It’s amazing that it’s taken this long, but after this weekend each WCHA team will have played at least one in-conerence series when Alaska Anchorage travels to Bemidji States.
This weekend also features a sneaky good matchup in the Upper Peninsula that many in the WCHA are paying close to.
Let’s get picking…
Northern Michigan at/vs Michigan Tech
Sean: This may be the best series of the weekend. It’s two well-matched teams in the middle of the standings and each gets a chance to play in front of their home crowd in a home-and-home. It’ll be a low scoring weekend, but the fans on each campus will get to enjoy some 3-on-3 overtime. Wildcats 2-1, Huskies 3-2.
Jack: I agree; this one has split written all over it. This series is usually really entertaining and I don’t expect any different. I guess I’ll pick each team to win at home. Huskies 4-3, Wildcats 3-1
Alaska at Lake Superior State
Sean: The Lakers offense is rolling right now and it’s fun to watch. Alaska is making its first trip to the lower 48 this weekend and is riding high off a nice win against Minnesota State last week. Either way, I see this as a sweep. Lakers 5-2, 4-1.
Jack: I don’t foresee Lake State doing much different this week compared to last — the Nanooks gave up a seven spot to Minnesota State in one of their games last weekend. I see this being a LSSU sweep as well. Lakers 7-4, 5-2
Alaska Anchorage at Bemidji State
Sean: Anchorage is the last team to jump into WCHA play and they have to make a tough trip to Bemidji to open the conference slate. The Beavers have outscored their opponents 10-2 in WCHA play and I expect that trend to continue. Beavers 4-2, 6-1.
Jack: The Seawolves have scored just three goals, total, this season. A bye week last weekend surely helped them a little bit to prepare for their trip to the Lower 48, but I can’t see them doing much against the Beavers. Beavers 3-0, 5-2
Ferris State at Minnesota State
Sean: Both teams have something to prove this weekend. Ferris State needs to prove it can win a game in the WCHA after an 0-3-1 start (they do have a shootout win). Minnesota State wants to prove its loss in Alaska was a fluke. Feels like a split to me. Mavericks 3-2, Bulldogs 4-3.
Jack: I want to think the Bulldogs can break out of their funk this weekend, and if they were in Big Rapids I could see it. Not so sure about it in Mankato, though. Mavericks 4-3, 5-2
Bowling Green at Miami
Sean: Bowling Green hast to get off this slide at some point, right? The Falcons are 0-5-1 and a once staunch defense has allowed 29 goals in six games. A series with former CCHA rival and in-state foe Miami should get the blood boiling and lead to a win. Falcons 3-1, RedHawks 6-2.
Jack: Is this finally the weekend? BG hasn’t looked very good against even the more middling competition they’ve played (that 8-2 loss to Western Michigan particularly looks bad).I think they can eek one out here. Maybe. RedHawks 5-3, Falcons 2-1.
Alabama Huntsville at St. Cloud State
Sean: The Chargers have gotten pretty comfortable, or as comfortable as one can get, with long bus trips. They’ve got another one this week and the results won’t end up in Huntsville’s favor. Huskies 3-1, 2-0.
Jack: The big question here is if the Chargers can keep the games close enough to have a shot at stealing a tie. Maybe they can do it in one game. Not sure if they can do it in two. Even so, it might not be enough. Huskies 2-1, 6-2
Alaska-Anchorage’s and Alaska’s hockey programs were saved Thursday, amidst other teams being cut at both schools (photo: Sam Wasson).
At a Thursday press conference, it was announced that several sports are in their last season at Alaska-Fairbanks and Alaska-Anchorage.
None of those sports is hockey, however.
Skiing is being eliminated at both schools, while UAA is axing indoor track and field. Those sports were targeted for elimination in a waiver request submitted by the university to the NCAA, University of Alaska president Jim Johnsen said Thursday at the Alaska Airlines Center.
The waiver request is a major part of the University of Alaska’s effort to cut $2.7 million from intercollegiate athletics as it attempts to survive the loss of $50 million in state funding for this fiscal year. More cuts are expected for the next fiscal year, too.
According to the Alaska Dispatch News, the university is asking the NCAA to waive its requirement that Division II members field a minimum of 10 sports. It wants permission to trim UAA’s teams from 13 to nine and UAF’s teams from 10 down to eight. In its request for a waiver, the university cites the state of Alaska’s budget crisis and the resulting loss of funding for the university.
The university’s athletic programs cannot meet the new budgets without eliminating some sports, the request says.
Johnsen said at the press conference that the university had to submit its waiver request in time for the NCAA to review it next month.
In terms of hockey at UAA and UAF, Johnsen said the sport survived mostly because the NCAA requires a school to offer two men’s team sports and two women’s team sports. At both schools, the only men’s team sports are hockey and basketball.
If the NCAA grants the waiver, the Board of Regents would still have to approve the elimination of the skiing and indoor track teams. The next Board of Regents meeting is Nov. 10-11 in Fairbanks.
Jim is still stuck at .500 while I’m only two games better. We’re both hoping our numbers take off in the upcoming weeks.
Dave last week: 11-7-6 Jim last week: 9-9-6 Dave’s record-to-date: 27-23-9 Jim’s record-to-date: 25-25-9
Here are this week’s picks:
Friday, Oct. 28
Providence at Boston College
Dave’s pick: Other than its Icebreaker game against Denver, this should be BC’s biggest test to date. BC 3, PC 2
Jim’s pick: Even though the Eagles struggled at Merrimack on Tuesday, home cooking will serve them fine. BC 4, PC 2
New Hampshire at Massachusetts
Dave’s pick: At a neutral site, I might go with the Wildcats but even that would be iffy given their early-season struggles, especially on special teams. UMass has looked like the better team. UMass 4, UNH 3 (OT)
Jim’s pick: This probably seems crazy, but I’ve liked a lot about UMass’ play while UNH has been spectacularly unspectacular thus far. I’m going with the Minutemen. UMass 3, UNH 2
Connecticut at Notre Dame
Dave’s pick: The Irish have only a win and a tie in their last four games, but those were against Minnesota-Duluth and Penn State. I’m still a believer. UND 4, UConn 2
Jim’s pick: I like so much about this UConn team, but really like a ton about Notre Dame, especially in South Bend. UND 4, UConn 2
Maine at Colgate
Dave’s pick: That 5-0 loss on Saturday took the bloom off Maine’s rose, but the Black Bears have still played better than a Colgate team fresh off a road sweep at the hands of Merrimack. Maine 4, CU 3
Jim’s pick: I don’t think in late September I would’ve believed I would be picking Maine here, but I love the start the Black Bears have had. Maine 5, CU 3
Michigan at Vermont
Dave’s pick: Another strong weekend from the Catamounts and I’ll start picking them to win contests like this one. But not yet. UM 4, UVM 3
Jim’s pick: Vermont’s performance against Omaha last week impressed me, but I still think Michigan is the better team. UM 3, UVM 2
Cornell at Merrimack
Dave’s pick: This was my toughest pick of the week. Cornell might be the stronger team, but how well will it fare coming out of the chute at a tough barn like Merrimacks? MC 3, CU 2
Jim’s pick: The fact that this is Cornell’s first game is the only reason I would pick against them. But I’m still not totally sold on the Warriors. CU 3, MC 2
Massachusetts-Lowell at Omaha
Dave’s pick: The River Hawks have struggled to hold into leads thus far, but I still think they’re one of the nation’s top teams. UML 3, UNO 2
Jim’s pick: This is another great NCHC test for the River Hawks. And though I love Omaha and Austin Ortega, I think the River Hawks can win on the road. UML 4, UNO 3
Saturday, Oct. 29
Boston College at Massachusetts
Dave’s pick: The Eagles aren’t as strong right now as I expect them to be in the spring, but they’re still strong enough for a road win here. BC 4, UMass 2
Jim’s pick: I don’t think this will be an easy matchup for BC, but think they can win. BC 3, UMass 2
Merrimack at New Hampshire
Dave’s pick: Switch this game to North Andover and I’d pick a different result, but I’m going with the Wildcats. UNH 4, MC 3
Jim’s pick: Tough game to pick for me, so I’ll let home ice dictate. UNH 5, MC 4 (OT)
Maine at Colgate
Dave’s pick: The Black Bears may not be quite as good as they looked against Quinnipiac two weeks ago, but they’re a lot better than I thought. Sah-weep! Maine 3, Colgate 2
Jim’s pick: Believe it or not, I’m going with the sweep here for the Black Bears. Maine 4, CU 3 (OT)
Massachusetts-Lowell at Omaha
Dave’s pick: I kinda said it all above, I’m a believer in Lowell until proven otherwise. UML 3, UNO 2
Jim’s pick: I know it is crazy to pick a sweep against a good NCHC team, but I like the way Lowell is playing and think they can handle the challenge. UML 5, UNO 3
Sunday, Oct. 30
Vermont at Northeastern
Dave’s pick: This isn’t a pick against Vermont; it’s a pick for the Huskies. NU 3, UVM 2
Jim’s pick: It seems mean to pick Vermont to get swept after earning respect with three points at Omaha. But I like the way Northeastern is playing. NU 3, UVM 1
Providence at Brown
Dave’s pick: I’m not sure if I’ve ever once picked Brown in this rivalry game. Homer Hendrickson goes for the Friars again. PC 3, Brown 2
Jim’s pick: This game is usually played later in the season. Not knowing much about Brown at this point, I’ll go with the Friars PC 4, Brown 2
The Big Ten may not have the best inter-conference record in Division I, but B1G Hockey is still floating above .500 — and I’ll take that, all things considered. Let’s see how Drew Claussen and I are floating so far.
Last week
Drew: 4-4-2 (.500)
Paula: 4-4-2 (.500)
Season
Drew: 12-11-4 (.519)
Paula: 14-9-4 (.593)
This week
All six B1G teams are in action this week, although Michigan State plays a single game instead of a series. None of this week’s games is televised.
Canisius at No. 19 Penn State
Drew: Coming back home after a huge weekend on the road, this could be a letdown series for the Nittany Lions. I think Guy Gadowsky will have the team ready and Penn State will sweep.
Paula: Last week, Canisius defeated Robert Morris, 6-3, before tying 2-2. The Nittany Lions beat the Golden Griffins 6-1 on the road at the start of the 2015-16 season. I don’t think it’s wise to pick against Penn State at this point. Games are Friday and Saturday at 7:00 p.m. at Pegula Ice Arena.
Drew’s picks: Penn State 5-3, 4-2. Paula’s picks: Penn State 5-2, 4-2.
No. 11 Michigan at Vermont and Dartmouth
Drew: Vermont had a good weekend in Omaha last weekend, picking up a win and a tie, so the Catamounts should be a formidable opponents for the Wolverines. Dartmouth has yet to play a non-exhibition game this season. I see Michigan picking up a couple wins this weekend.
Paula: Friday’s game between the Wolverines and Catamounts may be very telling. Vermont is much improved this season and Michigan is talented but young. This is the first-ever meeting between the Wolverines and Catamounts; Michigan went 1-0-1 against Dartmouth in Ann Arbor Nov. 27-28, 2015. Friday’s game in Gutterson Fieldhouse begins at 7:05 p.m. Saturday’s game in Thompson Arena begins at 7:35 p.m.
No. 12 Minnesota at Clarkson and No. 18 St. Lawrence
Drew: The Gophers need a pick-me-up weekend after blowing two leads and getting swept by St. Cloud State last time out. It’s not going to be easy. Clarkson tied No. 15 Providence and defeated No. 5 Massachusetts-Lowell last weekend. St. Lawrence dropped two games against those same two opponents. I think Minnesota will get back on track with a pair of victories this weekend.
Paula: The Gophers haven’t played Clarkson since 1993 and St. Lawrence since 1998. Friday’s game in Cheel Arena in Potsdam and Saturday’s game in Appleton Arena in Canton each begin at 7:00 p.m. Upstate New York — or as those local to Clarkson and St. Lawrence call it, The North Country — is lovely this time of year.
Drew’s picks: Minnesota 4-2, 4-1. Paula’s picks: Minnesota 3-2, St. Lawrence 3-2.
No. 15 Ohio State at Niagara
Drew: I love the way Ohio State has looked so far this season. If the Buckeyes keep this up, the conference race should be very interesting. The next four opponents are very beatable for Ohio State, but everyone knows the cliche is that games aren’t played on paper. If the Buckeyes can get through the next eight games with a record of 6-2 or better they will be in a good spot going into the conference schedule.
Paula: Niagara is 0-3-2 to start the season. I’m not calling against the Buckeyes until they lose. Games are Friday and Saturday at 7:00 p.m. in Dwyer Arena.
Drew’s picks: Ohio State 3-1, 3-2. Paula’s picks: Ohio State 4-2, 4-2.
Princeton at Michigan State
Drew: Michigan State was able to keep Denver from running the Spartans out of the building last weekend, but the lack of any offensive production is cause for worry. This will be Princeton’s first action of the season, which could and — dare I say, should? — help the Spartans. I’m going to say Michigan State breaks through this on Friday.
Paula: I, too, think the Spartans have an excellent chance of picking up their first win, given the way they played last weekend. The teams last met Nov. 28-29, 2014, a split in Hobey Baker Rink. This Friday night game begins at 7:05 p.m. in Munn Ice Arena.
