Home Blog Page 486

Niagara adds pair of D-I transfers in Lake Superior State’s Roll, Miami’s Brandt

When Niagara recently announced the addition of seven players for the 2017-18 season, two of them included Division I transfers.
 
Defenseman James Roll joins Niagara for his final year of collegiate eligibility as a graduate transfer after three seasons at Lake Superior State and Jared Brandt comes to Monteagle Ridge after playing the 2016-17 season for Miami and will be eligible for the 2018-19 season.

Roll, a native of nearby West Seneca, N.Y., is eligible immediately.

Last season, Roll posted a goal and an assist in 12 games and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in business administration with a concentration in marketing. He will pursuing a Master of Business Administration degree at Niagara.

“This year, we are going to lean heavily on James for his experience,” Niagara coach Jason Lammers said in a statement. “He gives us another strong presence at defense and on top of that, he is a great teammate and a gifted leader off the ice as well.”

Brandt finished his freshman year with the RedHaweks with 10 points (three goals, seven assists) and 28 blocked shots in 33 games played.
 
“After a year of college hockey at Miami, Jared is an experienced addition to our blue line,” Lammers added. “He had an impressive junior career and grew into a strong leader with Minot (Minotauros of NAHL). We expect him to grow into a solid contributor at both ends of the ice.”

Mason added to Niagara staff as director of hockey operations

Niagara has announced the addition of Andrew Mason as director of hockey operations.

Mason will be responsible for video analysis, analytics, team logistics and academic coordination at Niagara.

Mason joins the Purple Eagles after spending the 2016-17 season in the same position at Hobart, returning to his alma mater where he previously served as a student manager for four seasons. He also spent three years in the hockey operations department for the Columbus Blue Jackets organization from 2013-16.

“We are very excited to add Andrew to our staff here at Niagara,” Niagara coach Jason Lammers said in a statement. “He has gained significant experience at both the collegiate and professional level, which will help him contribute to our commitment to excellence.”

Mason returned to Hobart last season as director of hockey operations, where he was tasked with filming games and breaking down video for the coaching staff in addition to running the Statesmen’s social media accounts.

Hired by the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2013 as a hockey operations intern, Mason analyzed video of 2014 and 2015 NHL Draft prospects. He then joined Columbus’ AHL affiliate, the Lake Erie Monsters, as the hockey operations assistant and was on staff during the 2015-16 season as the Monsters won the Calder Cup as AHL champions. He assisted players and staff with employment paperwork and facilitating player movement between Lake Erie and Columbus, in addition to assisting the coaching staff with player performance analytics.

A 2013 graduate of Hobart, Mason received a bachelor’s degree in political science and American studies. He was a student manager for the Statesmen during all four years of his undergraduate studies.

Citing health reasons, Providence’s Gamez done playing hockey, will be PC student assistant

Garrett Gamez (PC - 13) - The University of Massachusetts Lowell River Hawks defeated the Providence College Friars 2-1 at 12:27 of the third overtime in their Hockey East semi-final meeting on Friday, March 18, 2016, at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. (Melissa Wade)
Garrett Gamez compiled 16 points in 57 career games for Providence (photo: Melissa Wade).

Providence junior forward Garrett Gamez has announced that he will no longer play hockey due to ongoing health concerns.

Gamez will join the men’s hockey staff this upcoming season as a student assistant coach.

“After speaking with the doctors, we have come to the conclusion that playing hockey would require risks to my health that I am not willing to take,” Gamez said in a statement. “I can’t explain how hard this decision was to make. With that being said, I can’t thank my family, friends, teammates and coaches enough for all the support they have given me through this tough time.”

Gamez collapsed on the bench during the first period in Game 2 of the Hockey East quarterfinals at Notre Dame on March 11 and missed the remainder of the season.

He appeared in 57 games for the Friars from 2015 to 2017, posting eight goals and eight assists over that span. Three of Gamez’s eight career goals were game-winners, including an overtime goal in the Friars’ 2-1 win over UMass on Feb. 25 of last season.

“Garrett’s health and well-being go beyond hockey and we completely support his decision,” added Friars coach Nate Leaman said. “Not only is Garrett a terrific hockey player, he is an even better person and someone who truly embodies the spirit of a Providence College student-athlete. We are fortunate that he will be around the program to assist on a daily basis.”

Robert Morris inks Schooley to contract extension through ’22-23 season

Robert Morris coach Derek Schooley. RMU mens hockey v Air Force at Consol Energy Center. Photo by Jason Cohn (JASON COHN/RMU ASSIGNED)
Derek Schooley has been the only coach Robert Morris has had in its 13-year history (photo: Jason Cohn).

