Coaches always love when their teams bounce back from adverse events. My results from last weekend were clearly a bounce back as I finished 6-2-0 (.750), which brings the season total to 15-8-1 (.646). This week brings some great Thanksgiving tournament action, as well as some very intriguing nonconference games. Coaches, make sure your players go easy on the turkey; teams need to be amped for these games.Here is my slate of picks for the weekend, and best wishes to all for a Happy Thanksgiving!Friday, Nov. 25Brockport at TuftsThe Jumbos are off to a 2-0 start, but face a stern test in a contending SUNYAC club. Tufts has been stingy defensively and scored some timely goals, and the third one here is an empty-netter to seal the deal. Tufts 3- 1Massachusetts-Boston at UticaWhat a high-octane game this is going to be in a great environment for a college hockey game. The Pioneers are one of just two unbeaten teams remaining in D-III and at home they will eke out another win against a talented Beacons squad. Utica 5-4Saturday, Nov. 26Wentworth at New England CollegeThe Pilgrims have very quietly gone about their business in getting off to a solid start to the season. Goalie Brett Kilar has been a workhorse from the first drop of the puck and he is the difference in this one where the margin for error is very small. New England College 3-2Williams at BabsonAnother terrific matchup amongst top teams from NESCAC and NEHC, where the flow of the game and speed on display should be a joy to watch. The Beavers have a few more games under their belts at this point of the season and already seem to have the team defense and opportune scoring formula dialed in. I would actually pick a tie through overtime but lean toward the home team for the win. Babson 3-2Geneseo at BowdoinThe Knights visit the Polar Bears and this may be the game with the most intrigue of all. Geneseo can score in bunches, but has struggled defensively early in the season. Bowdoin is just out of the gates and will need to ramp up against last season’s Frozen Four team. The visitors have just too much firepower. Geneseo 4-3Connecticut College at SkidmoreThe Thoroughbreds aren’t sneaking up on anyone down the backstretch and the Camels best find a way to get on top early or suffer the consequences of facing a very confident hockey team. Skidmore 3-2Sunday, Nov. 27Endicott at AssumptionThis game is one of the more interesting nonconference games as the Gulls look to get a string of wins going while Assumption is still looking for a consistent 60-minute performance. Too much balance for the visitors in this one. Endicott 5-3Nichols at ElmiraThe start of the season has been a tough one for Elmira and a disciplined Nichols team isn’t an easy way to stop the slide of a 1-7 record. Elmira is a very young team while Nichols has more experience. Experience wins out here, but barely. Nichols 5-3It’s not just a turkey buffet this weekend, it is a smorgasbord of great holiday tournament traditions and terrific nonconference matchups, so why not enjoy both!! Get out to see a game locally or support a tournament in your area; you just may be surprised at what you have been missing. “Drop the puck!”
West picks: Nov. 25
It’s Thanksgiving weekend and there is no shortage of hockey on the schedule, including a pivotal crossover showdown between Wisconsin-Stevens Point and Adrian. Among the other highlights on the schedule is Concordia’s trip to the PrimeLink Shootout and St. Thomas hitting the road to take on Adrian.Friday, Nov. 25Concordia (3-3) vs. Plattsburgh (3-2)The Cobbers have dropped two in a row and things won’t get any easier as they head East for the PrimeLink Great Northern Shootout. Goaltending will be a key to success and the Cobbers have two netminders capable of getting the job done in Jacob Stephen and Sam Nelson. Both have started three games apiece, with Stephen picking up two wins. The Cobbers have allowed 19 goals in all while scoring 15. The Cardinals have scored four goals in each of their wins. Cole Stallard leads the offense with four goals. Concordia 4-3Concordia (Wis.) (4-3-1) at Bethel (1-6-1)It’s been a tough start to the season for the Royals, who are winless in their last five games. They have managed two goals or less in each of those games and hope to get back on track in this two-game series on the road that kicks off Friday. Justin Bonanno and Andrew Bjorklund, who both with five goals, need to play well for the Royals to have a chance. The Falcons have won three of their last four and are good on the road, fashioning a 2-1-1 mark away from home. The balance they have on offense, which is led by Nicholas Erb (three goals, five assists) will likely be the difference. Concordia 4-2, 3-1Saturday, Nov. 26Marian (2-6) at St. John’s (4-3-1)The Sabres face a daunting start to their weekend as they hit the road for a game against the Johnnies. Marian has struggled away from home this year, going 0-4. The biggest challenge for Marian has been getting its offense on track, although it did come to life last weekend with a big 6-1 win over Superior. Gianni Mangone and Derek Thorogood each have five goals this year. The Johnnies will be playing only their second game of the season at home. They have scored 27 goals and allowed 26, with Matt Colford leading the offense (three goals, seven assists). The Johnnies the better offense and playing at home should help their cause as well. St. John’s 5-2Wisconsin-Stevens Point (6-1-1) at Adrian (5-1)The Pointers have already played one NCHA powerhouse, falling 5-3 to St. Norbert last weekend in a rematch of the 2016 national title game. The Pointers feature one of the top offenses in the country, with 11 players tallying at least five points. Jacob Barber has seven goals and five assists. Wis.-Stevens Point will be up against an Adrian team that is equally impressive. The Bulldogs have won five in a row and have scored five or more goals five times. Trevor Boyd leads the attack with five goals and eight assists. In the end, though, defense is likely to make the difference. Adrian has given up 13 goals. Wis.-Stevens Point has allowed 21. Adrian 4-3Finlandia (0-8) at Wisconsin-Superior (3-6)The Lions are still searching for their first win of the year. A road game against Wisconsin-Superior probably isn’t the place to find it. Finlandia has been shutout in three of its games and is winless in six road games. Earlier this season, the Lions lost 10-3 to Superior. A similar outcome won’t come as a surprise. Meanwhile, the Yellow Jackets have lost five in a row and look to snap out of their funk with a big win. Wis.-Superior has managed only five goals in its last five games, but its offense should come to life in this one. Wis.-Superior 8-4Sunday, Nov. 27St. Thomas (4-2-2) vs. Adrian (5-1)Jeff Boeser is searching for the 100th win of his career with the Tommies when his team hits the road to take on the Bulldogs. St. Thomas has been tough defensively lately, allowing only 14 goals in their last eight games. They have killed off 29 of their opponents’ last 33 power-play attempts. St. Thomas is also balanced offensively, with 11 different players scoring at least one goal. Adrian is balanced offensively as well — 14 different players have scored a goal — and the Bulldogs feature a defense anchored by goaltender Kevin Entmaa, who is 4-1 with a 2.20 goals-against average. Adrian 2-1Marian (2-6) at St. Olaf (1-7)The Sabres hope to take advantage of great goaltending against the Oles. Mike Baldwin has spent the majority of time in goal, recording 125 saves in five starts. He owns a 3.97 goals-against average. The Oles have lost three in a row, with two of those games being decided by one goal. Steven Sherman leads the offense with two goals and six assists. St. Olaf just seems due for a win after playing so hard as of late. St. Olaf 3-2Lawrence (3-3) at St. John’s (4-3-1)The Vikings are riding a wave of momentum, having won their last three to bounce back from an 0-3 start to the season. They have two shutouts this season and have given up 17 goals in all. They feature three goalies who have seen nearly equal playing time. Evan Cline has two wins and has allowed just one goal in those games. The Johnnies are playing only their second nonconference game of the season. Eight players have scored at least two goals for St. John’s, and that balance should go a long way toward success against Lawrence. St. John’s 3-2
Pickin’ the Big Ten: November 25-27
This is the final week of full-on nonconference play for the Big Ten before league action begins next Thursday, and B1G hockey is in good shape with a record of 38-19-8 and a .646 win percentage. Here’s how Drew Claussen and I are doing so far, too.Last weekDrew: 6-2-0 (.750)Paula: 6-2-0 (.750)This week, it was Drew’s turn to be bitten by the wrong-way split bug. He correctly called that Wisconsin would split with Merrimack but called wins for each team on the wrong nights.SeasonDrew: 34-21-8 (.603)Paula: 37-18-8 (.730)
This week
Everyone travels except for Michigan, and Ohio State and Penn State sit this one out. All times are local.Lake Superior State at No. 16 MichiganDrew: The Lakers had a good start to the season and even worked their way into our poll a couple weeks ago but have since dropped their last five games. I think Michigan will take care of business at home.Paula: This series renews an old CCHA and intrastate rivalry, one that Michigan leads 62-46-7 all time. These teams split their last series Jan. 18-19, 2013, and the Wolverines are 8-1-1 in the last 10 meetings. The Lakers dropped a pair of road games to Ferris State last weekend. Games begin at 7:35 p.m. Friday and Saturday night in Yost Ice Arena and neither is televised.Drew’s picks: Michigan 4-2, 3-1.Paula’s picks: Michigan 4-2, 4-2.Michigan State at No. 5 North DakotaDrew: After a period of play that saw the Fighting Hawks go 0-4-2 against Minnesota-Duluth, Minnesota and Denver, North Dakota got back on track by sweeping St. Cloud State on the road last weekend. Hosting the Spartans is a great opportunity to extend that winning streak to four games, and I think North Dakota will do just that.Paula: I don’t see the Spartans stealing a win from the Fighting Hawks on the road. North Dakota leads this series 64-36-2 all-time. The Fighting Hawks swept the Spartans in East Lansing Thanksgiving weekend 2015. Friday’s game begins at 7:37 p.m. in Engelstad Arena, Saturday’s at 7:07 p.m., and both games are carried by Midco Sports Network.Drew’s picks: North Dakota 4-0, 4-1.Paula: North Dakota 4-2, 4-1.No. 11 Minnesota at Northeastern and No. 4 Boston CollegeDrew: We saw both sides of Minnesota last weekend. The Gophers were vastly outplayed during Friday’s 4-1 loss to Minnesota State on Friday, but rebounded to pick up a 1-0 win on Saturday that could have been worse if not for strong play in net by Jason Pawloski. This week Minnesota gets a 4-5-4 Northeastern team on Friday and will follow that up with a game at No. 4 Boston College on Sunday afternoon. The Gophers have handled their road nonconfernce opponents pretty well this season, so I’ll pick them to get two wins this weekend.Paula: The Gophers lead their series with the Huskies 5-8-0, including a sweep in Mariucci Arena Oct. 23-24, 2015. Minnesota beat BC the last time the teams met, Nov. 28, 2014, in Chestnut Hill. Don Lucia is just one win away from his 700th this weekend, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he had to wait until Sunday, but I’m calling a sweep as well. Friday’s game Matthews Arena begins at 7:00 p.m. and Sunday’s game in the Conte Forum starts at 1:00 p.m. Neither is televised.Drew’s picks: Minnesota 4-1, 3-2.Paula’s picks: Minnesota 3-2, 3-2.Wisconsin at Colorado College and No. 2 DenverDrew: I think Wisconsin’s offense will power it past CC, but I can’t pick the Badgers to upend Denver on the road.Paula: This is a weekend of old WCHA rivalries for the Badgers. UW is 111-67-9 all-time against the Tigers, but CC has won seven of the last 10 meetings, most recently Nov. 21, 2014 at Broadmoor World Arena. Wisconsin leads the all-time series with Denver 75-61-13, but the Pioneers tied and defeated the Badgers in Madison last November. I think Denver is beatable, but perhaps not this weekend. Friday’s game at The Broadmoor begins at 7:37 p.m., Saturday’s game at Magness Arena begins at 7:05 p.m., and neither is televised.Drew’s picks: Wisconsin 5-3, Denver 6-3.Paula’s picks: Wisconsin 3-2, Denver 4-2.
