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TMQ: Monday poll, Friendship Four, Army West Point

9 Jan 16:  The St. Cloud State University Huskies host the University of Nebraska-Omaha Mavericks in a NCHC matchup at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center in St. Cloud, MN. (Jim Rosvold)
Omaha celebrates a goal last weekend as the Mavericks played to a split with St. Cloud State on the road (photo: Jim Rosvold).

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

Paula: Jimmy, looking at the results of the weekend, I think there were very few surprises and this week’s poll reflects that relative stability. It’s not surprising that Minnesota-Duluth retains the top spot and Denver is still No. 2 after those two teams split. Boston College drops a little after that close road loss to Notre Dame and Quinnipiac drops out of the top 10 after being swept in that home-and-home series with Princeton. Of course, this allows two teams that didn’t even play this weekend to edge up. Harvard’s new position at No. 4 reflects where it is in the PairWise, and Ohio State moved from No. 10 to No. 9 in the poll. Of course this happens all the time, teams moving up or down after not having played a given weekend. It just so happens that, this week, both the Crimson and the Buckeyes maybe moved closer to where they should be polling.

This past weekend of hockey was surprisingly predictable, especially in league play and especially among ranked teams. Not only did Duluth and Denver split, but so did Boston University and Vermont, St. Cloud and Omaha, Western Michigan and North Dakota.

In Atlantic Hockey, two upper-tier teams distanced themselves further from the teams beneath them as both Army and Air Force swept, and with a sweep of Bowling Green in two close games, Michigan Tech created some space between the top two WCHA teams and a very tight middle pack.

I think the only outcome that really surprised me this weekend was Quinnipiac’s two losses to Princeton. The Bobcats are now 1-4-1 in their last six, and their drop from No. 7 in the poll to No. 14 is probably a better reflection of those last six games than just these most recent two losses.

Jim: If there was a way to sum up last weekend when it came to the top 20, “splitsville” might be most appropriate. In fact, 10 of the 17 teams in the poll that were active split, which, as you mentioned, is why there was so little movement.

But Quinnipiac, the only top 20 team to lose twice, took one of the biggest falls we have seen this seasons. The recent play of the Bobcats is certainly concerning and I can’t help wonder if the travel to Northern Ireland for the Friendship Four had something to do with it. Last season, the four teams that traveled to Belfast had a difficult time upon return. Collectively a season ago, the four teams were 1-7-0 in the weekend following.

This season, it isn’t as dramatic. But looking at the two weekends since returning, Vermont (which didn’t play the first weekend back) is 1-1-0 and Massachusetts is 1-2-0 (the win came against Notre Dame, though). St. Lawrence at 2-1-0 isn’t showing much sign of wear. But then there’s Quinnipiac.

The Bobcats are 1-3-0 since returning from Belfast, that after the team scored just one goal in two games during the tournament. Offense has disappeared and Quinnipiac is averaging less than two goals a game since the Friendship Four began.

I had talked to Rand Pecknold before his team left and he said he “hesitated” when making the decision to head to Northern Ireland. That was more related to the fact that his club was giving up a home game against St. Lawrence, but now the twist that his team’s season has taken, I do wonder if there is some remorse about taking such a trip.

Paula: That is an interesting observation about the Friendship Four, Jim. An overseas trip during the season is probably a grueling thing, especially for college students who are also expected to keep up with their studies in addition to playing hockey. I am sure that no coach wants to deny his team that opportunity, though.

It’s sort of the opposite of what can happen with midseason tournaments, which can propel teams forward through the second half even if they don’t take the tournament title. A good performance at the holiday break can help a team maintain first-half momentum, or regain confidence, or find some chemistry.

As we close in on the end of the first half of the season, I’m looking both backward and forward. I’m surprised by some developments in the first half, and as someone who covers the Big Ten, I can’t help but be excited about the second half, as that’s when the majority of that conference’s league play takes place.

I’m really surprised by how down the WCHA seems to be this season. As I’ve said before, if I lived any closer to any of the league’s teams, that is a league I would love to cover, as it is comprised of member schools where hockey is a very prominent sport on every campus. I wonder, though, how much the restructuring of Division I four years ago has hurt the teams in that league. When a team like Ferris State was competing in a league that also housed Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State and Notre Dame, the Bulldogs benefited through exposure at the very least. It’s true of many teams in that league, and while the WCHA is interesting in and of itself, its first-half performance has me thinking back to realignment.

Then there are some delightful surprises, like Union senior forward Mike Vecchione. His 17 goals through 17 games has him two short of his career-best 19 goals he scored in 39 games in 2014-2015.

Jim: I guess there are two ways to look at the WCHA. Out of conference, the league’s performance borders on a dumpster fire. The .287 winning percentage for the league is the worst of the six conferences. But within the walls of the league, there are some good storylines that continue to develop. Bemidji State’s 13-1-2-2 mark inside the WCHA is excellent, and it’s certainly good to see Alabama-Huntsville turn from homeless a few years back to a top-five team in the WCHA at break.

If you’re looking for pleasant surprises, you can also find one in West Point where Army is sitting atop the Atlantic Hockey standings after a two-game sweep of Holy Cross. The wins might have been overshadowed on campus by the football team’s first win over Navy since 2001, but they are significant for an Army program that hasn’t finished above .500 in league play since capturing the AHC regular-season title in 2008.

We haven’t spent a ton of time discussing Atlantic Hockey teams in this space recently, so maybe this is a good time. Is Army one of the more pleasant surprises of the first half?

Paula: Without question, Army is one of the more pleasant surprises of the first half. Senior goaltender Parker Gahagen is one of those players whose career has always been consistently good enough but overshadowed by his team’s overall performance. He’s also shown significant improvement from season to season, and this year, his save percentage (.940) is second-best nationally and his goals-against average (1.69) is third.

In front of him, the Black Knights are an improved team. Last season, Army West Point averaged 2.32 goals per game (50th) compared to this year’s 2.75 (38th), a small push upward that sometimes means the difference between winning and losing one-goal games – except that’s not how the Black Knights win or lose this season. They score by committee, with 16 players recording at least one goal and no one with more than seven total. Their scoring defense (1.81) is second-best nationally, up from 16th last year. They don’t take a lot of penalties, but their PK is fourth nationally (90.1).

Whatever the Black Knights are doing, they’re finding ways to win games. Like you, Jim, I have a soft spot for both Army and Air Force, knowing that the current players will go on to active duty, but beyond that, the emergence of Army hockey is good for Atlantic Hockey. The more teams that becoming consistently competitive in that league the better, and a more competitive Atlantic Hockey is good for Division I hockey as a whole.

Still, we’re all riveted by the teams at the top of the proverbial heap, and that series between Minnesota-Duluth and Denver did not disappoint. Two games that were essentially one-goal games is exactly what you want to see from the top two teams in the country. It was the Bulldogs’ performance in their loss that likely influenced poll voters. In Denver’s 4-3 win, the Pioneers unloaded for three second-period goals, but Duluth scored the last goal in that period to make it 3-2 after two. Then the Bulldogs answered Denver’s fourth goal in the third period with a goal at 17:55 to draw within one again.

In Saturday’s game, it was Denver playing from behind the whole night and unable to capitalize on power-play chances. And it was a true 2-1 game until Duluth added the empty netter with a minute to go in regulation.

Not only was that exactly what you’d hope for in a match between the top two teams in the country, but it was what we are coming to expect from the NCHC.

