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TMQ: Early look at PairWise, rookie goalies, Bemidji State

Parker Gahagen (Army - 35). (Shelley M. Szwast)
Parker Gahagen has played every game for Army West Point through the Black Knights’ first 10 games, going 6-3-1 with a 1.40 GAA and a .949 save percentage (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

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

Paula: Jimmy, it seems that every weekend this season has been an interesting weekend, and every Monday you and I always find something to surprise us. One of the things that surprises me this week is North Dakota’s continue slide and the poll voters’ reaction to it. The Fighting Hawks are 0-4-2 in their last six, all against ranked opponents. This past weekend, with their tie and loss to Denver, I expected the Fighting Hawks to drop out of the top 10. They were able to salvage a point in the shootout in Friday’s 1-1 tie, but in each contest, they allowed the last goal in regulation. It makes me wonder if some voters look to the PairWise rankings, too, to determine placement of some teams. And all of that gets me thinking about the difference between polls and the PWR and the purpose of each.

Perhaps I shouldn’t be surprised by this, but Bemidji State’s continued success is impressive. The Beavers are 5-0-1 in their last six, having tied and defeated Minnesota State this past weekend — and they took the shootout point as well in Friday’s 1-1 tie. In 12 games, they are lowest in the nation in average goals-against (1.33) and junior Michael Bitzer (.944 SV%, 1.32 GAA) is having a career season.

We talked last week about confidence, and the Fighting Hawks and Beavers seem like candidates for a study in contrasts. I wonder how long North Dakota will remain confident as the season progresses if they don’t soon see rewards for their efforts. I don’t have any doubt about Bemidji’s confidence at this point.

Jim: I’ll admit that I don’t see North Dakota play often enough to make a proper judgement. I don’t know their X’s and O’s and how the personnel is able or unable to execute each night. But I have had a few North Dakota fans who see the team regularly and have watched them for numerous seasons all tell me (mostly when they were ranked number one) that they didn’t believe that the Fighting Hawks were a top team. Two separate people told me they will fight for home ice in the NCHC. And I get it. They lost a lot from a national championship team. It was almost undoubtable that North Dakota would still garner the votes to be the preseason number one. And a decent start kept them there. But maybe we’re seeing the reality of what this team is – a good, middle-of-the-pack NCHC team.

Don’t get me wrong. I think North Dakota will win more than a fair share of games. I expect them to be a 20-win team come season’s end. But there will be bumps in the road.

As for Bemidji State, the Beavers are playing excellent hockey and people are beginning to recognize it. At 9-2-1, the Beavers are one of the hottest teams. Their only losses came against aforementioned North Dakota. Both came in Grand Forks when the Fighting Hawks were playing their best hockey. And both were one-goal losses.

What strikes me about Bemidji is that their WCHA schedule was so front-loaded with league games. Thus, the fast start has the Beavers at 9-0-1 in WCHA play. You can’t take those wins away and thus every other team will be playing catchup with the Beavers for the rest of the season. You can’t crown a champion in November. But if you could, Bemidji State might be the most worthy of that designation that I’ve ever seen this early in the season.

Paula: That is one of the main points about Bemidji, that they are off to that fast start in conference play – and in a league that started very slow this season, putting everyone in the position of having to chase BSU. I’m sure that many other teams find that position enviable.

Another surprising team with a fast-ish start in conference play is Army. After sweeping Canisius at home last weekend, the Black Knights are 6-2-0 in conference play, 6-3-1 overall, and are 20th in the PairWise, a statistic that is only anecdotal but interesting nonetheless, given that Air Force (No. 21) and Robert Morris (No. 19) are where they are in the PWR. I mentioned Bitzer and the season he’s having, but Army senior Parker Gahagen (1.40 GAA) is second only to Bitzer (1.32 GAA) in goals against nationally, and Gahagen’s .949 save percentage is the fourth-best in the country. Like Bitzer, he’s the only goalie his team has played this season. We both know that a team can sometimes ride a very good goaltender a very long way.

Jim: My USCHO Live! co-host, Ed Trefzger, who calls RIT games on radio and thus has seen a lot of Gahagen over the years, has been touting his prowess for a couple of seasons, dating back to the days when Army struggled. So it’s very nice to see the product of his performances translating into wins for the Black Knights. Silently each year I find myself rooting for the military academies knowing these players are making more than a commitment to play hockey and get an education. I have always thought of both Army and Air Force as teams that consistently work hard and all so often that has made up for any talent gap that exists against non-military school opponents.

I would like to go back to goaltending and some of the nation’s leaders. Looking at goals against average (and I know it is easy and the sample size can be small) but after Bitzer and Gahagen, the next three leaders in goals against are all freshmen. In fact, six of the top 10 goaltenders in GAA are rookies. I see a lot of Hockey East games where freshmen goaltenders seem to be the storyline of this young season, but in reality, I think there is a strong trend of top rookie goaltenders, which could be a very good trend going forward.

Paula: I think we may be seeing a good rookie class nationally, but a particularly good crop of rookie goaltenders. In my B1G column last week, I talked about how the rookies are contributing to play in that conference, and there’s no doubt in my mind that an improvement in goaltending is contributing to an improved Big Ten overall.

I was able to see Boston University play Michigan at Yost Ice Arena Friday night, and Michigan freshman Hayden Lavigne (1.48 GAA, .956 SV%) made a pretty good case for himself for the starting position between the pipes there. Lavigne made 30 saves in his second shutout of the season against an aggressive Terriers team that outshot the Wolverines 30-21 and 15-2 in the second period alone. He’s fourth in the nation for goals against and first nationally for save percentage, but the Wolverines have played three goaltenders this season. His classmate, Jack LaFontaine, was in net for Michigan’s 4-2 loss to BU the following night, but he also stopped 30 shots. While LaFontaine’s goals-against average is, well, average (2.70), his save percentage (.923) is a not-too-shabby (14th nationally). Of course, we know that teams can have varying degrees of confidence in front of different but talented netminders.

For the record, I thought that BU’s Jake Oettinger (1.79, .932) looked a step off Friday, taking nothing away from some top-notch goal scoring from the Wolverines Friday. He did get Saturday’s win for the Terriers.

The goals-against averages of rookie goaltenders nationally is impressive; nine of the top 20 GAAs belong to rookies, as do 10 of the top 20 save percentages.