Weekend picks: Nov. 25
I had another good week last week, going 22-6-5, while Nicole went 19-9-5. I have a pretty big lead now on the season, as I am 157-55-24, while Nicole is 138-74-24. It’s a light weekend of action, so let’s get to the picks.Friday-Saturday, Nov. 25=26Princeton at Boston UniversityCandace: I really don’t know what to make of this series. Do we see the Princeton team that crushed Colgate, or the one that has struggled against other teams? Boston University 2-1, Princeton 2-1Nicole: Both these teams continue to confound me. A split seems the most likely outcome. Boston University 3-1, Princeton 3-2No. 4 Minnesota-Duluth at HarvardCandace: I’m not sure Harvard will win before next year, but if they do, it won’t happen this weekend. Minnesota-Duluth 4-1, 4-2Nicole: Maura Crowell returns to Cambridge with a really talented team. Minnesota-Duluth 3-1, 2-0Lindenwood at Minnesota StateCandace: I’m not really sure what to expect here, but generally I favor WCHA teams. Minnesota State 2-1, 2-1Nicole: Both teams have got big wins last week, so I’ll call for a split and hope they both keep some momentum. Minnesota State 2-1, Lindenwood 3-2RIT at RensselaerCandace: I expected more out of the Engineers last weekend. Do they wake up this weekend? Rensselaer 3-2, 3-1Nicole: I’m optimistic for RIT here, so I’ll call a split. Rensselaer 3-1, RIT 2-0Syracuse at No. 7 North DakotaCandace: These could be close games, but I expect the home team to win both. North Dakota 4-2, 3-2Nicole: Should be an easy sweep for the Fighting Hawks. North Dakota 4-2, 4-1Cornell at No. 1 WisconsinCandace: I’d have been more confident with my sweep prediction if I knew about the status of Ann-Renée Desbiens, Wisconsin’s goalie, but I think the Badgers sweep. Wisconsin 3-1, 3-2Nicole: Difficult to call without knowing Desbiens’ status, but Nikki Cece played well for the Badgers and they’ve been pretty untouchable at home. Friday night is already a sellout, so they’ll have the crowd support. They’ll sweep. Wisconsin 4-2, 3-1Nutmeg ClassicMerrimack vs. No. 8 QuinnipiacCandace: Merrimack hasn’t done well of late. Quinnipiac 3-1Nicole: This should be an easy win for the Bobcats. Quinnipiac 4-1Yale vs. ConnecticutCandace: I am really not sure about this game. I think Yale has more potential though. Yale 2-1Nicole: Connecticut is putting together a good season and showing a lot of growth. Connecticut 3-1Windjammer Classic(5) Clarkson vs. Robert MorrisCandace: The Golden Knights keep rolling. Clarkson 4-1Nicole: I can’t wait to see how Robert Morris fares here, but I think Clarkson will be too much for them. Golden Knights win. Clarkson 4-3St. Cloud State vs. VermontCandace: Vermont has been up and down, but St. Cloud has shown a lot by beating Benidji. St. Cloud State 3-1Nicole: The Huskies are coming off a big win against Bemidji. I think that confidence helps carry them here. St. Cloud State 3-1Saturday, Nov. 26New Hampshire at MaineCandace: I think I could flip a coin and do better picking this game. Home ice is my guide. Maine 2-1Nicole: Maine has three games in four days starting with this one. I’ll pick them here, but I think they might have a better shot on Monday and Tuesday. Maine 2-1No. 6 Boston College at No. 10 NortheasternCandace: It was a battle last weekend, and will be again. I’ll still pick BC. Boston College 2-1Nicole: These two tied last week and I’m tempted to pick that here, but I’ll go out on a limb for Northeastern at home. Northeastern 3-2.Providence at BrownCandace: Brown hasn’t done well in recent weeks, and Providence seems to be getting stronger. Providence 3-1Nicole: Providence should be able to handle Brown. Providence 3-1Saturday-Sunday, Nov. 26-27Bemidji State at No. 2 MinnesotaCandace: Bemidji has caused the Gophers trouble in the past, but I don’t see it happening this time. Minnesota 3-1, 4-1Nicole: I don’t think the Beavers have it in them to push Minnesota like they have in recent years. Minnesota 4-1, 4-2Monday-Tuesday, Nov. 28Dartmouth at MaineCandace: Can Dartmouth get momentum from its big win over Princeton? Sure, why not. Dartmouth 2-1, 2-1Nicole: Under different circumstances, I might pick a Maine sweep, but Dartmouth showed it has the ability to step up and I’m not sure Maine can keep going for the third game. Split. Maine 3-1, Dartmouth 2-1Tuesday, Nov. 29Merrimack at BrownCandace: This could end up a draw. I’ll pick the Warriors to get back on track. Merrimack 3-2Nicole: Picking Merrimack to win. Merrimack 2-1 Wednesday, Nov. 30No. 10 Northeastern at ProvidenceCandace: I don’t think this one will be as tight as antiquated. Northeastern 4-2Nicole: This should be a tight game, but I’ll picked the ranked team and say NU wins. Northeastern 4-3
Atlantic Hockey Picks, November 25-27
Last week:
Dan: 4-6-2Chris: 5-5-2
On the season:
Dan: 42-33-13 (.551)Chris: 46-29-13 (.597)
This Week’s Picks:
Friday, November 25 and Saturday, November 26Niagara at American InternationalDan: I apparently gave AIC the kiss of death when I said they were for real. I still think they’re going to be a force to be reckoned with, and every team goes through these lulls at some point in a season. On the flip side, Niagara is also playing some of their best hockey, but I think the travel aspect plays a role. Home cooking gets AIC at least a win. AIC wins on Friday, Niagara on Saturday.Chris: This is the only two-game league series this weekend. AIC is 0-2-4 in its last six games while the Purple Eagles have won two of their last three. But I’m thinking split, with AIC winning Friday and Niagara coming out on top on Saturday.Friday, November 25Mercyhurst at CanisiusDan: There’s something classic about this weekend. Even though Brandon Wildung got back on the right track, I think Charles Williams is a hair ahead. In a battle of goaltenders, I’m taking the Golden Griffins. Canisius wins.Chris: This is the 85th meeting between the schools. Canisius has dominated lately, and I think that continues here at HarborCenter. Canisius wins.Denver at Air ForceDan: The altitude effect is very real for opponents, even those that play in Colorado. Over the last couple years, the Falcons knocked off Denver and Colorado College, earning another tie against the Pioneers three seasons ago. Even though Denver is a mile high, they have to elevate another 2,000 feet in order to play at Cadet Ice Arena. So even though the Pioneers are #2, I smell an upset brewing. Air Force wins.Chris: Air Force has been known to knock off its Colorado rivals from time to time, but I think Denver, ranked No.2 in the latest USCHO poll, is just too strong this season. I’m going with the Pioneers to win.Holy Cross at Notre DameDan: I like Holy Cross to make this game interesting, but I think the Irish are just in the right spot at the right time to win the first game of their home tournament in South Bend. Notre Dame wins.Chris: The Crusaders will face off against the No. 12 Fighting Irish in the first round of Notre Dame’s Shillelagh Tournament. I’m going with the higher seed and home team. Notre Dame wins. Saturday, November 26 and Sunday, November 27Dartmouth at Robert MorrisDan: Stat to watch – Dartmouth’s power play, which is 2-53 this season. RMU, meanwhile, is third in the nation at 26.9% (14-52). The Colonials will win at least one thanks to an extra man goal. Either that or Dartmouth’s inability to score on the power play costs them a win. RMU wins on Saturday. Dartmouth wins on Sunday.Chris: The Big Green are 2-2-2 on the season so far, and I think they’ll leave Moon Township still at .500. RMU night take at least three points here, but I’m going with a split and picking RMU to win on Saturday and Dartmouth on Sunday.Saturday, November 26Air Force at Colorado CollegeDan: Amazingly, the road trip from the academy to Colorado College will shave about 1,000 feet off of the elevation as the cadets go from over 7,200 feet down to Colorado College, which is in Colorado Springs’ city proper (at 6,000 feet). Being from Massachusetts, this is something that’s unfathomable to me. Air Force wins.Chris: The CC Tigers got trounced last weekend by St. Cloud, but I think they’ll rebound here. I’d go with Air Force at Cadet Ice Arena, but this one’s 15 miles down Route 25 at the CC’s World Arena. I think Colorado College prevails in a close one.Bentley at HarvardDan: Bentley’s made a habit of ruining Harvard’s home ice advantage in the stands in recent years, packing Bright-Landry Hockey Center in each of their three meetings. But they haven’t won. Jayson Argue is playing out of his mind in goal, but Harvard’s offense is really clicking to start the season. Harvard wins.Chris:I think this has become a rivalry game for Bentley, but not so much for Harvard, which has won all three previous meetings. I think that trend continues. Harvard wins.Sacred Heart at ConnecticutDan: Sacred Heart failed to turn the state red when they played Yale. I would love to see them do it against a UConn team that has only one win since they beat Notre Dame in late October. That said, that UConn win was 4-0 over Boston University. UConn wins.Chris: The Pioneers have had recent success against their Nutmeg State rivals, but not this time. UConn wins.Holy Cross at Clarkson/YaleDan: Yale’s defensive struggles to start the season give Holy Cross an opening to hold a goaltending advantage should they meet in the second game of the Shillelagh Tournament. That contrasts with a Clarkson team capable of rolling out two netminders with save percentages over .900. Holy Cross loses to Clarkson but beats Yale.Chris:I like the Crusaders to defeat Yale if they meet in their the championship or consolation, but not against Clarkson which is undefeated on the road so far this season. So a win against Yale or a loss to CU.
NCHC picks: Nov. 25
My picking Minnesota-Duluth sweeps has been working out nicely in my contest with Matthew. I gained another game on him in our picks contest, going 4-1-3 (.687) while Matthew went 3-2-3 (.562). On the year, I am 38-25-10 (.589), while Matthew is 32-31-10 (.506).It’s not a busy weekend, but let’s see how we can do.Friday, Nov. 25No. 2 Denver at Air ForceCandace: I think Denver will get a close win here in a game that I think everyone thought would be previewed last month at the IceBreaker, but wasn’t to be. Denver 3-1Matthew: Air Force hasn’t been an easy team for anyone to beat this year, but I like the Pioneers to steal a win on the road here. Denver 3-2Wisconsin at Colorado CollegeCandace: CC is winless at home so far. Watch them get it here, but I’m not picking it. Wisconsin 3-2Matthew: This one might be too tough of an out for CC to make. I’ll take the Badgers. Wisconsin 4-2Friday-Saturday, Nov. 25-26Omaha at Northern MichiganCandace: Northern Michigan hasn’t done very well so far, and I think Omaha can win both as a result. Omaha 3-2, 4-2Matthew: For as much as results haven’t gone Omaha’s way at home so far this season, the Mavericks have been great on the road. That will continue this weekend. Omaha 4-2, 4-2Michigan State at No. 5 North DakotaCandace: I think North Dakota was playing better than people thought when they went without a win in six games, and the Hawks should build on last weekend’s success. North Dakota 4-2, 4-1Matthew: UND is coming off of a huge road sweep against St. Cloud State. I see the Hawks continuing to build momentum before their schedule becomes tougher again. North Dakota 4-2, 3-1Saturday, Nov. 26Wisconsin at DenverCandace: Wisconsin has shown improvement, but I think Denver will get the win in a tight one. Denver 3-2Matthew: Maybe the game of the weekend for NCHC teams playing over Thanksgiving. This might end in a tie but we can’t pick those, so I’ll take Denver to edge it. Denver 3-2Air Force at Colorado CollegeCandace: I might as well pick against Matthew in one game. Air Force 3-2Matthew: I think this will be a really tight game. League homer pick time. Colorado College 3-2
Nov. 25-26 picks
Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
I hope everyone who is reading this while ignoring their families is having a lovely time (and that those reading this after their meals won’t fall asleep two quickly after starting this sentence).