Jim: I thought the Denver vs. Minnesota-Duluth series was very interesting. I was so very tempted to vote for Denver this week in the USCHO.com poll, because I really like how they played. But results are still results. In Friday’s loss, I thought Minnesota-Duluth showed the resiliency they have shown all season and came close to tying the game. In Saturday’s win, I actually thought Denver was the better team, but the Bulldogs took advantage of a “bad goal” by goaltending standards on the first goal and a broken stick that led to a 2-on-1 rush on the second goal.

But the more I thought about how to vote, the one thing that stands out if Minnesota-Duluth’s resilience. They fell behind but kept coming back on Friday, something they’ve done all season. And then they took advantage of mistakes and won a game thanks to great defense and goaltending on Saturday.

If we learned anything this weekend about the two teams, we learned this could be a great ride in the second half for the NCHC and its fans.

And seeing as this is our last column of TMQ before the holidays, might I take a chance to wish everyone a very happy holiday season. We’ll see you in the New Year!

Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down

Thumbs up to two coaches who hit significant milestones this weekend. We’ll start with Omaha head coach Dean Blais who reached the 400-win plateau on Friday night with a win at St. Cloud State. A night later, Robert Morris bench boss Derek Schooley earned his 200th win (and the 200th win for the program) when his team earned a 4-1 win on the road at Bentley. Two good guys hitting great milestones.

Thumbs down to breaks. We hate breaks. We really do. And though the holidays are coming, what we’ll miss most as we toast egg nog and warming bourbon drinks is college hockey. So our thumbs down is to the fact that we’ll be missing it for a number of days. Yes, there are games this weekend (and a heckuva home-and-home between No. 1 Minnesota-Duluth and No. 15 Bemidji State), but we will miss hockey for days after that. Thanks to all our readers and a happy holidays to all!

Denver’s Gambrell assessed one-game suspension by NCHC for spearing major

The NCHC on Monday announced it has issued a one-game suspension to Denver sophomore forward Dylan Gambrell.

The suspension stems from an illegal stick infraction during Denver’s game against Minnesota-Duluth on Saturday, Dec. 10, at Magness Arena in Denver where Gambrell was assessed a major penalty for spearing and a game misconduct with no time remaining at the end of the third period.

Gambrell will be required to serve the suspension during Denver’s next game, which is Friday, Dec. 30, at Providence. Gambrell is eligible to return for the Pioneers’ series finale with the Friars on Saturday, Dec. 31.

Three things we learned: Dec. 12

It was a weekend full of WCHA conference games, and several teams took advantage of the conference matchups to help better their spot in the standings before the holidays.

Here are three things we learned this weekend:

1. Michigan Tech sent a message with a sweep against Bowling Green — they are taking aim at a conference title. The Huskies only allowed two goals in back-to-back games and played a strong defensive game against a team that’s been finding it’s offensive groove lately.

2. Alabama-Huntsville is taking strides and starting to win the games they are supposed to win. The Chargers swept Northern Michigan this weekend, and look like they’ve found some timely offense to go with a solid defensive strategy.

3. Bemidji State continues to prove it’ll be hard to catch on top of the WCHA Standings. The Beavers took five out of six points this past weekend and now have a seven-point lead on second-place Michigan Tech.

Rankings roundup: How the top 20 fared, Dec. 9-10

Eric Robinson  (Princeton - 18) scores an insurance goal to seal the win for Princeton. ((c) Shelley M. Szwast 2016)
Unranked Princeton came away with a weekend sweep of No. 7 Quinnipiac (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll of Dec. 5 fared over the Dec. 9-10 weekend.

No. 1 Minnesota-Duluth – split with No. 2 Denver

No. 2 Denver – split with No. 1 Minnesota-Duluth

No. 3 Penn State – was idle

No. 4 Boston College – defeated Northeastern (Dec. 6), lost to No. 14 Notre Dame

No. 5 Boston University – split with No. 12 Vermont

No. 6 Harvard – was idle

No. 7 Quinnipiac – swept by Princeton

No. 8 North Dakota – split with No. 18 Western Michigan

No. 9 Massachusetts-Lowell – swept Merrimack

No. 10 Ohio State – was idle

No. 11 Minnesota – swept Michigan State

No. 12 Vermont – split with No. 5 Boston University

No. 13 Bemidji State – tied, defeated Lake Superior State

No. 14 Notre Dame – defeated No. 4 Boston College

No. 15 Union – defeated Brown, defeated Yale

No. 16 Minnesota State – split with Ferris State

No. 17 St. Cloud State – split with No. 20 Omaha

No. 18 Western Michigan – split with No. 8 North Dakota

No. 19 St. Lawrence – defeated Clarkson

No. 20 Omaha – split with No. 17 St. Cloud State

Gallery: Princeton sweeps Mercyhurst in nonconference series

Photos from Princeton’s 4-2 and 5-2 victories over Mercyhurst on Saturday and Sunday, respectively, at Hobey Baker Rink:

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Gophers pick up a sweep, Michigan and Wisconsin split

Four Big Ten teams were in action against each other this weekend. Minnesota traveled to East Lansing to face Michigan State and Wisconsin headed East to square off against Michigan. Penn State and Ohio State had the weekend off. Here’s how the dust settled this weekend:

  • Minnesota swept Michigan State, winning 4-2 on Friday and Saturday
  • Wisconsin defeated Michigan 7-4 on Friday and the Wolverines came back with a 4-1 lead on Saturday

Here are three things I saw this weekend:

1. Gophers get their sweep

On the final weekend of the first half, the Gophers finally swept an opponent in a weekend series.

JT Stenglein got MSU on the board three and a half minutes into Friday’s game before Justin Kloos tied the game for Minnesota a little more than halfway through the period. The Gophers rattled off two goals in less than two minutes in the second period to go up 3-1. The Spartans were able to cut it to 3-2 late in the second but the two sides played an even third period before Darian Romanko scored and empty-net goal.

The Gophers held a 44-14 shot advantage on Friday.

“Score aside, I know that we can compete better than we competed tonight,” Michigan State head coach Tom Anastos said after Friday’s game. “I know we’re more tenacious than that. I know that we can be stronger one-on-one and win more battles. I know we can get to the net better than we did tonight. I’ll give them credit, but I know we can be better than we were tonight.”

Stenglein scored first again on Saturday and Thomas Ebbing lit the lamp six minutes and 13 seconds into the second period to give Michigan State a 2-0 lead. The Gophers, once again, scored two goals in quick succession to tie things up before the end of the period. Brant Gates Jr. scored on the power play a little more than half way through the third period to give Minnesota the lead and Tyler Sheehy scored an empty-netter near the end of the game.

2. Wisconsin’s offense is scary, but the Badgers are inconsistent

Maybe it’s time for some of those fans that have strayed away from the Wisconsin hockey program to start looking for tickets to some games in the second half. Even though, as we saw this weekend, the Badgers are capable of both scoring goals in bunches and struggling to score at all, they have proven that they are a safe bet to split against essentially any team no matter the location.

Wisconsin scored five goals in the second period of Friday’s 7-4 victory at Michigan. Sophomore forward Luke Kunin scored twice during the period. The Badgers chased Michigan goaltender Hayden Lavigne after two periods.

It’s tough to rag on the Badgers too much for Saturday’s game. Michigan went up 2-0 in the first and Lavigne made Red Berenson look like a genius for starting him again, he finished with 34 saves and one goal against.

All in all, a road split with a young and inexperienced goaltender isn’t a bad result for the Badgers. Seriously, go watch this team if you’re in the area. The pictures of a vacant Kohl Center are kind of getting hard to look at.