A cursory glance at the success of the teams with promising rookie goaltenders yields some interesting stats. As you said, Hockey East is particularly gifted this year with good rookie goaltenders, with four freshmen whose stats have them in the top 20 nationally and at least one other, Boston College’s Ryan Edquist (2.01 .909) undefeated in three games. Penn State has Peyton Jones (1.96, .919) as another freshman that can make bank, and Atlantic Hockey, the NCHC and the WCHA each have teams with an impressive newcomer.

Also interesting is that three teams with good rookie goalies – Robert Morris, Michigan and Michigan Tech – are currently not under consideration in the PWR, and that may be because they’ve rotated goaltenders more than other teams have in the early going. The other nine teams with rookie goalies whose GAAs are among the top 20 are TUC at this early point in the season.

Jim: You just mentioned Penn State and, though we’ve mentioned them before, I can’t help but go back to the early play of the Nittany Lions. If this is a more established team, there’s a chance that Penn State could be number one in the USCHO.com poll with a 9-1-1 record. Instead, they are 10th and constantly moving up. Sure, the Big Ten conference slate is a few weeks away from beginning and I think that will be their truest test. But everything that Guy Gadowsky and his team has shown to date is impressive and much more than I ever expected we would see four years after this program began their quest in the Big Ten and NCAA hockey.

Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down

Thumbs up to Arizona State for its overtime road win against New Hampshire Saturday. The game was tied, 2-2, after the second period, with each team exchanging goals in each of the first two periods, and then the Wildcats went ahead 4-2 in the third on two goals less than a minute apart before the period was three minutes old. The Sun Devils answered with two goals of their own to send the game to overtime, and freshman Brinson Pasichnuk scored the second OT game-winning goal in Sun Devils history 56 seconds into OT. Kudos to senior Robert Levin for his 32-save performance in Arizona State’s net.

Thumbs down to the Zamboni at Northeastern. Sunday afternoon, while the Huskies and Notre Dame were embroiled in a heck of a game, a scoreless tie through two periods, one of the Zamboni’s batteries died. The inability for the machine to power along the ice meant that the hot water kept flowing and created a rut in the ice that, though the building’s Bull Gang worked hard to repair, couldn’t get to a state that was safe for play. That meant that nearly three-and-a-half hours after the initial faceoff, it was decided that the game would be postponed. Whether the game is ever finished is yet to be seen. That will be decided later this week. And before you ask, no, this Zamboni is not (and could not be) as old as the century old building.

Quinnipiac’s Pecknold, Bemidji’s Serratore guest on Nov. 15 USCHO Live!

Our scheduled guests for the Nov. 15 edition of USCHO Live! are Quinnipiac coach Rand Pecknold, whose Bobcats are No. 4 in this week’s USCHO.com poll, and Bemidji State coach Tom Serratore, whose No. 13 Beavers are unbeaten and in first place in WCHA play.

Join us for the conversation and information, Tues., Nov. 15 at 8 p.m. EST using the player below or listen using the Spreaker Radio app for iOSAndroid or Windows phone.

Be part of the conversation! Send your tweets to @USCHO or your emails to [email protected]. Each episode of USCHO Live! features a look at news around NCAA hockey, a look ahead at upcoming games and events, and conversation with people who coach, administer and play college hockey, and journalists who cover the sport.

About the hosts

Jim Connelly is a senior writer at USCHO.com and has been with the site since 1999. He is based in Boston and regularly covers Hockey East. He began with USCHO.com as the correspondent covering the MAAC, which nowadays is known as Atlantic Hockey. Each week during the season, he co-writes “Tuesday Morning Quarterback.” Jim is the winner of the 2012 Joe Concannon award. He is the color analyst for UMass-Lowell hockey’s radio network, and is a studio analyst for NESN.

Ed Trefzger has been part of USCHO since 1999 and now serves as a senior writer and director of technology. He has been a part of the radio broadcasts of Rochester Institute of Technology hockey since their inception — serving as a producer, studio host, color commentator and as RIT’s play-by-play voice for 10 seasons. Ed is vice president and general manager of CBS Sports Radio affiliate 105.5 The Team in Rochester, N.Y., and COO of its parent company, Genesee Media Corporation.

What we learned: Nov. 14

The WCHA hosted one of the NCAA’s best matchups this weekend and it lived up to the billing.

Here is what we learned this weekend:

1. Bemidji State can get it done in overtime. The Beavers picked up WCHA sweep this weekend in overtime against Minnesota State. The first victory came in the 3-on-3 overtime session and officially counts as a tie for the pairwise rankings. The second victory came in the first overtime, giving the Beavers a 2-1 victory.

2. Bowling Green is back in the WCHA race. The Falcons scored 10 goals this weekend as they swept Northern Michigan. Bowling Green has only played six league games, the second least in the WCHA, and appears to have shaken off the early season funk.

3. Michigan Tech’s offense is firing on all cylinders. The Huskies scored 10 goals this weekend and registered 77 shots in a two-game sweep against Lake Superior State.

Weekend wrap: Nov. 13

No. 1 Plattsburgh at Neumann
On Friday, Plattsburgh needed two third-period goals to edge Neumann, despite outshooting them 59-13. Bek Lucas and Grace Klienbach had the Knights up 2-1 in heading into the final frame, but Hannah Kiraly and Melissa Sheeran sealed the victory with power-play goals for Plattsburgh. On Saturday, Kayla Meneghin scored twice in a four-goal first period for the Cardinals en route to a 5-0 win and a weekend sweep.

St. Catherine at Augsburg (home-and-home)
Danielle Heitkamp scored in overtime to give Augsburg the 2-1 win on Friday at home. On Saturday, Taral Clayton and Megan Johnson had Augsburg up 2-0 before Laken Muller cut the deficit for St. Catherine’s. It wasn’t enough as Ausgburg swept the weekend.

No. 2 Wisconsin-River Falls at Wisconsin-Stevens Point (Friday)
Carly Moran scored twice for Wis.-River Falls as they won their conference opener.

Gustavus Adolphus at No. 9 St. Thomas (home-and-home)
St. Thomas outshot Gustavus Adolphus 43-31 but needed a late goal from Leah Schwartzman to salvage a tie on Friday night at home. On Saturday, it was Schwartzman again with Allie Borgstrom and Ellie Tabaka that led the Tommies to the 3-2 win. Emily Gustafson had a goal and an assist for Gustavus Adolphus on the weekend.