Seven different WCHA teams are in action this weekend — including two conference battles. One to watch out for: With Bemidji State playing a nonconference series against Princeton and Minnesota State on a bye, Michigan Tech has a chance to gain even more ground on BSU in the standings with a series at Alaska.
Bowling Green, too, can leapfrog MSU with a win or two against Anchorage.
The three nonconference series should be pretty interesting, too — Lake State takes on old CCHA foes Michigan in a set that should test the Lakers’ mettle.
Anyway, without further ado, here are the picks. Enjoy the games!
Alaska Anchorage at Bowling Green
Jack: The Seawolves seem to be playing slightly better now, but the Falcons do, too. I think Bowling Green keeps rolling and prevents UAA from its first conference win. Falcons 5-2, 3-1
Sean: Bowling Green had a big weekend against Alabama Huntsville and the Falcons seem to have shaken off the early season struggles. Should be a nice Thanksgiving weekend for Bowling Green. Falcons 5-1, 4-2.
Michigan Tech at Alaska
Jack: The Huskies seem to be back on track, but I can see them getting a little worn out Saturday night. The Nanooks, too, have recovered since their early struggles. I foresee a split. Huskies 5-3, Nanooks 3-1
Sean: Michigan Tech spends another weekend in Alaska and they should have a better showing after a battle with Anchorage. This one feels like a sweep. Huskies 4-2, 3-1
Omaha at Northern Michigan
Jack: I don’t know what to expect from the Wildcats after they were pumped by Bemidji State last Saturday, but I think they will recover from it and get the split. Wildcats 4-2, Mavericks 4-2
Sean: Omaha has been an up-and-down team this season. You could say the same thing about Northern Michigan. With a matchups like this you’d be smart to expect a split. Wildcats 3-1, Mavericks 4-2
Lake Superior State at Michigan
Jack: The Lakers are scuffling right now, but a win over the Wolverines could be just what they need to get back on track. I think they’ll get a split in Ann Arbor. Lakers 5-3, Wolverines 4-1
Sean: Michigan has been battle tested by No. 4 Boston University and play strong defense under coach Red Berenson. Lake Superior has a dangerous with potential to go off at any time. Wolverines 4-2, 3-1
Princeton at Bemidji State
Jack: This seems like it could be a “trap series” for BSU — and I know next-to-nothing about Princeton. But I still have a feeling the Beavs shouldn’t have much to worry about. Beavers 3-1, 3-0
Sean: Princeton has struggled scoring this season, Bemidji State simply doesn’t let up goals very often. Seems like an obvious result to me. Beavers 3-0, 2-0.
Hockey East picks: Nov. 25-29
We both had identically respectable weeks, which isn’t bad considering all of the splits a weekend ago.Jim last week: 9-4-1Dave last week: 9-4-1Jim to date: 55-41-17Dave to date: 58-38-17Friday, November 25Friendship Four (Belfast, N.I.)Massachusetts vs. Vermont (11:00 a.m. ET, TV: NESN/ASN)Jim’s pick: The first edition of this special event nearly resulted in numerous upsets, but UMass-Lowell, the favorite entering, came out on top. At least in this game, I think picking the favorite is a must.UVM 4, UMass 2Dave’s pick: Jim has direct experience with this tournament that I lack, but we share the same conclusion, at least for this game.UVM 4, UMass 2Shillelagh Tournament (South Bend, Ind.)Holy Cross at Notre DameJim’s pick: Holy Cross has given some Hockey East teams a fit. But, simply put, Notre Dame is the better team here.UND 4, HC 1Dave’s pick: Agreed. The Irish aren’t number 12 in the country for nothing.UND 3, HC 1Minnesota at NortheasternJim’s pick: I really don’t have a good feeling for how good Northeastern is. But I’m ready to pick an upset, so let’s go with this one.NU 5, MN 4Dave’s pick: This was toughest pick of the week for me and I was tempted to go for the Huskies on home ice. But they’ve been a bit too up and down for me, so even though some of that could attributed to John Stevens being out of the lineup, I’ll stick with the Gophers.MN 4, NU 3 (OT)Providence at MerrimackJim’s pick: I liked the way Providence played this past weekend, so I’ll go with the Friars, even on the road.PC 3, MC 2Dave’s pick: I wasn’t impressed with Providence’s play at Northeastern for the first 45 minutes last Friday, but I still think they’re the decidedly better team, even in Merrimack’s little House of Horrors.PC 4, MC 3Saturday, November 26Friendship Four (Belfast, N.I.)Consolation (11 a.m. ET)/Championship (2:30 p.m. ET – TV: NESN/ASN)Jim’s pick: If Quinnipiac reaches the title game, I’m not picking against them. If it’s St. Lawrence, that’s a much more difficult decision. We will pick all possible outcomes to cover both games.QU 3, UVM 2; QU 4, UMass 1; UVM 3, SLU 2; SLU 4, UMass 2Dave’s pick: Hockey East Homer Hendrickson is going to pull a Benedict Arnold here and go with either of the ECAC teams over both of the good guys.QU 4, UVM 2; QU 5, UMass 1; SLU 3, UVM 2; SLU 4, UMass 1Shillelagh Tournament (South Bend, Ind.)Clarkson/Yale at Notre Dame (Consolation or Championship)Jim’s pick: Either of these could be difficult matchups for the Irish. But I’ll play Hockey East homer here.UND 3, Yale 1; UND 4, Clarkson 3Dave’s pick: Jim is working on my Homer side of the street, but I ain’t crossing over to the side. The Irish are just too good.UND 4, Yale 1; UND 3, Clarkson 2New Hampshire vs. Cornell (at Madison Square Garden, New York)Jim’s pick: I like some of the effort from UNH of late, but I have to go with the favorite.CU 4, UNH 2Dave’s pick: The Wildcats have won two straight, but Cornell has taken three of four and I guess I’m going against Hockey East yet again.CU 3, UNH 2Brown at MaineJim’s pick: Maine plays so well at home, so I have to pick them.UM 5, Brown 3Dave’s pick: I’d be picking the Black Bears over 1-7-0 Brown at any venue on the planet. At Alfond, this is a no-brainer.UM 4, Brown 1Colgate at ProvidenceJim’s pick: This one is a toss up to me, so I’ll pick Providence on home ice.PC 3, CU 2Dave’s pick: Here’s another one where home ice makes the choice easier, but I’d be picking the Friars regardless of venue in this match-up.PC 4, CU 2Sacred Heart at ConnecticutJim’s pick: This game has proven a challenge for UConn in the past and SHU has been strong this season against Hockey East opponents. And after outlining that, I’m going with UConn.UC 3, SHU 1Dave’s pick: I’m with UConn both as the stronger team and also at home.UC 4, SHU 1Sunday, November 27Minnesota at Boston CollegeJim’s pick: BC has played well of late, but seeing as I picked Minnesota to lose on Friday, I have a feeling the Gophers will be hungry on Sunday.MN 4, BC 3Dave’s pick: Despite that loss to Harvard last week, I’m still an Eagles believer.BC 4, MN 2Tuesday, November 29Boston College at NortheasternJim’s pick: The final game of what amounts to the BC-NU-MN round robin goes to the Eagles.BC 4, NU 2Dave’s pick: The Huskies will make it tough on home ice, but the Eagles will win to make them 12-1-1 over the last 14.BC 4, NU 3
Despite trying season, Alaska-Anchorage keeping focus on positives
It hasn’t been the easiest start to a season for Matt Thomas and Alaska-Anchorage.It began this summer when a budget crisis in the state meant a number of programs at the university — including his Seawolves hockey team — were potentially on the chopping block.Maybe it was the lingering spectre of the program potentially being on the chopping block, but the Seawolves subsequently struggled during their early-season tournaments in both Anchorage and Fairbanks — a place where, at least historically, they’ve been strong.The slide continued into the season. After an early 1-0 win over Canisius in Fairbanks’ tournament, the Seawolves lost six straight games. A few, like a 2-1 overtime loss at Bemidji State and a 3-2 overtime loss against Alabama-Huntsville, were close.Some were not.But going into last weekend’s series against a surging Michigan Tech squad, Thomas admitted it was starting to feel overwhelming.”We came real close there in Bemidji, then came home against Alabama and kind of suffered the same fate,” Thomas said. “It was kinda feeling like it was never going to happen.”The Seawolves lost to the Huskies 3-2 on Friday, extending their streak to seven losses. On Saturday, though, the Seawolves finally broke through. Jonah Renouf scored a third-period goal to send the game to overtime. UAA survived the five-on-five overtime to earn their first conference point, then won a shootout 1-0 to earn the extra point.True, it’s not a win — the Seawolves (1-10-1 overall, 0-5-1 WCHA) are still winless in the conference and have just one overall. They’ve also struggled to score — they’re averaging a league-worst 1.25 goals per game, worst in the country.But the tie represents a step forward for Thomas’ crew.”We’d been playing better as a team, so I was happy to see the guys get rewarded for it,” Thomas said. “The results ultimately aren’t there right now , but we feel like we’re a team that’s going to find a way to start winning a lot of these close games that we’re in.”It was good for us to get those points and move into the right direction.”Five of UAA’s games have been decided by one goal (counting the tie against Tech).For the most part, it’s been goaltender Olivier Mantha that has kept them in those games. Mantha, a junior, has a 3.10 goals-against average and a .913 save percentage. Not flashy numbers, but Thomas said that’s partly due to those early struggles the team overall had. He gave up 10 goals in the team’s first two games, against Minnesota and Alaska.”Mantha had a rough opening weekend that kinda hurt his numbers right out of the gate. It’s like having a bad GPA your first semester,” Thomas said. “He’s definitely a guy that gives us a chance every night to win; that’s all you can ask in your goaltender. He’s holding up his end of the bargain. It’s up to us to support him. We’re starting to find that rhythm.”This week, the Seawolves head to Bowling Green to take on another surging team, but after that, they return to Alaska and don’t have to travel back to the Lower 48 until January.That should give them some time to heal — last weekend against Tech, Thomas had just nine forwards available. Those injuries, though, have given playing time to a bunch of freshman. Five — Tomi Hiekkavirta, Corey Renwick, Aleksi Ainali, Nolan Nicholas and David Trinkberger — have played at least 10 games.”We’ve got a lot of young players in roles we didn’t envision them playing at the start of the year,” Thomas said. “A lot of that has to do with injuries and some other factors coming in. But guys are getting more ice time than we envisioned at the beginning of the year, so they’re learning quickly. And we’re learning some tough lessons. There’s always something very positive coming out of it.”That gives the Seawolves some hope for the future — both for now and in the long-term. The Alaska Dispatch News reported earlier this month that the Alaska hockey programs — in addition to some other proposed cuts like track and skiing — were spared.”We’re in a positive position moving forward,” Thomas said. “Support for athletics is strong. I think for our program and all the other programs here, there’s a bright future ahead.”
