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WIAC season preview: Look to River Falls and Stevens Point

 (Jack McLaughlin/Action Point Photo)
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.

Augsburg and St. John’s are favorites in MIAC

 (Kevin Healy/Kevin Healy for Augsburg College)
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.

Wednesday Women: Rating the early season

Denisa Křížová of Northeastern (Northeastern Athletics)
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.

Bemidji writer Hittinger, update on standard of play on Oct. 25 USCHO Live!

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 iOSAndroid or Windows phone.

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

About the hosts

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

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

Boston College coach York to miss Oct. 25 game at Merrimack after eye procedure

Jerry York (BC - Head Coach) - The Boston College Eagles defeated the Miami University RedHawks 7-1 in the 2010 NCAA Frozen Four Semi-Final on Thursday, April 8, 2010, at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan. (Melissa Wade)
Jerry York is undergoing an eye procedure Oct. 25 and will not coach Boston College in the Eagles’ game at Merrimack that night (photo: Melissa Wade).

Boston College coach Jerry York will undergo an outpatient eye procedure Tuesday and will miss Tuesday night’s game at Merrimack.

Associate head coach Greg Brown will lead the team in York’s absence.

York will return back to the Eagles’ bench “as soon as possible,” according to a news release.

TMQ: Are WCHA teams’ struggles cause for concern?

14 Nov.29 The University of North Dakota hosts the University of Nebraska Omaha in a NCHC matchup at the Ralph Engelstad Arena in Grand Forks, ND Austin Ortega (University Nebraska Omaha-16) (Bradley K. Olson)
Austin Ortega came up big in Omaha’s 4-4 tie with Vermont last Friday night (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

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

Jim: There were a lot of interesting results this past weekend, Paula. But with No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth idle and No. 1 North Dakota able to hold serve against a good Bemidji State team, each team maintained their position in the USCHO.com Poll.

What that means is that for the first time since January of 2013, we’re going to have a clash of the heavyweights as No. 1 North Dakota travels to No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth to open league play in the NCHC. The two will play a two-game series against one another with a lot of early-season bragging rights on the line.

HISTORY OF NO. 1 vs. NO. 2

I know it is difficult for college hockey fans to get excited for big games this early in the season. But this is certainly one that hopefully packs Amsoil Arena and gives us a great early-season atmosphere.

Paula: That is an especially exciting matchup because the Bulldogs are looking for their first win since their Oct. 14 4-3 victory over Notre Dame. While the exhibition loss against the U.S. Developmental program doesn’t count, Minnesota-Duluth will certainly feel that as something that extended a losing streak to two games. Getting the opportunity to turn things around against a tough conference rival at home will make for great atmosphere for this series.

Don’t forget that the Bulldogs lost four regular-season games to the Fighting Hawks in 2015-2016 before upsetting North Dakota in first game of the NCHC Tournament Mar. 18. Amsoil Arena should be fully charged Friday night – and the series should create some buzz around college hockey.

I’m looking at other matches this weekend that intrigue me, two in particular: No. 14 Providence at No. 8 Boston College and No. 11 Michigan at Vermont. I’m intrigued by the okay-ish starts that both the Friars and the Eagles have had and how that may play out in the opening weekend of conference play for each team. I’m also eager to see how the Wolverines will fare on the road against an improved Vermont team.

Jim: The Michigan-Vermont series really intrigues me. I had a chance to watch a good amount of the third period and overtime for Michigan against Michigan Tech on Saturday night. And though the Wolverines earned a tie at home, they were significantly outplayed. I was impressed by the play of goaltender Jack LaFontaine, who made 42 stops on Saturday but recognize that the Wolverines probably need to be stronger in front of whichever goaltender plays.

As for Vermont, the Catamounts had a fantastic weekend at Omaha, both nights coming back from two-goal deficits in the first period. Friday, Vermont probably felt like they deserved the win, but leave it to Austin Ortega, such a dynamic player, who tied the game late in the third. On Saturday, though, Vermont wasn’t letting up after taking the lead and scored the game’s final five goals.

Bear in mind that the Catamounts are playing well right now without all four of its captains/assistant captains. The quartet was suspended prior to the season for hazing and will miss the Michigan game (though they will return on Sunday afternoon against Northeastern). The fact that Vermont has escaped their first four games with a 2-1-1 record (the other two games were a split with a very good Clarkson team) proves this could be a tough opponent once all players are again eligible.