No. 8 Lake Forest at No. 4 Adrian
Kaylyn Schroka, Kristin Lewicki, and Sarah Shureb each had a goal and an assist as Adrian scored once in each period to win 3-0.

The rest of the top 10
No. 3 Elmira convincingly swept Chatham, 7-1 and 8-0. Maddie Jerolman had three goals on the weekend, including two on Saturday, and Meghan Fonfara and Katie Granato each scored twice.

No. 4 Adrian scored a program high six power-play goals to beat Marian 8-4 on Friday. Lexie Tzafaroglou scored twice, while Kristin Lewicki had a goal and two assists.

Amy Budde had two goals and an assist and Sydney Simone had three assists as No. 7 Lake Forest cruised to a 7-1 win Friday over Finlandia.

No. 6 Norwich defeated St. Anselm 5-2 Friday and followed it with a 3-0 shutout of Castelton Saturday. Celeste Robert made 26 saves Friday in the win and Alyssa Hulst had two assists, while Sophie McGovern had a goal and an assist in the first period. Saturday, Kim Tiberi scored the game-winner at 5:29 of the second and assist on Norwich’s final goal six minutes later.

No. 10 Oswego swept Cortland in two close games, 2-1 and 2-0. Jacquelin White scored twice in the third period Friday to give Oswego the come-from-behind win in a game in which Cortland goalie Rachael Farmer made 42 saves. Farmer faced 34 more shots Sunday in Oswego’s shutout win, in which Alexa Aramburu scored the only goal Oswego needed at 13:27 of the first. White assisted on that goal.

Humiliation, Alfond and Zambonis

These are the three things I think I learned this week.

1. UNH suffered an embarrassing loss. 

I’ll admit it.  When I saw that New Hampshire lost in overtime to Arizona State, I instinctively concluded that the Wildcats were in for a loooong season. After all, Arizona State only began playing varsity hockey last season, and this year is the first one in which it’s playing a fully Division I schedule.

Losing to such a fledgling program — and at home, no less–feels like something to hang your head over, especially when you have as proud a history as UNH’s.

But then one day later, the Sun Devils trailed third-ranked Boston College by only a single goal, 2-1, with just three minutes to play. And the Eagles had needed power plays to score both of their goals.

Not to mention that Arizona State also beat then-18th ranked Air Force earlier this year.

So UNH’s loss was… just a loss. Not a proud moment; but not a humiliating one either.

2. Alfond Arena is once again becoming a tough place to play.

Yes, Maine’s home record is only 4-3-0, hardly reason to break out the bubbly. But look at who the Black Bears have played there. Other than a struggling Rensselaer team, they’ve taken on third-ranked BC, fifth-ranked Massachusetts-Lowell, and seventh-ranked Quinnipiac, splitting with the latter two powerhouses.

Of course, we’re not talking the kind of dominance the Paul Kariya-led Black Bears enjoyed or for that matter that of Steve or Martin Kariya’s teams. But considering that Maine was projected to be rebuilding this year, Alfond has become a surprisingly hostile venue.

3. Zamboni failures aren’t just a youth hockey phenomenon.

Fan’s at Sunday’s Northeastern – Notre Dame game found this out the hard way. With the score tied, 0-0, the two squads headed to their dressing rooms for the intermission heading into the third period.

But there was no third period.

When one of Northeastern Zamboni’s broke down in the left corner of the ice, that portion of the ice was unable to freeze. After a delay, the ice was eventually deemed unplayable.

Hockey East’s executive committee will decide later this week the fate of the game. Of course, the visiting team being Notre Dame renders a makeup an even worse logistical nightmare than it would be for any local team.

Three things: Playing with fire

Streak ends
Coming into this weekend’s series, Minnesota-Duluth had looked impressive crucial NCHC series, sweeping North Dakota and St. Cloud State in dramatic fashion. The Bulldogs trend of giving up the goal continued Friday in the first game of a series with Western Michigan, as Aidan Muir put the Broncos up 1-0 with a power-play goal at 7:57. However, after Parker Mackay put the Bulldogs up 3-1 less than eight minutes later, Minnesota-Duluth looked in control again, but a Matheson Iacopelli goal at 16:50 set the stage for last-minute heroics from Colt Conrad.

First, Conrad tied the game at 19:56 of the first. Then after nearly 40 minutes of scoreless action, just when it seemed the game was headed to OT, Conrad scored the game-winner at 19:29 of the third. Trevor Gorsuch made 21 saves for Western Michigan in the win.

Bulldogs coach Scott Sandelin had emphasized the need to control Western Michigan’s fearsome power play, which had entered the weekend ranked fourth in the country. Friday’s first goal on the power play was the only one Western Michigan got all weekend, as the Bulldogs responded to the loss Friday with a 2-0 shutout win behind 30 saves from Hunter Miska and power-play goals from Alex Iafallo and Kyle Osterberg.

Duluth remains in first place in the NCHC with 15 points, five ahead of second place Denver and six ahead of Omaha and Western Michigan, which are tied for third with nine points, though the Pioneers, Mavericks and Broncos have two games in hand.

North Dakota streak continues
No. 6 North Dakota entered the weekend for a big home series against No. 2 Denver on a bad streak, as the Fighting Hawks were winless in their previous four games. Denver extended that streak with a tie and win on the weekend in a rematch of last year’s Frozen Four game.

Friday, the two teams battled to a 1-1 tie, though North Dakota got an extra NCHC point via a goal from Shane Gerisch at 3:28 of a three-on-three overtime period.

Gersich also scored twice on Saturday, but North Dakota lost 3-2 to Denver. Gersich’s first goal put North Dakota up 1-0, and his second erased an early 2-1 Denver lead, but freshman Henrik Borgström scored the game-winner in the second period just 57 seconds after Gersich had tied it, and Tanner Jaillet shut the door the rest of the way, including nine saves in the third period.

North Dakota hasn’t gone without a win for so many games since 2003, when they went through an 0-5-2 stretch. The Hawks’ path to breaking the current streak isn’t easy, as they are on the road next weekend against St. Cloud State. North Dakota is also 0-3-1 in NCHC play.

Omaha explodes
Omaha has rebounded from a disappointing 2-1 loss to Colorado College on Friday by scoring six goals in its last three games. The 12 goals this weekend paced Omaha to a sweep of Miami on the road, 6-4 and 6-2. In both games, Omaha showed impressive resiliency.