Robert Morris announced Tuesday that head men’s coach Derek Schooley has agreed to terms on a three-year contract extension through the 2022-23 season.

Schooley is entering his 14th season at the Colonials helm, as the program’s only head coach since its founding in 2003. Schooley has led the Colonials to a 213-205-58 (.508) record since RMU’s inaugural NCAA season in 2004-05, reaching the 200-win plateau in the 2016-17 campaign. Schooley was named the 2014-15 Atlantic Hockey Coach of the Year and was one of eight finalists for the Spencer Penrose Award, given to the nation’s top college hockey coach.

“We are thrilled to extend Derek’s contract and to ensure that he will remain a Colonial for a long time,” RMU director of athletics Craig Coleman said in a statement. “As the founding coach of our men’s hockey program, he continues to push the program to greater heights, and the sky is the limit.”

“My family and I would like to thank Robert Morris University president Dr. Chris Howard and Dr. Craig Coleman for the confidence that they have shown in me and direction of the Colonial hockey program,” added Schooley. “We are proud members of the Robert Morris community and the city of Pittsburgh.”

Since joining the Atlantic Hockey conference in the 2010-11 season, Schooley has coached the Colonials to a 144-92-32 (.597) record, finishing every season above .500 and posting 20 wins or more in four of the last five seasons. In that time, Robert Morris has reached its first NCAA tournament, winning the Atlantic Hockey tournament title in 2014 and back-to-back regular-season championships in 2014-15 and 2015-16. The Colonials have advanced to the AHC championship game in each of the last two seasons and three of the last four.

The Colonials have played host to several of college hockey’s top teams as part of the Three Rivers Classic, played in the home of the Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins, winning the hometown tournament three times in five years, including back-to-back Confluence Cup titles, aiming for a three-peat in 2017-18. The Colonials have taken down three ranked teams to win the last two Three Rivers Classic titles – over No. 14 Penn State and No. 8 UMass Lowell in 2015 and No. 14 Quinnipiac in 2016.

“I am honored and humbled every day to lead this program,” said Schooley. “We could not have done it without the dedication of great staff members, players and alumni. I look forward to continuing the success we have built over the past 13 years.”

Wisconsin goalie carousel has Jurusik going back to USHL, Hayton a possible grad transfer

Matt Jurusik (Wisconsin-30) 15 Nov.06 University of Wisconsin Badgers and University of North Dakota meet in a non conference match-up at the Engelstad Arena Grand Forks, ND (Bradley K. Olson)
Matt Jurusik went 9-7-0 with a 3.70 GAA and .882 save percentage in 2016-17 with Wisconsin (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

The Sioux City Musketeers acquired the USHL rights to goaltender Matt Jurusik from the Bloomington Thunder on Monday morning.

Jurusik spent the last two seasons playing at Wisconsin, but according to the Musketeers, will be joining the USHL for the 2017-18 season.

“Our team picked up an experienced collegiate goaltender that is very competitive and has a desire to win,” said Sioux City coach Luke Strand in a statement. “Matt has 50 games played at the Division I level.  His freshman season, he was the youngest player in college hockey, let alone the starting goalie. We are excited to have him on our team.”

That transaction comes on the heels of another as sources have told the Wisconsin State Journal that All-American goaltender Kyle Hayton will join the Badgers as a graduate transfer from St. Lawrence.

Kyle Hayton of St. Lawrence had 23 saves in a 5-2 loss at RIT (Omar Phillips)
Kyle Hayton started 35 of St. Lawrence’s 37 games last season and posted five shutouts among his 16 wins for the Saints (photo: Omar Phillips).

Hayton completed his undergraduate degree in three years at SLU, making him able to play his final season of eligibility at UW this fall without having to sit out a year as mandated by NCAA rules.

He was the Goaltender of the Year last season in ECAC Hockey and a second-team All-American in the East Region.

CWHL draft sees slew of NCAA women’s connections selected Aug. 20

Noora R?ty secured her NCAA-record 101st victory and 37th career shutout in the Gophers 6-0 rout of Minnesota-Duluth on February 1, 2013 at Ridder Arena. ...Unauthorized reproduction of d3photography.com photos is strictly forbidden (resale, reproduction);.use in advertising (for profit or at a loss) is a violation of the Student-Athlete's eligibility to compete...NCAA Bylaw 12.5.2.2 - Use of a Student-Athlete's Name or Picture Without Knowledge or Permission..If a student-athlete's name or picture appears on commercial items (e.g., T-shirts, sweatshirts, serving trays, playing cards, posters) or is used to promote a commercial product sold by an individual or agency without the student-athlete's knowledge or permission, the student-athlete (or the institution acting on behalf of the student-athlete) is required to take steps to stop such an activity in order to retain his or her eligibility for intercollegiate athletics. Such steps are not required in cases in which a student-athlete's photograph is sold by an individual or agency (e.g., private photographer, news agency) for private use. (Revised: 1/11/97, 5/12/05) (Ryan Coleman/Ryan Coleman, d3photography.com)
Former Minnesota netminder Noora Raty was selected sixth overall in the 2017 CWHL draft by the Kunlun Red Star (photo: Ryan Coleman/d3photography.com).