Quick draw
Ferris State freshman center Craig Pefley has turned some heads this season and he’s tied for the WCHA scoring lead with 15 points.The biggest key to his success?Face-offs.Pefley has won 172 face-offs this season, most in the league, and he’s only lost 122. That gives Pefley a .585 face-off percentage, which is third amongst players that have taken at least 100 face-offs.Pefley was named the WCHA Rookie of the Month for October, and hit a bit of a lull in early November before rediscovering his stride the past couple weeks.In his past three games Pefley has four points, three assists, and had the game-winning helper in each game of a sweep against Lake Superior State.So is Pefley the best face-off man in the WCHA? He’s certainly in the discussion with Michigan Tech freshman Alex Smith and Bowling Green junior Brett D’Andrea.
Ice Chips
– Alabama-Huntsville was on the wrong end of a 12-goal burst by Bowling Green. Huntsville has been on a bit of a slide after opening the season with back-to-back wins against Ferris State back in October.- Alaska was idle last week but returns to the ice this weekend to host Michigan Tech. Senior forward Marcus Basara and sophomore forward Chad Staley currently lead the Nanooks in scoring with nine points apiece, as both forwards have tallied four goals and five assists in 12 games.- Through 14 games, Bemidji State senior forward Marinaccio has already established a career season high for points with 13 (6g-7a). He’s already surpassed his 11-point (5g-6a) freshman season.- Mitch McClain had Bowling Green’s first hat trick since the 2013 season when he scored three goals against Alabama-Huntsville. McClain had the first, second, and eighth goal in an 8-3 victory.- After starting strong out of the gate, Lake Superior State dropped its fifth straight game and earned its sixth loss in eight games after being swept on the road at Ferris State. The Lakers head into a weekend series with Michigan at 6-6-0 overall and 4-6-0 in WCHA play.- Michigan Tech is unbeaten in its last five games. They beat and tied Alaska Anchorage last weekend and swept Lake Superior State the week before. Freshman goaltender Angus Redmond had 16 saves Friday and 21 Saturday. He ranks fifth in the country in goals-against average (1.57), seventh in winning percentage (.812), and 13th in save percentage (.925).- Minnesota State junior forward Brad McClure leads the Mavericks in shots on goal with 56 (sixth in the country), also leads the Mavericks in goals with seven (tied for 22nd in the nation). He scored twice in Minnesota State’s 4-1 win over Minnesota last Friday.- Northern Michigan will play Nebraska-Omaha this weekend in just its third non-conference series of the season. It’s also the first non-conference series against a team not named Wisconsin, after the Wildcats played the Badgers four times in the first two months.
Players of the week
This week’s WCHA players of the week are Bemidji State senior forward Brendan Harms (offensive), Minnesota State sophomore goaltender Jason Pawloski (defensive) and Ferris State freshman goaltender Justin Kapelmaster (rookie).
Bolding builds record of excellence at Norwich

Bird has Thoroughbreds galloping

Jordan having breakout season at Hamline

Quinnipiac looks to continue building

Friendship Four event proving to be a once-in-a-lifetime experience

Being Thankful
I remember in years past, I would use this space to go team-by-team throughout the league and write paragraphs and paragraphs about what each team is thankful for. The reality is the amount of research left me more worn out than a Thanksgiving Dinner (and the year’s my colleague Dave Hendrickson did the same, he shared the same thoughts).So this year, I’m going to pick and choose a few things that people around the league have to be thankful for without the long drawn out expectations. If you don’t understand, maybe you don’t get my humor (most people don’t). Or maybe they’re simply not humorous.So here goes:
- Boston College coach Jerry York: For his team’s success in his absence, and for good eyesight once he is back to health
- Boston University coach David Quinn: For the U.S. National Team Development Program
- Maine coach Red Gendron: For the return of Blaine Byron, Cam Brown and Nolan Vesey to the players we all know they can be
- Notre Dame coach Jeff Jackson: For the Big Ten becoming the Big Seven
- New Hampshire coach Dick Umile: For the goal scoring touch of Patrick Grasso
- Connecticut coach Mike Cavanaugh and UMass Lowell coach Norm Bazin: For the ability of their staffs to continually recruit great goaltenders (and let’s not forget, those two goaltending corps will match up one week from now)
- Northeastern coach Jim Madigan: For the knowledge and understanding his team will always finish strong (and for that Hockey East championship ring)
- Hockey East commissioner Joe Bertagna: For the new retractable roof that is being installed over Fenway Park. Oh wait, that’s not happening? Well Joe, then, will be thankful for 35 degrees and sunny in Boston on Jan. 7 and 14.
- And for myself and Dave: We’re always thankful to our readers! Let’s finish strong in 2016 and look forward to a great second half of the season!
Army West Point seniors take part in ‘special night,’ receive postgraduation orders

Leaders of the Pack
It’s not even Christmas, but it’s already time to start having the same discussion we have every year.Seven points – or the difference of two good vs. bad weekends – separate first from last place in Atlantic Hockey’s standings. Three teams are tied for fifth, and three teams are tied for eighth. I know I speak for Chris Lerch when I say, “Here we go again.”Army West Point leads the league with 12 points, but they’ve among three teams who played 10 AHC games. Behind them, Canisius and Robert Morris have 10 and eight points, respectively, and both have games in hand against both the Black Knights and RIT, who is tied with the Golden Griffins for second.None of that includes Air Force, who is in a three-team jumble with Mercyhurst and AIC for fifth. The Falcons only played six league games, poising them to make a run at the top of the league.Even Niagara, who is in 11th with five points, has won two of their last three games, including a 5-4 win over Mercyhurst, to pull closer to the teams in front of them.We say it every year, and we’ve said it all year this year. Points in games right now matter. A bad night and an errant loss can and, for someone, will be the difference between a closer road trip or a home series or even a bye. It’s hard to imagine that being the case, since the season is barely two months old, but we all see what’s coming. And we all know what’s happening in the present.”Getting multiple points in a weekend is very hard,” Bentley coach Ryan Soderquist said following his team’s split with Mercyhurst. “Every team in the league is evenly matched, and I think every weekend is going to be a battle (for everyone).”
Nonconference Bonanza
With the holiday on Thursday, there’s a little bit more leeway for teams to avoid playing conference games, although there will be one series between Niagara and AIC in Massachusetts and a single game between Mercyhurst and Canisius on Friday.That opens the door for some local non-conference games. Of the five teams playing non-conference games, four are either playing at home or staying local to their campuses.Holy Cross is the lone outlier, traveling to Notre Dame for the Fighting Irish’s annual Shillelagh Tournament. They’ll play the Irish on Friday night before playing either Clarkson or Yale in the second day.Bentley heads down the road to Harvard for a game at the Bright-Landry Hockey Center, while Sacred Heart travels up to Storrs for a game against in-state rival and old conference foe Connecticut. Air Force hosts Denver before traveling to Colorado College on Saturday.Robert Morris will play Dartmouth twice, but both games are in Pittsburgh. Saturday’s game is scheduled for 84 Lumber Arena on campus at RMU, while Sunday is at PPG Paints Arena, the home of the Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins.
What’s In A Name?
The NHL unveiled its 31st franchise this week, officially giving a name and logo to the team to the first major sports franchise in Las Vegas. The Vegas Golden Knights, as they’re dubbed, will play their home games on the Las Vegas Strip at T-Mobile Arena.The name itself is derived from an Atlantic Hockey connection. Its lead investor is Bill Foley, a West point graduate who is chairman of the appropriately-named Black Knight Financial Services. Foley’s investment group responsible for bringing the NHL to Las Vegas also draws its name from Army – Black Knight Sports & Entertainment.Army’s colors are black and gold, as are the Golden Knights. The logo, utilizing a spartan logo stylized with the letter “V,” also bears a resemblance to the current Black Knights’ logo introduced in April 2015.
Players of the Week
Player of the Week: Niagara’s Derian Plouffe: It feels really good to recognize a Purple Eagle. Plouffe scored four points last week and registered a +6 rating in a four point week. After helping Niagara over Mercyhurst with a plus-3 rating, he registered a plus-3 in a weekend split against Sacred Heart.Defensive Player of the Week: RIT’s Adam Brubacher: Brubacher was plus-3 with two assists and two blocked shots in RIT’s weekend sweep over Army West Point. He now leads the Tigers with an absurdly good +9 rating.Goalie of the Week: Canisius’ Charles Williams: Williams stopped 63 of 64 shots in a three-point weekend against AIC. It included 39 shots in the series’ second game in a 1-1 tie that moved the Golden Griffins into a second place tie in Atlantic Hockey. That was his seventh 30-save performance of the season.Rookie of the Week: Canisius’ Matt Hoover: Hoover scored a natural hat trick in a 4-0 win over AIC on Friday night last week. It was the first Canisius freshman hat trick in nearly 10 years; the last one was by Jason Weeks in 2006-07.
Happy Turkey Day!
Once again I’ll speak for Chris Lerch, but I wish all of you a very Happy Thanksgiving this week. These are divisive days, but regardless of what side you land on, we can all give thanks to have this great game of hockey. For me personally, I’m especially grateful and thankful to be able to cover this sport and this league, and I’m especially thankful for everyone who read and react to what we do.So join me in wishing everyone the greatest of turkey naps this week and remember – gravy goes with everything!
Harvard finding great success while playing a man up

RPI still trying to get the engines running
Rensselaer is currently on a six-game losing streak, which is its third losing streak of the season. The Engineers are 2-11-1 on the season.What has been the problem as they approach the midway point of their season? Trying to find confidence.”We are young and immature,” RPI coach Seth Appert said after the 5-0 loss to New Hampshire on Tuesday night. “We are trying to work through that and I am trying to help our guys. Our seniors haven’t been go-to guys in their career. Riley Bourbonnais, a little bit towards the end of last year. We’ve had older guys above them. We’ve had the Jason Kasdorf’s, the Zach Schroeder’s and Chris Bradley.”We’ve had a lot of guys that logged a lot of minutes, but the pressure of leading. We are struggling with that right now. It’s just the reality.”Seventeen of the 27 players on the roster are either freshmen or sophomores with only four seniors this season.”We lost some games late in the first month of the season in the third period,” Appert said. “That shook our confidence a little bit. Right now, we are coming out a little tentative mentally. It’s almost like you are waiting for something bad to happen before you get start playing a little bit. We have to fight through that, I have to help my guys through that. Our staff hasn’t done a good enough job, I haven’t done a good enough job figuring that out yet to help this group finding their identity, finding their way to play the way we need to be successful.”In that first month, RPI had a 2-1 lead going into the third period on Oct. 8 against Maine before losing 4-2. On Oct. 21, RPI took a 3-2 lead in the third period against Niagara before the Purple Eagles tied it with 3:14 remaining. The game ended in a tie. Then on Nov. 5, the Engineers had a 2-0 in the third period before Yale scored twice and then in overtime for the 3-2 victory.RPI is looking to stop the losing skid this weekend, heading to the Valley of the Sun to take on the Sun Devils. If the Engineers do pick up a victory this weekend, it will be their first away from the Houston Field House.