Drew’s pick: Michigan State 3-2. Paula’s pick: Michigan State 2-1.
Wisconsin at No. 18 St. Lawrence and Clarkson
Drew: The Badgers’ offense showed that it’ll be able to score with any team when it netted eight goals over two games against Boston College, but having a defense capable of giving up eight in one game will hamper Wisconsin’s efforts. That also makes Wisconsin a hard team to pick. I feel like the Badgers could easily pick up a win this weekend, but with the lack of consistency I’m going to pick them to drop both.
Paula: It’s nice that the Badgers will likewise be able to enjoy The North Country this weekend. (Can you tell that I’m a little homesick?) Wisconsin last played St. Lawrence in 2005 and Clarkson in 2006. Friday’s game against the Saints begins at 7:00 p.m. Saturday’s game against the Golden Knights starts at 7:30 p.m.
Drew’s picks: St. Lawrence 5-3, Clarkson 4-3. Paula’s picks: St. Lawrence 4-2, Clarkson 3-2.
I gained one more game on Matthew last weekend. If I’d been smart and been a league home and picked Miami Saturday, it would have been too. Oh well. Last week, I went 6-4-2, while Matthew went 5-5-2. On the year, I am 19-14-6 (.564), while Matthew is 16-17-6 (.487).
Friday-Saturday, Oct. 28-29
Western Michigan at Denver Candace: I think the Broncos are good for one win here, and I’ll pick Saturday. Denver 2-1, Western Michigan 3-2 Matthew: WMU has started the season very well and is fresh off a bye week. I think the Broncos will get another win here but I’m not sure which night it’ll happen. Denver 3-1, Western Michigan 3-2
North Dakota at Minnesota-Duluth Candace: If I could be anywhere in the country Friday, it’d probably be Duluth. Luckily, I have NCHC TV so I can watch this game. I’m not really sure how to pick this series. It’s got to be a split, but who wins which night? Hmmmm. Minnesota-Duluth 3-2, North Dakota 3-1 Matthew: A rare No. 1 vs. No. 2 series. I’m going to take the safe route and call for a split. Knowing my luck, watch as this pick blows up in my face one way or the other. North Dakota 3-2, Minnesota-Duluth 2-1
Bowling Green at Miami Candace: Miami has looked good so far, and I’ve voted for them in the USCHO poll the last two weeks. I like them again this weekend. Miami 3-2, 3-1 Matthew: I have a good feeling about the RedHawks early this season, and I think they’ll do the business this weekend. Miami 3-1, 3-1
Alabama-Huntsville at St. Cloud State Candace: UAH opened well, but I think St. Cloud may have stabilized its defensive zone issues last weekend, so I’ll pick them to sweep. St. Cloud State 3-2, 4-2 Matthew: I’ve had a soft spot for UAH ever since I saw them play two years in a row at the CHA tournament in my home state. I always want to see the Chargers do well, but I don’t know if they’ll get much this weekend. St. Cloud State 3-1, 4-1
Massachusetts-Lowell at Omaha Candace: I picked Omaha to sweep last week and that didn’t go so well. This week, I think I’ll pick Lowell to sweep and hope to get one right. Besides, if I do that, RedArmyUNO will be happy. Lowell 3-2, 5-4 Matthew: UML’s defense hasn’t been impenetrable early this season, and that could be good news for a UNO team with several solid offensive weapons. The Mavericks have struggled so far, though, and while a breakout weekend could be coming, I don’t think this one is it. Lowell 3-1, Omaha 3-2
I bet big last week, and it worked out for me, as I opened up a sizeable lead in our season picks race. Whether I can hold it is another story. Last week, I went 19-2-6 (.814), moving to 73-28-14 (.695), while Nicole went 13-8-6 (.592), moving to 65-36-14 (.626).
Games start tonight, so let’s see how we do.
Thursday-Friday, Oct. 27-28
Penn State at RIT Candace: Two teams with only one win each, but Penn State has looked better in its losses than RIT. Penn State 3-1, 3-2 Nicole: Penn State has tallied a ton of goals. That hasn’t translated to wins, but I think it gives them the advantage here. Penn State 3-1, 3-0
St. Cloud at Minnesota Candace: St. Cloud might frustrate the Gophers a little, but Minnesota wins. Minnesota 4-1, 4-2 Nicole: Gophers sweep at home. Minnesota 3-1, 4-1
Friday, Oct. 28
Princeton at Brown Candace: The Tigers impressed last weekend. Princeton 4-1 Nicole: Princeton 4-2
Harvard at Clarkson Candace: North Country swings are always a tough see. Have to go with home ice. Clarkson 3-2 Nicole: Picking the home squad. Clarkson 3-1
Cornell at RPI Candace: Cornell looked strong last week, and I see it continuing. Cornell 4-1 Nicole: Big Red move to 3-0. Cornell 3-0
Dartmouth at St. Lawrence Candace: Dartmouth needs more miles before they can match the Saints. St. Lawrence 4-1 Nicole: The Saints continue their winning ways. St. Lawrence 4-1
Colgate at Union Candace: Union got an emotional burst a few weeks ago, but it won’t be enough against the Raiders. Colgate 3-1 Nicole: Colgate stays hot. Colgate 4-2
Quinnipiac at Yale Candace: The Bobcats have struggled the last couple of weeks, but I think they rebound. Quinnipiac 3-2 Nicole: Picking Quinnipiac’s experience since I don’t have a read on Yale yet. Quinnipiac 3-1
Merrimack at Northeastern Candace: Merrimack will be a tough out, but the home team takes it. Northeastern 4-2 Nicole: Huskies have made a big comeback since the opening weekend. They take this. Northeastern 5-2
Maine at Providence Candace: Maine might fall back to Earth after beating Boston College, but I have to take them. Maine 3-2 Nicole: I’ve liked what I’ve seen from the Black Bears so far, so picking them to win. Maine 2-0
Vermont at New Hampshire Candace: A potential trap game, but I like the Catamounts. Vermont 3-1 Nicole: Catamounts are playing well. They win. Vermont 4-1
Friday-Saturday, Oct. 28-29
Mercyhurst at Robert Morris Candace: I see a split, though who wins what night is tough. I’ll pick Mercyhurst to sweep and hope I get one right. Mercyhurst 2-1, 3-1 Nicole: Hard to pick a sweep here, despite RMU’s record. Picking a split. Robert Morris 3-1, Mercyhurst 2-1
Lindenwood at Syracuse Candace: If Nicole Hensley was still in net, I might pick a split. Syracuse 3-2, 3-1 Nicole: Both teams are looking for their first win and I think they both get them this weekend. Syracuse 3-2, Lindenwood 2-1
Boston College at Connecticut (home-and-home) Candace: Something tells me Boston College turned a corner last week. Boston College 3-2, 4-2 Nicole: Can’t pick against BC here. They sweep. Boston College 3-2, 2-1
Wisconsin at Minnesota State Candace: The Badgers will continue the Mavericks’ WCHA futility. Wisconsin 3-1, 3-1 Nicole: Badgers should sweep. Wisconsin 6-1, 4-0
Minnesota-Duluth at Ohio State Candace: I think the Bulldogs stay hot, but it will be tough. Minnesota-Duluth 3-2, 3-1 Nicole: Hard to pick against UMD, but Ohio State has foiled me a few times already, so I’ll pick a split. Minnesota-Duluth 3-1, Ohio State 3-2
Bemidji State vs. North Dakota (home-and-home) Candace: I have to go with home ice for each team. North Dakota 3-2, Bemidji state 3-2 Nicole: Another split. Both teams have the ability to be great. North Dakota 4-2, Bemidji State 3-1
Saturday, Oct. 29
Quinnipiac at Brown Candace: Quinnipiac continues to get back on track. Quinnipiac 4-2 Nicole: Bobcats take this one. Quinnipiac 4-1
Dartmouth at Clarkson Candace: Clarkson just has too many weapons. Clarkson 3-1 Nicole: Clarkson 3-0
Colgate at RPI Candace: Colgate’s rise continues. Colgate 3-1 Nicole: I don’t see Colgate faltering here. Colgate 4-1
Harvard at St. Lawrence Candace: I wish I had more of a bead on Harvard, but they’ve only played one game so far, so … St. Lawrence 3-2 Nicole: Picking Harvard to upset here, since I’ve not really picked one yet and I have a feeling the Crimson might surprise some this season. Harvard 3-2
Cornell at Union Candace: Cornell continues with the hot hand. Cornell 4-1 Nicole: I think Union isn’t done with big wins, so I just have to pick one every once in awhile. I’ll take them here. Union 3-2
Princeton at Yale Candace: It’s hard to know much about Yale when the only games the Elis played were against RIT, but the same could be said for Princeton playing Providence. Princeton 3-2 Nicole: Picking the Tigers’ offense to take control of this one. Princeton 5-2
Providence at Merrimack Candace: I’ve been impressed with the Warriors so far, and less than impressed with the Friars. Merrimack 3-2 Nicole: Going with the home team. Merrimack 2-1
Sunday, Oct. 30
Vermont at Maine Candace: Maine is bound for a letdown. I’m going with the visitors. Vermont 3-2 Nicole: This should be a good game. When in doubt, I pick the home team. Maine 3-2
Tuesday, Nov. 1
Cornell at Colgate Candace: This will be a huge test for the Raiders, because Cornell is to me looking like a Big Red team of old. Colgate 3-2 Nicole: Picking the ranked team. Colgate. 2-1
Kevin Entmaa is back to anchor the goal for Adrian. (Mike Dickie Photography)
Last year’s champion
Adrian and St. Norbert tied for the regular-season championship, sharing the Peter’s Cup for most points (35) in the regular season. Adrian won the Harris Cup, but it was St Norbert that made the deepest run in the NCAA tournament, advancing to the final, where it lost 5-1 to Wis.-Stevens Point. Adrian lost 5-2 in the quarterfinal round to eventual national champion Stevens Point.
Favorites
Adrian and St. Norbert have established themselves as the teams to beat in the NCHA. It’s unlikely that will change this year. Both will be contenders for the national title as well.
Players to watch
Adrian returns eight of its top 10 scorers, including Cory Dunn, who punched in six goals and dished out 25 assists last year. Connor Armour, the USCHO national rookie of the year, is also back after racking up eight goals and 30 assists. Mat Thompson returns as well after striking for 16 goals and 21 assists a year ago. The defense of the Bulldogs will also be solid with Kevin Entmaa back in goal. As a freshman, he went 14-1 and fashioned a 2.12 goals-against average.
St. Norbert spent the majority of last season ranked No. 1 in the country and returns several of its best players, including Pijus Rulevicius, who finished with 17 goals and nine assists last season. Riley Christiansen tallied 13 goals and 13 assists. Blake Thompson is also back and will anchor the defense. He scored four goals and tallied 18 assists last year for the Green Knights.
Brandon Millin is the top player back for St. Scholastica and is one of the best offensive threats in the league, coming off a year where he struck for 13 goals and 18 assists. Derek Sutliffe and Josh Hansen bring a lot of experience to the table as well. The seniors scored seven and eight goals, respectively, last year. Sutliffe added 14 assists and Hansen, who came through with four game-winners, tallied 11 assists.
A pair of sophomores will lead the way for Concordia this season. Stefen Steel scored six goals and dished out 14 assists last year for the Falcons. Adam Fauchoux came through with four goals and 11 assists.
Lawrence is counting on another big year in goal out of Mattias Soderqvist, who recorded two shutouts and fashioned a save percentage of .899. Josh Koepplinger returns as well after scoring 10 goals and dishing out five assists last year. Nick Felan should also make an impact after finishing last season with seven goals and 13 assists.
Jack Lewis is back for Lake Forest and is the team’s leading scorer the last two seasons. Lewis struck for 11 goals and seven assists last season. Charlie Izaguirre also returns and finished tied for the team lead in assists, racking up 11 last year.
Braden Crone should be one of Marian’s top scoring threats. The transfer from Concordia (Wisconsin) was the Falcons’ leading scorer last season, tallying 10 goals and 11 assists. Gianni Mangone is coming off a stellar freshman year for the Sabres after tallying 12 goals and 13 assists.
James Ring will play a pivotal role in the success of the Milwaukee School of Engineering after tallying four goals and seven assists last season. Zach Simpson also came through with four goals and seven assists.
Tim Santopoalo is among the key players back for Aurora, which is hoping to turn things around after a two-win season. Santopoalo scored seven goals and tallied five assists last year. Rihards Marenis and Tony Pnewski scored four goals apiece last season for the Spartans.
Finlandia returns two of its top three scorers. Thomas Malkmus is the leading returning scorer from last season, tallying five goals and four assists. Thomas Clayton ranked third on the team in scoring a year ago, finishing with four goals and four assists.
Notes
Adrian has made four consecutive NCAA tournament appearances. Coach Adam Krug has accomplished a great deal in his two years with the Bulldogs, winning 48 games and leading his team to sweeps of the NCHA regular season and tournament crowns. He has coached five All-Americans in that time as well.
St. Norbert has appeared in the final four of the national tournament 10 times in its history, winning the championship four times. The Green Knights punched in 137 goals a year ago and also featured one of the nation’s best defenses, allowing only 1.68 goals per game.