Paula: Equally intriguing for me in the early going are the teams that are not performing as expected, especially teams that have yet to win a game. Ferris State is 0-6-1, having finally broken its losing streak with a 2-2 tie against Northern Michigan Saturday night. The Bulldogs lost four of their first six games by a single goal and the other two by two goals. I can’t imagine the frustration.

Then there’s Bowling Green (0-5-1), but some of the Falcons’ losses have been a bit more lopsided, like their 6-1 loss to Ohio State Saturday night. Bowling Green was named the favorite in preseason by both the WCHA coaches and media.

And then there’s Michigan Tech (1-5-2), picked second in preseason in the WCHA. As you said, they only came up with a tie after outplaying the Wolverines Saturday, and they lost to Michigan Friday night by giving up the game-winning goal, shorthanded, with 52 seconds left in regulation. In fairness, the Huskies have had a really tough early schedule. Not one of these three WCHA teams can be happy about the start of its season.

Once again, the season is young. That doesn’t mean it’s so young, though, that teams can’t be seen as underperforming. What have you noticed elsewhere?

Jim: You mention these WCHA teams, but I’m also concerned about the WCHA as a whole right now. Right now, with a 6-19-2 mark, WCHA teams have by far the worst out-of-conference winning percentage. I know we said this last week as well, but what happens in October, a month when so many non-league games are played, significantly impacts what happens come March.

It’s extremely likely that the WCHA may only place its tournament champion in the NCAA tournament. The league’s ugly 2-9-1 record against the NCHC and a 3-7-1 mark against the Big Ten has placed the WCHA in a hole from which it may be impossible to dig.

What’s interesting is that amidst all of this gloom and doom, you have Lake Superior at a perfect 4-0-0 and Minnesota State off to a 5-1-0 start. So maybe all is not awful for the WCHA.

Paula: Good points overall about the WCHA, Jim. Perhaps we’re seeing some natural growing pains, too, for a league that experienced significant membership changes not that long ago. Adjustment can be a difficult thing – although the NCHC, with its 23-11-6 early season nonconference record may be the counterargument to that.

Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down

Thumbs up to the members of Michigan’s 1996 NCAA championship team who took to the ice on Friday night. The trio of Marty Turco, Brendan Morrison and Mike Legg all took shots from the opposite blueline as part of Michigan’s Score-O contest. After Turco and Morrison both impressively made their shots, Legg stole the show. Trying to recreate his “lacrosse” goal that he scored to win the game against Minnesota in the regional final of the ’96 tourney, Legg “threw” the puck perfectly 150 feet to send the Yost Arena crowd into a frenzy.

[youtube_sc url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Chi-pXeoSBM]

Thumbs down to the sheer number of penalty minutes teams are accruing. While it’s true that teams need to adjust to tweaks in penalty calling at the start of every season, the stats so far are alarming, with nine teams that have played five or more games this season averaging more than 20 penalty minutes per game — teams that averaged far less than that, some by half or more, for the 2015-2016 season — and 15 total teams with more than 100 PIMs per game. No league is immune to this, and the only D-I independent, Arizona State, has 204 minutes in six games. It’s disruptive to the game, no matter the cause, and putting far too much an emphasis on special teams play overall.

ECAC Hockey hands down one-game suspension to Quinnipiac freshman Mick

ecaclogoECAC Hockey on Monday announced that Quinnipiac freshman forward Logan Mick has been assessed a one-game suspension as the result of his actions in the Quinnipiac-Boston University game on Saturday, Oct. 22.

The league action was taken after review of an incident that occurred at the 6:36 mark of the first period where Mick was assessed a major penalty for hitting from behind and a game misconduct penalty.

Mick is not eligible to compete in Quinnipiac’s next game on Tuesday, Oct. 25, when the Bobcats host Massachusetts.

Hockey East: Thinking of Merrimack, BU and Vermont

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

1. Things are looking a lot better at Merrimack. 

The Warriors got off to a rocky start on the season with three losses: 2-1 to Sacred Heart, 4-0 to Clarkson, and 4-1 to St. Lawrence.

A look at the details made those losses look even more ominous. The loss to Sacred Heart came despite a 14-5 advantage in power play opportunities. At home. And the collective 8-1 loss to the North Country teams involved zero empty-net goals. The disparity really was that bad.

Ugly.

But all that changed with a sweep of Colgate this past weekend, 4-3 and 5-2.

2. The early “Mayday!” calls at BU weren’t warranted.

Much was expected of Boston University going into the season. The Terriers were picked to finish first in Hockey East, and one week into the season they were the number two team in the country in the USCHO poll.