After scoring the first goal Friday, Omaha fell behind 4-1 by 10:25 of the second period after Anthony Louis’ second goal of the period before rallying, sparked by Joel Messner’s short-handed goal at 16:15 of the second. Omaha then scored four goals in the third, with David Pope notching the game-winner at 11:55 and Mason Morelli adding an empty-netter to seal the win.

Omaha jumped out to a lead again on Saturday, making it 2-0 on Austin Ortega’s short-handed goal at 12:45 of the first, but Miami struck back with power-play goals from Kiefer Sherwood less than two minutes apart, the second coming at 16:52 of the first. However, Luc Snuggerud scored the game-winner while the teams were four-on-four, and Pope scored a five-on-three power-play goal at 9:25 of the second to put the Mavericks up by two. Ortega and Snuggerud also scored in the third, the latter on the power play.

Omaha scored five power-play goals and two short-handed goals on the weekend. Ortega also extended his points streak to six games.

East wrap: Nov. 13

If this week is any indication of some of the drama we have in front of us for the next few months, then get ready for nonstop and heart-racing action right to the final whistles of regulation and beyond. This weekend produced extra-attacker goals, overtime thrillers, amazing comebacks, and new rivalries in the making. Here is a breakdown of some of the terrific action from the weekend.

CCC
Curry saw its offense get on track with an 11-3 win over Becker. The Colonels were led by Jake Heisinger’s five points and a total of 16 players recorded a point in the runaway win. On Saturday, four different goal scorers contributed a 4-1 conference win over Western New England.

Salve Regina remained unbeaten in conference play with two wins over key competitors. On Thursday night, the Seahawks downed Endicott in a rematch of last year’s conference title game by a 4-2 score. On Saturday, Salve Regina saw themselves trailing by a 3-1 score entering the third period before scoring three unanswered goals to take the lead over UNE. The Nor’easters then scored with just 15 seconds remaining in regulation to send the game into overtime, where Joseph Yeadon scored his first of the season in overtime for the win.

ECAC West
Hobart fell from the ranks of the unbeaten as Matt Lippa scored two goals in leading Manhattanville to its first conference win of the season by a 5-3 score.

In what is surely an early-season nominee for game of the year, the Neumann Knights rallied from a 4-1 deficit in the third period to take an overtime win against Elmira on Friday night. Neumann recorded third-period goals from Shane Topf, Ryan Luitken, and an extra-attacker-goal from Jake Davidson with just one second remaining on the clock to setup sending the home fans happy after Lauri Viitanen’s overtime winner.

MASCAC
Plymouth State and Salem State played the first head-to-head game on the schedule in what figures to be the key games in determining playoff seeding at the top, and the matchup did not disappoint. The Panthers came out firing on all cylinders, chasing the Vikings’ goalie, Marcus Zelzer, in the first period and building a 5-0 lead in the first 14 minutes of the game, but that is when things became really interesting.

Salem State rallied with five unanswered special teams’ goals, including four on the power play and a short-handed goal from Eric Rorzenski, to force the game to overtime, where Plymouth State took the win on a goal from Tim Larocque to earn the crucial two points in the standings.

The overtime win was PSU’s second of the week, as they needed Ryan Stevens’ extra-session goal on Thursday to down Massachusetts-Dartmouth by a 5-4 score.

NEHC
While Babson and Norwich both took a pair of conference wins, the Beacons of Massachusetts-Boston were upset by Skidmore on Saturday afternoon in a playoff-atmosphere game. The Thoroughbreds had lost a one-goal game to Babson the night before and were down early to the second-ranked Beacons, but rallied behind a hat trick by senior Anthony Bird and 43 saves from goalie Brandon Kasel to upset the previously unbeaten host team.  Skidmore overcame two one-goal deficits to earn the win on a short-handed goal by Bird late in the third period.

SUNYAC
Oswego remained unbeaten on the season with a 4-1 win over Cortland on Friday night. The Lakers fell behind 1-0 in the first period, but leveled the score in the final minute on a goal by Shawn Hulshof. Oswego then added three more unanswered goals from Kenny Neil, Chris Raguseo, and Michael Herlihey to support David Jacobson, who made 28 saves in the win.

Elsewhere, Buffalo State took a key home win over Plattsburgh by a 4-1 score led by two goals from Taylor Pryce.

In nonconference action, Geneseo took a win and a tie from Canton, where the two-game series produced a total of 25 goals between the two teams. Friday night ended in a 6-6 overtime tie before the Knights took the weekend finale 8-5 behind four points each from Anthony Marra and Stephen Collins.

Three Biscuits
Anthony Bird — Skidmore: The Thoroughbred forward scored a hat trick in leading Skidmore to a come-from-behind, road win over second ranked Massachusetts-Boston on Saturday. Two of the three goals by Bird were of the short-handed variety, including the game-winning goal and an empty-net insurance tally to close out the scoring.

Trevor & Brady Fleurent — University of New England: Tallied 10 points between them in last week’s 6-4 conference win over Nichols. Trevor posted a hat trick while adding two assists and brother Brady added two goals and three assists in the 6-4 win on Thursday night.

Chris Moquin – Southern New Hampshire University: The Penmen right wing scored a hat trick in an 8-4 win over Daniel Webster, including the game-winning goal in the third period. The three goals were Moquin’s first tallies of the season and equaled his total from his freshman campaign last year.

It takes the full 60 minutes and sometimes longer to earn the result a team and coach are looking for. This weekend clearly showed every second counts and the battles for points in the standings and nonconference “W’s” are going to be hard fought to the bitter end.

Three Things: Twice as nice

Three Things from this past weekend in Atlantic Hockey:

Double trouble

There were three sweeps this weekend, with Army taking four points from Canisius, Air Force defeating Rochester Institute of Technology twice, and Robert Morris taking a pair of games from Sacred Heart.

In the RIT/AFA and RMU/SHU series, the scores of the two games were identical: the Falcons had a pair of 4-3 wins, while the Colonials cruised to two 4-1 victories.

In the RIT – Air Force series, not only was the score the same each night, so was the story line. In both cases, the Falcons opened 3-0 leads only to see the Tigers claw back to tie the game. But Air Force broke the tie each night with the decisive goal.

Friday’s contest was more dramatic, with Jordan Himley getting the game-winner with just 1:13 to play.

On Saturday, Dan Bailey’s GWG came with just three seconds left…in the second period. The Falcons were able to hold off RIT in the third despite the Tigers outshooting them 13-4.

Air Force moved to 4-2 con league play, good enough for third place. RIT (3-5) has now lost four conference games in a row and fell to eighth.