3. That’s a wrap, kind of

Michigan State hosts Northeastern for a one-game set on Sunday, but the rest of the conference will go on hiatus until after the holidays. All-in-all it has been a pretty good season so far for the the Big Ten with some strong nonconfernce records. I still think the conference is split into the top three and the bottom three, but the bottom three isn’t as weak as it has been in previous seasons and there doesn’t seem to be a clear doormat (see: Wisconsin the past two seasons).

 

Weekend wrap: Dec. 11

Wesleyan at Endicott
Wesleyan carried a 2-0 lead into the third period, but Endicott scored twice in less than five minutes midway through to even the score. Gina Mangiafridda and Alexis Banquer scored for Wesleyan. Maggie Layo and Lexi Klein scored for Endicott.

Hamilton at No. 7 Oswego
The teams traded goals twice before Katie Parkman scored just 1.2 seconds into overtime to give Hamilton the 3-2 win. She also had an assist in the game. It was just the second loss of the season for Oswego.

New England College at Potsdam
On Friday, Mackenzie Meegan scored less than a minute into the third period for New England College and Jaci Morr responded seven minutes later for Potsdam. It was 1-1 in overtime before Potsdam’s Amanda Peterson scored with 23 seconds left to give the Bears the 2-1 win. On Saturday, Peterson had the lone goal heading into the final frame. Erica Lissner tied it for New England College before Brenna Wilson and Anna-Rose Bertin sealed the victory and the sweep for Potsdam.

No. 10 Augsburg at Wisconsin-Stevens Point
Cara Lemirande’s goal just before the end of the first period proved to be enough to lift Wis.-Stevens Point past Augsburg. Goalie Sydney Conley earned her first shutout of the season for the Pointers.

Marian at Wisconsin-Eau Claire
This one was scoreless until midway through the third period when Kelly Knetter scored a power-play goal for the BluGolds. Sarah Bier scored with under four remaining to tie the game at one. Wis.-Eau Claire outshot Marian, 40-15.

Manhattanville at Williams
Williams scored first in each of the first two periods, but Manhattanville was able to answer each time. Williams pulled away to earn the 4-2 victory with goals from Chelsey Stevenson and Mia Carroll in the third. Manhattanville goalie Olivia Drew’s 45 saves were the third-most in school history.

The rest of the top 10
The rest of the top 10 all won easily. Here are the result:

No. 4 Norwich 3, at Bowdoin 1
No. 6 Middlebury 2, at Castleton 0
No.  8 Connecticut College 3, Massachusetts-Boston 1
No. 3 Wisconsin-River Falls 4, at Gustavus Adolphus 1
No. 2 Elmira 2, Trinity 0

Weekend wrap: Dec. 11

The weekend saw a few stunning upsets. Here is what we learned.

No. 2 Minnesota at Boston University
On Friday, five different Gophers scored en route to a 5-1 win. Minnesota outshot BU 50-15. Kelly Pannek had three assists. On Saturday, the Terriers jumped out to a 2-0 lead and Minnesota had to score twice in the third period to force overtime. Senior captain Natalie Flynn scored her second of the game to give Boston University the win. They were just her second and third career collegiate goals.

No. 3 Minnesota-Duluth at Minnesota State
On Friday, three different Bulldogs found the back of the net to lead them to a 3-0 win. On Saturday, Megan Hinze scored two third-period power-play goals to give the Mavericks a come-from-behind 2-1 win. Minnesota State goalie Brianna Quade made 39 saves in the win.

No. 4 Clarkson vs. Syracuse
On Friday, Syracuse’s Alysha Burriss tied the game 2-2 with just under two minutes to go after stealing a puck and taking it the length of the ice. On Saturday, Corie Jacobson, Cassidy Vinkle, Cayley Mercer and Jessica Gillham each scored for Clarkson in a 4-1 win.

St. Cloud State at No. 10 North Dakota
On Saturday, UND freshman Alyssa McMillan scored her first collegiate goal in the Fighting Hawks’ 3-2 win. St. Cloud’s Julia Tylke had a goal and an assist. On Sunday, NoDak blanked the Huskies 4-0. Kayla Gardner scored twice for the Fighting Hawks.

Merrimack at Providence
Merrimack had a 2-1 lead early in the third, but two unanswered goals from Providence gave them the 3-2 win. Cassidy Carles had a goal and an assist for Providence

No. 1 Wisconsin at Ohio State
The Badgers used two four-goal second periods to power their sweep of Ohio State. On Friday, Emily Clark had a goal and four assists while Annie Pankowski and Jenny Ryan each scored twice in the 7-0 rout. On Saturday, five different Badgers scored and Clark added two more assist to her weekend total as the Badgers won 5-0.

Princeton continues to play well against ranked competition

The Princeton Tigers have done it a again.

For the second time in three weeks, the Tigers have swept a team in the USCHO’s Top 20 poll. This weekend they took down the No. 7 Quinnipiac Bobcats in a home and home series. Friday night at Hobey Baker Rink they had five different goal scorers in the 5-3 victory. Not even 24 hours later, this time in Hampden, Conn., Max Véronneau had two goals and an assist in the 4-1 victory.

Two weeks ago they swept a Bemidji State team. They did drop a game against Union last weekend.

Veronneau has been on fire for the Tigers with 13 of his team leading 18 points coming the past two weekends. Ryan Kuffner and Jackson Cressey have seven points the past four games.

Colton Phinney hasn’t been putting up stellar numbers, but he’s giving his team a chance to win right now. He seems to finally getting into a rhythm because the schedule doesn’t let up to end the first half in the second half.

After a home game against UMass on Tuesday, Princeton welcomes the Minnesota State Mavericks for a pair of games next weekend. The Mavericks came into this weekend 16th in the nation and swept Ferris State.

After this weekend, they have one more non-conference game and it’s against Penn State who currently has the nations best record at 13-1-1. Princeton hosts the Nittany Lions on Jan. 28.

A change at the top of the ECAC standings

A few weeks ago, the Bobcats had a comfortable lead in the conference standings, but after being swept, they woke up on Sunday morning in third place. The Union Dutchmen and the St. Lawrence Saint each jumped Quinnipiac in the standing. Union lead the conference with 17 points while Clarkson is one point behind Union.

Spencer Foo had a big weekend for Union as he had four goals in the games against Brown and Yale. In the win over Yale Saturday, he had a hat trick. The Saints defeated rival Clarkson on Friday night in their lone game of the weekend.

Quinnipiac with 13 points has a two point lead over Clarkson who’s in fourth. Cornell and Harvard are tied for fifth with nine points.

There’s no place like home

The Dartmouth College Big Green record doesn’t stand out at 4-5-2 overall and 1-3-2 in ECAC, but at Thompson Arena this season, they are 3-0-1. On Saturday they defeated in state rival the University of New Hampshire 5-1 in Hanover.

What’s more impressive is the opposition has only scored four goals this season.

It’s something they can build on for the second half of the season as 11 of their final 18 games will be played at Thompson Arena.

Three things: Splits and marquee matchups

A series that lived up to its hype
For the second time this season, two teams from the NCHC squared off in a battle between the two top-ranked teams in the nation, as No. 2 Denver hosted No. 1 Minnesota-Duluth. These two games were much closer than the previous time, when then-No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth swept then-No. 1 North Dakota. For any fan of college hockey, the series showcased everything that makes the game great, including fast skating, relentless and back-and-forth pressure, and outstanding goaltending.

Fittingly, the series ended in a draw, with Denver winning 4-3 Friday and Duluth responding with a 3-1 win Saturday. The final goal of Saturday’s game was an empty-netter. Denver clearly missed the presence of top scorer Henrik Borgström, who was out with an undisclosed illness, on the power play, which failed to score on several opportunities Saturday. Jim Montgomery stated,  “I think we win tonight if Henrik’s there. I have to be honest. Our power play’s not going 0-for-4 with him on the ice.”