cwhlA total of 113 players representing nine countries were selected in the 2017 Canadian Women’s Hockey League draft on Aug. 20 and will join the Boston Blades, Calgary Inferno, Kunlun Red Star, Markham Thunder, Les Canadiennes de Montreal, Toronto Furies and Vanke Rays for the 2017-18 season.

Held at the Hockey Hall of Fame’s Doc Seaman Centre in Toronto, 59 former NCAA Division I and Division III players and one commit are now property of CWHL clubs.

Round (Overall)Player's NamePositionCollege TeamCWHL Team
1 (1)Courtney TurnerFUnionBoston Blades
1 (2)Kristyn CapizzanoFBoston CollegeToronto Furies
1 (3)Nicole KostaFQuinnipiacMarkham Thunder
1 (5)Taryn BaumgardtDQuinnipiacCalgary Inferno
1 (6)Noora RatyGMinnesotaKunlun Red Star
1 (7)Cayley MercerFClarksonVanke Rays
2 (8)Robyn ChemagoGDartmouthBoston Blades
2 (9)Brittany ZubackFVermontToronto Furies
2 (10)Lindsay GriggDRITMarkham Thunder
2 (12)Kelly MurrayDCornellCalgary Inferno
2 (13)Alex CarpenterFBoston CollegeKunlun Red Star
2 (14)Elaine ChuliGConnecticutVanke Rays
3 (17)Cassie ClaytonFRITMarkham Thunder
3 (19)Sophie ShirleyFWisconsin (commit)Calgary Inferno
3 (20)Shiann DarkangeloFSyracuse/QuinnipiacKunlun Red Star
3 (21)Brooke WebsterFSt. LawrenceVanke Rays
4 (22)Amie VaranoDSacred HeartBoston Blades
4 (23)Shannon StewartFPlattsburghToronto Furies
4 (27)Stephanie AndersonFBemidji StateKunlun Red Star
4 (28)Hanna BuntonFCornellVanke Rays
5 (29)Kaitlin SpurlingFHarvardBoston Blades
5 (30)Alexa AramburuFOswegoToronto Furies
5 (33)Kayla GardnerFNorth DakotaCalgary Inferno
5 (34)Zoe HickelFMinnesota DuluthKunlun Red Star
5 (35)Emily JanigaFMercyhurstVanke Rays
6 (36)Michelle NgFSt. LawrenceBoston Blades
6 (37)Cassidy DelaineyFElmiraToronto Furies
6 (39)Erin HallDHoly CrossBoston Blades
6 (41)Taylor MarchinDYaleKunlun Red Star
6 (42)Ashleigh BrykaliukFMinnesota DuluthVanke Rays
7 (43)Meaghan SpurlingDSt. AnselmBoston Blades
7 (44)Grace KlienbachFNeumannToronto Furies
7 (46)Kelly KittredgeDBrownBoston Blades
7 (47)Lyndsay KirkhamFLindenwoodCalgary Inferno
7 (48)Madison WooFBrownKunlun Red Star
7 (49)Emma WoodsFQuinnipiacVanke Rays
8 (52)Megan DelayDPlattsburghMarkham Thunder
8 (54)Anissa GambleFRobert MorrisCalgary Inferno
8 (55)Melanie JueDCornellKunlun Red Star
9 (57)Kristen EmbreyFUMass BostonBoston Blades
9 (58)Maeve KehoeFUnionToronto Furies
9 (59)Itsuki BabaDSt. ScholasticaMarkham Thunder
9 (63)Qian ZhaoDSyracuseVanke Rays
10 (64)Erin DwyerFSt. Michael'sBoston Blades
10 (70)Rose AllevaDPrincetonVanke Rays
11 (71)Alison QuinnFSt. AnselmBoston Blades
11 (77)Lauren KellyDDartmouthVanke Rays
12 (79)Brooke GibsonGAdrianToronto Furies
12 (81)Shayna DominiqueGCantonLes Canadiennes de Montreal
13 (85)Casey StathopoulosFSacred HeartBoston Blades
13 (86)Nicole MageeGSacred HeartToronto Furies
14 (90)Ashley RyanFElmiraBoston Blades
15 (93)Taryn HarrisDManhattanvilleBoston Blades
16 (96)Rachel ViglianoFNew England CollegeBoston Blades
17 (99)Megan ServaesDNew England CollegeBoston Blades
18 (102)Gabby CrugnaleFUniv. of New EnglandBoston Blades
19 (105)Casey BreeseFSt. AnselmBoston Blades
20 (108)Elizabeth AvesonFUMass BostonBoston Blades
21 (111)Cassandra ShermanFSouthern MaineBoston Blades
22 (112)Cassandra DunneDPenn StateBoston Blades