But a week ago they traveled to Denver and got swept, 4-3 and 3-1. The Pioneers typically represent a tough road foe, but they had lost their first two games out of the gate, so getting swept by them did raise the BU blood pressure.

Defeating Sacred Heart on Friday, 7-0, was a good first step to calm any rattled nerves, but shutting out fourth-ranked Quinnipiac, 3-0, on Saturday is what did the trick.

All is well again at Agganis Arena.

3. Vermont might be better than I thought.

I’d pegged the Catamounts as a middle of the pack team and their opening weekend split with Clarkson affirmed that assessment. So I expected them to have a tough time at #20 Omaha this past weekend. Instead, they emerged with three out of four points.

Hockey East’s strength might well be deeper than I thought.

Kudos to the Catamounts.

Three things: Oct. 24

1. Ringy Dingy… Six Times A Game

Lake Superior State’s hot offensive start continued this weekend, this time with a sweep of Alabama Huntsville. The Lakers, now 4-0, beat the Chargers 6-3 and 5-2 in Huntsville. LSSU has scored at least five goals in each of its four games this season — that’s six goals per game, currently the best in the league. Last season, the Lakers scored a league-worst 1.80 goals a game. Overall they’ve netted 24 goals, with five different players — JT Henke, Gage Torrel, Diego Cuglietta, Anthony Nellis and Brayden Gelsinger — scoring three goals already.

2. Brickley breaks out

It’s still early (obviously) but Mnnesota State’s Daniel Brickley’s three-assist game against Alaska on Friday night gave the Maverick defensemam 10 points on the season. That’s good enough for the conference’s scoring lead. He’s got one goal and nine assists already through just six games. Not too bad, considering the Utah native had 11 points in 36 games. Brickley’s currently the only league player to his double-digit scoring so far.

3. Nonconference struggles continue

The league’s dismal nonconference track record didn’t get much better this weekend. With three teams playing nonleague series, the WCHA squads went 0-5-1. No. 18 Bemidji State, despite being swept by No. 1 North Dakota, lost both games by a goal. Michigan Tech also played well against No. 11 Michigan but was unable to hold onto a one-goal lead in either game this weekend. They lost 4-3 Friday before tying 3-3 Saturday. Preseason league favorite Bowling Green hasn’t played well yet this season and didn’t change things against Ohio State. The Falcons lost 5-4 and 6-1 in their home and home series. They’re one of two WCHA teams (along with Ferris) still without a win.

Overall WCHA teams are 6-19-2 in nonconference play. Lake State and Minnesota State holds two of those wins (they swept Michigan State and St. Cloud State, respectively, the previous weekend). Those losses have added up quick, and won’t help matters in the Pairwise down the road.

 

Three things: Oct. 23

A few of the bigger talking points from around the NCHC landscape this weekend.

UND digs out of early holes again
We’re talking about a small sample size just five games into the season, but North Dakota doesn’t seem to have much trouble erasing early deficits.
The top-ranked Fighting Hawks have now given up the first goal in each of UND’s past four games. It happened twice again this weekend at home against Bemidji State, yet UND picked up a sweep and moved to 5-0 on the season.
On Friday night at Ralph Engelstad Arena, the Hawks actually gave up the game’s first two goals as BSU’s Phillip Marinaccio and Brett Beauvais put UND in a 2-0 hole going into the second period.
Brock Boeser then put UND onto the scoreboard 14:51 into the second period on a 5-on-3 power play goal. He struck twice again in the third period, netting the game-winning goal on a penalty shot.
In Saturday’s rematch, Bemidji went ahead 1-0 2:53 into the game on a Leo Fitzgerald goal. Fast-forward to early in the third period, however, and another two goals from Boeser propelled UND into a 5-1 lead. After five consecutive Hawks goals, Bemidji scored three of its own to make the final score tight at 5-4.
UND’s schedule over the next month is potentially brutal: at No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth, at No. 7 Minnesota, sixth-ranked Denver at home and then a series at No. 14 St. Cloud State.

RedHawks impress at home
Miami continued its own promising start to the season with a win and a tie at home against Maine. The visiting Black Bears started the season with three wins and an overtime loss but were unable to pick up another victory on their first road trip of the season.
Friday’s series-opener was an entertaining 3-3 draw in which neither team was ever ahead by more than one goal. Anthony Louis was the hero for Miami with two goals, including a power play tally with 4:30 left in regulation that capped the game’s scoring.
Miami was even stronger offensively Saturday in a 5-0 win. The RedHawks peppered Maine’s net with 40 shots on goal. Louis picked up a goal and an assist, while Louis Belpedio knocked in a pair of goals.
MU (2-1-2) is back in action this upcoming weekend at home against former CCHA in-state rival Bowling Green ahead of a trip to currently undefeated Western Michigan (3-0-1).