Fit to be…

Because American International now plays its home games at the MassMutual Center, sharing the facility with the Springfield Thunderbirds of the American Hockey League, the Yellow Jackets have had to get creative with their schedule.

That’s why they hosted a series with Bentley on a Tuesday and Thursday instead of a weekend.

Both games ended in ties, making it four consecutive times the teams have deadlocked, dating back to Jan. 23 of last season.

On Tuesday, Bentley’s Max French got the equalizer in a 2-2 draw with just 3:09 left in regulation. On Thursday, AIC erased a 1-0 Bentley lead with a goal by Johno May midway through the contest.

The teams don’t meet again unless they wind up tangling in the postseason, and we won’t have a tie should that happen.

Getting his shot

All 11 Atlantic Hockey teams had an established starting goaltender heading into this season, but some freshman have gotten a chance to get between the pipes so far, with positive results.

Freshman Colin DeAugustine has started in Mercyhurst’s last three games, including helping the Lakers to a 4-2 win on Saturday. He made 17 saves for the win, but may have been more impressive in a 3-2 loss to the Crusaders on Friday, when he made 39 saves.

So far, DeAugustine has an impressive .922 save percentage and a 2.68 GAA.

Weekend wrap: Nov. 13

The action was again a little light this weekend. The big series saw Minnesota-Duluth face North Dakota.

No. 3 Minnesota-Duluth at No. 9 North Dakota
On Saturday, Minnesota-Duluth scored twice in 34 seconds midway through the first period to take a 2-0 lead. Halli Krzyzaniak halved the deficit late in the third, but it was not enough as the Bulldogs won 2-1. On Sunday, UMD was up 2-0 in the second on goals from Sidney Morin and Katie McGovern, but Amy Menke got the Fighting Hawks close and Charly Dahlquist scored with just 28.8 seconds left in the game to force overtime. Officially, it ends a 2-2 tie, but UND earned the extra WCHA point by winning the shootout as Ryleigh Houston was the only player to score.

Yale 3, at No. 5 Colgate 4
Colgate scored two third-period goals to extend their unbeaten streak to 12 games, a program record. Jessie Eldridge had two goals and an assist, giving her 22 points on the season. Phoebe Staenz and Krista Yip-Chuck had a goal and an assist each for Yale.

No. 10 Princeton 2, at Harvard 1 (OT)
Freshman defenseman Julia Edgar scored her first collegiate goal in overtime to give the Tigers the win. Princeton outshot the Crimson 52-21 and Harvard’s Molly Tissenbaum was spectacular in goal to keep her team in the game.

Syracuse at Mercyhurst
Special teams were on display Friday as each team scored two power-play goals, but it was a three-goal second period from Syracuse that powered them to the win. Heather Schwarz scored twice to lead the Orange. On Saturday, Mercyhurst scored three times in the final frame to secure a split of the series. Maggie Knott scored twice and added an assist to lead the Lakers. Stephanie Grossi scored twice for Syracuse.

No. 8 Quinnipiac 2, at Dartmouth 1
The Bobcats outshot Dartmouth 35-16 and Kate MacKenzie scored her first collegiate goal to give Quinnipiac the win.

No. 10 Princeton 2, at Dartmouth 3 (OT)
Eleni Tebano scored with under a minute to go in overtime to give Dartmouth the upset and their first win of the season. Dartmouth scored twice in the first and Karlie Lund scored twice in the second period to tie the game and send it to overtime.

No. 8 Quinnipiac 2, at Harvard 1
All three goals were scored in the final period, with Harvard taking the lead just 1:47 in on Val Turgeon’s goal. Katie Tabin scored her second collegiate goal and Taylar Cianofarano secured the win for Quinnipiac.

Boston University at Maine
On Friday, Victoria Bach tallied a hat trick, including two goals in BU’s three-goal third period to secure the 5-3 win. On Saturday, it was Maine freshman Tereza Vanisova that came away with the hat trick, as she scored three goals in just over six minutes to give the Black Bears a 4-1 win and a series split.

The rest of the top 10
Boston College swept New Hampshire on the weekend in a home-and-home, winning 5-1 Friday and 7-1 Saturday at home. Makenna Newkirk had two goals and an assist Friday, and Andie Anastos had two goals and an assist Saturday. Delaney Belinskas also scored twice Saturday.

Clarkson swept the Rensselaer/Union travel pair, defeating Union 5-1 on Friday with five players scoring, and following that with an 8-3 win over RPI Saturday. Jessica Gilham had a goal and assist in Clarkson’s three-goal first period, and Cayley Mercer had three assists in the game.

St. Lawrence continued its strong start with a sweep of the Rensselaer/Union travel pair, defeating RPI 4-1 on Friday and Union 4-0 on Saturday. Kennedy Marchment had a goal and two assists Friday, and notched two more assists on Saturday.

Bobcats show they can come from behind

The Quinnipiac Bobcats took four very big points this weekend and on Friday night they shown the ability that they can comeback en route to a victory against Dartmouth. They got down 1-0 and 2-1 in the first period to the Big Green.

They took control in the second period and dominated the third period as they took the contest 6-3 behind a Landon Smith hat trick.

Five out of their seven victories on the season they have been able to jump out to at least a two goal lead. The only other time they haven’t been able to jump out to a couple of goal lead was on Saturday in the 4-2 victory over the Harvard Crimson. They got out to a 1-0 lead before Harvard tied it later in the first period.

Freshmen producing for Clarkson

It was a big weekend for the Clarkson Golden Knights this weekend as they defeated RPI 5-2 and Union 3-1. Part of the success was the play of their freshman class. German Nico Sturm had a three point weekend with his goal and an assist in the victory over the Engineers. He added a goal 64 seconds into the game on Saturday against the Dutchmen.

Sheldon Rempal also had a three point contest as he dished out three assists. Devin Brosseau had an assist in each game. Haralds Egle had a goal and an assist in the victory over RPI.

You can’t forget about goaltender Jake Kielly who returned to the net after having last weekend off. He has been in the cage for five of the six Golden Knights victories this season.

Cornell finishes their five game road swing to start the season with two wins

The Cornell Big Red have spent their first three weekends of the season traveling across the Northeast. They picked up their first two victories of the season. On Friday night, they doubled up the Brown Bears 4-2 and they doubled up the Yale Bulldogs 6-3.

Now they sit at 2-2-1 overall and 2-1-1 in the ECAC.