St. Scholastica advanced past the quarterfinal round of the NCHA tournament for the ninth time in the past 10 seasons last year, reaching the semifinals, where it fell in two games to Adrian. Millin tied for the league-lead in game-winning goals last year, scoring five as he helped the Saints finish second in the NCHA standings with a 15-10-3 record.
Concordia set a program record for wins in a season, finishing the year with 11. The Falcons went 11-12-3 overall and played well in overtime games last year, going 2-0-3 in games that went beyond regulation.
Marian went 18-7-3 a year ago, turning in its best season since the 2010-11 campaign, when it won 19 games. The Sabres won their final 12 games of the regular season and reached the semifinals of the Harris Cup for the first time in program history.
Lawrence has made the NCHA playoffs every year in the 10 seasons Mike Szkodzinski has been the coach of the Vikings. Soderqvist ranks third in school history in career wins (18) and fourth in career saves (1,980).
Northland won seven games last season, including three by a goal. Two of the Lumberjacks’ losses were by a goal and three games ended in a tie.
MSOE scored 66 goals a year ago and finished the year at 14-10-1. The Raiders had a winning record at home and on the road, winning eight times on the road.
Billy Kent scored nine goals for Lake Forest, three of which were game-winners. The Foresters finished the season strong, winning four of their final six games and are hoping to carry that momentum over into this season.
Aurora is entering its second full season of NCAA and NCHA competition. The Spartans are under the direction of first-year coach Jason Bloomingburg, who was a Hobey Baker finalist during the 2004-05 season at Wayne State.
Finlandia won just won game last year and heads into the new season on an 18-game losing streak. The Lions will be tested early as they open the season with four consecutive road games.
Alysia DaSilva has become the starter as a junior. ( Princeton – 31). (Shelley M. Szwast)
With a school schedule that start weeks later than anyone else, the Ivy League schools are always the last ones to take the ice during the women’s hockey season. A full month after Wisconsin and St. Cloud State opened play, the Ivies hit the ice and gave us our first full look at the full slate of teams competing for the eight NCAA tournament spots.
Maybe the most interesting and controversial of those teams is Princeton. In last year’s NCAA tournament, the Tigers were sent to Minnesota to play the Gophers, who’d been given the three seed, sending Northeastern to play at number one Boston College. In the end, the higher seeds won in all three quarterfinal games that were affected by the move, so it’s probably a moot point, but the questions about the bracket may have been the first time many fans thought about Princeton’s women’s hockey team for more than a passing moment.
Last season was the Tigers’ second NCAA appearance, but it’s not something coach Jeff Kampersal lets his team dwell on too much.
“We want to still be true to the core values we have in our program,” he said. “We really don’t think about last year except for the older players now knowing what it takes to be Ivy League champions and make the NCAA tournament and hopefully they can pass that down.”
Kampersal has been with Princeton since 1996 and is entering his 21st season with the Tigers. A Princeton alum, he’s the longest-tenured coach in program history, as well as the career wins leader. The Ivy League schools have always started the season a few weeks after the other teams, but that doesn’t mean it’s something Kampersal has ever gotten quite used to.
Hitting the ice to take on opponents that have as many seven games of experience under their skates already can be difficult, if not a little daunting.
“They’re used to the nuances of the officiating or their rotation and maybe have their lineup set while we’re still determining roles,” Kampersal said.
On the other hand, Kampersal likes that his players get a few extra weeks to get fit — as well as avoid injury. Those few extra weeks of rest can make a difference at the end of a long season, both mentally and physically.
“We try to look at it as a positive. I think the hockey season starts way too early and playing games at the end of September is kind of crazy to me. We can stay healthy and stay conditioned and that’s how we mentally (think of the late start).”
One position that may benefit from the extra time is goalie. Princeton graduated First Team All-Ivy League goalie Kimberly Newell, a key part of the Tigers’ success last season. Junior Alysia DaSilva takes over in the net having started just seven games thus far in her career. Having First Team All-American and Patty Kazmaier top-10 finalist Kelsey Koelzer in front of her will certainly help the transition, but Kampersal assumes there will be some bumps that accompany the switch.
“Kimberly had an unbelievable four-year career; she hid a lot of our sins,” Kampersal said. “We may learn new areas of weakness that we didn’t know we had last year. … (But) our defensive approach doesn’t really change. We always want to be relentless and take away time and space and smother and block shots. It doesn’t really matter who’s in net.”
As much as Koelzer provides on the blue line, she’s also a huge scoring threat for the Tigers. The defenseman finished second on the team in scoring with 17 goals and 16 assists. That brings its own set of challenges, but has allowed Koelzer to grow as a player. She was invited to her first Team USA camp this past off season and was named to the U-22 team.
Adding international experience to an already impressive resume just helps Koelzer be the vocal team captain that Kampersal said leads by example.
“Kelsey is a stud. She had ridiculous production from a defensive position. She’s a big part of our offense, no question. She just needs to be Kelsey and do her thing rather than try to do too much. As long as she’s picking her spots, she’s so big and strong and powerful that she’s so hard to defend as a fourth wave of attack.”
Koelzer would be impressive no matter where she is on the ice, but by being so prolific from the blue line, she changes the whole dynamic on the ice. Teams now have to find a way to defend her closely and that usually means another player is freed up and open. Her impact goes far beyond her score line.
The Tigers started the season ranked seventh, but dropped off the polls as other teams took the ice. They returned at the ninth position this week after a pair of convincing wins over Providence, but the final score doesn’t tell the whole story of the wins. Princeton scored three third-period goals on Saturday and five in the final frame on Sunday to sweep the weekend. That third-period resiliency is the kind of thing Kampersal is looking to see from his team this season.
If they learned nothing else from last year’s postseason, the Tigers are now aware exactly how important every win is, in and out of conference. If last season was the best in program history, Kampersal doesn’t want to look for concrete goals or outcomes to determine whether this season is better. Instead, he wants the players to focus on day-to-day improvements and conditioning, exactly so they can pull out tight games and put opponents away in the final period.
So instead of focusing on improving the team’s conversion rate on the power play, he wants to focus on scoring in those positions so that when the team is down late in a game or up by a single goal when a lot is riding on each win, “they can answer the call.”
Lake Superior State is averaging six goals per game after never scoring more than four in any game in 2015-16 (photo: Kati Doty).
Hockey coaches want their teams to score.
This seems like a statement as obvious as “I want a million dollars” or “I want some chocolate cake.”
Of course coaches want their teams to score more goals.
But sometimes, when a team isn’t scoring — or is playing a certain defensive style — the outside perception is that coaches would just as soon not score any goals and leave it up to the defense.
Take, for example, Lake Superior State. For each of the past two seasons the Lakers have averaged under two goals per game — 1.80 and 1.58 in 2015-16 and 2014-15, respectively. In each instance, those numbers were good enough for second-to-last nationally.
It perhaps wasn’t a coincidence that the Lakers have struggled since then.
Obviously, that isn’t the goal.
“Our lack of offense wasn’t by design,” LSSU coach Damon Whitten said. “We didn’t come in here to build a team that is low scoring and try to win 1-0, 2-1. We were trying to build a team that could be high-end offensively, with the goal being top 10 offensively and defensively.”
Early in the season, those plans seem to be coming to fruition. The Lakers are currently 4-0-0 after sweeping both Michigan State and Alabama-Huntsville and currently lead the country with a six goals-per-game average.
And although Whitten knows it’s still early, it’s a big step for a team that has struggled to put the puck in the back of the net in recent seasons.
“I can’t tell you that I thought (the offense) would come this early on and I know it’s not sustainable to score at that level all season, but we have better depth,” Whitten said of this year’s Lakers. “We have better speed and better skill throughout our lineup. Right now, pucks are going in.”
With just one senior (Gus Correale) and one junior (JT Henke, one of four players with seven points) in the forward rotation, the young Lakers have, so far, lit the lamp 24 times this season. The scorelines thus far have read: 6-1, 7-3, 6-3 and 5-2.
Last season, the Lakers never scored more than four goals in any single game.
Five different players (Henke, sophomores Gage Torrel, Diego Cuglietta and Anthony Nelis and freshman Brayden Gelsinger) have three goals already, while Owen Headrick has a goal and six assists. Aside from Henke and Correale, all of LSSU’s forwards are either sophomores or freshmen.
“We’re very young,” Whitten said. “That sophomore class played huge minutes for us last year as freshmen and that was one of the challenges for us last year. We were relying on young kids to generate offense for us, and that made it tough, but it’s paying dividends now.”
The Lakers already have an outstanding goaltender (Gordon Defiel) who is only a junior, as well as a solid (and slightly more experienced) defensive core.
It’s just four games into their season, and a lot can happen between now and March, but the Lakers seem to have found a better balance offense and defense. Considering it’s the LSSU program’s 50th anniversary of existence, it’s at least a first step in the proper direction back to the more halcyon days of the early 1990s.
“I don’t think anybody thought we’d go from being one of the worst offensive teams in the country to leading the NCAA early on here, but it gives us confidence,” Whitten said. “I think we’ve shown an ability that we can create and we can score, and that’s going to give us a chance.
“We feel good about where we’re at and where we’re moving the program forward.”
Sacrificing the body
WCHA coaches may point to goaltending as a strength of the league, but skaters have also shown off their ability to block shots this season.
Roughly a month into the season, a dozen players are averaging two blocked shots or more per game. The leader of the black-and-blue effort?
Huntsville sophomore Cam Knight and Lake Superior freshman Collin Saccoman, who are each averaging 2.75 blocked shots per game.
Knight isn’t the only Charger consistently blocking shots. Brandon Carlsson is averaging 2.71 blocked shots per game, while Brandon Parker is averaging 2.38 shots per game.
“We want to see our guys doing what they can to help the goalie,” UAH coach Mike Corbett said earlier this season. “It’s one of those little things that can make a big difference and get some energy up on the bench.”
As expected, all those averaging more than two blocked shots per game are defenseman. But there are a couple forwards who have gotten in on the shot-blocking action.
Northern Michigan forward Gerard Hanson leads all WCHA forwards with 11 blocked shots in six game. After Hanson, Torrell is blocking 1.25 shots per game.
Maybe it’s leading to chances. Maybe it’s just good karma, but Torrell and Hanson have also found success on the offensive end of the ice.
Hanson has four points in six games, while Torrell has six points in four games.
Ice Chips
– Jordan Uhelski is supposed to be the backup goalie for Alabama-Huntsville, but he’s played like a starter and has posted impressive numbers while under heavy fire. Uhelski has a .905 save percentage and 2.73 GAA.
– Alaska-Anchorage had a bye week after starting the season 1-3-0. The struggling Seawolves have scored just three goals in the four games they’ve played thus far. Their only win was a 1-0 victory over Canisius.
– Alaska picked up a big win against No. 9 Minnesota State at home last week. The Nanooks were trounced in the first game 7-1, but battled back and scored three second-period goals in a 4-2 win on Saturday. Alaska takes the momentum to the Lower 48 and will play away from the Last Frontier for the first time this weekend.
-After scoring just six points in 39 games as a sophomore in 2015-16, Bemidji State junior defenseman Brett Beauvais has already matched that total through six games this season. He has two goals and four assists and currently leads the Beavers in scoring. Thirteen players have scored points for BSU so far.
– Bowling Green has been one of the biggest disappointments this season. The preseason WCHA favorite has yet to win a game and once again got swept this past weekend against Ohio State. The good news for the Falcons? They’ve only played one WCHA series so far, so all could be forgotten.
– Gerald Mayhew has missed the past three games with injury for Ferris State. The senior was expected to lead the Bulldogs in points this year and had three points (two goals, one assist) in three games before his injury.
– Despite outshooting them 79-45 last weekend, Michigan Tech only managed a loss and a tie against nonconference foe Michigan. The Huskies return to the Upper Peninsula this weekend when they take on rivals Northern Michigan. Former Tech players Brent Peterson and Scott White, along with the Huskies’ 1975 national championship team, will be inducted into the Michigan Tech Sports Hall of Fame on Saturday, Oct. 29.
– Minnesota State freshman Nick Rivera scored two goals and had two assists to lead the Mavericks in their sweep of Alaska last weekend. Rivera is currently on a three-game scoring streak
Players of the Week
This week’s WCHA players of the week were Cuglietta (offensive), Saccoman (defensive) and Rivera (rookie).
Jordan Greenway is an offensive threat for Boston University playing 5-on-5, shorthanded or on the power play (photo: Melissa Wade).
Much attention has been given to the early-season abundance of power plays and penalty kills and the impact of high (or undesirably low) percentages in both categories.
“I don’t know if there’s anybody in the country that hasn’t had to put special teams at the forefront,” Merrimack coach Mark Dennehy said. “For the first three weekends, it has become a special teams game. We spend half our time in practice on special teams because half the game is special teams.”
But there’s a third side to the special teams triangle — one that’s usually mentioned only as an afterthought if it’s mentioned at all — but is proving to be a crucial in many contests.
Shorthanded goals.
Both for and (especially cringe-worthy) against.
On Friday night, Massachusetts-Lowell, a team that scored four shorthanded goals all last year, scored two in the second period alone to break open a tied game.
On Saturday, New Hampshire lost to Colorado College, 4-3. Not only did UNH go 0-for-7 on the power play while CC went 2-for-6, but the Wildcats also gave up two shorthanded goals in the opening six minutes to dig a hole from which they could never totally crawl out of. They did score once themselves on the PK–making it a total of three between the two teams–but you’ve got almost no chance when your man-advantage unit finishes a net two goals down.