Players of the Week
On Tuesday night, the ECAC announced the three players of the week for this past weekend.Mike Marnell, a junior forward for St. Lawrence, was named the Player of the Week with his four goals in the 7-2 victory over Brown. He has now surpassed his point total from last season where he had 13 points. This year, he has 15 points, including seven goals, which matches his total from 2015-16.Clarkson’s Devin Brosseau picked up his second and third goals of his NCAA career against Brown on Friday night. That was good enough to pick up the Rookie of the Week honors. He now sits second on the team in points with 12, one behind Jordan Boucher.Harvard’s Merrick Madsen won the Goaltender of the Week honor with the 5-2 victory over BC. On the year, he’s 5-2-1 with a 2.18 GAA and a .915 save percentage.
Minnesota flexing its muscle as early-season road warriors

If it’s a weekend and there’s hockey to be played, then the Golden Gophers must be on the road.
For Thanksgiving, Minnesota heads east to play Northeastern Friday and Boston College Saturday. Last weekend, the 5-3-2 Gophers split a home-and-home series against Minnesota State, and the Gophers have played just four home games this season with a record of 2-1-1 in Mariucci Arena.
“At the end of November,” said coach Don Lucia, “we will have played one home series so far this season.”
And what a series it was, renewing the rivalry with North Dakota that resulted in a 5-5 tie and a 3-0 win for a Minnesota team that is, according to Lucia, making progress.”We’ve played a lot of good teams, which will make us better as a team,” said Lucia.
The extended nonconference schedule that each Big Ten team plays before league play begins in December provides an opportunity for B1G coaches to build a variety of schedules. Lucia said that he and his staff made a conscious decision to schedule challenging teams, although the amount of travel wasn’t something done by design. And he said the start the Gophers have had this season is, in part, because of the level of competition coupled with travel.
“We need to score more goals more consistently,” said Lucia. The Gophers are averaging 3.40 goals per game for the 18th-best scoring offense so far nationally. At the end of last season, Minnesota was 11th in the country in offense but scoring 3.27 goals per game.Most recently against Minnesota State, said Lucia, “We score two goals on a weekend and get a split. That split part is good.
“Through ten games this season, no one on the Minnesota squad has registered more than four total goals. While Minnesota’s fifth-best power play is clicking along at 25.6 percent, the Gophers are looking for offense five-on-five. That’s how playing such good teams is such a mixed blessing.”
Part of the offense is playing good teams like Clarkson and St. Lawrence, who were both really good, really tough, and North Dakota is North Dakota,” said Lucia. “Those are going to make us a better team. You improve when you’re going to grind them out.”
We’re breaking in some new defensemen, so we ‘ve got three of the six [defensemen] are newcomers. Our specialty teams have been better and our power play is good.
“The Gophers continue to rely heavily on sophomore goaltender Eric Schierhorn (2.64 GAA, .900 SV%). The sophomore, said Lucia, has had some ups and downs in the early going, but he has confidence in his starter, who went 20-17-0 in 2015-2016.
“It’s been his M.O. since he’s been here that if he doesn’t play well on a Friday, he always works hard to recover and play better on Saturday,” said Lucia.
After Friday’s 4-1 road loss to Minnesota State, Schierhorn bounced back with a 1-0 shutout home win Saturday. The week before against North Dakota, Schierhorn recorded a 4-0 shutout on the Saturday following Minnesota’s 5-5 Friday night tie. Schierhorn now has three shutouts on the season, six in his collegiate career.This weekend’s games against Northeastern and Boston College will be Minnesota’s final nonconference warmup before hosting Ohio State Dec. 2-3 to open Big Ten play.
“Again, we’re going to play to good teams,” said Lucia. “This is the time of the season that Northeastern gets going every year. Northeastern’s very skilled. They only had one loss in the second half of last season.
“Knock on wood, we’ve had some decent sets against BC over the years. Both of teams can get up and down the ice and they can score goals. Their seniors are having some really good years. Their freshman goaltender [Joe Woll] has nearly the same save percentage that [Thatcher] Demko had last year. It should be a good game.”
For his part, Lucia said that he’s enjoying the travel, even if so much sightseeing hasn’t been deliberate. He seems to get a kick out of showing players a bit of the hockey landscape outside of their own league and said that the trip to upstate New York to play Clarkson and St. Lawrence was especially nice. Of course, he loved returning to Alaska, where he coached in Fairbanks from 1981 to 1993, first as an assistant and then as head coach.
“We wanted to take a trip to Alaska,” said Lucia. “It’s good to take a group up there every three or four years if you can do it.”
One benefit of so much road work is the reciprocation. Teams like Northeastern and Boston College will travel in the future to Minneapolis to play on Minnesota’s home ice. As for this trip east, Lucia said that he the day off between the game against Northeastern and Boston College was deliberate.
“If a team’s not playing Friday,” he said, “we’re getting Saturday off.”The Eagles played Connecticut last night but don’t play against until they meet the Gophers Sunday afternoon.Said Lucia, “I did schedule a little bit smarter.”
Big Ten, big win percentage
If you think that the Big Ten as a conference is off to a good start, you’re correct. After a weekend during which B1G teams went 6-2-0 in nonconference play, the league’s overall inter-conference record improves to 38-19-8 on the season for a Division I-leading win percentage of .646. The Big Ten finished 2015-2015 with an inter-conference record of 40-40-11.
The improved record and win percentage against teams in other conferences may be very significant toward the end of the season. Right now, one week away from concluding the league’s long nonconference prelude to Big Ten play, the league has three teams under consideration in the PairWise Rankings: Penn State (second), Ohio State (eighth) and Minnesota (13th). Wisconsin is sitting at 21st, Michigan is 27th and Michigan State is 51st.
Three teams – half the league – emerging from the first third of the season in such good PWR shape is good news. When conference play begins, said Lucia, “Now you’re playing teams with better records within the conference.” This can increase the league’s chances of putting more than one team into the NCAA tournament next March.
The league seems to have improved overall, but it’s difficult to point to exactly why. You have two teams really scoring goals – Penn State and Ohio State – and the league seems to be getting improved goaltending overall. Although he hasn’t seen a lot of his conference’s other teams play yet, Lucia said that he’s not really surprised.
“I knew if Ohio State could stay healthy, they’d be good,” said Lucia. “They have a good, veteran team. That’s why I voted them number one in our poll.”We knew Wisconsin was going to be better. Penn State has gotten off to a good start, and Michigan’s getting good goaltending. That was their question mark. And Michigan is Michigan.”
Lucia said that he thinks that the standings are going to be very close at the end of the regular season. “I think you’ll see the conference in better shape overall. No one is going to run away with this.”I hope he’s right. Exciting, relevant Big Ten hockey would be very welcome after the first of the year.
Penn State’s quick start
How good are the Nittany Lions?
Well, they’re enjoying the nation’s best unbeaten streak (10-0-1) and have lost a single game this season.
They’re leading the nation in shots on goal per game for the second straight season, averaging 46.64 and many of those shots go in. PSU leads the country in scoring, averaging 4.77 goals per game. Nineteen Nittany Lions have scored at least a goal and sophomore Andrew Sturtz has 10 of them in 11 games, sixth in the nation, and that’s just eight short of what he totaled for all of 2015-2016.
A pair of rookies is making a huge impact on PSU. Freshman forward Denis Smirnov leads all Big Ten players and all freshman nationally with 22 points (9-13—22) and he’s fourth nationally in points per game. Goalie Peyton Jones (2.16 GAA, .912 SV%) has the third-best win percentage (.950) nationally in 10 games played. In front of Jones, Penn State’s penalty kill is second in the country (91.8).
The Nittany Lions are idle this weekend in advance of opening Big Ten play at home against Michigan Dec. 1-2. That series will end a 10-game home stand for Penn State.
Those Buckeyes, though
The 8-1-4 Buckeyes haven’t lost on the road (6-0-2) and are likewise done until the beginning of Big Ten play, when they travel to Minnesota (Dec. 2-3).
And like the Nittany Lions, they can score. Averaging 4.38 goals per game, Ohio State’s offense is second nationally. Fourteen different Buckeyes have found the back of the net this season, led in goal scoring by senior Nick Schilkey (12-5—17). One of three players nationally to have scored a dozen or more goals so far this season, Schilkey is fifth nationally in goals per game and needs seven more goals to equal his career-best 19 of a season ago.
The Buckeyes’ power play is 11th in the nation (22.0), and Schilkey is one of 25 players nationally to have netted four power-play goals this season; in 36 games last season, Schilkey netted six goals on the PP.
Three stars of the week
It’s all about the Nittany Lions and Buckeys this week.
First star – Penn State freshman forward Denis Smirnov Smirnov (Moscow, Russia) led all B1G players in points with five, including his first career hat trick – the fourth in Penn State history – in the Nittany Lions’ 7-4 win over Arizona State Friday, and he had the game-winning goals in both of PSU’s wins in the sweep of the Sun Devils. This is Smirnov’s second career weekly Big Ten award, and his second consecutive week of honors, as he earned the second star last week.
Second star – Ohio State senior goaltender Matt TomkinsTomkins (Sherwood Park, Alberta) registered a weekend save percentage of .962 and was the only B1G goalie to have earned two wins on the weekend as the Buckeyes swept Rensselaer on the road, 4-0 and 3-2. Friday’s win was his third career shutout and his first of the season. This is his third career weekly Big Ten honor and the first for Tomkins this season.
Third star – Ohio State freshman forward Tanner LaczynskiLaczynski (Shorewood, Ill.) had two goals and two assists in OSU’s series against Rensselaer, including the game-winning goal in Saturday’s 3-2 win. This is his first career weekly Big Ten honor.
