 25th anniversary of his brother’s death, with the idea of keeping Mike’s memory alive and giving back to the community.Morrison presented a $10,000 check to the Clarkson hockey program on Dec. 8 in a ceremony prior to the Golden Knights’ game against St. Lawrence. The Saints, who are coached by Mark Morris, also were presented with a check. Morris is a family friend of the Morrisons, and was the first-year coach at Clarkson in Mike Morrison’s senior season.The Golden Knights’ weight room was renamed the Mike Morrison Memorial Training Center on December 4, 1999, and features a tribute wall that includes pictures from Morrison’s playing days. His teammates from the 1988-89 season dedicated a plaque, which reads:“In loving memory of Mike Morrison, a man who led us by example. Hustle, hard work and enthusiasm were embodied in your every play. Your leadership and friendship won’t be forgotten. Memories of you should inspire those who follow to give the extra effort that is needed to be a winner.” (Clarkson Athletics)The Golden Knights have made it clear that the next player to wear the number will have had to earn it, which means that it won’t necessarily be an annual honor.“When we feel we have a player that exemplifies Mike we will have him wear No. 6,” Casey said.The Golden Knights (19-6-3) are ranked seventh in the latest USCHO.com poll. Pierog and his teammates have talked about making this season even more special by winning an ECAC title and making some noise in the NCAA tournament.Pierog has earned his degree in finance and is scheduled to complete his MBA in the spring. Like Mike Morrison, his goal is to continue playing as long as he can.“I’ve had a dream to play in the NHL,” Pierog said. “So I’d like to give professional hockey a try after this year.”The number on his jersey says he has the work ethic and commitment it takes to make it happen.

UConn’s Cavanaugh, USCHO.com’s Weston join Feb. 6 edition of USCHO Live!

Mike Cavanaugh (UConn - Head Coach) The Boston University Terriers defeated the visiting University of Connecticut Huskies 4-1 (EN) on Sunday, November 17, 2013, at Agganis Arena in Boston, Massachusetts. (Melissa Wade)
Connecticut coach Mike Cavanaugh has his Huskies in the hunt for a first-round bye in the Hockey East playoffs (photo: Melissa Wade).
Our guests on the February 6 edition of USCHO Live! are Connecticut coach Mike Cavanaugh, whose Huskies are just two points out of a first-round bye in Hockey East, and USCHO.com Big Ten columnist Paula C. Weston.Listen live at 8 p.m. EST using the player below or the Spreaker Radio app for iOSAndroid or Windows phone, or later on demand.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.