Azzano leaves Cortland bench for USHL assistant’s job in Lincoln

Cortland assistant coach Chris Azzano has been named assistant coach of the USHL’s Lincoln Stars.

Azzano spent the previous two seasons at Cortland and prior to joining Cortland, served one season as an assistant coach for Canton.

“We are excited to add Chris to our staff,” Stars coach Cody Chupp said in a statement. “His experience working with goaltenders, passion for the game and ability to create strong relationships with players make him a great fit for Lincoln and our vision for the organization.”

Azzano played three seasons and was a two-time captain as a goalie for Morrisville after beginning his college career at Wentworth.

“I am very grateful to join the Lincoln Stars and want to thank Cody Chupp, Jon Hull, Chris Michael and Ryan Schiff for this amazing opportunity,” Azzano added. “I cannot wait to join such a prestigious organization with an incredible fan base and a proven track record for developing players.”

Shuchuk leaves Michigan Tech assistant’s post for NAHL head coaching job

29 Nov 13: Gary Shuchuk (Wisconsin Assistant Coach). ===The University of Minnesota Golden Gophers host the University of Wisconsin Badger in the first ever B1G Hockey Conference matchup at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, MN. NCAA Bylaw 12.5.11 prohibits the use of a student-athlete's name, picture, or identity to promote the sale of a commercial product or service. It is the intent of the University of Minnesota that this photo shall no be used in any way that may constitute advertising or promotion of any commercial product or service. (Jim Rosvold)
Gary Shuchuk spent five seasons as an assistant coach with Wisconsin from 2010-15 (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Michigan Tech assistant coach Gary Shuchuk has been named head coach of the NAHL’s Janesville Jets.

Shuchuk spent two years as an assistant at MTU, where he helped the Huskies win the 2016 McNaughton Cup as WCHA regular-season champions, and a 2017 Broadmoor Cup as WCHA playoff champions.

He served five seasons as assistant coach for his alma mater Wisconsin prior to joining the Huskies. With the Badgers, Shuchuk won the 2013 Broadmoor Cup and the 2014 Big Ten playoffs.

“I’m extremely excited about the opportunity to coach the Jets,” Shuchuk said in a Janesville news release. “I can’t wait to get the players here in training camp next weekend. I want to thank Joe Dibble for his hard work and dedication to making the Janesville Jets one of the top programs in the NAHL. I know the Jets have great community and fan support and I’m looking forward to bringing a Robertson Cup championship to the city of Janesville.”

Shuchuk played 142 NHL games and recorded 39 points between the Detroit Red Wings and the Los Angeles Kings. He also co-captained the 1990 national champion Badgers, garnering first team All-American status along the way, in addition to WCHA Most Valuable Player and University of Wisconsin Male Athlete of the Year titles.

Shuchuk is tied for 12th on the Badgers’ all-time scoring list (176 points) and stands seventh in goals (85). His 80 points in 1990 are the second-most in a single season by a Badger.

Wilkes delays women’s program’s start to 2018-19 due to low roster size

wilkesWilkes University has announced the delay of its NCAA Division III women’s hockey season.

The announcement was made in a brief news release on the official school athletics website.

“Wilkes made the decision to delay the season due to a lower than anticipated roster size,” said the announcement. “The men’s and the women’s programs are slated to begin competition in 2018-19.”

Boston College’s Burt taken No. 1 overall in 2017 NWHL Draft

Katie Burt of Boston College (BC Athletics)
BC’s Katie Burt was the top pick in the 2017 NWHL Draft and will stay in town with the Boston Pride (photo: BC Athletics).

2017_NWHL_Draft_Final__1__largeThe National Women’s Hockey League held its third annual draft Thursday night and all 20 players selected came from the NCAA Division I ranks, led by Boston College goaltender Katie Burt, who went first overall to the Boston Pride.