My ballot
1. Minnesota-Duluth
2. Denver
3. Boston College
4. Quinnipiac
5. Ohio State
6. Penn State
7. Boston University
8. Bemidji State
9. North Dakota
10. St. Cloud
11. Mass-Lowell
12. Minnesota
13. Union
14. Minnesota State
15. Western Michigan
16. Harvard
17. Michigan
18. Notre Dame
19. Vermont
20. St. Lawrence
North Dakota works on the ‘process,’ blanks St. Cloud State twice on the road

What they are thankful for
This holiday is all about giving thanks for the good things you have. As such, here is what the coaches of each NCHC team have to be thankful for.Colorado CollegeMike Haviland’s team notched its first league win a month earlier than last season, and has shown signs of improvement while still also showing the inconsistency that comes with being a young team. Haviland is thankful not only for the early wins, but the play of freshman Mason Bergh, who leads the team in scoring with four goals and two assists.DenverJim Montgomery’s squad started the season going 0-2 at home in the IceBreaker tournament, but has since rebounded. Part of that has been the play of goaltender Tanner Jaillet, who earned the starting job the second weekend of Denver’s season against Boston University. Montgomery is thankful to see Jaillet continue to improve, as his GAA has dropped to 1.61 from last year’s 2.27 and his save percentage is up to .935 from last year’s .922. Jaillet’s play is one reason Denver’s penalty kill is the best of all NCHC teams at 86.3 percent.MiamiEnrico Blasi is thankful for the play of senior forward Anthony Louis, who has 17 points in 13 games. He also is thankful for the play of freshman goaltender Ryan Larkin last weekend in Denver, who helped his team earn two ties, and hopes it continues and develops more consistently.Minnesota-DuluthScott Sandelin is thankful for his season to date. The Bulldogs are ranked first in the country and have compiled an impressive 10-2-2 record and are 7-1 in conference. Part of the success Duluth has had has come from improvement in the power play, which after struggling in recent years, is currently clicking at 21.13 percent, 13th in the country. Sandelin is also thankful for time off, as his team is off for the next two weekends before facing No. 2 Denver on the road.North DakotaNorth Dakota entered the season ranked No. 1 as the defending champion, and returned a lot of talent, including goaltender Cam Johnson and freshman phenom Brock Boeser. However, what Brad Berry is thankful for is the emergence of Shane Gersich as an offensive force. Gersich, like Boeser a sophomore, is averaging more than a point a game better than what he did as a freshman. Berry is also thankful that his team ended its winless streak of six games while possibly getting the power play untracked.OmahaThe Mavericks are at .500 in the conference and one game over that mark overall. For coach Dean Blais, what he is thankful for is that his team has managed to overcome a poor home mark of 2-5-1 by going 3-0 on the road and 1-0 at neutral sites. Since Omaha’s last six games of the first half are on the road, perhaps that bodes well for them. Blais is also thankful that forward like Austin Ortega returned as a senior. Ortega leads the team in scoring with nine goals and seven assists. Ortega could easily have left for the pros last spring, like his former classmate Jake Guentzel did. Guentzel, incidentally, scored twice in his debut with the Pittsburg Penguins on Tuesday night.St. Cloud StateThe Huskies lost their top six scorers from last year’s team, five to graduation and one to early departure to the pros. Their starting goaltender also left early for the pros. Coach Bob Motzko knew it would take time for his young team to work out the kinks, so he is thankful they are sitting at .500 so far despite playing some top-ranked teams like Minnesota, Minnesota-Duluth, Minnesota State, and North Dakota. Motzko is also thankful that Judd Peterson is developing into a scoring threat in his junior year.Western MichiganAll the prognosticators had Western Michigan off their radar, so coach Andy Murray is happy not only with his team’s good start, but also that the Broncos avoided falling off like they did last year after starting well. Western Michigan is the only NCHC team to defeat No. 1 Minnesota-Duluth so far, in part because of a lethal power play that ranks sixth in the country. Murray is thankful for not only the power play’s effectiveness, but the play of sophomore forward Matthew Iacopelli, who leads the team in scoring with 12 goals, second in the country, and also has four assists.
NCHC players of the week
Offensive player of the week – Matthew Iacopelli, Western Michigan: Iacopelli had four points as the Broncos tied and beat Air Force at home. In the 5-5 tie Friday, he assisted on Western’s first two goals in the first period. On Saturday, he lodged his fourth multi-goal game of the season with two goals, including the first game-winner of his career. On the weekend, he had two goals, two assists, and finished the weekend plus-3. He is second in the NCAA this year with 12 goals.Defensive player of the week – Tucker Poolman, North Dakota: Poolman helped North Dakota notch its first sweep in 18 years, getting three points while also helping staunch St. Cloud’s strong offense. Friday, he assisted on North Dakota’s second goal. Saturday, he assisted on the first goal and then scored North Dakota’s second goal. On the weekend, he finished plus-2 and anchored the penalty kill that killed all eight St. Cloud power plays.Rookie of the week Ryan Larkin, Miami: Larkin was outstanding in helping Miami earn two ties on the road against Denver, facing a barrage of shots each night, and blanked Denver in 10 minutes of overtime play and another 10 minutes of three-on-three play. Friday in a 1-1 tie, he made a then-career-high 38 saves, then made seven more saves in the three-on-three OT. Saturday, he topped that with 49 saves, including 13 while short-handed. He finished with a .967 save percentage with 87 stops no 90 shots and a 1.38 goals-against average.Goaltender of the week – Cam Johnson, North Dakota: Johnson helped North Dakota earn its first road sweep of St. Cloud in 18 years with two shutouts, helping the Fighting Hawks end a six-game winless streak in the process. Friday he made 26 saves, including five while short-handed, in a 4-0, and topped that Saturday with 36 saves, three while short-handed, while earning a nod as first star of the game. He made 62 saves and has an active shutout streak of 153:55.
Wednesday Women: Considering chaos

Arlan: Two of the three teams that went into the weekend unbeaten tasted defeat, including No. 1 Wisconsin, which split at Minnesota-Duluth. After starting the season with a 12-0-1 burst that pushed it to No. 5 in the polls, Colgate was toppled twice within 24 hours. Even during its historic opening month and a half, Colgate had walked a high-wire act at times against lesser competition that apparently kept the voters hesitant to rank the Raiders higher. Those were just two of the eight ranked teams that were defeated or tied over the weekend, with only St. Lawrence and Clarkson coming through unscathed. It may not have been a coincidence that those were the only two not facing a ranked opponent.
There were other significant developments far from the rankings as well. Lindenwood got its first win of any kind of the campaign, and in the aftermath, the Lions decided to share the joy as RIT bounced back the next day with its first CHA win of the young season. Minnesota State claimed its only WCHA triumph since Feb. 2, 2015, by edging Ohio State. Six contests over the weekend went into overtime tied, and five minutes of game action later, that’s how they ended. That included Minnesota and North Dakota, who deadlocked twice, and Northeastern, which was unable to reach a verdict versus two different partners.
Let’s start with Wisconsin, the favorite of many to hoist the championship trophy come March. The Badgers embarked on a tough trip to Duluth without goaltender Ann-Renée Desbiens, their most important piece, to face a long-time rival that is enjoying a resurgence. The visitors dominated the opening 20 minutes to the tune of a 20-3 advantage in shots, but that didn’t translate into any advantage on the scoreboard that remained at 0-0. Thereafter, Wisconsin didn’t have many answers as the Bulldogs pulled away to a statement, 4-1 victory.
What do we make of that? We could say that it was a lot to expect of freshman goaltender Nikki Cece making her first collegiate appearance. She allowed four goals on 30 shots, but looking at the highlights, I’d place the blame elsewhere than on her shoulders. She wasn’t getting a lot of help on the goals that she allowed or on many of the scoring chances that she repelled. A couple of times, Cece made the first save on a quality chance, only to have an uncovered Bulldog near the crease put away the rebound. UMD also scored on a wraparound that perhaps she could have denied more emphatically, but Katherine McGovern was allowed multiple pokes at the puck while the attendant Badgers were slow to neutralize her. The final UMD goal had a couple of Cece’s defensemen coughing up the puck and combining to screen her most effectively. Did Wisconsin miss Desbiens? I’m sure it did, but the regulars in the lineup could have done far more to make it an easier transition for the newcomer. That includes the offense that has shown a propensity to be fairly easy to contain for longer stretches than one would expect given its personnel.
On Saturday, the Badgers bounced back with a 4-1 win of their own, led by a hat trick from junior Annie Pankowski, her first three goals of the year. I’ve seen people explain that despite not scoring in her first nine games for Wisconsin, Pankowski has done a number of other things for her team. Maybe, but we’re not talking about a player like Sydney McKibbon, who truly does fill a lot of roles for UW, and if she provides offense, then that is a bonus. Pankowski missed several games while she was away competing for the United States at the Four Nations Tournament. She’s on that roster because of her ability to bring instant offense, and on top of whatever little things she does, I’d have expected more tangible contributions than six assists and a plus-3 rating through her first nine games. Having now found the net in a big way in her 10th game, maybe her slump, injury, or whatever it was, is now behind her, and she’ll get back to leading Wisconsin’s attack.
What did you think of Wisconsin over the weekend, and because it takes two to tango, the Bulldogs as well?
Candace: The Bulldogs’ win Friday certainly caught me off guard, especially given that it was fairly convincing. I knew Wisconsin wouldn’t get through the season undefeated, but I figured that when the Badgers did lose, it would be a tight, one-goal game. A three-goal loss definitely wasn’t what I would have expected.
Like you said, the temptation might be for some people to pin the loss on a rookie goaltender. There’s no question that making your first collegiate start against the No. 3 team in the country is a daunting task, but when you dig down, I think there was more going on. When you outshoot your opponent 20-3 and don’t get a goal, that’s cause for concern. The Badgers have too much offensive talent not to finish when they are getting so many chances. Yes, Maddie Rooney is an outstanding goaltender, but I don’t feel that Wisconsin was getting her to move too much, and when a goalie can square off, she’s going to be more effective. You mentioned Pankowski, and her production has been down, her worst so far in her collegiate career, but she’s still averaging almost a point a game, and I expect her to get untracked. Her getting a hat trick Saturday had to come as a relief, especially since the teams were tied 1-1 after the first period, and Pankowski scored the three goals from there.
In some ways, the Badgers’ loss isn’t that surprising, however. They have struggled at times. They needed to rally from a 2-1 deficit against St. Cloud in the third period on opening weekend, and they played Ohio State to a draw. The Badgers really shouldn’t have been in that position in either game, given their talent level. I thought they had turned a corner with the sweep of North Dakota and the convincing sweep of Bemidji State, but perhaps maintaining that consistency was too much. Perhaps the loss to Duluth will help the Badgers play looser in two weeks when they face Minnesota, a series they need to at least split.
As for the Bulldogs, they continue to show that they’ve turned a corner, and are back in that elite conversation. The scoring production has fallen off a little, but Lara Stalder is still having a great year, and McGovern and Ashleigh Brykaliuk are also contributing quite well. Having an elite line like that helps all the other players on the team in terms of production, even if the Bulldogs aren’t quite as deep as say, Minnesota. Having said that, I could see the Bulldogs playing themselves into position for a home ice spot in the first round of the NCAA tournament. If that happens, we might have three WCHA teams in the top four, and a possible all-WCHA final again.
Of course, some Eastern teams will have a say in that, especially St. Lawrence, which is currently in the top spot of the PairWise. Before we get to them though, let’s talk about Hockey East a little. Vermont tying Northeastern came as a huge surprise to me given how the Huskies had been playing. Northeastern needed two third-period goals just to get that tie. The Huskies then played Boston College to a 2-2 draw Sunday at home, twice rallying from a goal down. Each team also got a short-handed goal. Boston College has actually played itself back into the at-large position in the PairWise, but it’s still a long season. Northeastern gets another shot at the Eagles, again at home, this Saturday, which could have some pretty big implications down the line.
Hockey East just seems so volatile right now. It’s hard to know what to think. Maine, for instance, is 2-8 in conference, but those two wins are over BC and Boston University. Providence has actually been playing quite well, and currently sits at fourth with a .500 record. I could see the Friars battle New Hampshire and Connecticut for the final home ice spot in the Hockey East tournament. What’s your take on top dog in Hockey East right now? Does it seem like BC again?