Last year, by contrast, six of the 12 Hockey East teams scored only one or two shorties all season long. League teams gave up 31 shorthanders to other teams while scoring 39 of their own. This year, just three weekends into the season, those numbers are 14 and 11, respectively. That is, they’ve already given up almost half of what they gave up all last year.
“Either you have your regular guys out there and they’re tired which is going to lend itself to more opportunities,” Dennehy theorizes, “or you’ve got to go deeper down your roster and put kids into positions that maybe they haven’t been in the past. Instead of having two units, you might have three or maybe even four power-play units.
“You have to because half the game is power play. If you’re not on a power play or killing unit, you can go long stretches of the game and not play. You might have to stretch again by the time your number gets called. So because of that, it’s created opportunities.”
The two teams that have taken best advantage of that opportunity are Lowell and Boston University. As noted before, the River Hawks used two shorthanded goals to default St. Lawrence on Friday.
“We have an aggressive penalty kill so we’re always thinking about it,” Lowell’s John Edwardh said after the win. “First and foremost, we’re thinking about killing the penalty, but we have the green light if we see fit.”
Lowell coach Norm Bazin added, “I don’t know if you go out [intending] to score a shorthanded goal, but if you have the mentality to be aggressive, they usually come as a result.”
BU, however, tops all others with four shorthanded goals. Other than the outrageously high total for so early in the season, that shouldn’t be a surprise since the Terriers are arguably the league’s most talented team.
“If you’re on a power play and all of a sudden you see guys like Clayton Keller, Jordan Greenway, JFK [Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson], Patrick Harper, and Kieffer Bellows killing [the penalty], that creates a psychological dynamic before the puck is even dropped,” BU coach David Quinn said. “When you have good players out there killing penalties, the other team notices. Maybe they get a little more cautious or a little more nervous because they know if they make a mistake they could put themselves in a position all of a sudden to give up a shorthanded goal. That’s something that we certainly try to take advantage of.”
And because BU has a wealth of elite players, Quinn doesn’t run ragged his top three or four to gain the special teams edge.
“We’re using eight forwards to kill penalties and we use all our D, so we’re lucky in that regard,” Quinn says. “We’re not going to wear people out. I don’t think we’ve had a forward play over 20 minutes [in a game] yet this year. We’re fortunate that we do have a bunch of forwards we trust with killing penalties.”
So it’s no surprise that Quinn feels optimistic about the tighter enforcement of the rules. The best offensive players will get to flash more without being shackled by quasi-legal defensive techniques — the Jack Eichels and Johnny Gaudreaus of college hockey benefit more than Sammy Sledgehammer. And having a wealth of top players makes for a special teams advantage while the rest of the sport adjusts.
“I think it’s good for hockey,” he says. “People love offense in any sport, whether it’s football, basketball, hockey or baseball. Everybody likes points. I think it will help us, because I think we do have some talented players, but there are a lot of talented players in college hockey.
“It’s been a tough transition for the players and the referees. We’re all learning what a penalty is, but if people are patient this is all going to work out.”
U-turn at Merrimack
Merrimack got off to a rocky start, the Warriors losing their first three games: 2-1 to Sacred Heart, 4-0 to Clarkson and 4-1 to St. Lawrence.
Last weekend, however, a sweep of Colgate made for a quick U-turn.
“It’s easy to go back and look at individual situations and explain them away, but at the end of the day, it’s about how we play and we really didn’t play great in any of those games,” Dennehy said. “This weekend was just a result of us playing better.
“This time of the year, that’s what you’re striving to do. You’re trying to get better every time you go on the ice, whether it’s in practice or in the game. So I thought we took a good step forward.
“I like our team and I’ve said that from the start of this season, but we just really hadn’t gotten the type of performance from enough players to put anything together. That’s probably what we’re probably looking for now as coaches, more than anything. Now we’re going to be looking for a little more consistency. Even in our games this weekend, we’d go through a stretch where we were doing some really good things, and then there’d be a two-to-three minute period where we weren’t paying as much attention as we need to, or taking care of the puck as much as we need to. There’s just a little bit more of a drop off than we can have if we want to be a good team.”
Freshman Tyler Irvine has made a positive first impression, scoring his first goal this past weekend, but catching Dennehy’s eye before that.
“He’s had a big effect for us early on in the season,” Dennehy said. “He’s someone who has earned our trust in a number of situations. Honestly, the first three games we only had two good players each of those games. One of them was the goalie and the other one was Tyler.
“So he has separated himself on that front. He’s been our most consistent player.”
And the Warriors kept the momentum going on Tuesday night with a 2-2 tie with Boston College.
“Watch them on film, it’s Groundhog Day,” Dennehy said. “Instead of Johnny Gaudreau or Nathan Gerbe or Marty Reasoner or Brian Gionta, it’s Colin White and Ryan Fitzgerald. They’re skilled, so we [had] to play well.
“This time of year, your opponent doesn’t matter nearly as much as you do. We’re trying to get better and I thought we took a step in the right direction.”
BU bounces back
It caught observers such as myself by surprise when Denver, coming off two losses, swept BU a week ago. Perhaps we had anointed the Terriers as the team to beat in Hockey East a bit prematurely. But a 7-0 shellacking of Sacred Heart and especially a 3-0 shutout of Quinnipiac restored those expectations.
“A lot of people mentioned that they were surprised at what happened out in Denver, and I guess I’m surprised people were surprised,” Quinn said. “Number one, they’re a really good team. Their D-corps is as good as any D-corps in the country. They can skate, they’re tough to forecheck, they defend hard and they’re a really good team. They’d also gotten swept the weekend before. Any time you get swept, the next weekend takes on more of a meaning. They were two hard fought games, and we’re young.
“I know we won draft day, but that doesn’t mean anything in college hockey. The thing that I really liked was we competed. I just liked our make-up. We’re all as coaches trying to figure out what make-up our team has at this time of the season. The weekend ended and we lost two games, but I felt good about our team and what we were capable of because of some of the characteristics we showed out in Denver.
“I thought we competed, but I didn’t think we were hard to play against out in Denver. I still don’t think we fully understand what it’s going to take to create offense at the collegiate level because we’re so young, but we were much harder to play against this past weekend.”
Quinn’s comment about the team’s youth is well placed. While there is some experience on the blue line, which he considers the strength of the team, seven of the team’s top scorers are freshmen or sophomore and goaltender Jake Oettinger, who has excelled, is also a freshman.
“This is a big picture, long process for us,” Quinn says. “We’re not the ones writing about ourselves. Just because people write all this stuff about us, we don’t certainly feel that way. We love our team and we love the kids we have here. We love that we have a chance to be very good, but that doesn’t mean anything.
“You’re not talking about 20- and 21-year old sophomores and freshmen. You’re talking about 18- and 19-year-olds. We’re littered with teenagers and it’s just the makeup of our team right now. That’s why it’s going to take some time. We have a chance to be very good, but it depends on how we grow and if we continue to jell as a team and work hard and all those characteristics that you need to have success.”
Brett Gervais is one of several Clarkson players with three points on the young season (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).
Clarkson started a stretch playing four ranked teams in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll this past weekend with a pair of games against Providence and Massachusetts-Lowell.
The undermanned Golden Knights did quite well as youngsters and veterans alike contributed in the 3-3 tie against the Friars and the 4-3 victory over the River Hawks. They were led by freshman goaltender Jake Kielly, who made 71 saves on the weekend and was named ECAC Goaltender of the Week for his efforts.
Kielly has been filling in for senior Steve Perry.
“Steve Perry has been hurt to start the season here,” Clarkson coach Casey Jones said. “It gave us the opportunity to get Jake in net right off the bat. I think he came in prepared. He obviously won a championship in the USHL last year [with Tri-City], so we knew he would be competitive and ready to challenge for playing time. The opportunity has presented it to him and he’s a calming effect for us, which is always nice.”
Defensemen Terrance Amorosa and Aaron Thow have also missed time recently.
In Friday’s game, it was the freshmen who stepped up as they had two of the three goals, Jordan Schneider and Sheldon Rempal each scoring in the second period. Junior defensemen Tyko Karjalainen scored in the third period.
Saturday, it was the seniors who stepped up in the comeback win against UMass-Lowell. Down 2-0 in the second period, they tied the game with goals from freshman Devin Brosseau and senior Jordan Boucher. Seniors A.J. Fossen and James de Haas scored in the third.
Even with the successful weekend, Jones knows his club still has plenty of work ahead.
“Three points is encouraging, but we are a work in progress,” Jones said. “I was happy to get points on the road from two good teams. I think for us, that’s our team. We are going to have to have some depth in scoring and we are going to have to spread it around to be successful. I think this point of the season, we are happy we are getting more consistency of production on a nightly basis, which has allowed us to get three or four goals.
“That’s a step in the right direction for us this season.”
Only three skaters on the roster don’t have a point so far in the young season. Two of them are freshmen in forward Haralds Egle and defenseman Shane Kuzmeski, who each have only played in three games so far. The other is junior forward Dylan Gareau, who also has only played three games.
Quebec natives Devin Brosseau and Sam Vigneault lead the team with five points each. Boucher, de Haas and Nic Pierog each have four points. Six players sit with three points.
The schedule doesn’t get any easier for Clarkson after starting the regular season with six games against Hockey East opponents. This weekend, they host two Big Ten teams in Minnesota on Friday night and Wisconsin on Saturday.
“We knew our schedule was going to be tough in October,” Jones said. “We wanted to get that challenge to see where we are at to help us prepare for the ever-tough ECAC league season.”
Clarkson opens ECAC play the first weekend of November with Quinnipiac on Nov. 4 and Princeton on Nov. 5.
CIS scheduling change leads to Dartmouth-Harvard scrimmage
With the Ivy League schools getting their regular season underway this weekend, travel partners Harvard and Dartmouth met in Hanover, N.H., Saturday afternoon to get one final warmup in before the regular season begins.
Why did the two teams decide to face each other?
First, Ivy League rules allow teams to scrimmage each other. Secondly, as they get a late start compared to the rest of Division I, they couldn’t schedule a Canadian Interuniversity Sport team this year.
“It’s kind of unavoidable because of the new regulations in CIS, the college hockey loop in Canada,” Dartmouth coach Bob Gaudet said. “It’s hard to play a Canadian team because most of the leagues, they can’t play (NCAA teams) once they started the (regular season) schedule. They can’t take out outside trips once they start their league schedule. There are very few teams that can. The teams we have been dealing with in the past like McGill or teams in the Maritimes – we actually had an exhibition game scheduled with the University of New Brunswick. That new rule actually caused that not to happen.”
University of New Brunswick is perennial power in CIS that usually plays a handful of NCAA teams during the season.
Cornell did play two Ontario University Athletics teams – a conference within CIS – this past weekend in Ontario IT and Brock.
Dartmouth and Harvard usually play the same CIS team, but with the teams not playing each other until Jan.17, it made sense to schedule an exhibition against each other.
“I know Teddy Donato and Paul Pearl over there at Harvard and what we figured we would do is play a game for all intents and purposes that was to get us prepared to play the upcoming schedule,” Gaudet said. “It would be nice to play a couple of those, but we don’t have the opportunity. To play once, I think it benefited us both.”
Harvard, who also played the U.S. National Team Development Program’s Under-18 team on Oct. 8, won the scrimmage against Dartmouth, 4-3 in a shootout.
With Harvard being ranked, it also gave a quality test as Dartmouth opens the season against another ranked opponent in Michigan. Dartmouth went out to Ann Arbor last season after Thanksgiving and lost 7-0 and skated to a 1-1 tie. The Wolverines return the favor this year by heading over to Hanover for a single game.
“Playing the University of Michigan is great,” Gaudet said. “We want to play a tough schedule and we have since I have been here. It’s been 20 years now and we have played so many tough schedules. I think that’s what we aspire to be, one of the nation’s elite. In order to do that, you have to play them and that’s what we are trying to do.”
Vecchione, Cockrell also win ECAC weekly awards
With Kielly winning the Goaltender of the Week, Mike Vecchione of Union was named the Player of the Week with his six goals and two assists in the victories over RIT and Niagara. Adam Dauda of Colgate was also another nominee as he had two goals and two assists in the series against Merrimack. De Haas of Clarkson was the third nominee with his goal against UMass-Lowell. Evan Tironese of RPI was also a nominee with his seven-point weekend. He had a goal and an assist in the tie against Niagara and a goal and four assists against RIT.
Jared Cockrell of Colgate was named the Rookie of the Week with his first two points of his career in the series against Merrimack. Brogan Rafferty of Quinnipiac had two points against UConn to receive a nomination. Kielly was also in the running for Rookie of the Week.
Runner-ups for Goalie of the Week were Chris Truehl of Quinnipiac and Jake Kupsky of Union.
Pecknold inducted into New Hampshire Hockey Hall
On Sunday, Quinnipiac head coach Rand Pecknold was inducted into the Hampshire Hockey Hall of Fame for contributions to the game.
The Bedford, N.H., native is in his 23rd season behind the Bobcats’ bench. He played at Connecticut College, where he had 17 goals and 40 assists as a senior. Before playing at Connecticut College, he played at Lawrence Academy.