Duluth goaltender Hunter Miska was strong in both games, stopping 27 shots in the loss and making 38 saves in Saturday’s win.

“I thought he (Hunter) was seeing the puck well,” said Bulldogs coach Sandelin. “That’s how he’s played for us all year. He’s had some really strong games, and I thought he was huge for us tonight making some key saves.”

Denver and Duluth are separated by one point in the NCHC standings, with the Bulldogs leading with 24 points. They have semi-commanding leads over teams below them, with Western Michigan the next team in line with 14 points, though the 5-8 teams have two games in hand.

Friday’s loss ended a 15-game unbeaten streak for Denver. However, Montgomery cautioned that his team has to come out strong in the second half.

“I looked at it and Omaha was 14-3-3 last year and missed the tournament.”

Power play costs North Dakota
After routing Western Michigan Friday, 5-1, you would have thought the Fighting Hawks would have command of Saturday’s game. After falling behind in the first and then tying it, North Dakota had a five-minute major that carried four minutes into the start of the third period, part of a stretch of 12 straight minutes of power-play time that the Fighting Hawks failed to score on, Taylor Fleming took back-to-back major penalties. Over the last 21:25 of the game, North Dakota had 14 minutes of power-play time and couldn’t score. North Dakota’s power play went 0-for-6 on the night.

North Dakota was without star forward Brock Boeser, out for a fifth game in a row with a wrist injury, and also without Tyson Jost, who went to Hockey Canada for the World Junior team camp.

“We just weren’t ready,” said forward Joel Janatuinen. “We talked about it in the locker room. It’s easy to talk about those things, but you have to act on them. I don’t know. We have to be better. We have to take a long look in the mirror again and get better.”

At the other end, Western Michigan is off to its best start ever in NCHC play at the break, sitting at 4-5-1 and in third place with 14 points, and showed some great puck movement, particularly on the game-winning goal by Wade Allison off a great cycle by the Broncos in the offensive zone and some tic-tac-toe passing, as Corey Schueneman got the puck at the right point, sent a pass to Hugh McGing in the left circle, and McGing found Allison in the right circle, who had an open net to shoot at high.

A road loss (finally)
Despite a poor record at home, the Omaha Mavericks have been keeping pace in the league thanks in part to stellar play on the road, where they were unbeaten entering this weekend’s series against St. Cloud State. Omaha continued its streak with a 3-1 win in which goaltender Evan Weninger continued his outstanding play. The sophomore, who had made 47 saves against Wisconsin the previous weekend, stopped 40 shots from a relentless St. Cloud offense while Teemu Pulkkinen scored the game-winner in the second.

However, Saturday, Weninger wasn’t enough. The netminder made 32 saves, but St. Cloud jumped all over the Mavericks in the first 2:03 of the game, scoring an extra-attacker goal at 1:34 on a delayed penalty and then scoring on the ensuing power play. Omaha twice pulled to within one goal, but Judd Peterson scored at 8:47 of the third to give the Huskies a cushion. The loss was Omaha’s first road loss of the season, and came after Omaha coach Dean Blais notched his 400th career win on Friday. Congrats to Blais on an outstanding and ongoing career.

Omaha is currently in fifth place in the league with 12 points, but has two games in hand on the four teams above them.

West wrap: Dec. 11

Wisconsin-Stevens Point and Adrian squared off in a showdown of nationally ranked teams, and both games of this crucial nonconference series lived up to the hype.

The Pointers and Bulldogs skated to a 4-4 tie in the opener Friday before William Nong-Lambert came through with a game-winning goal midway through the third period of Saturday’s series finale. It was his fourth goal of the season and provided Wis.-Stevens Point with its first win over Adrian this season.

Kyle Sharkey and Stephan Beauvais both scored in the opening period to give Stevens Point a 2-1 lead in Saturday’s game. Vince Paquette had given Adrian an early 1-0 advantage and Kyle Brothers tied the score at 2-2 in the first. Brothers scored his second goal of the night to tie the game at 3-3. Ethan Strong gave the Pointers a 3-2 lead prior to Brothers’ goal.

Max Milosek of Stevens Point and Kevin Entmaa of Adrian stayed busy in goal. Milosek racked up 28 saves and Entmaa came through with 29 saves as he suffered just the second regular-season loss of his career. Milosek won his fifth game of the year.

On Friday, Adrian scored twice in the third to tie game at 4-4 and force a tie in the series opener. Bud Madej’s goal helped the Bulldogs send the game to OT. Lawrence Cornellier and Nong-Lambert pushed the Pointers in front 2-0 before Bryan Yim came through with a goal to cut the lead to 2-1 at the end of the first. Vinny Post tied the score at 2-2 in the second, but Cornellier broke the tie with his second goal of the night, pushing the Pointers in front 3-2. Eliot Grauer’s goal gave Wis.-Stevens Point a 4-2 advantage heading into the final period of play.

Wis.-Stevens Point, ranked fourth in the country, heads into Christmas break with a 9-2-2 record. Adrian, the second-ranked team in the nation, is 8-2-2.

Below is a look at some of the other highlights from the weekend

MIAC
St. Thomas saw its seven-game unbeaten streak come to an Saturday night in a 4-2 loss to St. Norbert. The Tommies went into the third period tied at 2-2 with the Green Knights, but St. Norbert scored twice in the final period to secure the win.

Kurt Black struck first a little over three minutes into the period and Pijus Rulevicius delivered an insurance goal. It was his second goal of the game.

Johnny Roisum and Charlie Donlin both scored for the Tommies, who fell to 6-3-3 overall. They are 2-1-2 on the road this season. St. Thomas was 5-0-2 entering the game with the Green Knights. St. Norbert improves to 10-2 with the win.

Concordia scored the first six goals of its game against Wisconsin-Stout and closed out the first half of its season with a bang, knocking off the Blue Devils 6-1 Friday night. Dalton Mills and Jon Grebosky both scored twice in the win to pace the Cobbers, who won their third consecutive game and improved to 7-4. Mills finished with four points as he also dished out two assists. It was the first four-point game of his career. Colton Brausen scored the lone goal for the Blue Devils.

Jacob Stephen was sensational in goal for the Cobbers, racking up 20 saves to help Concordia beat Wis.-Stout for the first time since November 2011. The Blue Devils still lead the all-time series against the Cobbers 9-4-1.

Saint Mary’s snapped a three-game losing streak with a dominant 7-2 win over Aurora Saturday. Seven different players scored for the Cardinals. Nick Albergo paved the way offensively, scoring a goal and dishing out two assists. Taylor Portner came through with a goal and assist for the Cardinals, who improved to 3-1 in road games this season.

Brendan Logan and Rudolfs both scored for the Spartans.

St. John’s won in thrilling fashion Saturday night in a nonconference game against St. Scholastica. Brady Heppner delivered the game-winning goal with 24 seconds left in OT as the Johnnies improved to 7-4-2 on the year. Heppner punched his shot into the top left corner of the goal to lift St. John’s to the win. He scored off an assist from Dan McNamara, who ended his night with a goal and two assists. Heppner scored the other two goals for St. John’s, which is unbeaten in its last four games.

Tyler Nelson made 29 saves for the Johnnies, who have seven wins before Christmas break for the first time since the 2005-06 season. The win for Doug Schueller was the 99th of his career. He is 99-97-24 in his career at Saint John’s.