Arlan: Regarding the PairWise, BC is back in the picture — almost. The Eagles sit seventh, which sounds fine, but it’s only worth an at-large berth should they not need one. One CHA team is going to make the field. If BC doesn’t win the Hockey East tournament, then that would be a second team below the Eagles in the current PairWise that would be advancing, and the seventh spot won’t get a team into the field. The good news is that more than three months remain for BC to improve its lot in national tournament life.
As for whether they seem like themselves again, I can see that, as long as you don’t mean like the Eagles of the previous two seasons. Their pace is much more in line with what it was each of the four seasons that preceded 2014-15 and 2015-16, when Katie Crowley made and then surpassed history at Boston College.
The encouraging thing is that a couple of BC’s best players thus far are rookie forwards. Delaney Belinskas leads the team with 11 goals, and Caitrin Lonergan is second with nine tallies and is tops in assists with 12 and points at 21. Lonergan is 13th in the country in scoring average. That has contributed to BC scoring roughly three and a half times per game, which is not too shabby. That’s more than a goal and a half less than last season, but I doubt anyone expected to put up the type of numbers of that juggernaut. However, the drop in production is compounded by the fact that the Eagles are allowing more than .6 more goals per game. The net result is that a scoring margin that was 3.95 for last year’s Eagles is down to 1.6 this time, and it figures that there will be more frequent games where the opponent is within range.
Those numbers, like the Eagles themselves, can certainly change and improve. The returning players figure to become more accustomed to life after Alex Carpenter and Haley Skarupa, and they’ll figure out what their new teammates bring to the ice. Their most difficult nonconference games are behind them, as are half of their Hockey East games with Northeastern and Boston University, so BC should improve on that seventh position in the PairWise, and it should be in the NCAA tournament even if it fails to defend its Hockey East Tournament title.
As for the Hockey East regular season title, yes, that should be BC once more. It took the Eagles a while to figure out how to win the darn thing, but they look poised to put together a nice string of those championships. The league playoff title is a bit more precarious. One slip there is a team’s undoing, and BC has shown that it can be at something other that its best from time to time. While both Northeastern and BU figure to be capable of springing such an upset, only one is likely to get the chance if they finish 1-2-3 again with BC on top of the heap.
Am I being too pessimistic about the rest of the league, given that BC has been dead even in goals scored and allowed thus far in two games with BU and one with Northeastern?
Candace: No, that seems like a fair assessment to me. Northeastern and Boston University seem more inconsistent, so I think that with consistency an issue, it makes the Eagles the favorite for the regular season title, but before the last two seasons, BC was also vulnerable to slips come the Hockey East tournament, so one bad game can do them in and it might again. Regardless, I don’t see anyone else in Hockey East stepping up to dethrone BC of the regular season crown except its cross-town rivals. The Eagles already have a good jump on the rest of the league, including leading Boston University by five points. Northeastern is the team closest, and does have two games in hand while trailing by four points, but the game with Vermont seems to indicate some vulnerability from Northeastern. Long-term, just like BC seems to figuring out its offense, I think the Eagles will figure out their defense more as the season goes on and become a more potent threat. I think one of the Boston teams wins the Hockey East tournament, and it could be a coin flip come the postseason between BC and Northeastern, with BU an outside threat.
Boston University had a good weekend last weekend in sweeping Merrimack, but BU still has trouble giving up too many goals. Case in point was last night against Harvard. The Terriers built up a two-goal lead in the third period on a goal by Rebecca Leslie, only to let Harvard tie it with goals in the last three minutes of the game and force overtime. The positive is that Victoria Bach scored with 1:46 left in the overtime to eke out a win for BU. BU’s defense gives up on average three goals per game, and some are sloppy. Up 3-1, they let Sydney Daniels score with a slap shot from the left point with 3:45 to play, and then they let Haley Mullins get behind both defensemen and get sprung on a breakaway with under a minute to play, and Mullins scored top shelf with 49.6 seconds left to send it to OT. The Terriers really need to get better defensively if they want to make a push for the postseason.
We’ve talked a lot about the teams in the ECAC that are in the upper echelon, but one we haven’t talked about much is Cornell. I’m wondering if it’s time to give the Big Red another look after last weekend, where they beat Princeton and tied Quinnipiac. As recently as three years ago, Cornell was a top squad with a fearsome offense that was a virtual lock to make the NCAA tournament. They are off to a 6-2-1 start so far, and it seems like Doug Derraugh has his team clicking again. Freshman Kristin O’Neill leads the team in scoring with 10 points and a 1.111 points-per-game average. Senior Hanna Bunton is also scoring well. Goaltender Paula Voorheis is a senior now, and seems to be establishing more consistency in net with a .951 save percentage. Do you think Cornell belongs in the conversation with St. Lawrence, Clarkson, Colgate and Quinnipiac as a threat to win the ECAC tournament and possibly make the NCAA tournament?
Arlan: Yes, but I’d need to qualify that to some extent. I think that a few weeks back, most people would have included Princeton in that list, and the reason that you didn’t now hinges to a large extent on the fact that Voorheis made 38 saves in the Big Red’s 2-1 win over the Tigers on Saturday. We knew that Princeton would need to replace Kimberly Newell in its own net. Alysia DaSilva has done fairly well with a .925 save percentage, but that is only 10 games into her first season as the starter, so she may have a higher ceiling.
Jeff Kampersal also has an intriguing prospect on his roster in Canadian Under-18 veteran Steph Neatby. Neatby is a 6-footer like Voorheis, and I wonder if Kampersal is hoping to redshirt her this season so that she’d have three years of eligibility remaining after the junior DaSilva graduates.
Anyway, getting back to this season’s Tigers, I think that they have more offensive pop than teams like Cornell and Quinnipiac do. Any team that can score always has the equivalent of a puncher’s chance in hockey, and if you combine that with goaltending that we could reasonably seeing heating up and staying hot, I think it is too soon to discount Princeton from the ECAC tournament picture despite the four losses in the first 10 games. I guess the bigger reason to overlook Princeton may be the team’s own postseason history, where for whatever reason, it hasn’t managed to make deep runs. With one of the most dynamic defensemen in the country in senior Kelsey Koelzer and Karlie Lund showing no sign of a sophomore slump as she leads the team with nine goals and 14 points, I’m going to keep an eye on the Tigers. Perhaps Greg Fargo will as well after they hung seven goals on his previously unbeaten Raiders in the first 45 minutes on Friday.
When Cornell had its best teams, its trademark was high-level talent on the blue line. That seems to be the case again. Despite graduating Cassandra Poudrier off of last year’s roster, Derraugh has rebuilt around the likes of sophomore Micah Hart and freshman Jaime Bourbonnais, both Canadian veterans of the U-18 World Championships, and junior Erin O’Connor, who was a member of our All-Rookie team a couple of season back. That unit has likely aided Voorheis’ strong start. The Big Red will need the tight defense to continue, because after the O’Neill and Bunton, the offense tails of markedly.
What about the rest of the Ivy League teams? Brown and Dartmouth are rebuilding under new coaches. Yale hasn’t quite gotten back to the level it had reached in Jaimie Leonoff’s senior season. I think I started the season expecting more from Harvard than you and Nicole did, but I certainly didn’t expect to see the Crimson dip this low, ranking 22nd defensively and 30th in scoring heading into their Tuesday night game hosting BU. Did you?
Candace: The Crimson have definitely struggled, but they’ve been in some games, like the Qinnipiac one that was a one-goal game. When you look at their results, the one that pops is the loss in OT to New Hampshire. I really don’t know what to make of that one. I think enough time has passed in their season that we can’t keep using the later start as an excuse. I think I always expect more Harvard just because of the Crimson’s history, but perhaps this is the year where they not only don’t get home ice, they really struggle to even get into the ECAC tournament. When I look at their schedule, I could see the Crimson ending their first half with two more conference losses, and I don’t see them beating Minnesota-Duluth this weekend, even if they are at home. Then Harvard opens its second half with Quinnipiac, Princeton, and Boston College.
It’s funny to think that the Crimson were in the national championship game just two seasons ago, but a lot of those players are gone. They can’t look to Emerance Maschmeyer to be a wall in net anymore. Harvard has two senior goalies, but neither has played a lot. Molly Tissenbaum had played in 11 games entering this year, and Brianna Laing had played in 24, an average of eight per year for her. Those two have split their time in net so far.
Offensive production is also by committee. Sydney Daniels’ production is pretty much in line with what it’s been in her career, as is Lexie Laing’s. Harvard doesn’t have players like Miye D’Oench and Mary Parker anymore. Harvard could definitely use the latter, who has 13 goals and eight assists for Boston University so far this season. She can play because she ended up redshirting her senior year at Harvard after injury and is now in grad school at BU, and she scored twice against her former teammates last night.
I think the falloff in the ECAC after the top six is such that Harvard should at least make the ECAC tournament, but who knows. You mentioned Yale, and the Elis and Rensselaer are the teams I expect to fight Harvard and possibly Dartmouth down the line for the last two spots in the ECAC tournament, but it’s still early to speculate so far out.
Rensselaer was just swept in blowout fashion over the weekend by a Mercyhurst team that has struggled. The Lakers then faced Colgate last night, losing 4-2, and do so again tonight. Do those results from the Lakers show that they are ready to make a push in the second half and challenge for the CHA tournament autobid?
Arlan: This is the second consecutive slow-as-molasses start by Mercyhurst. Historically, the Lakers have been strong in goal, and in the rare seasons where they needed to buy some time while waiting for a new goaltender to find her way, the offense was able to square accounts. With the graduation of Christine Bestland’s class three years ago, Mike Sisti doesn’t have any truly elite scorers at his disposal, something that allowed his teams to separate from their CHA competition in most years.
Thus far, the best producers at Mercyhurst are hitting the score sheet at a point-per-game pace, and other CHA teams can match or exceed that. Syracuse doesn’t have anyone at that mark, but the Orange are on the wrong side of .500 as well. Robert Morris leads the way in the league, in part because the trio of Brittany Howard, Jaycee Gebhard, and Amber Rennie are all recording more points than games played. Laura Bowman and Amy Peterson have led Penn State in scoring the past two years, they are currently doing so again as seniors, and most of the time, they’ll get a couple of points per series.
Such a threat has yet to really emerge for the Lakers. Perhaps the cream will start to separate once their schedule softens a bit. It will be tough for Mercyhurst to make a big push up the standings until they can look to people who strike as regularly as the top lines of their competition.
Even without that, it will be in the realm of possibility for Mercyhurst to get on a roll in the CHA playoffs and capture the automatic bid, but I think that at this point, we’d have to say Penn State belongs in that same category. RIT showed in consecutive seasons that a first-round bye isn’t needed to emerge victorious from that conference.
Speaking of RIT, what is your best guess as to why the Tigers have dipped so low? I’ve seen a number of different theories offered, but why do you think that Scott McDonald has been unable to get the same level of talent on his D-I rosters that he brought in while RIT was a D-III power?
Candace: I have a few theories on RIT. One is that they managed to have an outstanding goaltender in Ali Binnington when they moved up from D-III to D-I, and her steady presence in net gave the Tigers a great advantage. Sometimes really good players go D-III instead of D-I for a variety of reasons. Binnington was an outstanding goalie during her years at RIT, and that helped RIT be in position to have some success as soon as they moved up.