Round (Overall)Player's NamePositionCollege TeamNWHL Team
1 (1)Katie BurtGBoston CollegeBoston Pride
1 (2)Kennedy MarchmentFSt. LawrenceBuffalo Beauts
1 (3)Taylar CianfaranoFQuinnipiacNew York Riveters
1 (4)Kenzie KentFBoston CollegeBoston Pride
2 (5)Sam DonovanFBrownConnecticut Whale
2 (6)Savannah HarmonDClarksonBuffalo Beauts
2 (7)Victoria BachFBoston UniversityNew York Riveters
2 (8)Mallory SouliotisDYaleBoston Pride
3 (9)Eden MurrayFYaleConnecticut Whale
3 (10)Brittany HowardFRobert MorrisBuffalo Beauts
3 (11)McKenna BrandFNortheasternNew York Riveters
3 (12)Lexie LaingFHarvardBoston Pride
4 (13)Denisa KrizovaFNortheasternConnecticut Whale
4 (14)Annika ZalewskiFColgateBuffalo Beauts
4 (15)Toni Ann MianoFBoston CollegeNew York Riveters
4 (16)Lauren KellyDNortheasternBoston Pride
5 (17)Nina RodgersFBoston UniversityConnecticut Whale
5 (18)Amy SchlagelDNew HampshireBuffalo Beauts
5 (19)Rebecca LeslieFBoston UniversityNew York Riveters
5 (20)Julia FedeskiDNew HampshireBoston Pride

Boston College, Boston University and Northeastern had the most players drafted with three each.

Hockey East was the conference with the most draftees (11); ECAC was second with eight and the CHA had one.

Marian brings back Gaynor as Sabres’ new head coach

Zach Gaynor has been named the new head coach at Marian. 

Gaynor replaces Lincoln Nguyen, “who recently accepted a Division I assistant coaching position,” according to a Marian news release.

“I am pleased to announce that Zach Gaynor will be taking over the leadership of our men’s hockey program,” said Marian director of athletics Jason Bartelt in the release.  “As a Marian hockey alum and coach, he has been around NCAA hockey and the grueling NCHA for nine years.  It is great to get him back home and behind our bench. I look forward to watching him continue the strong tradition of Marian hockey.”

Gaynor begins his second stint for the Sabre hockey program after serving as an assistant from 2009 to 2012. 

Most recently, Gaynor served as the associate head coach for Concordia (Wis.) since 2012. 

“I would like to thank Lincoln Nguyen, Jason Bartelt, and President Manion for this opportunity,” added Gaynor. “I am very excited to be the head coach where my career first started almost a decade ago. It has been a goal of mine to return and be the head coach at my alma mater. Coach Nguyen has played a vital role in this programs success and I look forward to continuing that success moving forward.

“Marian hockey has a rich history of athletic and academic excellence and I am grateful and humbled to be a part of that once again.”

Late Northland blueliner Morgan was ‘a hockey player’s hockey player’

Chris MorganNorthland hockey player Max Glashauser received heartbreaking news in a phone call from his head coach last Sunday.

Glashauser learned in the call with Seamus Gregory that one of his closest friends on the team was dead at the age of 22.

Chris Morgan was killed in a tragic hit-and-run accident while walking home from a graduation party Aug. 5 in his hometown of Rochester Hills, Mich.

According to reports from WXYZ in Detroit, the body of the Lumberjacks defenseman was found in a ditch around 11:30 a.m. the following morning.

On the afternoon of Aug. 10, with the shock still fresh and the pain still real, Glashauser took a few minutes of his time to do a phone interview with USCHO.com and share his feelings on the loss of Morgan.

“My stomach and heart just dropped,” Glashauser said. “It still doesn’t feel real.”

Gregory was out of town visiting family when he received a call from Morgan’s dad Sunday.

“It’s been a difficult couple of days,” Gregory said during a phone interview Aug. 8. “I’m still trying to get my head around what is taking place. It’s been difficult on all of the guys, the members of our school community. It’s never easy when something like this happens.”

Despite the sadness and shock he was dealing with, Gregory knew he had to personally call each one of his players.

“Those are phone calls no coach wants to make but has to make,” Gregory said. “The phone calls were very hard, but we are a family and our administration and the school community has been very supportive.”

Though the players are scattered at the moment because all of them are on summer vacation, Gregory said technology has helped them all keep in touch during a difficult time.

“We’ve had interaction with our players, via FaceTime and via text, and we have a huge group text going on right now to keep in touch with each other,” Gregory said. “The toughest part will be when September comes around, but we’ll pull together even more.”

Northland made its counseling and student peer services available immediately to anyone who may need it, and Gregory said the administration and school community has been supportive.