TMQ: Talking the Feb. 5 poll, surprise teams this season, Beanpot attendance

Erik Brown (16 - RIT), Noah Delmas (20 - Niagara), Brian Wilson (33 - Niagara) (2018 Omar Phillips)
Niagara is just a shade under .500 in AHC play this season, a season after the Purple Eagles went 5-31-3 overall (photo: Omar Phillips).
Each week during the season, we look at the big events and big games around Division I men’s college hockey in Tuesday Morning Quarterback.Paula: With a win and a tie against Penn State, Notre Dame has reclaimed the top spot in this week’s poll after Cornell saw its 11-game undefeated streak stopped by Rensselaer, and the balloting this week has me a bit confused.After Notre Dame’s streak 16-game win streak was halted by a loss to Wisconsin Jan. 21, the Jan. 22 poll still had the Irish at No. 1, although Cornell received 15 votes for first place and Clarkson and Denver each received a vote.It took until Notre Dame lost two in a row for the Irish to lose first place to Cornell in last week’s poll, and the Big Red only enjoyed that spot for a moment before voters pretty decisively decided restore Notre Dame to the top spot. This in spite of Denver’s current seven-game unbeaten streak after two wins over Minnesota-Duluth. Notre Dame, St. Cloud and Denver are all knotted at the top of the PairWise Rankings, making this week’s poll even more interesting.It’s almost as though the voters viewed Notre Dame’s two-game skid as a hiccup that the Irish have rectified — and maybe it was and maybe they have. They did have to come from behind to beat Penn State Friday and they tied Saturday, so in their last five games, the Irish were close to losing four.Except that they didn’t lose all of those four, and I’m guessing that is the important difference to voters.Even though we pretty much all acknowledge that the NCHC is the strongest conference, though, I have to wonder why Denver only received eight votes and St. Cloud two. At the other end of the poll, I’m also wondering what Boston University needs to do to get recognized, as the Terriers are enjoying a seven-game undefeated streak of their own.Jim: I think that explaining Notre Dame’s ascent back to No. 1 isn’t as difficult as it seems.Cornell had a tough weekend, barely surviving on Friday at Union to earn a 4-3 win and then falling a night later at Rensselaer. Voters, I think, looked at that as a pretty rough weekend.As compared to say the NCHC or Big Ten, I think losses in the ECAC, particularly to the bottom tier, took a lot of luster off the newly-minted top ranking that Cornell had just achieved. Sure, the fact that it also ended a long unbeaten streak shouldn’t simply be overlooked. But again, I really think voters are finding a way to balance off the strength of leagues right now.That, though, could lead to your second question about why Notre Dame and not Denver as the top pick. That’s a much more difficult question. I do know that we’ve discussed in the past the fact that when a team falls in a poll, it can often be much more difficult to re-ascend. Denver fell to No. 5 after losses to Dartmouth, Merrimack and Miami. All of those teams at the times of the losses were towards the bottom of their respective standings (Dartmouth has played better hockey of late).Notre Dame, on the other hand, is finding ways to win or tie, it seems. I get your that they could have lost five straight, but didn’t. Sometimes, that is the sign of a winner.The team that surprises me right now is Clarkson. Somehow the Golden Knights have gone from a 14-game winning streak to having just one win in their last five (1-3-1). Certainly, winning cultivates winning, but I am surprised that after the winning streak ended that it has been such rough sailing.Paula: Clarkson surprises me as well, but the entire ECAC surprises me this season.Harvard started off well in conference play. but has been inconsistent since the start of the calendar year, with five overtime games since Jan. 6, games during for which they have a record of 2-0-3.Union has been average overall (16-13-1) but quite good in league play (11-5-0) with the only loss in the Dutchmen’s last six games to Cornell last Friday night and a record of 6-3-0 in 2018. Colgate looked promising in the first half of the season, but the Raiders have really fallen off with a record of 4-8-0 since the start of December. For a league that produced consecutive national champions with Yale in 2013 and Union in 2014 – with Quinnipiac making Frozen Four appearances in 2013 and 2016 – the ECAC seems a bit unsteady this season, which of course underscores your point about the poll.There are a couple of teams out there that I find really interesting right now, teams that may be heating up at just the right time of the season. One of them is Minnesota State, although in fairness, I don’t think the Mavericks were ever really cold this year. Overall, my sense is that the WCHA is improved as a whole this season at least among its top teams, but the Mavericks may be in a class of their own in that league, in spite of lagging behind first-place Northern Michigan by a point.The Mavericks have one of the top freshmen in the country in forward Jake Jaremko, who scored his 10th goal of the season this past weekend and is second among freshmen nationally in points per game. Senior goaltender Connor LaCouvee, who transferred from Boston University, is among the top 10 goaltenders nationally in goals against (1.81) and he has the second-best win percentage in the nation. The Mavericks lead the nation offensively (3.86 goals per game), are sixth defensively (2.18), have the best power play in the country and are second nationally in combined special teams. They seem loaded to me and yet completely under the radar, perhaps because they are playing in the WCHA.Another sneaky team of late is Robert Morris. The Colonials went 8-12-1 in the first half of the season but have climbed to third place in Atlantic Hockey with a record of 5-1-1 since the start of January. With six games left and tough competition from at least two of the three teams they’ll face, the Colonials will make the AHA race fun to watch.And then there’s Boston University, a team I mentioned earlier – which brings us to the Beanpot, Jimmy. As we craft this column, I know you’re covering the Beanpot this year and I am very interested in your thoughts on the tournament itself as well as the teams participating.Jim: Well, in terms of competitiveness, this is one of the better Beanpot tournaments.Northeastern, which hasn’t won since 1988, is technically the favorite as the highest ranked team. But all the others aren’t far behind, which makes for a great on-ice product.If I have any concern about the Beanpot, it’s the fact that the stands in the TD Garden seem empty. What once was the hottest ticket in town can be had for more than 50 percent below resale value from the local ticket agencies. And this has nothing to do with the product on the ice.The tournament is more competitive now than it was 10-plus years ago. But the competition for the entertainment dollar, the fact that alumni and business people aren’t scurrying to the games and even the students seem apathetic. Monday, Boston College’s student section was about one-third empty and defending champ Harvard’s was about half-empty. BU and Northeastern still seem to draw, but for some reason, the luster has worn off.It also hasn’t helped that since 2001, eight of the first Mondays of the Beanpot come a day after the Patriots have played in a Super Bowl, so that hangover seems real.This is still a great tournament, probably the premier in-season event in college hockey, but it is no longer the draw it once was.

A Tip of the Cap…

Paula: … to the five finalists for this year’s Hockey Humanitarian Award: Camil Blanchet (Bowdoin), Courtney Pensavalle (Yale), Sidney Peters (Minnesota), Luke Rivera (Fredonia) and Lauren Spring (Ohio State).It is impossible to summarize adequately in just a few words what these five players have contributed to be counted among hockey’s finest citizens. They’ve raised money for cerebral palsy, for bone marrow registration, for stroke awareness, for Meals on Wheels.Blanchet is a representative to the Bowdoin student government. Pensavalle sings with other Yale student-athletes in the Unorthojocks, an acapella group. Peters volunteered in Haiti with Project Medishare. Although sidelined with an injury this season, Rivera continues his commitment to the Blue Devils’ community engagement. Spring traveled to Ecuador to volunteer with “Soles for Souls.”Individually and collectively, the generosity of these student-athletes is both inspiring and humbling.Jim: Every year at the Frozen Four, I get to meet and interview the Humanitarian recipient and every single year, I am humbled by how much these student-athletes do for their community.This is all about being not a good citizen, but a great citizen, and being active in the community they represent despite spending hours studying and being an athlete. Everything these five have accomplished is so incredible.

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