However, consistently recruiting good players is more of a challenge, especially for a school like RIT, which not only has rigorous academics, but because it’s still a D-III school with its other sports it can’t offer scholarships to its players, which puts the McDonald at a distinct disadvantage against other programs. I expect that RIT will mix in good and bad seasons and streaks of seasons because of that issue. I’m not sure if you have other thoughts besides those, but if you do, please feel free to chime in.
Let’s talk about St. Lawrence again. I think one thing getting lost with the Saints given how well the top line has been scoring is just how good they have been defensively. Desbiens of Wisconsin rightfully gets a lot of notice for her gaudy stats and she set a new shutout record this year, but Grace Harrison at St. Lawrence is becoming a force in her sophomore year. She has seven shutouts so far, one more than Desbiens, a save percentage of .956, which is tops in the country, and a goals-against of .923.
It’s not just Harrison though, even as good as she has been. In their last 13 games, the Saints haven’t given up more than one goal, and they have eight shutouts, including shutouts in their last five games. Saturday night, backup goalies Brooke Wolejko and Sonjia Shelly combined to get a shutout against Brown.
If Harvard has been a surprise on the bad side of the ledger, the Saints have certainly been one of the feel-good stories of the year. The questions becomes, can they keep it up? What’s your take?
Arlan: St. Lawrence reminds me of a movie where I want to just enjoy the ride, not stop and ask, “Wait! Would that really happen in real life?” I doubt anything would be as good for the overall health of the game as someone like the Saints winning the NCAA title. Clarkson’s championship was great from a competitive standpoint, to be sure, but the Golden Knights accomplished that by bringing in some very high-profile recruiting classes. Before that season got underway, they were the high-ranking team from the previous year whose roster was the most intact and conducive to a deep run, and looking back, it wasn’t a big surprise that they ended up on top.
Has SLU had a top-five recruiting class in recent memory? Maybe — I’m not that up on who is who coming out of some of its recruiting hotbeds as I’d need to be, but there certainly aren’t the quantity of kids with medals from the U-18 World Championships that one sees on rosters for Minnesota, Harvard, BC, or Wisconsin. Instead, the roster is full of students who made the honor roll. Not that other schools don’t have players who do well scholastically, or that there aren’t Saints who were the focus of some contested recruiting battles. Nobody is going to question the pedigrees of the top line of Brooke Webster, Kennedy Marchment, and Hannah Miller, but hockey isn’t basketball, where you can pick up a handful of great players and that is all you need to win.
To be successful, Chris Wells needs to also land some overlooked talent and a few diamonds in the rough, and he needs players who will have faith in his program, work hard, and improve over the course of their years in Canton. He’s not the only one to do more with less, and there are obviously rosters with far less talent than that of St. Lawrence, but it is surprising to see how high the Saints have climbed when you remember that they opened last season winless in their first six games and went into the holiday break with a .500 record before rallying to reach the ECAC semifinals.
More than anything, I enjoy the perspective Wells has on college sports. You don’t find too many other coaches doing interviews during intermission for the broadcast of the other team. He isn’t the only coach willing to schedule opponents that look to be better than his team, but when that game comes, his players don’t pack it in and look to clog things up. Instead, they try to get up and down the rink and match their skills against the opposition. I think they play the game the way it is meant to be played if college hockey is going to be fun.
Can they keep going as the ECAC schedule gets tougher and once everyone turns it up a few notches for the postseason? Who knows, but it’ll be an entertaining finish.
Speaking of entertainment, we have some good stuff on tap over the long holiday weekend. Many teams take a break from league play to serve up an appetizing assortment of games. We have special events like the Nutmeg Classic hosted by Quinnipiac, Vermont’s Windjammer Classic, the Mayor’s Cup in Providence, Maura Crowell returning to her old home to face Harvard, Syracuse traveling to Grand Forks, and the first-ever meetings of Cornell and Wisconsin. The Badger fans may have to put their, “Let’s go Red!” cheer on hold in that one. What stands out to you?
Candace: It’s not the tournaments for me. First up is the BC-Northeastern rematch on Saturday. I’m very curious to see if that’s another draw, or if one team can assert itself. I’m also curious to see how Bemidji State does against Minnesota. The Beavers have often troubled Minnesota, even when the Gophers were practically unbeatable. As far as non-league games goes, I’m wondering whether Cornell can do anything against Wisconsin.
TMQ: PairWise vs. USCHO poll, figuring out Western Michigan, Clarkson

Each week during the season, we look at the big events and big games around Division I men’s college hockey in Tuesday Morning Quarterback.
Jim: Well, Paula, Denver’s ride at No. 1 was pretty short lived. Two ties this weekend for the Pioneers against Miami combined with Minnesota-Duluth’s two-game sweep at Omaha has the Bulldogs back to the top spot in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll with 48 of the 50 first-place votes (Denver, for the record, took the other two votes).
Certainly, holding the No. 1 spot has been difficult, but recent polls are showing that there are a handful of teams with the staying power in voters’ minds to remain among the top teams in the country.
In addition to the two aforementioned teams, Quinnipiac and Boston College have both spent significant time this season in the top five. The longest tenured No. 1, North Dakota, is back in the top five. And despite two consecutive weekend splits, UMass Lowell continues to ride in the top six.
In fact, the top 16 teams from last week are once again members of that group, with some reshuffling, which makes me wonder: Are we beginning to see some teams define themselves as the “haves” while others still remain “have nots?” And is there one team that isn’t ranked right now that you expect to impact the rankings at some point?
Paula: There is something to be said for things shaking out for most divisions, the “haves” and “have nots” defining themselves. Teams have played enough hockey to begin to establish themselves – their identities and, in some cases, their credibility. Voters are confident enough that Bemidji State, for example, is the team to chase in the WCHA, and confident enough in the WCHA to vote the Beavers into the top 10. BSU’s eight-game unbeaten streak along with its great showing two weeks ago against Minnesota State did some convincing.
The other teams in the top 10 seem like usual suspects with the exception of Penn State, which may make a case for itself as a usual suspect with continued success.
You ask about other teams that may have an impact on rankings at some point, and it seems this season that I keep going back to Atlantic Hockey. I look at Air Force and Robert Morris – both competitive teams, both just outside of consideration in the Pairwise, and each has received votes in the poll this year – and I think that if either of them heats up and the AHC becomes even more interesting as the season progresses, there could be an impact.
Do you see a team outside of the rankings that can potentially impact?
And speaking of the poll, I received an email from a reader this week asking why we bother with a poll, given that the PairWise Rankings are such an accurate predictor of the NCAA tournament field. How would you counter that, Jim?
Jim: There are two teams that have jumped onto my radar screen that I think some people didn’t think highly of coming into the season and, for one, still isn’t getting recognition. The first jumped into the poll last week and remains at No. 18, that’s Western Michigan. Too often, teams have to pull off big upsets to get recognition and that was the case for Andy Murray’s squad. After the Broncos beat Minnesota-Duluth two weekends ago, they debuted in the poll. After taking three of four points from Air Force, Western held its position.
Another team that still isn’t getting the looks is Clarkson. I saw them play in person and know that team has some decent talent, particularly goaltender Jake Kielly, who as a freshman is 6-4-2 in his first 12 collegiate starts. Clarkson still is towards the bottom of the “receiving votes” category but is 4-1-1 in ECAC play and 7-5-2 overall. That’s a team to watch out for as this year progresses.
As for the reason for polls when the PairWise exists, I think the answer has many parts. First off, many people will tell you that polls are for fans and media. But they do help provide some structure to understand which teams are trending in the right direction and which are not.
But more importantly, because the PairWise is a computer formula that really only matters on the final day when the NCAA is selecting the field (though we all like to follow it much of the year, right?), there are times when the PairWise tells us nothing. Does it matter right now? Probably not much as there are too many games left to play and, for certain teams like the Ivies, the sample size is still really small.
The reality is that as the season progresses, the PairWise becomes a more accurate representation of each team’s performance based on its total body of work. The polls really tend to recognizing trends more than overall accomplishment. Thus, I see a reason for both to exist.
Paula: I’ve had my eye on Western Michigan all season. The Broncos are capable of impressive displays of offense with an ability to come from behind when they need to at all. Western Michigan is averaging 3.83 goals per game, driven in part by sophomore Matheson Iacopelli’s performance in the early going. Iacopelli has a dozen goals in a dozen games and three on the power play; WMU’s power play is the sixth-best in the nation (24.1).
Clarkson caught my eye early as well, but the Golden Knights’ little mini-skid at the end of October and beginning of November may have given some poll voters (like me) second thoughts. Their current five-game unbeaten streak, though, is convincing.
I like the way you frame the poll as something that identifies trends. In the first half of the season, especially, when there is so much hockey left to played, the poll also provides the kind of input that numbers don’t. Poll voters actually watch the teams play and the poll can be a more concrete representation of the overall performance of given teams – and leagues.
Heading into Thanksgiving weekend, I am becoming impatient for Big Ten play to begin. I remember the days of the old College Hockey Showcase, when Michigan, Michigan State, Wisconsin and Minnesota would play each other annually on Thanksgiving weekend and four teams within the greater definition of the Big Ten playing each other was a big deal. Now, fans of that conference have to wait another whole week after Thanksgiving before Big Ten play begins.
But that does mean another week of interesting nonconference play for fans of B1G Hockey. For sentimental reasons, I’m looking forward to the match between two old CCHA rivals, Lake Superior State and Michigan. This series should be a good barometer for each team as well. The Lakers seem significantly improved this season and the Wolverines still appear to be finding their feet.
There’s also Minnesota’s trip east, which has the Golden Gophers playing Northeastern Friday and Boston College Sunday. That Sunday game is exciting for obvious reasons.
Jim: I am excited to watch some morning hockey this weekend with ASN nationally and NESN in New England broadcasting the second installment of the Friendship Four from Belfast, Ireland. I was lucky to be part of the inaugural event last season and know that all four teams participating – Massachusetts, Quinnipiac, St. Lawrence and Vermont – will have a true one-in-a-lifetime experience to play college hockey in a unique environment.
The organization that sponsors this tournament, Odyssey Trust, truly is committed to hockey in Northern Ireland. They own the Belfast Giants, Ireland’s only professional hockey team and the arena where the event will be played.
It is nice that the field for this year’s tournament seems very competitive as well as Quinnipiac, Vermont and St. Lawrence all take up spots in the USCHO poll.
I am told the tournament organizers will soon announce – possibly as early as January – that the event will be extended for at least two more years.
Thumbs Up, Thumbs Down
Thumbs up to Alaska-Anchorage for ending a seven-game losing streak with a 1-1 tie and shootout extra point against visiting Michigan Tech Saturday night. Trailing 1-0 to the Huskies after two, the Seawolves tied the score on Jonah Renouf’s second goal of the season at 2:30 in the third. Renouf’s second goal of the season was also his second power-play marker and stopped a four-game point drought for the sophomore.
Thumbs down to Lake Superior State. We feel like the Lakers maybe tricked us with their white-hot start – 6-1-0 in the first seven. Since then, they’ve come back to Earth and have lost five straight, including back-to-back setbacks to Ferris State, 3-0 and 7-5. It may not help that the Lakers are in the middle of their longest road swing – six straight on the road – and that continues to this weekend when they head to Ann Arbor for two against Michigan.