Glashauser, who hails from Texas, wasn’t able to attend the visitation and funeral. But he said that having his teammates to text back and forth with has been helpful.

“We can’t be around each other right now to provide support, but we have our group text, and we’re all supporting each other through that. We are just letting everyone know we are there for each other.”

Morgan was less than a month away from beginning his junior year at Northland. He was less than three months away from beginning a new hockey season and helping the Lumberjacks build off their surprising success of a year ago.

Gregory said Morgan was an integral part of the rise of the program, which won 11 games this past season after winning only seven a year earlier. Morgan played in 34 games in his two seasons at Northland.

“He didn’t put up a lot of points, but when you needed a guy to shut down, when you needed a guy with a minute to go, he was the guy you wanted on the ice,” Gregory said. “He was a hockey player’s hockey player and the cornerstone of our blue line. He helped us win a lot of one-goal games the last two years.”

Glashauser called Morgan one of the hardest working players on the team.

“He always worked hard and he was the kind of player who held himself accountable,” Glashauser said. “He was extremely strong and a great teammate.”

Gregory said Morgan stuck around Ashland over the summer, holding a job at a fitness center and at a local company in town. So he saw the work ethic Morgan had even in the offseason.

Gregory also shared a story about Morgan and his workout routine.

“He was always the first one at practice and he was even given a key to the arena to lock up at night because he would stay late,” Gregory said. “He was a fierce competitor and built himself into an everyday player. He was a fantastic human being from a fantastic family.”

The team does plan to honor him in some way this season, and Gregory said he will work with the family on the most appropriate way to do that.

Glashauser said he and his teammates plan to keep him in their thoughts throughout the season and put their best effort forward each day in honor of him.

“We’re definitely going to dedicate this season to him,” Glashauser said. “We’re going to play hard and we know he’ll be watching over us. We want to have the best season we can for him.”

Renault, Savage added as assistant coaches with Nichols’ women’s team

Nicole Renault - Paige Savage (Melissa Wade)
Recent college graduates Nicole Renault (left) and Paige Savage will be assistant coaches for the 2017-18 season at Nichols (photos: Melissa Wade).

Nichols has announced the additions of Nicole Renault and Paige Savage to the women’s team’s coaching staff.

Renault was a four-year member of the Syracuse program, where she was a two-year assistant captain. She graduated with the most points by a defenseman in program history (81), collecting 28 points as both a sophomore and senior. She was a unanimous selection to the CHA All-Rookie Team in 2012-13 before earning First Team All-CHA honors in each of her final three campaigns. In 125 career games with the Orangewomen, Renault scored 37 goals to go along with 44 assists.

A three-time CHA All-Academic Team pick, Renault graduated from the Martin J. Whitman School of Management in May 2016. She went on to spend one season as a member of the EV Bozen 84 Eagles, a team that competes in the European Women’s Hockey League. Renault helped them capture both the regular-season and playoff championship.

“I am very excited to have Nicole as a part of our family,” said Nichols head coach Michael O’Grady in a statement. “Nicole brings a wealth of knowledge after having finished playing professionally in Italy. She will be a great asset to our players in helping them develop both as hockey players and young adults.”

Savage graduated from Northeastern this past May with a Bachelor of Science degree in Criminal Justice. In 149 career games for the Huskies, she racked up 106 points on 37 goals and 69 assists, highlighted by a 29-point campaign as a sophomore (7-22-29) and a 28-point effort (11-17-28) as a junior. She was an assistant captain as a senior.

Currently a member of the Boston Pride of the National Women’s Hockey League, Savage represented the U.S. at the U18 World Championship in the Czech Republic, and was the captain and leading scorer of the NAHA U19 team when it won the Junior Women’s Hockey League in 2011-12. She has worked a series of hockey camps, including North American Hockey Elite Camp and International Ice Hockey Federation Camp.

“It is great to have Paige on board here at Nichols,” added O’Grady. “She had a great career as a Husky and will help our forwards continue to improve. With Paige being a member of the NWHL’s Boston Pride, she will bring a unique perspective to the staff and will help us achieve our goals.”

St. Norbert adds former Wisconsin standout Brandt as new associate head coach

St. Norbert has named Andy Brandt its associate head coach.

Brandt arrives at St. Norbert after spending the last 2 1/2 seasons as the head coach and general manager of the Atlanta Gladiators of the ECHL. He was also an assistant coach with the Gladiators for the 2013-14 season and into the 2014-15 season before being promoted.

“My family and I are excited and honored to have the opportunity to join such a prestigious program,” Brandt said in a statement. “I was thrilled when the opportunity arose to coach at the collegiate level with St. Norbert and I’m eager to jump in and get started.