Omaha’s defense struggles at home
A week after Omaha won the Alaska Goal Rush tournament, the Mavericks opened their home schedule in relatively underwhelming fashion.
UNO needed an Austin Ortega goal with 4:44 left in regulation Friday to salvage a 4-4 tie against Vermont in the teams’ series-opener at Baxter Arena. The Mavericks had found themselves 2-0 ahead after the opening 20 minutes on tallies from Justin Parizek and Tyler Vesel before Vermont scored four of the game’s next five goals.
Both teams were given plenty of power play opportunities. UNO went 2-for-7 on the man-advantage while Vermont capitalized on two of its six chances.
That happened again Saturday during a 5-2 victory for Vermont. The Catamounts capitalized on one of eight power play chances, while UNO went 1-for-6.
UNO again jumped out to a 2-0 lead, this time on goals from Mason Morelli and Ian Brady. Vermont roared back, however, scoring five unanswered goals.
Omaha (2-1-2) will look to get back on track this weekend at home against another Hockey East opponent. Little is likely to come easily, though, against fifth-ranked Massachusetts-Lowell.

Weekend wrap: Oct. 23

The weekend saw a lot of interesting clashes between ranked teams, as well as the first games of the season for the Ivy League teams.

No. 1 Wisconsin at No. 9 North Dakota
Emily Clark scored a third-period goal and Sarah Nurse ensured the win with an empty-netter to give the Badgers the 2-0 win on Saturday. It was Ann-Renée Desbiens’ 41st career shutout. She’s now two away from tying the NCAA career mark. On Sunday, it was the Sarah Nurse show, as she scored four of the Badgers’ five goals to lead them to a 5-2 victory and weekend sweep.

No. 2 Minnesota at Ohio State
Sarah Potomak tallied her first career hat trick and her third game-winning goal of the season to give the Gophers the win on Friday. On Saturday, the Gophers outshot the Buckeyes 57-19, but needed yet another late game-winning goal from Potomak to secure the sweep. Saturday’s win marked the 300th in coach Brad Frost’s career. The Gophers surrendered the first goal in each game for the fifth and sixth consecutive time this season.

No. 3 Quinnipiac vs. No. 6 Boston College (home-and-home)
Friday afternoon’s game featured 10 penalties — including seven in the second period — but neither team were able to bury the puck as they ended in a 0-0 tie. It was the first time BC was held scoreless since February 2014, a streak that spanned 106 games. Caitrin Lonergan’s short-handed goal and two assists led the Eagles in their 4-1 win on Saturday. It was another stilted match, this time with 11 penalties, but both teams were able to tally power-play goals.

No. 10 Bemidji State at No. 4 Minnesota-Duluth
Katerina Mrázová was the hero for the Bulldogs as she scored both goals on the way to UMD’s 2-1 win on Friday. She became the third Bulldog to score two goals in a game already this season. On Saturday, Bemidji’s Emma Terres scored twice to bring the Beavers back from behind and salvage a 3-3 tie. Minnesota-Duluth won the shootout to earn the extra conference point and take possession of third place in the WCHA.

Princeton at Providence
The Ivies hit the ice this weekend and Princeton proved it deserved its preseason No. 7 ranking in the polls as the Tigers swept Providence 4-2 and 7-3. On Friday, the Tigers scored two goals in the final five minutes of the game to secure the win. Freshman Sylvie Wallin scored her first collegiate point when she netted the game-winning goal. On Saturday, 12 Tigers skaters showed up on the score sheet, with five having a multi-point afternoon.

The rest of the top 10:

No. 5 Colgate vs. Syracuse (home-and-home)
The Raiders took the first game 3-2. On Saturday, they fought to a 2-2 tie.

No. 7 St. Lawrence vs. Vermont (home-and-home)
Kennedy Marchment had a goal and two assists as the Saints continued their winning ways with a sweep at Vermont.

No.8 Clarkson at New Hampshire
Clarkson put up two straight 3-1 wins to sweep New Hampshire.