Steven Phee and Kristofer McKinzie both scored for the Saints, who sit at 5-6 on the year and lost a one-goal game for the fifth time this season.

WIAC
Wisconsin-Eau Claire played a pair of overtime games this past weekend, edging Hamline 5-4 on Friday before skating to a 2-2 tie with Gustavus Adolphus Saturday. The tie is the first in eight games for the Blugolds. Wis.-Eau Claire had won seven consecutive games prior to the matchup with Gustavus.

TJ Stuntz scored the game-winner in OT to lift Wis.-Eau Claire to the win.

Hamline trailed 4-2 going into the third, but got back into the game thanks to goals by Chad Hennum and Russ Jordan, both scored in a span of just under five minutes to force OT.

Jay Deo made his 12th straight start in the game against the Pipers and racked up 20 saves to pick up his ninth win of the season. Adam Knochenmus was coming back from an injury and tallied a goal and two assists for the Blugolds. Jordan scored twice to pace the Pipers.

Wis.-Eau Claire heads into the break with a 9-1-3 record. Hamline is 6-4-2.

Wisconsin-Stout bounced back Saturday with a 3-0 win over St. Olaf, with Etienne Roy earning the win in goal in his first start of the season. It was also the first shutout of the season for the Blue Devils. Roy is a transfer from Franklin Pierce and racked up 18 saves to earn his first win in a Wis.-Stout uniform. He played two seasons with Franklin Pierce.

Brausen and Riley Colvard both tallied a goal and an assist in the victory for Wis.-Stout, which improved to 6-6 on the year as it won for the second time in three games.

Wisconsin-River Falls heads into the break with momentum after sweeping Finlandia behind a couple of stellar defensive performances. The Falcons topped the Lions 2-0 Friday and closed out the series Saturday with a 1-0 victory. Wis.-River Falls wraps up the first half with a 5-8-1 record.

Christian George scored the lone goal Saturday, scoring off the power play to lift the Falcons to their third consecutive win. The Falcons held a 42-15 advantage in shots. Alex Rounds played well in goal for the Lions, making 41 saves, including six on power-play opportunities for Wis.-River Falls.

On Friday, Zach Quinn recorded his first career shutout for the Falcons, stopping 20 shots. Quinn also earned a shutout win Saturday. Michael Lant scored his fifth goal of the season in Friday’s game. Ryan Gotelaere also scored for Wis.-River Falls.

East wrap: Dec. 11

To end the first half on a positive note means a lot to every team, but some more than others. For those that started fast, to keep the positive momentum going is key, while others that have struggled have the opportunity to put some bad results or poor play behind them based on some strong final weekend results. It was a mixed bag with surprising results aplenty, some teams that have really found their identity and others still in a desperate search for some consistent play and a positive outcome on the scoreboard.

Here is the wrapup for the last weekend of games in December, as virtually every school will head off to finals and the holidays before starting up again at the end of the month.

CCC
After winning nonconference games over MASCAC foes on Thursday by one-goal margins, top contenders University of New England and Nichols squared off on Saturday, with the Nor’easters hoping to knock off the Bison and move up in the standings.

Scott Cuthrell’s two points and Colin Brennan’s 41 saves led the Bison to a 3-1 win, with Dylan Bengston’s unassisted, extra-attacker goal breaking up Brennan’s shutout with just over a minute remaining in regulation time. With the win, Nichols passes Salve Regina atop the CCC standings entering the break.

Curry made a big statement in downing Babson by a 1-0 score, with Jake Heisinger netting the game-winning goal in overtime and then following that up with a nonconference road win over Manhattanville by a 7-4 score. Shane Tracy scored a hat trick for the Colonels in the win over the Valiants.
 
ECAC West
The Utica Pioneers were one of the hottest teams in the country to open the season, but have fallen on hard times over the last few weekends of the first half. In a nonconference game with Morrisville on Friday night, the Pioneers dropped their fourth game in a row after opening the season 8-0. The Mustangs got 52 saves from goalie Jared Young and two goals from Joe Santino to take the home win that included a power-play goal, a short-handed goal, and an empty-net goal to go with a pair of even-strength goals.

Hobart closed out its first half with a nonconference tie with Trinity on Friday that saw a special teams battle in the 4-4 tie. Hobart overcame three Bantam power-play tallies with two short-handed goals of their own before Jonas Toupal’s goal tied the game midway through the third period.

MASCAC
Five different goal scorers and couple of points each from Kyle Griffin and Mike Palmer led the Worcester State Lancers to a nonconference win over Stonehill last Thursday night.

Salem State continues to struggle in finding their game this season, as a 4-4 nonconference tie with Suffolk was followed up by a 6-0 loss to Endicott where the Vikings were outshot by a 61-20 margin.

NE-10
Assumption took a pair of nonconference wins over Framingham State by a 10-2 score and 3-1 over Western New England. Tommy Mahoney recorded the hat trick in the win over the Rams, while Nick Commesso starred in goal against the Golden Bears, recording 40 saves in the come-from-behind victory.

NEHC
New England College has very quietly closed out a solid first half following Friday night’s win over travel partner St. Anselm.  The Pilgrims moved to 5-2-0 in conference play and 8-3-0 overall after recording the 4-3 win against the Hawks.  Connor Fries scored a pair of goals as NEC built a 3-1 lead early in the second period but the Hawks rallied to tie the game behind goals from Jonathan Pallotta and Lawrence Taylor IV before Kyle Arenson rallied the visitors to the win with a goal in the final three minutes of play.  Brett Kilar made 25 saves and moved to 7-3-0 on the season in goal for New England College.

NESCAC
Hard to believe that Saturday’s game between Amherst and Middlebury would find the loser winless in conference play for the first half. Amherst used two goals from freshman Patrick Daly to post a 4-1 win that dropped the Panthers to 0-6-0 in NESCAC play and 0-8-0 overall.

Bowdoin went on the road and used some very consistent play to knock off Tufts on Friday night by a 4-0 score before taking a 4-3 win over Connecticut College behind a hat trick from forward Cody Todesco. The Camels had fought back to tie the game just 15 seconds into the third period on a goal by Brian Belisle after falling behind by a 3-0 score in the first period before Todesco scored the game-winning goal with just over six and a half minutes remaining in regulation. Erick Wurman made 23 saves for his second win of the season.

SUNYAC
Buffalo State had the ultimate in up-and-down weekend play when they maybe got caught looking ahead to Saturday when they lost a Friday night league contest to Cortland by a 3-0 score. That loss may have fueled a bigger fire for Saturday when number one ranked and unbeaten Oswego paid a visit and the Bengals took down the Lakers by a 5-1 score behind two points each from Anthony Beaumont, Anthony Passero, Marcus Michalski, and Darren Young, while Mike DeLaVergne stopped 27 of 28 shots for the big win to close out the first half of the season.

Three biscuits
Cody Todesco, Bowdoin: He followed freshman Sam Topham’s first career goal with two of his own over a three-minute span of the first for a 3-0 Polar Bears lead over Connecticut College. The lead didn’t stand up and Todesco needed to complete his hat trick with the game-winner in the third period for the 4-3 road win and weekend sweep for Bowdoin.

Anthony Beaumont, Buffalo State: Scored just his second goal of the season to open the scoring for Buffalo State and closed out the 5-1 win over previously unbeaten Oswego with a third period power-play goal to ice the upset win over the nation’s number one team.