Before taking the Quinnipiac job in 1994, he served as an assistant coach at Connecticut College for three seasons.
“This is an incredible honor,” Pecknold said in a Quinnipiac press release. “I’m very appreciative of the New Hampshire Hockey Hall of Fame for this recognition.”
Denver sophomore Troy Terry has been an offensive catalyst as of late for the Pioneers (photo: Candace Horgan).
Starting the season at home in the Ice Breaker tournament, Denver was a preseason favorite.
However, the Pioneers lost both games in the tournament, 3-2 to Ohio State and 3-1 to Boston College.
An 0-2 start wasn’t cause for panic among Pioneers fans, but when that opening weekend followed with an announcement that star forward Dylan Gambrell would be out for 4-6 weeks with an upper-body injury, there was cause for concern.
However, Denver has rebounded with four wins, following an impressive home sweep of then-No. 2 Boston University with a road sweep of Michigan State last weekend.
The Pioneers’ success has mostly come from strong defense, which has limited opposing teams to just a single goal in each of its last three games.
“You know, we said the strength of our team at the start of the year while our young forwards start to gain confidence at the college level was our ‘D’ corps dominating the games by not allowing easy entries and taking away time and space,” said Denver coach Jim Montgomery. “All six, even our freshman, Michael Davies, have done a great job of assimilating and playing how we want to play. The way they break the puck out and the way they shut down offensive transitions has been the most important part to our four-game winning streak.”
The offense has been paced by NHL first-round draft pick Henrik Borgström, who, after failing to register a point in his first three games, has three goals and three assists in his last three outings.
“I think he’s becoming more of a two-way hockey player, and is improving because of his work habits,” said Montgomery. “He’s getting the puck with a lot more time and space offensively now.”
The offense is also getting production from sophomores Troy Terry and Jarid Lukosevicius, who have upped their production during this win streak, and show signs of stepping up after their freshman years.
“I think both of them had great second halves last year, and I think that their confidence from last year and what they did over the summer has carried forward,” said Montgomery. “We expected both of them and needed both them to take steps offensively, and both have done it.”
Denver has won with timely scoring in addition to a stifling defense, but the offense isn’t as explosive as it was last year, when it was led by the “Pacific Rim Line” (Trevor Moore, Danton Heinen and Gambrell), as well as senior Quentin Shore. The defense also lost scoring blueliner Nolan Zajac. All five players were important on Denver’s power play last year, and this year’s power play has struggled without them, registering only four power-play goals on 32 chances.
“There’s no doubt that losing those guys, it’s hard to replace those players, but it’s a new season, a new year, and we need new players to emerge and be as dominant and offensive as those players were for us,” said Montgomery.
“There’s a lot of reasons (for the power-play struggles). One, we’re getting outworked. Two, we’re losing faceoffs. And three, our decision-making in the zone has not been great. We’re trying to get more reps at it and we’re trying to get better at it. A lot of it falls on me. Because I run the power play, I don’t think I have expressed enough what I think is going to work and what we need to be doing because we haven’t had the work ethic and the right attitude when we go over the boards. That’s all about me. I need to demand from our power-play groups.”
Denver opens its NCHC slate this weekend at home against Western Michigan, which has surprised some observers with a strong 3-0-1 start. The Broncos’ success has come at the expense of two then-ranked WCHA teams, but it’s no surprise to Montgomery.
“We think they are by far the most improved team in the NCHC this year,” Montgomery said. “I think we’re going to have to be much better on the special teams than we have been, because they are 30 percent on the power play and 87 percent on the penalty kill. The other part is we’re going to have to be better at protecting pucks. We’ve been kind of like a rush team so far and haven’t had a lot of offensive zone time, and if we want to have success against Western, we can’t just be a one-and-done offensive zone team five-on-five.”
St. Cloud State works out the kinks
St. Cloud State knew there might be some defensive issues this year after losing starting goaltender Charlie Lindgren and blue line quarterback Ethan Prow.
However, after starting the season by giving up 10 goals in two losses to Minnesota State, there might have been concern when St. Cloud fell behind 5-2 in the third period Friday night in Minneapolis against arch-rival Minnesota.
Instead, the Huskies rallied with three goals, then eked out a win in OT, and followed that with a strong 3-2 win over the Gophers at home on Saturday.
“We got a couple of bounces,” said St. Cloud State coach Bob Motzko. “We’re there playing Minnesota in a big situation, and our kids just kept battling real hard, which they’ve done all four games. I think they’ve made some mistakes, but they’re a young hockey team and I think that’s normal. However, when you do win, there’s a major emotional burst in the locker room after, and conversely, we didn’t get down when we were losing, and we just want to get better. I thought Saturday was our best-played game of the four. We limited mistakes and we had good structure.”
According to Motzko, it was the win Saturday that really displayed the type of growth he is looking for from his young charges, who could have been vulnerable to a letdown after the emotional win on Friday on the road.
“It was huge for confidence. It validates the fact that our guys can keep getting better and we turned it into another good game on Saturday,” Motzko said. “That was the critical sign for me, how we played Saturday coming off an emotional win. I really thought Saturday was our best game so far, and the way we want to play. That being said, we were only inches away from losing both games. That’s why it’s critical that we find ways to win.”
One issue for St. Cloud so far in all of its games has been slow starts.
In each game, the Huskies have fallen behind by at least two goals. Against Minnesota State in the second game, they were able to rally and take a 3-2 lead after one period, and then a 4-3 lead in the second before giving up three unanswered goals. They were then down by two after one against Minnesota Saturday after the third-period three-goal rally Friday.
When asked what his team needs to do to improve on those slow starts, Motzko was succinct.
“Just our structure of things within our system, and a little penalty kill and young goaltenders, I think there is a combination of things that have led to that, and how you fix that is you keep moving forward trying to get better at it,” said Motzko. “What’s most critical now is we have to build on last weekend.”
One interesting aspect of the Huskies’ early-season play has been special teams. The power play has been strong, clicking 28.57 percent of the time, despite a new cast of players, but the penalty kill has been dreadful, giving up seven goals on 11 chances.
Motzko briefly laughs when asked about what his team can do to improve the penalty kill, saying, “Stop taking penalties.”
He does stress that the new players will need time to work out the kinks on special teams.
“The big thing for our penalty kill is we’re playing new players on the penalty kill,” explained Motzko. “Judd Peterson is our only penalty killer from our forwards that was on the penalty kill last year on the top unit. We’re putting new players in new positions in critical moments in a hockey game. That’s the No. 1 thing to move forward. We think Jacob Benson has taken a huge step forward and has the ability to take a big role in penalty killing. In four games, he’s grown into it. I don’t know if we used him a lot the first week, but he’s grown into it.
“To be a top penalty killer, it’s an art and it’s a commitment and not everybody is great at it. We are trial and error right now trying to find the right mix of people who we are going to groom into being our penalty kill unit.”
St. Cloud State has one more nonconference series this weekend against Alabama-Huntsville at home before opening conference play the following weekend against Minnesota-Duluth at home.
While Motzko laughs about wishing college hockey would have more of an exhibition series to gain experience, he does value playing nonconference opponents early, and hopes his charges can keep building on last weekend’s success.
“I think it’s just another opportunity to get games in,” said Motzko. “The fact that it’s nonconference is critical because I think we just need more games to find the right guys on the penalty kill and power play and juggle that around. Four games so far, we are starting to shift everything around. We keep tinkering, and it gives us another opportunity to solidify what we are doing and tinker with what we are doing and build on the things that we are getting better at and continue to work on the areas that we are struggling with.”
NCHC Players of the Week
Offensive Player of the Week – Brock Boeser, North Dakota: Boeser scored five goals in a weekend sweep of then-No. 18 Bemidji State, including the first four of the series. On Friday, he scored a natural hat trick, the second of his career, in a 3-2 win as North Dakota fought back from a 2-0 hole, notching the second and third goals in the third period. On Saturday, he scored two more goals in a 5-4 win. He was named the game’s first star both nights and earned a plus-3 rating.
Defensive Player of the Week – Louie Belpedio, Miami: Belpedio earned three points in a tie and win over Maine and helped limit the Black Bears to only three goals on the series. On Friday, he assisted on the game-tying goal in the third period of a 3-3 tie. Saturday, he had two goals, his first career multi-goal game, in a 5-0 shutout. All of his points came on the power play. He also led a penalty kill unit that killed all nine Maine power plays.
Rookie of the Week – Nick Halloran, Colorado College: Halloran helped CC earn a split on its Hockey East road trip, scoring three of CC’s five goals in its games against Boston College and New Hampshire. On Friday, he scored the first goal of the game in CC’s 4-1 loss to BC. On Saturday, he got his first career multi-goal game, scoring twice on the power play, including notching the game-winning goal in the third period in a 4-3 over UNH.
Goaltender of the Week – Ryan Larkin, Miami: Larkin helped Miami earn a tie and win over red-hot Maine last weekend while only giving up three goals and notching a .944 save percentage and a 1.45 GAA. On Friday, he made 18 saves in a 3-3 tie, and on Saturday, he pitched a shutout with 33 saves in a 5-0 win, for which he was named the game’s first star. He also helped Miami kill all nine Maine power-play chances.
Providence announced Wednesday that Kyle Murphy has been promoted to the position of associate athletic director for men’s and women’s hockey/Schneider Arena. It also was announced that Theresa Feaster has been hired as the coordinator of men’s hockey operations. Murphy replaces Nick Reggio, who resigned earlier in the month, and Feaster fills the void created by Murphy’s promotion.
Ed Minney has been a positive for the 0-4-0 Michigan State squad this season (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).
Nobody likes a moral victory.
At least, nobody claims to like a moral victory.
Sometimes, though, when a team is at a point where progress isn’t yet noted in the win column, a little bit of moral victory can go a long way for the morale itself.
It’s more than fair to say that Michigan State hasn’t had the start the 0-4-0 Spartans wanted, but after dropping a pair of road games to unranked Lake Superior State Oct. 14-15 by a collective score of 14-4, Michigan State rebounded at home against Denver last weekend – in a way. The No. 3 Pioneers were ranked sixth coming into the weekend in East Lansing, but the Spartans were able to compete with them in two close losses, 2-1 and 3-1.
MSU coach Tom Anastos said that the Spartans had learned lessons through the series but said, “I hate learning them through losing.”
In the Friday game, the Spartans were able to hold the Pioneers scoreless through the first 45:33 of the game, in spite of being outshot 22-9 in the first two periods. In that contest, junior goaltender Ed Minney had perhaps the best game of his career, stopping 24 of Denver’s 26 shots.
Freshman John Lethemon made 23 saves in Saturday’s loss, his second game in net after having been replaced by Minney in the second period of Michigan State’s 7-3 loss to the Lakers the Saturday before.
Eight of Michigan State’s freshmen skaters have played in at least two games each this season, and the Spartans have just one junior and one senior blue liner. After Friday’s game, Anastos said that the level of competition was good for his young squad.
“I think our team got better, and that’s what’s important at this stage of the game,” said Anastos. “A lot of guys got experience. We played a lot of freshmen tonight in key situations, a lot of sophomores tonight in key situations, so that’s a positive as well.”
One significant way in which the Spartans improved was on special teams. In the series against Lake Superior State, Michigan State allowed six power-play goals and a short-hander. The Pioneers went 0-for-5 on the power-play against the Spartans for the weekend.
“Special teams tonight were radically improved from a week ago, which is a sign of improvement,” said Anastos Friday. “Lots to be encouraged about, although you’re always disappointed to lose, to give up the goals that we did and not be able to climb back.”
One of the most encouraging things about the series for the Spartans was the play of the very young defense.
“I was pleased with the gains we made from a week ago and how we competed and defended in our defensive zone,” said Anastos.
Minney’s performance against Denver Friday was very promising, but he also credited the defense in front of him.
“I felt great [and] I was seeing the puck awesome,” Minney said. “Overall, our ‘D’ did a way better job of clearing out the front of the net and it was a lot easier to stop the puck when I could see it. They did a great job of clearing it out of the zone, too.”
“I thought Ed was seeing the puck well [and] I thought he was playing the puck well,” added Anastos. “He played against a good team, made a lot of good saves and I hope his confidence would grow, for sure. I thought he handled the puck overall pretty well, which was nice. To get over that hump, winning helps your confidence, too, so that’s an important part, but again, that’s another sign of encouragement.”
Anastos said that getting a good performance out of both Minney and Lethemon was “a real positive” for the Spartans against Denver.
“Our plan was to get these guys experience and see how things shake out,” he said.
Going forward, Anastos said that Michigan State is “open to playing one guy or multiple guys.” What’s important, he said, “is that they’re playing at a level that gives us a chance to win every night.”
This weekend, the Spartans have a single home game against Princeton Friday night.
Ohio State still undefeated
The Buckeyes moved up to No. 15 in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll. With their 3-0-2 start, perhaps Ohio State needs a few more wins to gain more a little respect outside of the Big Ten, where the Buckeyes were picked by coaches in preseason to finish second in the league.
None of that sort of thing matters to coach Steve Rohlik, whose contract was extended recently through the end of the 2020-21 season.
All Rohlik wants to do is keep going.
“We’re just concentrating on the next game,” said Rohlik after the Buckeyes swept Bowling Green in a home-and-home series, 5-4 on the road and 6-1 at home.