“The program has been extremely successful for a long time, but what intrigued me the most was the chance to work alongside [SNC head coach] Tim [Coghlin] and to help the program further develop student-athletes. The commitment to both academia and athletics is important and is something I have personally experienced as a collegiate athlete at the University of Wisconsin. I understand firsthand that athletic success cannot be achieved without academic success.

“Plus, when you add in the fact that we get to move our family back home to Wisconsin, the decision was a no-brainer.”

Brandt spent seven seasons as a professional player, mostly with the then-Gwinnett Gladiators. He appeared in a team-record 357 games, scoring 76 goals and adding 116 assists for 192 points. Brandt was an assistant captain from 2007 to 2012 before serving as the team captain in 2012-13. Brandt also played in the AHL for the Lake Erie Monsters, Manitoba Moose and Abbotsford Heat, while also playing in the ECHL for the Victoria Salmon Kings.

“Andy brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to St. Norbert College,” Coghlin added. “He experienced Division I hockey at its highest level with the national championship at Wisconsin, and most recently completed his time as a player and coach in the ECHL. He has a clear understanding of player development and how to reach the next level.”

Brandt played four seasons and appeared in 130 games at Wisconsin from 2003-04 to 2006-07, highlighted with the Badgers’ NCAA championship in 2006. He was twice named the team’s Seventh Man Award recipient.

McGowan back at Adrian as Bulldogs’ new assistant coach

McGowanFormer Adrian women’s standout Hannah McGowan will return to her alma mater as assistant coach for the Bulldogs.

“The program is excited to have Hannah back,” said Adrian head coach Chad Davis in a statement. “She is a person that can help get us to the next level with her passion, dedication and experience with our program.”

McGowan finished her career as a Bulldog tied for second in game-winning goals (10), second in shots on goal (390), third in career points (100), third in assists (53), third in plus/minus (55), fourth in goals (47), and fifth in power-play goal (13). She remains in the top 10 for the Bulldogs in all of those categories.

“Having the opportunity to come back to the program where my career started is an honor,” McGowan added. “I look forward to coming back and helping lead the team to another successful season and continue the traditions that the program has built in its last ten seasons.”

The 2015 Adrian grad spent one season as a member of the NWHL’s Buffalo Beauts in 2015-16 before playing last season overseas in Austria’s EWHL league for the Neuberg Highlanders.

Along with collegiate and professional play, McGowan has been a lead instructor at the Vigilante Ice Hockey Camps in Detroit since 2010.

McGowan earned her bachelor of business administration in sports management degree in May of 2015.

Smaby returns to North Dakota as Fighting Hawks’ student manager

matt-smaby-2013-4312North Dakota announced Thursday the addition of former UND captain Matt Smaby to his program’s support staff.

Smaby, who will serve as student manager, recently retired after an 11-year professional playing career and returned to UND to complete his bachelor’s degree.

Smaby played at UND from 2003-04 through 2005-06 and captained the 2005-06 squad to a berth in the NCAA Frozen Four. After leading the program to a pair of Frozen Four appearances and a WCHA title in his three seasons, Smaby went on to play in 122 games over four years with the NHL’s Tampa Bay Lightning.

“We are really looking forward to Matt and his family coming back to Grand Forks,” said UND coach Brad Berry in a statement. “North Dakota hockey and UND are, and always have been, a very special place for Matt. He will be a tremendous asset to our program over the next couple of years as he completes his education.”

Smaby’s North American playing career also included stints with Norfolk and Syracuse in the AHL. He spent the past four years playing in Germany with Munich EHC and won the league championship in each of his last two seasons.

Trine names Western New England assistant Keiser to same role with Thunder

keiserTrine has named Austin Keiser the program’s first assistant coach.

Keiser most recently worked as an assistant coach at Western New England, his alma mater. He served as the team’s strength and conditioning coordinator while working on player/goalie skill development and systems development and implementation.

“I am excited to be a part of history with the new hockey program at Trine University,” Keiser said in a statement. “I’m looking forward to helping create a winning culture as the program is launched. The support and commitment from the university and the Angola community is something I’m grateful to be a part of.”

Keiser also played NCAA hockey at Potsdam and has worked with goalies at Pro Crease, CAN/AM Hockey and Westminster Prep School.

Denver promotes from within, has new director of hockey operations in Howe

25 Nov 11:      Joe Howe (Colorado College-31)    The University of North Dakota Fighting Sioux host the Colorado College Tigers in a WCHA matchup at Ralph Engelstad Arena in Grand Forks, ND. Subway Holiday Classic. Final Score:North Dakota 7- Colorado College 6. (Brad Olson)
Joe Howe starred between the pipes for Colorado College from 2009 to 2013 (photo: Brad Olson).