Matt Schneider, Brockport: The Brockport netminder moved to 3-1-0 on the season in recording the shutout win over hosts Plattsburgh on Saturday night in the 2-0 conference win. Schneider stopped all 36 shots he faced, including 28 over the final two periods as Brockport was outshot 36-26 for the game. The win was Brockport’s first ever in 44 games at Plattsburgh and completed a two-game weekend sweep for the Golden Eagles, moving them to 5-6-1 overall and 4-5-0 in conference play.

Look for a Letter to Santa this week to cap off a great and very exciting first half. Every coach needs the jolly elf to bring them something over the break, so let’s see how generous Mr. Claus will be this holiday season.

Notre Dame’s comeback win keeping BC in arm’s reach

The Boston College Eagles, off to their best start in Hockey East history at 8-0-1, threatened to run away with the conference by the time February rolled around. But a 3-2 comeback victory by Notre Dame on Saturday against the Eagles could keep the race interesting in the New Year.

1. Three-goal explosion for Notre Dame paces Irish past Eagles

When you looked at the Hockey East standings after Friday night and Boston College had a six-point lead over a trio of teams for first place, it’s hard to to envision a runaway season for the Eagles. But leading 2-0 on Saturday in South Bend, Notre Dame responded with a trio of goals (and a number of hit posts) before the middle frame ended to take the lead. Then a solid defensive third period for Notre Dame (and a great save by Cal Peterson in the closing seconds) preserved the win for the Irish. A four-point lead for first still feels nice for BC, but games-in-hand and head-to-head matchups against the opponents in the chase should make for an interesting second half.

2. Two wins against AIC provides padding to scoring numbers for Maine

Chase Pearson just had the weekend of his college hockey career. Twelve goals in two games against AIC helped Maine’s struggling offense come alive paced by Pearson’s five goals and an assist. The rookie doubled his goal scoring in a single weekend. Blaine Byron, Maine’s leading scorer, also padded his stats on the weekend with three assists on Friday and two more goals on Saturday. Cam Brown assisted on six of Maine’s 12 goals on the weekend. The only problem for Maine is that these were non-league games. The Black Bears still have just a win and a tie in eight league contests.

3. Jerry York’s long ride

Many of you know that Boston College coach Jerry York underwent his third eye surgery a number of weeks back for a detached retina. The result was doctor’s order to not fly due to the pressure it would create on the eye. But York, the all-time winningest coach in college hockey history, wasn’t going to miss a game against long-timer sports rival Notre Dame. Thus, York hopped on a train in Albany, N.Y., and went all the way to South Bend, a 17-hour adventure each way. The Boston Herald’s John ‘Jocko’ Connolly chronicled the entire trip in the newspaper, a great read.

Three Things: West Point’s Weekend To Remember

A popular favorite to top Atlantic Hockey this season, Army West Point finally hit a lull in their season over the last month. RIT outscored them 8-3 in a weekend sweep, and a 3-1 loss to Brown bookended a 1-0 squeaker win over AIC.

In a reversal of tides, the Black Knights blew into the semester break in the schedule like a gale force wind this weekend, taking four points from Holy Cross in a home-and-home among the most traditional of eastern teams.

On Friday, the Black Knights peppered goalie Paul Berrafato in the first period, outshooting the Crusaders by a 12-3 advantage, but failed to crack the scoreboard. That’s something that happened in the second period, when Ryan Nick scored his first of the year to make it 1-0.

They finished off Holy Cross with three unanswered goals. After Dominic Franco scored 30 seconds into the period, Dalton MacAfee made the game 3-0 thanks to an extra attacker, delayed penalty strike with five minutes remaining. Zach Evancho added a goal before the ensuing power play ended, giving the Black Knights three third period goals. Perhaps most impressive, they scored that trio on just six shots the entire period. Though Holy Cross spoiled the shutout bid, it was a great way for Army to get back on track.

That led to Saturday. Conor Andrle scored 53 seconds into the first period as Army rolled out to a 3-0 in the first period to chase Berrafato after 20 minutes. They scored a fourth goal 3:23 into the second against Tommy Nixon, then added four goals in the third en route to an 8-1 victory.

Brendan Soucie, with two third period goals, recorded his first career hat trick, and the Black Knights scored their most goals in a game since 2010.

The weekend vaulted the Black Knights back into first place as the first half winds down, and it sent the message that they’re going to be a big factor in the second half of the year. These were watershed games on the Army season against a tough opponent with no downside.

Actually that’s not true. The downside for the hockey team? They couldn’t rush the field in Baltimore to sing second for the first time in 15 years.

The Forgotten Force?

West Point is getting all the glory this weekend given the football team’s win over Navy and hockey team’s impressive showing against Holy Cross. But out west, another military academy continued its roll.

With its sweep of Niagara, Air Force improved to 3-1-1 in its last five games. The two wins moved them to 6-3-1 in Atlantic Hockey play, which slots them second based on winning percentage. It also continued their rise through the ranks, since it slotted them in fourth at the end of the weekend, tied with Canisius.

Kyle Haak scored twice in the Falcons’ 4-0 win on Saturday after the hosts came from behind to win 2-1 on Friday. In that first win, Jordan Himley and Evan Feno scored roughly four minutes apart. It was Feno’s first goal of the season and his second game-winner of his career.

Of the teams at the top of the standings, Air Force has the least amount of games played. They hold a game in hand over Canisius, two games in hand over Robert Morris, and three games in hand against both West Point and RIT.

Win #200

Congratulations are in order for head coach Derek Schooley of the Robert Morris Colonials. Saturday’s win over Bentley was the 200th in program history, and it became, in turn, the 200th for the only head coach the program’s ever known.

I’m a sucker for nostalgia, and I always talk about the way things were and are. I love where college hockey’s going, but I love talking about where we were. No program is more indicative of that than the Colonials. They’re a team that started right before realignment, before college hockey started to grow instead of contract. Now they’re one of Atlantic Hockey’s top programs.

Battle of the Bulge

As is the case year after year after year after year after…well you get the idea, we’re going to see a mad dash in the second half of the season.

Mercyhurst split with Sacred Heart, and Bentley split with Robert Morris this weekend. AIC was idle in league play but lost twice at Maine in non-conference affairs. With the results coming down, four points now separate sixth from 10th in the standings.

There’s a trickle down effect to look at. Three points separate a first round home series from a first round bye to await an unknown opponent. Canisius and Air Force are tied, which is always fun to watch because of the travel implications of factoring the academy into everything.

With the rise of programs like AIC and Army West Point in the first half, it’s made the league competitive from top to bottom. With 11 teams capable of winning every single game on any given night, this is what we dream and live for as fans and analysts. Games played now will have an impact, and a bounce here or there will determine where teams go.

The first half of the season is coming to a close. We won’t have a full slate of league games until the first weekend in January, but when we come back, it’s straight through to completion – which means the real fun is still coming, and the clouds are gathering for a storm on the horizon.

Brown’s McArdle suspended one game by ECAC Hockey for charging penalty

ECAC Hockey announced Saturday that Brown junior defenseman Josh McArdle has been assessed a one-game suspension as the result of his actions in the Brown-Union game on Friday, Dec. 9.

The league action was taken after review of an incident that occurred at the 9:46 mark of the third period in the Bears-Dutchmen contest where McArdle was assessed a penalty for charging.

Based upon the league’s action, McArdle is not eligible to compete in Bears’ next game on Saturday, Dec. 10, when Brown hosts Rensselaer.

WCHA Picks: Dec. 9-10

We’ve got one more full week of action before the holiday break — as of next week, the schedule gets a little more complicated. Some will be playing nonconference games. Some won’t be playing at all.

But for now, there’s one week full of conference action — one that will be big for all teams as they head into the season’s halfway point.

But enough chitchat. Let’s make these picks!