“If we continue to get better during the week and prepare the right way, all we’re concerned about is the next game. If we take care of those things, everything falls into place.”
One of the things falling into place is Ohio State’s offense. Through five games, the Buckeyes have averaged 3.60 goals with nine skaters on the squad registering at least a goal so far.
“We talked prior to the season on how to get the young guys going – we are four lines deep right now,” said senior forward Nick Schilkey. “We have young guys stepping up and scoring big goals right now. We are confident up front for sure.”
Schilckey leads Ohio State in scoring with four goals and two assists – three goals against Bowling Green – after having netted 19 in 36 games last season.
Good goalies in the early going
It’s way too early to look at stats as anything more than speculative, but it is encouraging to see three B1G goaltenders among the top eight for save percentage in the nation.
The trio includes a pair of Michigan freshmen, Hayden Lavigne (.954) and Jack LaFontaine (.946), each with two games to his credit. The third is Ohio State senior Matt Tomkins (.936), who is 2-0-2 so far this season.
“We scored enough to win. We just gave up too many goals.”
That was Don Lucia’s assessment of Minnesota’s 6-5 overtime Friday loss to St. Cloud State, a game in which the Gophers surrendered three goals in the second half of the third period.
“All of a sudden, we just got on our heels,” said Lucia. “We gave them too much room, had some breakdowns, and it’s going to cost you.”
The Gophers lost Saturday’s rematch, 3-2, again giving up three unanswered goals – two in the second and one in the third.
Even with the losses to SCSU, Minnesota is tied for second in the nation in offense, averaging 4.75 goals per game through four games. Sophomore forward Tyler Sheehy (3-5-8) is tied for fourth in the nation in points per game (2.00). Sheehy had 12 goals in 37 games last season.
Perhaps they’re not rebuilding
Penn State surprised a few people with the success in South Bend against No. 7 Notre Dame, a team that was ranked third before the Nittany Lions took the Irish to two overtime games, tying 3-3 and winning 3-2.
“It gave us some confidence that we can play with them,” said PSU coach Guy Gadowsky. “The rankings this early in the season, I don’t think they mean so much, but you know that Notre Dame is a very, very good hockey team and extremely well coached and we were able to hang with them and the guys gained confidence from that.
“I think we’re looking to get better, though. By no means do we feel like we’ve arrived by any stretch.”
The Nittany Lions are a still a bit of a question mark this season, with seven rookie forwards, two freshmen defenders and newcomer Peyton Jones between the pipes. In five games played, Jones is 3-0-1 with a .916 save percentage and 2.40 GAA.
“Maybe this counts because of Peyton Jones’ demeanor,” said Gadowsky, “but we seem very calm and we’re not frantic at all and I thought for a team that’s as young as we are, we would show some of that.”
The young Nittany Lions have a chance to gain even more confidence in their next 10 games, all to be played in Pegula Arena and culminating with their first Big Ten series of the season against Michigan, Dec. 1-2.
Three stars of the week
A couple of rookies and a familiar face.
First star – Penn State freshman goaltender Peyton Jones
Jones (Langhorne, Pa.) recorded a weekend save percentage of .918 in the Nittany Lions’ tie and win against Notre Dame on the road, stopping 56 shots in the two overtime contests. This is his second weekly Big Ten award.
Second star – Ohio State senior forward Nick Schilkey
Schilkey (Marysville, Mich.) led the league in goals (three) and shared the conference lead in points (four) as the Buckeyes swept Bowling Green in a home-and-home series. Schilkey’s goal in the first minute of the third period Friday tied the game for the Buckeyes. This is his fifth weekly Big Ten award and the first of this season.
Third star – Michigan freshman forward Will Lockwood
Lockwood (Bloomfield Hills, Mich.) had a goal and an assist in each of Michigan’s home games against Michigan Tech, a 4-3 win and 3-3 tie. His goal Friday was the game winner with less than a minute to go in regulation. This is his first weekly Big Ten award.
My ballot
I’m with Guy Gadowsky on this. It’s so early.
1. North Dakota
2. Boston University
3. Quinnipiac
4. Boston College
5. Mass-Lowell
6. Ohio State
7. Michigan
8. Denver
9. St. Cloud
10. Miami
11. Minnesota
12. Notre Dame
13. Minnesota-Duluth
14. Providence
15. Clarkson
16. Minnesota State
17. Northeastern
18. St. Lawrence
19. Bemidji State
20. Penn State
Sacred Heart senior Jordan Minello has a goal and an assist in six games this season for the Pioneers (photo: Omar Phillips).
There’s nothing more sacred in hockey than the concept of “the room.”
It’s the very heart and soul of every team, a place where souls shed their individuality in favor of a team skin. It’s a place of bonding, a place nobody can understand with any accuracy unless they’ve been a part of one.
Building the foundation of the room comes in many forms.
At Sacred Heart, it’s come on the road as six games into the season, the road warrior Pioneers have played at home only once. They’ve traversed the northeast, going from Fairfield County to the Hudson Valley to the Massachusetts-New Hampshire border. They’ve gone back home only to go back up to Boston and out west to Springfield. It’s been a long road, one that continues over the next couple of weeks, but it’s been worth it.
“It will be nice to eventually get home,” said SHU coach CJ Marottolo. “We still have our next two games against Yale and New Hampshire. Yale is close, but it’s always a competitive atmosphere to play in, and a trip to UNH is always tough. After that, we’ll have four league games at home.
“It’s been a good chance for us to come together as a team and learn about each other and our teammates,” he continued. “As a coach, when you’re going through, it can be hard, but you know that will help make your team.”
For the Pioneers, the early road trips are a sign of their resiliency. After opening the year at Army West Point with a 4-0 loss, they traveled up to Merrimack, coming away with a 2-1 victory two days later. They returned to West Point the next weekend, losing 3-0, before returning home the next night to take on Union.
It was in that first home game in their new arena that Sacred Heart gave a glimpse into that resiliency. Surrendering a goal just over four minutes into the third period, the Pioneers faced their second two-goal deficit of the night. That’s when two freshmen – Vito Bavaro and Zach Tsekos – scored within 80 seconds of each other to tie the game.
“We didn’t get off to a great start [against Union],” said Marottolo. “But we stuck it, especially in the second and third periods. We kept battling, and we just kept playing our game. In the end, we were rewarded for our hard work with Vito and Zach getting their first goals. Even in overtime, we didn’t score, but we had a couple of whacks at it.”
The next weekend, it was back on the road for two games in three days in Massachusetts. On Friday, facing Boston University, Sacred Heart fell behind 2-0 in the first after being outshot, 14-4. But the Pioneers rallied to play the fourth-ranked Terriers evenly in the second before BU pulled away in the third for a 7-0 win.
“We just couldn’t get that first one,” said Marottolo. “If we were able to get one, you never know what could have happened. But we held them to 2-0 into the third period, and BU is a very talented team.”
That led to Saturday.
League rival American International scored a shorthanded goal with 32 seconds left in the first period to take a 1-0 lead. After Bavaro tied the game in the first minute of the second, AIC again took the lead with a goal at the five minute mark for a 2-1 lead after 40 minutes.
Sacred Heart scored the next four goals, with Jasper striking twice and Kory Kennedy and Jordan Minello adding scores of their own as the Pioneers turned a 2-1 deficit into a 5-2 lead in an eight-minute span en route to a 6-3 victory.
“We really bounced back with a solid effort against AIC,” said Marottolo. “We rallied from down a goal, and we really started to get on the same page as a team. We were able to stick with it again against a good AIC team that has great buy-in with a new coach and is very dangerous.”
That resiliency and persevering attitude is already defining the Pioneers, who enter a single game on Saturday against Yale with a 2-3-1 overall record. “We don’t cheat our game,” said Marottolo. “We’ve done a good job of not pressing against other players, and our guys are buying in that a good defense feeds the offense. We’re playing good, hard defense, and that’s nice to see, especially when goals sometimes haven’t been there. We’re playing to our identity.”
How ‘Bout Those ‘Jackets?
In three games this year, AIC is winless, sporting an 0-2-1 record, but you’d be hard pressed to find anyone who considers them an easy out. Against Union, they rallied from three different deficits, including a two-goal difference after two. Despite a 5-4 loss, they just didn’t stop coming at the Dutchmen, outshooting them, 11-6, in the third.
Against Connecticut, they rallied from two one-goal deficits, shutting out the Huskies after the first period in a 2-2 tie in their home opener despite being outshot 38-18. With freshman Zackarias Skog stopped 14 shots in the third period, AIC withstood the UConn rush, and then arguably outplayed them in overtime despite not scoring.
And then there was last week against Sacred Heart, where they led 2-1 despite being outshot, 21-16, through two periods. Yes, they lost the game, but they were right there until the Pioneers took over in the third.
In a world where 60 minutes are critical, AIC will, at some point, put it together and breakout. When it happens, they’re going to inflict sadness on plenty of other teams’ fan bases.
Altitude? What altitude?
Last year, I took a look at the home-ice advantage Air Force has in Colorado Springs. Combining geography with 7,000 feet of altitude, the Falcons have a distinct upper hand. Since joining Atlantic Hockey, they’re 115-48-21 overall against both conference and non-conference opponents.
If there’s a secret to beating them, however, maybe people should look to the academy’s ornithological brethren. Bentley’s win on Saturday avoided a sweep and stretched the streak of avoiding a sweep at the western Falcons to eight seasons.
Air Force hasn’t swept Bentley in Colorado since October 31st and November 1st, 2008. They haven’t won a series outright at home against the eastern Falcons since a win and tie in the next season on November 6th and 7th, 2009.
Bentley took three points during both the 2011-2012 and 2013-2014 seasons, and the two teams split each of the past two years.
It should be noted, though, that there were three years where the Falcons didn’t have to travel west.
Homeward Bound
Sacred Heart’s Webster Bank Arena is 21.1 miles away from Yale’s Ingalls Rink. That shortened distance will create a great atmosphere on Saturday night when the Bulldogs open their home slate against an in-state rival.
For Marottolo, it’ll be more than that.
A North Haven native, he spent 13 years on the Yale staff, but the rink known colloquially as the “Yale Whale” is a place that runs deeper than that in his blood.
“I grew up playing there,” said Marottolo. “My dad was the founder of Yale youth hockey, and my son now plays in that same Yale youth hockey program. So it means a lot to me (to play Yale) on a personal level. I’m still friendly with a lot of people there, and they’re great coaches who will have a great atmosphere on their opening night. At the same time, it’s going to be a fast-paced game, and it’s a great opportunity for us with Sacred Heart.”
I only recently became exposed to the Connecticut hockey culture. Every year, it’s one of my favorite things to talk about, and rivalries are great for the growth of the sport. With all of the storylines running through this one, it would be a great moment for Atlantic Hockey to earn a victory over the stalwart Ivy League and ECAC program.
Players of the Week
Here’s the latest from the league office!
Player of the Week: Canisius’ Felix Chamberland: Chamberland used the power-play to notch score not once, not twice, but thrice. It was the 18th time in NCAA history that a player scored a hat trick exclusively on the power play, and the Golden Griffins used two other man-up strikes to pave a 6-3 win over Robert Morris.
Defensive Player of the Week: Niagara’s Tyler Hayes: Hayes scored two assists and blocked nine shots while turning in an even plus/minus rating over three games. His assists came during a 3-3 tie at RPI.
Goalie of the Week: Canisius’ Charles Williams: Williams made 59 saves over two games in a three-point weekend against Robert Morris. That included 19 saves in the third period of Saturday’s 2-2 tie.
Rookie of the Week: Niagara’s Derek Brown: Brown scored two goals and an assist for the Purps, scoring against Mercyhurst and then adding two points against Union later in the week.
Lawrence Cornellier is back at Wis.-Stevens Point (Jack McLaughlin/Action Point Photo)
Last year’s champion
Wis.-River Falls and Wis.-Eau Claire shared the regular-season league championship. It was the 18th time in program history the Falcons have won a title. The Blugolds won their second league crown. Wis.-Stevens Point won the WIAC tourney, though, and enjoyed a memorable postseason run, winning its fifth NCAA championship with a 5-1 win over St. Norbert in the national final.
Favorites
Wis.-River Falls and Wis.-Stevens Points are the top contenders for the championship.
Dark Horse
Wis.-Eau Claire isn’t your typical dark horse. In fact, with 19 returning players, the Blugolds could easily end up winning the title.
Players to watch
Wis.-Stevens Point returns three of its top five scorers, including Kyle Sharkey, who led the team in scoring with 19 goals and 19 assists. Lawrence Cornellier and Jono Davis are also back for the Pointers. Cornellier finished his season with a team-best 23 goals and Davis punched in 17 goals.
Wis.-Eau Claire will be led by Adam Knochenmus, who led the team in goals with 22 and also came through with 17 assists. Second-leading point scorer Patrick Moore is also back after coming through with 11 goals and 19 assists last season. The Blugolds will also count on the solid play of Garrett Clemment, who tallied 10 goals and 19 assists.
Christian George is among the top players back for a River Falls team hoping to win another league title. George scored eight goals and dished out eight assists a year ago. Joe Drapluk is also a key scoring threat for the Falcons, tallying seven goals and nine assists last season.