Denver has announced that Joe Howe has been named the program’s new director of hockey operations.

Howe replaces David Tenzer, who tendered his resignation earlier this week after spending 16 seasons with the Pioneers.

Howe was named Denver’s volunteer coach in Sept. 2015 after retiring as a player earlier that summer.

“Joe Howe has proven to be an invaluable member of our staff these last two years and we’re very pleased to be promoting him to the role of director of hockey operations,” said DU coach Jim Montgomery in a statement. “He’s demonstrated a tremendous work ethic and a great knowledge of and passion for college hockey while consistently going above and beyond the call of duty in his role as a volunteer coach for us. We’re excited to have Joe on board full-time as we look to repeat as NCAA champions in 2017-18.”

A three-time WCHA All-Academic Team honoree and a member of the conference’s All-Rookie Team in 2009-10, Howe appeared in 119 career NCAA games with Colorado College from 2009 to 2013, going 54-50-10 while recording a 2.97 GAA and a .905 save percentage.

“I’m looking forward to entering the next phase of my career here at Denver and I’m honored to be a part of such an amazing program and staff,” added Howe. “The last two years as a member of the DU hockey family have been incredible and I’m excited to play an expanded role with the Pioneers moving forward.”

Crowell agrees to three-year extension with Minnesota Duluth women’s program

crowellMinnesota Duluth women’s coach Maura Crowell has signed a three-year contract extension that will keep her on staff through the 2021-22 season.

In just two seasons at UMD, Crowell has compiled an overall record of 40-28-6, including a WCHA postseason mark of 5-2.

“I am thrilled to extend my contract through 2021-2022 at the University of Minnesota Duluth,” said Crowell in a statement. “I appreciate Chancellor Black and Athletic Director Josh Berlo’s clear commitment to the future of our program.  We are proud of all that our student-athletes have accomplished both on and off the ice the past two seasons, but we also know it is just the start. Our return to the national tournament last spring was a significant step in the right direction and I firmly believe we have the pieces in place to vie for national prominence year in and year out moving forward.”

For her efforts during the 2016-17 season, Crowell was named the USCHO.com Division I Women’s Coach of the Year, as well as the CCM/AHCA Division I Women’s Ice Hockey Coach of the Year Award for 2017.

Crowell was also crowned the 2016-17 WCHA Coach of the Year after she guided UMD to its biggest turnaround in program history with 25-7-5 overall record and the Bulldogs first NCAA quarterfinal round playoff game at home since 2010.

On Crowell’s watch, the Bulldogs earned 19 WCHA wins in 2016-17, the program’s highest since the 2010-11 season, and finished third in the ultra-competitive WCHA.  In addition to landing in fifth in both national final season polls, UMD had a Patty Kazmaier Top-3 Finalist, two All-Americans, and a run on league awards last season, including 2016-17 WCHA Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, and WCHA Student Athlete of the Year.

The Bulldogs had five players placed on All-WCHA Teams, and tacked on a program-record 10 WCHA Scholar Athletes in 2016-17, as well as a program-high 16 WCHA All-Academic Team members.

North Dakota legend, All-American and Olympian McKinnon dies at 90

mckinnonNorth Dakota legend and Olympic medalist Dan McKinnon died Aug. 6 at the age of 90.

McKinnon was a defenseman at UND from 1947-48 through 1949-50 and collected seven goals and 15 points in 61 career games. He was a member of the 1947-48 UND team that, in just its second year of varsity hockey, upset Michigan on the road in a victory widely-considered to have unofficially ushered the university into the world of NCAA hockey.

He earned All-America honors as a senior in 1949-50, becoming the program’s first defenseman to do so, and later won a silver medal with the United States at the 1956 Winter Olympics in Italy alongside fellow North Dakota alumni Gordon Christian and Ken Purpur. McKinnon also represented the U.S. at the 1955 and 1958 World Championships.

“Our thoughts and prayers go out to the McKinnon family at this time,” said UND head coach Brad Berry in a statement. “Dan was an instrumental part of our hockey program and in what we represent today. His legacy will always be remembered as hard-working, honest, and being a great teammate. He, along with people like Cal Marvin, Ginny Christian and John Noah, laid the foundation blocks for our program that is now loaded with tradition and success. We will remember Dan within our family in the future years to come.”

McKinnon was inducted into the UND Athletics Letterwinners Hall of Fame in 1982. He was also a recipient of the UND men’s Hockey Sioux Legends Award.

Latest Stories from around USCHO