Michigan Tech at Bowling Green
Jack: What looked like a heavyweight battle in the preseason might have lost some of its luster the way both team’s started (with a thud). But now, it seems like both the Huskies and the Falcons are finally playing up to their potential — so much so that I don’t think either team has the upper hand. This is going to be a really entertaining split, methinks. Huskies 3-1, Falcons 5-2

Sean: This is going to be a fun series to watch. Both teams are looking to prove they are the teams we thought they were before the season, and both have taken major strides after slow starts. Jack is right on this one, it’s going to be a split. Falcons 4-3, Huskies 3-2. 

Minnesota State at Ferris State
Jack: This is the series I had the most trouble picking, but I think history has to guide us. The Bulldogs won their first game of the season in Mankato and have won 5 of 8 since. The Mavs haven’t had a sweep since winning four straight to start the season. I think both of those things hold true: A split this weekend looks likely. Mavericks 4-2, Bulldogs 4-3

Sean: The Bulldogs started to turn around the season with a win against the Mavericks, and have done a nice job of building momentum since. The Mavericks have been a hard team to figure out since a strong start. They can’t seem to completely control a weekend series, but they’re also never out of a game. Bulldogs 3-2, 4-3.

Alabama Huntsville at Northern Michigan
Jack: The Chargers are playing decent hockey right now. Meanwhile, the Wildcats won their first game since Nov. 4 against Wisconsin when they beat Alaska Anchorage on the road last weekend. I think UAH is going to get the sweep in a pair of close games. Chargers 3-2, 2-1

Sean: If Alabama Huntsville wants to move up the WCHA standings a little bit, this is the opportunity. Northern Michigan isn’t playing at  high level and the Chargers a bit of confidence as they head to Northern Michigan. Chargers 3-2, Wildcats 4-2

Lake Superior State at Bemidji State
Jack: The Beavers have looked a little more vulnerable in the past two weekends, as they have lost three times in their last four games. This may be somewhat troubling — especially considering they’ve scored just six goals in that span — but their defense is still getting the job done. The question is, will the Lakers offense be able to crack the BSU defense? I think they may do it once, but Michael Bitzer and Co. won’t let it happen twice in a series. Lakers 5-2, Beavers 3-1

Sean: The Lakers offense has the capability to catch fire at any moment, while the Beavers have the defense and goaltending to shut down any team in the country. The Beavers have been tough at home, and I think they sink the Lakers this weekend. Beavers 2-0, 3-1

Alaska Anchorage at Alaska
Jack: The Nanooks have done a decent job hanging with the top half of the conference so one would think they would be able to handle their instate rival with ease. However, these are rivalry games for a reason and I think the Seawolves will steal one on the road. Seawolves 2-1, Nanooks 6-2

Sean: For two teams near the bottom of the standings a rivalry game could be just the thing they need. The Nanooks should be favored on paper, but the Seawolves won’t want to lose to their in-state rival. It should be an entertaining split. Seawolves 3-2, Nanooks 5-4

ECAC Hockey picks: Dec. 9 – 13

Last time: 11-7

Overall: 33-27-2

For much of ECAC Hockey, this is the last weekend of games before the holiday break. All games start at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted.

Friday, Dec. 9

Union at Brown

Union wasn’t at its sharpest last weekend, but still managed to score twelve goals en route to a road sweep of Princeton and Quinnipiac.  The Dutchmen shouldn’t have much problem with a Bears team that has struggled defensively this season. Union wins

Quinnipiac at Princeton        

The Bobcats own a 9-1-1 advantage in the last eleven meetings between these teams, and I don’t see that changing Friday.  Quinnipiac wins

Clarkson at St. Lawrence

This already heated rivalry game has a little more heat to it this year, as current St. Lawrence coach Mark Morris faces his former team for the first time. Both teams have been playing well lately; I’m giving the slight edge to the home team. St. Lawrence wins 

Rensselaer at Yale    

This might not be the Yale team of years past, but the Bulldogs should have enough to beat an RPI team that’s had a hard time getting wins. this season Yale wins                   

Saturday, Dec. 10

Rensselaer at Brown, 4 p.m.

It’s been a struggle for both of these teams, but RPI has at least showed an ability to score at time this season. Rensselaer wins

Princeton at Quinnipiac, 4 p.m.

The venue and start time may change from Friday, but I don’t think the result will. Quinnipiac wins

Union  at Yale

A young Bulldogs team might have trouble holding off the potent Dutchmen offense. Union wins

New Hampshire at Dartmouth, 7:05 p.m.

The Wildcats have been fairly steady lately, while Dartmouth has one win in the last month. New Hampshire wins

Tuesday, Dec. 13:

Massachusetts at Princeton 

Neither team has done a lot to inspire a lot of confidence thus far this season, but the Tigers have three wins in their last four games. Princeton wins

 Yale at Boston University, 7:05 p.m.

A win against the Terriers would be quite the upset for the Bulldogs, but I don’t see it happening. Boston University wins

Atlantic Hockey Picks, December 9-13

Last week:

Dan: 6-2-2
Chris: 6-2-2

On the season:

Dan: 53-40-16 (.560)
Chris: 57-36-16 (.596)

 

This Week’s Picks:

Friday, December 9 and Saturday, December 10
Niagara at Air Force
Dan: Air Force is 3-2 at home this year with one loss coming against Denver, a team that could be #1 in the nation according to some. I have to take that in stride and make the quick pick. Air Force sweeps.
Chris: Niagara used to dominate (22-6-3) the Falcons back when both were in College Hockey America, but since both have been members of Atlantic Hockey, Air Force leads the series 15-6-2. I think that trend continues with an Air Force sweep.

Holy Cross vs. Army West Point
Dan: Army could really use a pick-me-up offensively after splitting last weekend. Holy Cross rolls in after picking up three points against Air Force. I have no reason to think the Black Knights are capable of getting swept, but the Crusaders are are 4-1-2 at home this year. So I’ll pick the home team in both nights. Army West Point on Friday with Holy Cross on Saturday.
Chris: The Black Knights host on Friday and then the action moves 175 miles Northeast to Holy Cross on Saturday. I’m going with the home team both nights, so an Army West Point win on Friday and a Crusader victory on Saturday.

Robert Morris at Bentley
Dan: As I pointed out this week, Bentley is starting to pick up a little steam, and they stand out as a team that could be an awakening and a reckoning in the second half. I’d like to think they’ll net at least a win this weekend, so I’ll take them at home against a bus lagged RMU team. But I don’t think RMU gets swept either, so I’ll pick the split. Bentley wins on Friday, RMU wins on Saturday.
Chris: Other than a trip to Air Force, this is the longest road trip in the league. The last seven meetings between the schools have been at RMU, so this is a welcome change for the Falcons. I think Bentley is going to come around soon, but probably not this weekend against a good, confident Colonial squad. Robert Morris sweeps.

Mercyhurst at Sacred Heart
Dan: Sacred Heart is a lot better than their standing would indicate, but Mercyhurst is just one of those steady-as-she-goes teams. The Lakers are 2-2 in their last four and 3-3 in their last six. I don’t think they Pioneers will be swept, but since I can’t figure out which night to pick them, I’m picking the deuce for the visitors.. Mercyhurst sweeps.
Chris: The Lakers are coming off a nice win at Canisius while the Pioneers lost a pair of close games at Robert Morris. SHU is currently tied for last in the conference but I still think they’ll be closer to the top of the standings than the bottom when the dust settles. I think they’ll earn a split here, with Mercyhurst winning on Friday and SHU on Saturday.