They play their first games at Lynah Rink this weekend as they host Quinnipiac on Friday night and the Princeton Tigers on Saturday. The home stand stretches to three games as they host the University of New Hampshire the Saturday after Thanksgiving.

Cornell then travels to Colgate on Tuesday, Nov. 29 before hosting Miami on Dec. 2-3 to close out the first half of the season. They will reap the benefits of starting the season the road as their final 13 games, nine of them will be in  Ithaca

Rankings roundup: How the top 20 fared, Nov. 11-13

Tanner Jaillet (Denver-36) 16 November 11 Denver University and University of North Dakota meet in a NCHC conference contest at Ralph Engelstad Arena (Bradley K. Olson)
Tanner Jaillet made 29 saves for Denver as the Pioneers tied North Dakota 1-1 Friday night at the Ralph Engelstad Arena (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll of Nov. 7 fared over the Nov. 11-13 weekend.

No. 1 Minnesota-Duluth – split with Western Michigan

No. 2 Denver – tied, defeated No. 6 North Dakota

No. 3 Boston College – defeated New Hampshire (on Nov. 8), defeated Arizona State

No. 4 Boston University – split with No. 18 Michigan

No. 5 Massachusetts-Lowell – split with Maine

No. 6 North Dakota – tied, lost to No. 2 Denver

No. 7 Quinnipiac – defeated Dartmouth, defeated No. 10 Harvard

No. 8 Minnesota – was idle

No. 9 Notre Dame – defeated Northeastern (second game Sunday suspended)

No. 10 Harvard – defeated Princeton, lost to No. 7 Quinnipiac

No. 11 Minnesota State – tied, lost in overtime to No. 15 Bemidji State

No. 12 Penn State – swept Alaska-Anchorage

No. 13 St. Cloud State – swept Colorado College

No. 14 Ohio State – defeated, tied Connecticut

No. 15 Bemidji State – tied, defeated No. 11 Minnesota State

No. 16 Union – tied St. Lawrence, lost to Clarkson

No. 17 Providence – was idle

No. 18 Michigan – split with No. 4 Boston University

No. 19 Yale – lost to Colgate, lost to Cornell

No. 20 Lake Superior State – swept by Michigan Tech

Penn State keeps on keeping on and Ohio State gets back on track, kind of

I hope everyone had a great weekend. Four of the six Big Ten teams played nonconference opponents this weekend with Minnesota and Wisconsin taking the weekend off.

Here’s how things played out:

  • Michigan State dropped Thursday’s game to Ferris State but rebounded on Saturday to get a split
  • Michigan split a series at home with Boston University, winning 4-0 on Friday and losing 4-2 on Saturday
  • Penn State swept Alaska-Anchorage at home
  • Ohio State hosted Connecticut and picked up a win on Friday before tying Saturday’s contest

Here’s three things I saw this weekend:

1. Penn State kept on rolling

The Nittany Lions improved their record to 9-1-1 by sweeping Alaska-Anchorage at home this weekend. Penn State won both ways this weekend, by blitzing the Sea Wolves in a 6-3 victory and by shutting down UAA’s offense in a 3-1 victory. It put 45 shots on target Friday and followed up with 56 the next night.

Penn State controlled both games from the start. The Nittany Lions took a 4-0 lead through two periods on Friday before the two teams took turns scoring five goals in the third period. On Saturday, they held a 2-0 lead through two periods and hunkered down when the Sea Wolves cut the lead to one in the third period before scoring an empty-net goal in the final minute.

Freshman goaltender Peyton Jones improved to 8-0-1 with two victories this weekend. Penn State will have another great opportunity to pick up a home sweep next weekend when it hosts Arizona State.

2. Ohio State got back into the win column on Friday, but ended with another tie on Saturday

Despite trailing by a 4-2 score more than halfway through the game, Ohio State ended the second period by scoring three goals and tacked on two more in the third to beat UConn 7-4 on Friday.

The Buckeyes fell behind agains on Saturday, by allowing the Huskies to score the first two goals of the game. OSU battle back to tie the fame about four minutes into the second period and took the lead early in the third period. Brian Morgan scored halfway through the third to give the game its final 3-3 score.

The tie was the fourth of the season for Ohio State. That fact coupled with the Buckeyes’ 49-17 shot advantage on Saturday left the Buckeyes frustrated.

“We’re obviously disappointed coming away with another tie,” Mason Jobst said after the game. “We have to bear down and find a way to win in these games.”

3. Another good nonconference weekend

Combined, the four Big Ten teams went 5-2-1 this weekend. It’s obviously way too early to be looking at the PairWise rankings, but right now Penn State, Ohio State and Minnesota are in the top-16 and Wisconsin is No. 18.

It’ll be important for all six teams to finish out their nonconference schedules strong, but as of now it’s looking possible that the Big Ten puts more than on team into the NCAA Tournament. That hasn’t happened since the conference’s inaugural year when Minnesota and Wisconsin made the tournament.

Strong play from at least five of the six teams (sorry, Michigan State fans, I still think the Spartans are destined to play the spoiler role this season) should mean that the conference race will be compelling when Big Ten teams start playing each other in December.

 

Notre Dame, Northeastern game Nov. 13 suspended, makeup date to be determined

Notre Dame and Northeastern skated to a 0-0 tie through two periods of play before a Zamboni breakdown and subsequent problems with ice conditions forced the game to be suspended on Sunday afternoon at Matthews Arena.

The teams will attempt to make up the third period later in the season at a date to be determined if scheduling allows.

Through two periods of play, Notre Dame goaltender Cal Petersen made 16 saves.

Northeastern goaltender Jake Theut stopped all 22 shots he faced in the first two periods of play in the first start of his career.

Two Air Force players, two RIT players suspended by Atlantic Hockey

Atlantic Hockey on Saturday announced four suspensions stemming from last night’s Air Force-RIT game – two players from each team.

The four players, who are ineligible to compete in the series finale Saturday night, are RIT’s Shawn Cameron and Caleb Cameron and Air Force’s Jonathan Kopacka and Kyle Haak.

The four suspensions come as a result of a multi-player incident that occurred at the 15:53 mark of the second period. Shawn Cameron was whistled for a five-minute major for boarding and given a game misconduct. However, after play was stopped, several players from both teams were involved in an altercation that resulted in multiple hitting after the whistle, roughing and 10-minute misconduct penalties.