First-team All-WIAC selection Anton Svensson out of Sweden will lead the way for Wis.-Superior; he had a great year last year, scoring 13 goals and dishing out 13 assists. Ian Ecklund is also expected to play a pivotal role for the Yellow Jackets, after punching in 10 goals and dishing out 19 assists. Eric Shand will also be counted on to play a key role for Superior, tallying eight goals and 15 assists a year ago. He’s aiming to become the first four-time All-WIAC selection at the school in more than a decade.
Wis.Stout will be led by Justin Moody, a two-time all-conference pick. Moody racked up nine goals and 14 assists last year. Spencer Viele should be one of the top goalies in the league this year. The Blue Devils netminder fashioned a 4-3-2 record and owned a 2.56 goals-against average.
Notes
Stevens Point won 24 games last season, the most since the 1992-93 campaign. Coach Chris Brooks went into the season with 98 career wins at Stevens Point, which became the ninth WIAC program to win a title.
River Falls has 15 letter-winners back from a team that won 16 games. The group includes Joe Gattalaro, a two-time All-WIAC selection who led the team in points last season with 19. He scored nine goals and dished out 10 assists. The Falcons scored 79 goals last season, including 19 off the power play.
Eau Claire returns 19 players, including goalie Jay Deo, who finished 5-1 last year. The Blugolds put up 103 goals last season. Coach Matt Leon enters his ninth season and has won 136 games in his career at Eau Claire.
Superior had only one senior last season and returns its top nine scorers. Rich McKenna enters his first season as the coach of the Yellow Jackets, replacing Dan Stauber, who retired after 16 seasons. McKenna coached the New Jersey Titans of the NAHL last year.
Terry Watkins enters his 21st season as the coach at Stout. He has won 233 games in his career with the Blue Devils. Stout scored 78 goals last year and had six games end in ties.
Jordan Kaufer is expected to backstop Augsburg. (Kevin Healy/Kevin Healy for Augsburg College)
Last year’s champion
Augsburg won the regular season and conference tournament titles last year. The Auggies topped St. John’s 5-4 in a triple-overtime thriller in the MIAC title game and went on to play in the NCAA tournament, where they fell to St. Norbert 6-1 in the quarterfinal
round.
Favorites
Augsburg, St. John’s, and St. Thomas are the front-runners to contend for the conference title.
Dark horse
St. Mary’s returns two-time All-MIAC selection Martin Gruse; the Cardinals struggled down the stretch last year, losing their final three, but could be a surprise contender if they can get off to a strong start in conference play.
Players to watch
Augsburg welcomes back All-American goalie Jordyn Kaufer, a transfer from Concordia who went 16-61 in his first season with the Auggies. Kaufer recorded three shutouts and his 16 wins were the fifth most in the nation. Nate Flynn was the top scoring threat for Augsburg last season, as he punched in 16 goals to go along with 14 assists.
Michael Dockry led St. Thomas in assists (11) last year and also came through with eight goals en route to earning honorable mention All-MIAC honors. All-MIAC selection Johnny Rosium tallied three goals and 10 assists.
George Spilchal was the second-leading scorer for Bethel a year ago, racking up eight goals and nine assists. Justin Bonanno struck for nine goals a season ago and is the top returning goal scorer for the Royals.
Huba Sekesi is one of the top scoring threats in the league. An all-league pick a season ago and an all-rookie team selection two years ago, Sekesi has scored 16 goals and dished out 20 assists in his career with St. John’s. He led the team in points (25) and assists (16) last year. Sean Lang is a promising young player who earned a spot on the all-rookie team last year. Lang came through with 13 points, good enough to lead all defensemen on the St. John’s roster.
Bob Kinne is a two-time All-MIAC selection and ranked third in the league in assists last season with 18. He also scored nine goals and has two three-assist games in his career with St. Mary’s. Jay Heinle led the Cardinals in goals with 16 and also dished out eight assists. He ranked third in the conference in goals scored.
John Grebosky is back to lead the way for Concordia. The All-MIAC pick led the Cobbers in scoring as he struck for 11 goals and racked up 14 assists. Mario Bianchi is a solid threat for the Cobbers as well after coming through with 11 goals and four assists last season.
Mitch McPherson will be counted on to help pave the way for Hamline this year now that Brandon Zurn and Charlie Adams have graduated. McPherson ranked third on the team in goals (13) and was tied fourth in assists (14) last year. Mitch Hall racked up eight goals and tallied a team-high 17 assists for the Pipers.
St. Olaf will rely on the talent and experience of Drew Otto, who ranked second on the team in goals (9) and assists (7) last year. Steven Sherman will also provide a boost to the Oles’ offense as he is coming off a year where he dished out a team-best 11 assists. He also scored three goals.
Gustavus Adolphus should be a much-improved team as its top three scorers are back, including Sam Majka, who finished with five goals and 13 assists and will look to provide a boost to an offense that managed to score only 52 goals last year. Colin Hernon and Van Sullivan also return and will help that cause after combining for 14 goals and 17 assists last year, including eight goals and eight assists by Hernon.
Notes
St. Thomas placed second in the MIAC regular-season standings and is hoping to rely on defense to fuel its success after holding 18 of its 26 opponents to two goals or less in regulation. The Tommies also killed off 87 percent of their opponent’s power plays.
Bonanno closed out the 2015-16 season with his first career hat trick, helping Bethel top Concordia 4-1 and win for the second time in its final three games. The Royals finished with 62 goals last season, including 15 off the power play.
St. John’s was a goal away from an NCAA tournament bid after falling in overtime in the third-longest game in NCAA history (102:53). The Johnnies have a reputation for being great when the calendar flips to the new year, fashioning a 47-27-10 record after Jan. 1 under coach Doug Schueller, including a 7-1-2 record last year.
St. Mary’s snapped a 22-game winless streak against the Tommies last year. The Cardinals were 0-19-3 during a streak that dated back to December 2004. St. Mary’s had a player tally three assists in a game four times last season, with Gruse doing it twice. Gruse has come through with back-to-back seasons of 30 or more points.
Concordia has been one of the most consistent teams in the MIAC lately, having advanced to the conference tourney five times in the last six years. The Cobbers have also finished in the top five in the league in six consecutive seasons.
Augsburg won 17 games last season, the third-most in program history, and is more than capable of duplicating or even topping that total this year. The Auggies return four of their top five scorers from a team that put up 101 goals last season. The group includes Corbin Chapman, who finished with 11 goals and also tallied 10 assists.
Hamline is looking to return to the top of the MIAC mountain after winning the league tourney two years ago. The Pipers finished the year with 10 wins and made it to the second round of the MIAC tournament.
St. Olaf has a new head coach in Mike Eaves, who spent 14 seasons as the head coach at Division I Wisconsin. Eaves, a two-time All-American for the Badgers and the program’s all-time leading scorer, is no stranger to Division III hockey as he began his coaching career at Wis.-Eau Claire in 1986. He played seven years in the NHL and finished with 90 career goals before retiring and becoming a coach.
This year will mark the 75th anniversary of hockey at Gustavus. The Gusties are hoping to make it one to remember after winning only six games last season. They are aiming for their first winning campaign since 2013-14, when they went 16-7-4 and played in the MIAC tournament title game.
Denisa Křížová has helped Northeastern rally from two early losses. (Northeastern Athletics)
Arlan: All last season, we talked about how ECAC Hockey was as competitive as it had ever been. Maybe we haven’t seen anything yet where that league is concerned.
There has only been one conference game to date, Harvard’s 5-1 defeat of Dartmouth, but it is very tough to tell who the favorite is. Maybe a more appropriate question is, “How many favorites are there?”
Dartmouth is the only one of the Ivy League half of the ECAC that has lost after those team’s opening weekend. Of the teams that are a month into play, Colgate and St. Lawrence are still unbeaten with a tie apiece. Quinnipiac and Clarkson were the two highest ranked before the season. The Golden Knights have had a tough schedule, but they didn’t manage any wins against either St. Lawrence or Wisconsin, although they did play those teams tough. The Bobcats couldn’t get a win over Boston College, and their split with Mercyhurst looks worse after Cornell swept the Lakers.
Princeton’s opening weekend suggests that voters’ faith in the Tigers was deserved, even though it has been a while since Providence provided a good measuring stick. Cornell shows signs of being back in the mix. Maybe the biggest surprise is how little Candace, you, and I have collectively mentioned Harvard thus far, given the Crimson are almost always in the hunt.
What have you seen thus far from the ECAC as a whole, and do think we may be overlooking Katey Stone’s team?
Nicole: I think last season the competition at the top of the ECAC was the best it’s been in awhile, but this year the conference is showing it’s competitiveness from top to bottom. Seven of the teams have to at least be in consideration when you’re making your top 10 every week and the other five have shown they aren’t going to be pushovers. There won’t be a lot of easy weeks or letdowns for teams pushing toward the postseason, and that could be a stumbling block. Every week will be a fight, so fitness and focus are going to be as important as scoring goals.
Though maybe they shouldn’t have, Princeton surprised me this weekend. It’s never easy to get a full grasp on a team you don’t get to watch very often and maybe my perception was skewed by the furor that came after the NCAA brackets were revealed and a person on the committee admitted they deemed Princeton to be a better team than their PairWise showed. They lost a very good goalkeeper to graduation and I wasn’t sure what we’d see when they finally hit the ice this week, but they came out strong and added even more confusion to the already jumbled top 10.
I’m going to go ahead and reserve judgement at least another week or two on Harvard. They’ve graduated a lot of great talent in the past two years as well as lost Mary Parker to BU. Sidney Daniels looks like she’ll be picking up right where she left off — the Crimson’s highest returning scorer had three of their five goals on Sunday. With the rest of the conference exercising their power, I can’t get on the Harvard bandwagon until I know more about their situation in net.
The door may be open for anyone to make waves or even win the ECAC, but the depth means the path will be a whole lot more difficult.
Over in the CHA, Robert Morris has the best record, but lost in OT and then tied Merrimack, a team in just its second year of existence. As we’ve talked about before, Mercyhurst has shown flashes of being a very good team, but they were swept by Cornell this weekend. The Lakers have won all but one regular-season CHA title, but it looks like there’s opportunity for someone else to step up this season.
Robert Morris has three ties already in the short season. If they can find an extra gear and find a way to steal a few more of those wins, they’d be in the driver’s seat. It’s still early, but who do you see taking this one? Will the experience at Mercyhurst help them as the season progresses, or can Robert Morris hold on? Is there another candidate to come up and take a shot at the crown?
Arlan: Mercyhurst is my first, second, and third choice, and I don’t know all that much about the Lakers’ roster.
Some people believe that if a coin keeps coming up heads, one should gamble ever-increasing amounts that the next flip will bring a tails. Personally, I’d just keep betting the heads until I lose doing it. I noticed in last week’s picks contest that you picked Ohio State to take the series opener over Minnesota. It makes sense for a lot of reasons, and you gave two: Ohio State has looked better than expected, and Minnesota has looked like a team that lost a lot to graduation. But after the Gophers’ sweep in Columbus, they’ve now gone 42 games versus the Buckeyes without tasting defeat. I know as well as anyone that one has to find places to get creative to beat Candace in that contest, but trying to find an upset in that series is as low a percentage move as trying to gain ground by picking ties.
Tabbing Mercyhurst to claim the CHA regular season prize is the closest thing that we have to a lock in our little corner of the hockey world. You obviously know this, as you forecast yet another CHA crown. The Lakers have taken at least a share of the title every time, even last year when they were still winless at this point of the season. Mike Sisti always manages to figure out a way to put the pieces together such that he beats his rivals to the finish line, even in recent years when his pieces haven’t been far superior as they once were.
Mercyhurst doesn’t look very threatening at the moment. Where once there were scoring explosions waiting to happen up and down the line chart, now nobody is averaging more than one point per weekend. That isn’t a big surprise, given Rachael Smith and Megan Whiddon have the highest career point totals in Erie, each with 31 points. No problem — Sisti adjusts, and now the Lakers get enough scoring by committee and win CHA games with defense. I think he anticipates that his team isn’t going to do well in the early portion of its schedule, but he schedules as tough as he can, knowing Mercyhurst will be stronger for the experience down the road. With the automatic berth in the NCAA tournament, the focus is definitely on putting the best possible team on the ice once the postseason dawns.
Looking at the competition, what do you think of Syracuse? The Orange are winless, and it is hard to be impressive when you’re not celebrating at game’s end. However, Syracuse has played a difficult slate to date, and other than one game where Bemidji State pulled away in the third period, the Orange have been right there at the final horn. Paul Flanagan had some big holes to fill after graduation. Based on the early returns, is there a chance that he succeeded?
Nicole: Syracuse’s schedule is tough and it doesn’t really get any easier as the next month approaches, but as you said, they’ve been in most every game they’ve played. One thing they need is to get their offense moving. They’ve not scored more than two goals in any game. In good news, six players have scored goal. In bad news, only one of them has more than one goal. They’re a young team and with their schedule they sort of started with their heads below the water. They’re learning as they go and I think the fact that they’ve kept it close so far is something they can build on.
Looking over at Hockey East, Boston College gained some needed confidence and traction this weekend when they tied and beat No. 3 Quinnipiac. It’s to be expected with a coach like Katie King Crowley. A lot of teams might have been a bit on tilt after the surprising start to the season that the Eagles had, but they’ve recovered nicely and this past weekend showed they aren’t going to let those games define their season.