American International at Maine
Dan: AIC nearly knocked off Union and tied UConn earlier this year. Maine could really use something positive here since they’re 1-6-1 in Hockey East play. If this were in Springfield, I wouldn’t be taking the Bears to win. Maine sweeps.
Chris: AIC has held its own in non-conference games so far, and while I think they’ll give Maine a scare, I going with a Black Bears sweep on home ice.

Providence at Rochester Institute of Technology
Dan: Like Maine, Providence hasn’t been great in Hockey East play. The road cooking does the Friars some good, although if you ask me, Wes’s Rib House and Rick’s Road House can go toe-to-toe with Dinosaur BBQ any day of the week. Providence sweeps.
Chris: These teams have never met, although they do share a past fraternal connection. The 2010 RIT team that went to the Frozen Four in Detroit and the 2015 Providence squad that won the national championship in Boston shared two sets of brothers: the Saracinos (Nick at Providence, Chris at RIT) and the Tanevs (Chris at RIT and Brandon at Providence). The Friars have just one road win for far this season, but I think they’ll make themselves at home at the Polisseni center and come out with a sweep.

Tuesday, December 13
Arizona State at American International
Dan: It’s going to be a daytime high of 38 on Tuesday with lows in the 20s. I kind of wish this game was being played at the old Olympia Ice Center just so I can see what it’s like when people from Phoenix – where it will be a daytime high of 73 on Tuesday – get put in an ice box. AIC wins.
Chris: Arizona State will spend next week in Springfield, Mass., taking on AIC on Tuesday and sticking around for a weekend series at UMass. The Sun Devils will be well rested after taking this weekend off, while the Yellow Jackets have to return from Maine and turn things around quickly for a Tuesday tilt. I’m going with Arizona State to come out with a rare road win.

Weekend picks: Dec. 9

Nicole and I had the same record last week, going 20-8-4 (.687). On the year, I am 191-69-33 (.708). while Nicole is 171-89-33 (.639). The action is a little lighter this weekend, so let’s get to the picks.

Friday, Dec. 9

Merrimack at Providence
Candace: I’ve like what I’ve seen of Providence, despite the Friars getting blown out by Boston College. Providence 3-2
Nicole: Going to pick the underdog here. I’ve liked the growth I’ve seen from Merrimack and I think Providence is a beatable team for them. Merrimack 3-2

Friday-Saturday, Dec. 9-10

No. 3 Minnesota-Duluth at Minnesota State
Candace: The Bulldogs are doing what they need to do, which is not lose to teams they should beat. Minnesota-Duluth 4-1, 4-2
Nicole: Despite advances by Mankato, I don’t see anything other than a UMD sweep here. Minnesota-Duluth 4-1, 5-2

No. 1 Wisconsin at Ohio State
Candace: I’d imagine the Badgers are itching for revenge, and last weekend’s offensive explosion points to good things. Wisconsin 5-1, 4-1
Nicole: The Buckeyes and Badgers tied early in the season and Kassidy Sauve seemed to have the Badgers’ number. She’s only gotten better and they’ve had trouble scoring at times. I think Wisconsin rides the high of last Sunday’s beatdown of Minnesota, but it’ll be close. Wisconsin 3-1, 3-1

No. 2 Minnesota at Boston University
Candace: These two played in the national championship game a few years ago. BU has the offense, but not the defense. Minnesota 5-3, 5-2
Nicole: I wish this was a more marquee matchup than it is this season. The Gophers will want to head into the break with something other than that Wisconsin game on their minds. Minnesota 3-1, 4-2

Union at Maine
Candace: Who is the only team to beat both BU and Boston College in Hockey East? Maine. Of course, the Black Bears have lost to just about everyone else, but I like them to get two wins at home. Maine 3-1, 3-2
Nicole: The Black Bears have shown a lot of potential, but I’m going to bet on a split here. Union 3-1, Maine 2-1

Bemidji State at RIT
Candace: Bemidji had a surprise loss last weekend to Minnesota State, but I like the Beavers to sweep here. Bemidji State 2-1, 3-1
Nicole: Much like Minnesota, Bemidji would like to erase last weekend from their heads. Even with some stumbles, I think they can outplay RIT. Bemidji State 3-1, 3-0

No. 4 Clarkson vs. Syracuse (home-and-home)
Candace: Clarkson looked fearsome last week against St. Lawrence. Syracuse just doesn’t have the depth to hang with the Golden Knights. Clarkson 4-1, 4-1
Nicole: The Orange have done well in conference, but not so great outside the CHA. Clarkson has momentum and firepower. I think they sweep. Clarkson 4-2, 3-1

Saturday, Dec. 10

Dartmouth at Vermont
Candace: Dartmouth beat Princeton and Maine, but it’s been all downhill otherwise. This should be a win for the home team, but I think it’s close. Vermont 3-2
Nicole: The Catamounts are one of the surprises of this season and they seem to just keep getting better. Vermont 4-1

New Hampshire at Yale
Candace: New Hampshire has gotten better and better as the season has gone along. Yale is a tough out, but I like the Wildcats here. New Hampshire 3-2
Nicole: UNH has quietly doing well for themselves just a point behind BU and two points behind second-place Northeastern. I expect them to win here no problem. New Hampshire 3-1

Saturday-Sunday, Dec. 9-10

St. Cloud at No. 10 North Dakota
Candace: Given North Dakota’s inconsistency, picking them to win two games against anybody is tough, but that’s what I’m going with. North Dakota 2-1, 3-2
Nicole: I’m taking a bit of a flyer and saying that St. Cloud sneaks out of Grand Forks with a win. The Huskies have shown a lot of growth and there doesn’t seem to be rhyme or reason to what’s happening with the Fighting Hawks. I think the opportunity is there for SCSU if they can grab it. North Dakota 3-1, St. Cloud 3-2

Mercyhurst at Princeton
Candace: Mercyhurst is definitely in a down year. This isn’t a good way to end the first half, but I don’t see the Lakers winning here. Princeton 3-1, 4-2
Nicole: I’d be rather surprised if Princeton doesn’t sweep this series. Giving the Tigers the benefit of the doubt and picking them. Princeton 4-2, 3-1

Weekend picks: Dec. 9

A small slate, and tons of nonconference matchups, so here are my picks of some of the interesting games.

Friday, Dec. 9

Hamilton at No. 7 Oswego
Oswego has been slowly climbing up in the polls. Their five-game winning streak started with a victory over top-ranked Plattsburgh. With just five games under their belt, Hamilton will need to catch up to speed quickly if they want to have a chance. Oswego junior Olivia Ellis is third in the country with 23 points and freshman Jacquelin White has nine goals and 10 assists through the first 12 games. Junior goalie Sam Walther has a .972 save percentage for Hamilton. Oswego 4-2

No. 10 Augsburg at Wisconsin-Stevens Point
Augsburg has battled into no. 10 on the polls, winning eight of their last nine. Wis.-Stevens Point has been unable to find any consistency so far this season, but is looking to gain some ground. Augsburg’s Rebecca Sonnet is third in the country with a .967 save percentage. Augsburg 3-1

Saturday, Dec. 10

Manhattanville at Williams
Williams is just seven games into the season and its two losses were at the hands of Oswego. Manhattanville has won five of the last six, including two overtime wins. Giving the home team the nod here. Williams 3-2

Massachusetts-Boston at No. 8 Connecticut College
Connecticut College is allowing just 1.5 goals a game and goalie Julie Chester is proving crucial to their run so far. Mass.-Boston is coming off an overtime win over William Smith. The Camels will take this one. Connecticut College 4-2

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