After reviewing the game footage, Atlantic Hockey officials determined that the correct calls were made on the ice, but the players’ actions resulted in more discipline through the league’s supplemental discipline policy.

“The four players are receiving an extra game of discipline because of their continued involvement with each other following the whistle,” read an Atlantic Hockey news release.

CHA announces one-game suspension to Syracuse forward Sibley

The CHA announced Saturday that Syracuse forward Jessica Sibley has been suspended for today’s game against Mercyhurst.

The play in question was not called on the ice, but was put under review following yesterday’s contest.

After review of the play, the CHA determined that a major penalty for contact to the head and a game misconduct should have been called on Sibley and therefore, activated the league’s supplemental discipline policy by suspending her for Saturday’s game.

Syracuse and Mercyhurst play at 2 p.m. EDT.

Gallery: North Dakota and Denver battle to 1-1 tie

Photos from Friday’s NCHC contest between No. 2 Denver and No. 6 North Dakota:

[photoshelter-gallery g_id=”G0000cdfhKtjDVPw” g_name=”20161111-Denver-University-of-North-Dakota-Bradley-K-Olson” width=”500″ f_fullscreen=”t” bgtrans=”t” pho_credit=”iptc” twoup=”f” f_bbar=”t” f_bbarbig=”f” fsvis=”f” f_show_caption=”t” crop=”f” f_enable_embed_btn=”t” f_htmllinks=”t” f_l=”t” f_send_to_friend_btn=”f” f_show_slidenum=”t” f_topbar=”f” f_show_watermark=”t” img_title=”casc” linkdest=”c” trans=”xfade” target=”_self” tbs=”5000″ f_link=”t” f_smooth=”f” f_mtrx=”t” f_ap=”t” f_up=”f” height=”400″ btype=”old” bcolor=”#CCCCCC” ]

Gallery: Bemidji scores in overtime to gain 2 points in WCHA race.

Here are scenes from Friday night’s 1-1 tie in Mankato. The Beavers scored in the second overtime, which gives them two points in the WCHA race, but goes down as a tie in the record books.
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ECAC Hockey picks: Nov. 11 and 12

Last time: 6-6-2

Overall: 15-16-4

For the second weekend in a row, the ECAC Hockey schedule consists of all conference matchups. Here’s a look at what is set for the weekend. All games start at 7 p.m. unless noted.

Friday, Nov. 11

Cornell at Brown

It’s been a tough few weeks for both teams – both are struggling to score and neither has been sharp defensively. Each is looking for its first win Friday; given the Big Red’s track record the last few years, I’m going with them. Cornell wins

Harvard at Princeton

The Crimson’s offense might not reach the level of last season, but it hasn’t been any slouch through the first few weeks of Harvard’s season. I just don’t see Princeton with the capability to keep up with the Crimson. Harvard wins

Dartmouth at Quinnipiac

It’s been a solid start for a Big Green team that was expected to struggle in the early going. Dartmouth is only averaging two goals a game, but junior Devin Buffalo has a .957 save percentage. The Bobcat’s puck possession game hasn’t been its typical strong self in the early going, as Quinnipiac is getting outshot by its opponents by nearly three shots a game. The Big Green are 2-12 all-time on the road against the Bobcats, but I think that trend will reverse itself Friday. Dartmouth wins

Clarkson at Rensselaer

Neither team enters the weekend on any sort of hot streak; Clarkson’s win last Saturday snapped a three-game losing streak, while the Engineers lost in overtime to Yale for their third loss in four games.  I think Clarkson is better than what it has showed thus far. Clarkson wins

St. Lawrence at Union

Union won six of its last seven games and is averaging just over four goals per-game this season. However, the Dutchmen are allowing more than three goals per game. St. Lawrence has one of the best defensive groups in the league, and the Saints offense is no slouch either. I think that gives the visitors an edge. St. Lawrence wins

Colgate at Yale

A late rally against RPI last Saturday helped the Bulldogs avoid a pointless weekend on the road. Yale might not be as tight defensively as in years past, but Colgate has really struggled to find its groove in the first month of the season. Yale wins

Saturday, Nov. 12

Colgate at Brown 4 p.m.

As much as the Raiders have struggled, it’s been worse for Brown. Colgate wins

Dartmouth at Princeton

Don’t expect a lot of scoring in this matchup, as neither team is averaging more than two goals per game. But the Big Green have been outstanding defensively, while Princeton has struggled in its own end so far. Dartmouth wins

Harvard at Quinnipiac

I predicted Dartmouth to beat the Bobcats on Friday, and I have a hard time believing Quinnipiac will get swept at home this weekend.  Quinnipiac wins

St. Lawrence at Rensselaer

The Saints look to be putting it together and should have the depth to take down RPI. St. Lawrence wins

Clarkson at Union

There should be plenty of goals Saturday at Messa Rink, as both teams are averaging more than three goals per game. Give the slight edge to the home team. Union wins

Cornell at Yale

The Big Red’s defense has bit a little below its high standards so far. That should change as the year progresses, but right now I think Yale is playing better hockey. Yale wins

Weekend picks: Nov. 11

I didn’t have a great week, because I went against my gut in my Friday ECAC picks, but I still improved my lead on Nicole on the season. Last week, I went 17-8-1 (.673), while Nicole went 14-11-1 (.557). I now have a 15-game lead on the season, as I am 113-43-16 (.703) while Nicole is 98-58-16 (.616).

Let’s get to this week’s picks.

Friday, Nov. 11

Union at Clarkson
Candace: Clarkson is one of the best teams in the league, and should pick up an easy win. Clarkson 4-1
Nicole: Golden Knights win easy. Clarkson 5-2

Yale at Colgate
Candace: Yale is looking good early, but I have to go with the home team. Colgate 2-1
Nicole: This may be a tough test for Colgate, but they’ve got a lot of ice time on Yale, who just started their season. Going with experience and home ice for the Raiders. Colgate 3-1

Brown at Cornell
Candace: Brown got a good win last week over Union, but struggled the rest of the weekend. Cornell has too much offense. Cornell 4-1
Nicole: Cornell 4-1

Quinnipiac at Dartmouth
Candace: Dartmouth will be no match for the Bobcats. Quinnipiac 4-1
Nicole: The Bobcats’ offense will take control. Quinnipiac 5-1

Princeton at Harvard
Candace: Home ice could be a neutralizing factor, but I’ll go with the Tigers. Princeton 2-1
Nicole: This feels like a toss-up, but I’ll take the Tigers’ better record. Princeton 3-2