We already mentioned the strong showing from Merrimack against Robert Morris, but the Warriors have had a couple of great games already in this early part of the season. They’re showing the inconsistency of a young and inexperienced team — they have just two upperclassmen — but they beat St. Cloud State and lost by just a goal to Colgate. The transition to NCAA D-I is never easy, but Merrimack seems to be handling it rather well.
We’ve talked quite a bit about how Boston College has handled this season after losing so much talent, but Northeastern had the same issue and has quietly done a great job of recovering after their early-season losses to St. Lawrence. They’ve won five in a row, and haven’t lost since October 1. Denisa Krížová is tied for eighth in the country for scoring and there are four Huskies in the top 33. Krížová and McKenna Brand each have a six-game scoring streak. Goalie Brittany Bugalski is the two-time defending WHEA Defensive Player of the Week.
What have you seen in Hockey East so far?
Arlan: I grew up in a rural area where there was no shortage of either gravel roads or bad weather, and the latter took a toll on the former. On a regular basis, the county would have to dispatch a grader to smooth things out, shaving off the bumps and pushing the loose fill into the low spots. From last season to this, it looks like somebody ran a road grader through Hockey East.
Gone are the highest points like Kendall Coyne, Alex Carpenter, and Haley Skarupa. That brings a lot of the other teams into range of the perennial favorites.
A year ago, a team like Maine wasn’t built to hang with the Eagles for 60 minutes and never came close to an upset. Even a year later, I’m not sure what did happen to the Black Bears that caused a team that was off to a 6-6 start and seemed to be continuing the positive upswing from the previous season to finish the campaign on a 4-17-2 tailspin. Even that was only thanks to a “hot streak” in the deep of winter where Maine won three of four and salvaged a playoff spot.
Now the Black Bears have added a couple of threats who sit atop the team’s scoring chart, Czech forwards Tereza Vanišová and Vendula Pribylová, as well as 6-foot Swede Ebba Strandberg on the blue line and Carly Jackson in net. We’ll see over the long haul if Maine is a different team, but it’s safe to say that it is relying on a different cast of characters to make an impact.
I have yet to see the Black Bears, but I have gotten to watch the top three teams from a season ago, BC, BU, and Northeastern, as well as Vermont. There is a decent chance that those will be the four home ice teams when the playoffs commence. However, none were at their best when I watched them.
I’ll have to discard the Eagles’ performance in Duluth and wait for a better day to make an evaluation of them. The Catamounts were a bit overmatched on Friday at St. Lawrence. The first meeting between Northeastern and Boston University wasn’t flattering to either team. It was kind of a sloppy game that was out of control much of the time, as is often the case when offensively talented teams meet before they have all of the kinks ironed out, or in keeping with my earlier analogy, the roads graded. The Terriers looked similar to last year, with too many forwards not paying close enough attention to the little things in their defensive games. They’d appear to have a Husky covered on the back check, only to lose interest around the top of the circles and have a good view of the resulting goal.
As a whole, I continue to see Hockey East as BC’s to lose. Despite the early wobbles, the Eagles are still likely to approach 30 wins and gain a high seed into the NCAAs.
Other conferences are experiencing a similar phenomenon to Hockey East. Where is the next wave of great scorers who are going to average two points a game for a season? Almost all the current leaders in that regard will fall back once the Ivies play more than a couple games apiece. Do you see a future Patty Kazmaier Award winner in the wings? Can someone like a Sarah Nurse realize the potential that she’s always offered for more than a weekend or two?
Nicole: I got the chance to interview Sarah before the season started or I’d seen her skate at all and was really impressed by her. That week, when someone asked me who to watch on the Badgers, it was Sarah’s name I mentioned. It’s a bit nebulous, but when you talk to players game-in and game-out, you learn their mannerisms and the way the talk (or don’t talk) about themselves. This was the first time I’d really seen Sarah talk with confidence and authority. It gave me the feeling that we were going to see a different player on the ice, and thus far, she’s proven me right.
As you said, she’s a player that has always felt like she was just half a step away from being truly great. She’s incredibly fast and especially early on in her career, she had trouble handling the puck at the same pace as her skates were carrying her, so she’d get breakaways and be unable to finish them off. This happened a few times in the 2014 National Championship game against Minnesota her freshman year. This past weekend in North Dakota she finished two goals that I’m not sure she would have in years’ past. The Badgers have a ton of depth, so I’m not sure any one player on that team is going to be able to rack up the points to make a Patty Kaz resume.
As for other player’s primed to be offensive powerhouses this year or in the future, I think the obvious answer is Minnesota’s Sarah Potomak. But beyond that, I’d keep my eye on Boston College’s Caitrin Lonergan, Robert Morris’ Kaycee Gebhard, Boston University’s Sammy Davis, and North Dakota’s Emma Nuutinen.
For me, there’s not a clear front-runner, or even group of front-runners, thus far for the national MVP. I think Minnesota-Duluth’s Lara Stalder is in the conversation as well as the aforementioned Potomak. She’s only played one week, so it’s early, but I assume we’ll be keeping an eye on Kelsey Koelzer. Krížová at Northeastern is also someone to keep an eye on.
One interesting case for me will be Wisconsin’s Ann-Renée Desbiens. I’ve already heard folks say she’s not doing as well as last season, despite the fact that she’s the only goalie in the country who’s played more than one game who has a sub 1.00 goals-against average, and she’s already posted three shutouts. It will be nigh on impossible for her to match what she accomplished last season — it was a goaltending season for the ages. Will people be able to stop comparing her to last season and judge this season on its own merit?
Who are your early front-runners?
Arlan: Coming into the season, Desbiens was definitely my favorite for the Kazmaier as the only returner among last year’s top three. As such, she probably still is, but the early weeks haven’t really strengthened her case. I don’t look that closely at goals-against average when comparing goaltenders, because that is usually a product of which team plays the best defense, not just which goaltender is strongest. Save percentage tends to be a better indicator of the goalie’s play. I don’t compare Desbiens to her previous season, but I do compare goaltenders to their current peers, and right now she ranks fourth in save percentage in the WCHA. Perhaps she could still win the Kaz if that continues, but it is tough to make as strong a case if people like Janine Alder of St. Cloud State and Sauve are stopping the puck with greater frequency despite playing behind less-talented teammates. If Wisconsin stays unbeaten, that definitely helps Desbiens’ cause. She’ll also get a boost from her historic season of a year ago, in my opinion, rather than being penalized for it. Goalies tend to get recognized a year late, particularly if they shine brightly in the postseason.
As far as offensive players go, it is too early to conclude much about those in the Ivy League after playing a single opponent. Let’s see who is still producing after a couple of more weeks elapse.
BU has five players with either nine or seven points thus far, and I won’t be surprised to see Rebecca Leslie jump up into that mix. Unless the Terriers start winning more frequently, no one player is likely to attract much attention if there are several with similar production.
For Boston College, Megan Keller is the person I’d most expect to be mentioned in Kaz discussions in a few more months. Consistent scoring from the blue line is hard to find, and she no longer is overshadowed by heralded upperclassmen.
I agree with you on Koelzer of Princeton; she’s a safe bet to be in the final 10, having been there before.
In terms of players whose stock has really risen, I’d look to both Ashleigh Brykaliuk and Stalder at UMD. When a team jumps into the national spotlight like the Bulldogs have, one wants to reward those most responsible. The same goes for the top line of St. Lawrence. For any of them to really garner votes, one of Kennedy Marchment, Brooke Webster, or Hannah Miller needs to separate a bit from the others as far as points go. Webster is the senior, so she is more likely to get the nod if they remain in a pack.
Looking beyond personal glory to team glory, No. 1 Wisconsin is still unbeaten, and that isn’t likely to change when the Badgers go to Mankato this weekend to extend the Mavericks’ streak of WCHA frustration. After that, they close 2016 with 10 games against five opponents that theoretically could spring an upset. Do you see Wisconsin celebrating a new year while still boasting a zero in the loss column?
Nicole: I think it’s probably a little optimistic to think they could be undefeated in the new year, but not totally impossible. Even before anyone hit the ice, I figured Wisconsin and Minnesota would split their series. Even with the chinks in Minnesota’s armor, I still have to pick it that way. Rivalries like these are rarely about the sum of the actual talent on the ice. Both teams will be up for the games and playing their best. We’ve talked in the past about how historically one team has dominated this series for a few years at a time and the Badgers did finally break through last year, so it’s possible the tide is swinging in their direction.
The other series that has the best opportunity to trip them up is when they head to Duluth. If the series were at LaBahn, I might be less concerned since the Badgers have been so good at home, but the Bulldogs have shown they have the chops to play with anyone this season. All of that being said, what Wisconsin has that Minnesota doesn’t this season is stellar goaltending. I think they have more answers for UMD’s firepower, so I still have to favor the Badgers.
While we’re talking WCHA, Ohio State continued to impress me this week with their tight losses to Minnesota. There’s definitely not a better four-loss team out there right now. Their path doesn’t get any easier this week as they host Minnesota-Duluth, though they do get a bit of a respite from the heavy-hitters after that. I’ll admit to being surprised by the Buckeyes this season. I expected the late hiring of Nadine Muzerall to affect them more, but we obviously have to give credit to the players who got themselves season-ready in the midst of yet another off season of turmoil.
What are your impressions of the Buckeyes? With just two seniors on their roster, OSU has room to grow on this season. Despite vast improvements, it’s a tough year to be in the middle of the WCHA, but is this just the beginning for them? Should we expect even bigger things from them next year?
Arlan: I’ve often thought that Ohio State was a program with more potential than it has demonstrated in past seasons. While the university hasn’t invested in women’s hockey to the extent that the other Big Ten schools in the WCHA do, the program still has more resources than many others. Under Jackie Barto, the Buckeyes reached the WCHA semifinals more often than not and always had some quality players, but never quite enough of them. Nate Handrahan brought a grittiness to OSU’s play, but that wasn’t always a positive, as penalties often proved costly. Then Jenny Potter took over, and while it’s impossible to say what would have transpired had her tenure been longer, goals allowed spiked sharply under her watch to a higher total than Ohio State had allowed in years.
Now we have another former high-scoring forward in charge of the program in Muzerall. It’s interesting that she is succeeding Potter, because the two were teammates for a season at Minnesota, and then they spent a season as rivals on two teams that formed an instant disliking of each other when Potter transferred to UMD. There isn’t a lot of overlap in their personalities, with Potter being reserved while Muzerall is more outgoing. People assumed that Potter would have a recruiting edge because of her Olympic experience, but these days, there are a lot of coaches with Olympic credentials. A better asset is having the gift of gab, and I’d have to go with Muzerall on that count.
While we’ll have to wait at least a couple of years for her recruiting strategy to become apparent, I expect that she’ll immediately bring a healthy dose of passion to Columbus. She was a big part of Minnesota’s historic run, and along with being a big sister to the players, her other major contribution was the energy she infused into the program. To run any organization successfully, you need to be able to handle people and do so in a caring way. I expect Muzerall to excel and bring a pride to the Buckeyes women’s hockey program that may have been lacking at times.
With all that said, how big can the bigger things get? The star-studded recruiting classes continue to arrive in Madison and Minneapolis, and the staffs there know what to do with them. The Bulldogs are resurgent. Bemidji State is going to keep coming, year after year, even in seasons where the talent won’t turn any heads. Some thought that North Dakota would quickly fade away after Jocelyne and Monique Lamoureux graduated; it didn’t happen. Now St. Cloud State is a tougher out. Progress is being made at Minnesota State. I think Muzerall will do very well at Ohio State, but I think it may be a slow climb.
As for your point that there isn’t a better four-loss team, do we know that? Will the Buckeyes wind up with a better record than Syracuse or Mercyhurst? Maybe Merrimack will continue to grow in the opportunity-offering schedule of Hockey East. It’s not even a done deal that OSU will be ahead of SCSU in the WCHA when the dust settles.
While we’re looking at the loss total, who would you say will prove to be the best current three-loss team when the season is over?
Nicole: I think the easy money has to be on Clarkson. They’ve faltered a bit to start the season and I think they’re probably a step or two behind the teams we’ve seen from them in recent years, but they still have Shea Tiley and a lot of potential on the offensive side. They’ve got a bit of a brutal stretch to end the season, but have a set of games here in the middle where they can find their groove and confidence.
Another team I think that’s up and coming is North Dakota. As I mentioned above, it’s not the best season to be a middle team in the WCHA — the competition is fierce for a possible third NCAA bid, but the transition in net has been pretty seamless and the young players have proven their worth already. Everyone is only going to get better and more comfortable with each other and there’s a lot of potential on that roster. I would not be surprised to see them among the best at the end of the season.
We’ve got a full slate of games this week and are finally getting into the meat of conference match ups, so we should have a lot more information to consider next week.
Our guest for the October 25 edition of USCHO Live! was Bemidji Pioneer sports editor and USCHO.com WCHA columnist Jack Hittinger. Jim and Ed also covered some big upcoming matchups, noted the progress on NCAA rules and emphasis, and discussed the eye surgery for Boston College coach Jerry York announced today.
Join us for the conversation and information, Tues., Oct. 25 at 8 p.m. EDT using the player below or listen using the Spreaker Radio app for iOS, Android 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.