Rensselaer at St. Lawrence
Candace: The Saints are perhaps the best team in the league. St. Lawrence 3-1
Nicole: The Saints are too tough a test for RPI. St. Lawrence 4-2

Friday-Saturday, Nov. 11-12

Syracuse at Mercyhurst
Candace: I got burned picking Syracuse to split with Robert Morris last weekend. The CHA is more volatile than any league. I’ll pick Mercyhurst and hope I get one right. Mercyhurst 3-2, 2-1
Nicole: I think this will be a good opportunity for Mercyhurst to get back on track, though I won’t at all be surprised to see Syracuse steal one. Conservatively going with a Lakers sweep. Mercyhurst 3-1, 2-0

Lindenwood at Penn State
Candace: Lindenwood is going to struggle to get wins this year. Penn State 3-1, 3-1
Nicole: I don’t foresee Lindenwood getting their first wins this weekend. Penn State 3-2, 4-2

Robert Morris at RIT
Candace: RIT has looked dreadful this year, and while this could be a letdown weekend for Robert Morris, I think the Colonials get the wins. Robert Morris 3-1, 3-0
Nicole: The Colonials are in the CHA driver’s seat at that doesn’t change with this series. Robert Morris 4-1, 3-0

Northeastern at Merrimack (home-and-home)
Candace: I thought Merrimack might take a step toward consistency last weekend against Connecticut, but I was wrong. Northeastern 2-1, 3-2
Nicole: I’ve really been impressed with the Huskies in recent weeks. I don’t see them losing this series. Northeastern 3-1, 4-2

Boston University at Maine
Candace: Maine’s one win was against Boston College, and while this could be a letdown for the Terriers after last weekend against BC, I see them getting the sweep. Boston University 3-1, 3-2
Nicole: The Terriers have confidence after the series with BC. They’ll sweep. Boston University 3-1, 3-0

Boston College at New Hampshire (home-and-home)
Candace: I think the Eagles will learn from their defensive lapse last weekend. Boston College 3-1, 3-1
Nicole: Boston College sweeps. Boston College 4-1, 3-0

Ohio State at St. Cloud State
Candace: Both teams have been good at times and bad at others. Home ice could get the Huskies a split, but I’ll go with the visitors. Ohio State 2-1, 2-1
Nicole: Both teams have shown flashes of brilliance, but I think they’ll split. St. Cloud State 4-2, Ohio State 2-1

Saturday, Nov. 12

Rensselaer at Clarkson
Candace: Hard to see RPI getting points against the North Country travel pair. Clarskon 4-1
Nicole: Clarkson wins. Clarkson 4-1

Brown at Colgate
Candace: Brown doesn’t have enough to threaten the Raiders. Colgate 3-1
Nicole: Raiders continue their early-season dominance. Colgate 4-1

Yale at Cornell
Candace: I’m going with home ice. Cornell 3-2
Nicole: I have to go with the Elis, who’ve started strong. Yale 3-2

Princeton at Dartmouth
Candace: This could be a letdown game for the Tigers, but I think they take it. Princeton 3-2
Nicole: Tigers win. Princeton 4-1

Quinnipiac at Harvard
Candace: Harvard just seems too inconsistent at the moment. Quinnipiac 3-2
Nicole: Until I know more about Harvard, going with the proven success from the Bobcats. Quinnipiac 3-1

Union at St. Lawrence
Candace: Union has gotten better, but it won’t get a win against the Saints. St. Lawrence 3-1
Nicole: Union has improved, but St. Lawrence is a tough beat. St. Lawrence 5-2

Saturday-Sunday, Nov. 12-13

Vermont at Providence
Candace: I’m not convinced the Friars have improved enough. Vermont 3-2, 3-1
Nicole: Calling for a split of these pretty evenly matched squads. Providence 2-1, Vermont 3-2

Minnesota-Duluth at North Dakota
Candace: I really don’t know what to expect here. I think a split is more likely than not, but could see the Bulldogs getting a sweep too. I’ll pick that and hope I get one right. Minnesota-Duluth 3-2, 3-2
Nicole: Taking a bit of a flyer and choosing North Dakota to get a win here. It’ll be a split. Minnesota-Duluth 3-2, North Dakota 4-2

Tuesday, Nov. 15

Harvard at New Hampshire
Candace: New Hampshire might make it interesting, but fall short. Harvard 3-1
Nicole: Harvard wins. Harvard 3-0

Weekend picks: Nov. 11

Last week, I got Duluth’s sweep of St. Cloud right, but Matthew got the North Dakota-Minnesota Saturday result right, so we both went 4-3-1 (.562). On the year, I am 29-21-7 (.570) while Matthew is 25-25-7 (.500). Let’s see how we do this week.

Friday-Saturday, Nov. 11-12

St. Cloud State at Colorado College
Candace: Colorado College has shown a lot improvement early. St. Cloud will rebound after getting swept though, and I’m not convinced the Tigers have fixed their defensive issues yet. St. Cloud State 4-2, 4-3
Matthew: I’m tempted to give CC a little love here and pick a split, but I think the Huskies will get the job done and sweep. St. Cloud State 3-2, 3-1

Denver at North Dakota
Candace: Hard to see anything other than a split, and I’ll pick North Dakota to win first, since I can’t see the Hawks going winless in a fifth consecutive game. North Dakota 3-2, Denver 3-2
Matthew: UND needs to get back on track, but I’d be surprised to see this Denver team leave Grand Forks empty-handed. North Dakota 4-2, Denver 4-2

Omaha at Miami
Candace: Both teams have been consistently inconsistent. Home ice should get the RedHawks at least one win. Miami 3-2, Omaha 3-1
Matthew: Omaha won Alaska’s tournament earlier this season, and they’ve been up-and-down since then during a six-game homestand. Maybe hitting the road again is what the Mavericks need, but Miami would be hard to beat at home. Hmm. Miami 3-2, Omaha 3-2

Western Michigan at Minnesota-Duluth
Candace: Western has been the surprise team of the conference this year. They look really good. Duluth looks better, and while I think a split is entirely possible, I’m going with the Bulldogs to stay hot. Minnesota-Duluth 3-2, 3-2
Matthew: Western is looking very good so far this season, and I have a feeling the Broncos could give UMD their second home loss. I just don’t know which night to go with. Minnesota-Duluth 3-2, Western Michigan 3-2

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