Gallery: St. Cloud State completes sweep of Minnesota

Photos from No. 14 St. Cloud State’s 3-2 victory over No. 7 Minnesota on Saturday, which completed a sweep of a home-and-home series:

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Hockey East wins this round

There were seven games between Hockey East and ECAC Hockey teams over the weekend, and the final decision went decisively to Hockey East, as the conference went 5-1-1 against ECAC Hockey teams.

To be fair, all the games were on the road, but from a league perspective, it would have been nice to see ECAC Hockey make more of a statement in the early going.

Clarkson was the only league team to return home with points against Hockey East opponents. The Golden Knights tied Providence Friday and then scored late in the third period to defeat Massachusetts-Lowell on Saturday.

The change in the way the game is called by the officials was also notable this weekend.

Niagara and Rensselaer each had nine power plays on Friday; Providence had ten against Clarkson Friday, scoring on three, while Colgate was just one-for-eleven on the man advantage in a loss to Merrimack Friday night.

On Saturday, Niagara and Union both went 0-for-8 on the power play, while Quinnipiac’s power play didn’t score on any of its twelve chances in a 3-0 loss to No.8 Boston University.

“It’s a work in progress,” QU coach Rand Pecknold told USCHO of the Bobcat’s power play struggles against the Terriers. “We got cleaned out, lost a lot of good players, and we’re trying to figure it out now. Our power play struggled tonight, and I thought BU’s kill was really good.”

Quinnipiac’s power play was fourth in the country last season, but the Bobcats have since lost Travis St. Denis and Sam Anas, who combined for 20 of the teams 47 power-play goals last year.

Rensselaer breaks through

Heading home after a pair of tough road trips to Maine and defending national champion North Dakota appeared to be just what RPI needed.

The Engineers tied Niagara 3-3 Friday and then erupted for a season-high six goals in its first win of the season Saturday against RIT. That outburst came after RPI scored eight combined goals in its previous four games.

Sophomore Evan Tironese leads the team with three goals and six assists through the first five games. He got off to a strong start last season, scoring seven points in his first six collegiate games before missing the rest of the year with an injury.

It’s early, but a healthy Tironese should be a boost to a Rensselaer team that lacked scoring depth last season.

Vecchione leading Union

It’s unfair to call last season a disappointment for Union senior Mike Vecchione. The Dutchmen captain had 29 points in 34 games, a dropoff from his 50-point sophomore year, but also played a solid two-way game as well. That translated in plenty of NHL interest in the offseason, but Vecchione chose to return for his last year of college.

It looks like he made the right decision. Vecchuine tied a career high with five points, including four goals, in a 5-2 win over Niagara Saturday. He has seven goals and four assists in his last four games, and leads all of Division I with eight goals and 13 points on the year.

Scoring goals hasn’t been a problem for the Dutchmen through the first few weeks of the season, as Union is averaging just under four goals per game. However, its play in its own zone will need to pick up of the Dutchmen are to rebound after two disappointing seasons in a row.

Union showed signs last weekend, giving up two goals in each game, but for the season the goalies Alex Sakellaropoulos and  Jake Kupsky have combined for a 3.12 goals-against-average and a .876 save percentage.

Three Things: Cooling off

Here’s a look back at the weekend that was in Atlantic Hockey:

Cooling off

Dan Rubin and I spent the last two weeks crowing about the league’s relatively strong start in non-conference play, so of course it was time for a letdown.

After opening the season a respectable 6-7-5, AHC teams were just 0-6-2 this past weekend. Niagara managed to tie Rensselaer 3-3 and American International fought former conference foe Connecticut to a 2-2 draw. Jackson Teichroeb made 38 saves for the Purple Eagles while AIC rookie Zackarias Skog stopped 38 in his collegiate debut.

Those were the high points because the losses weren’t pretty, as five of the six defeats suffered were by three goals or more.

Next week features a half-dozen non-conference matchups including Niagara hosting No. 19 Ohio State for a pair of games.

Not much settled

There were some conference games as well, including a series between Air Force and Bentley and one between Canisius and Robert Morris.

The results of these series might be an indication that we’re picking up where we left off last season, when four point weekends were hard to come by.

On Friday, the homes teams had their way. Canisius cruised to a 6-3 victory over RMU behind Félix Chamberland’s hat trick, while Air Force got goals from five different players in a 5-2 win over Bentley.

Saturday was an entirely different story with Bentley turning the tables in a 6-1 win powered by a pair of goals from Max French. Robert Morris was also able to turn things around with a road point in a 2-2 ties with Canisius that saw a player from each side score a pair of goals: Ryan Schmelzer for the Golden Griffins and Alex Tonge for the Colonials.

Conference action picks up this week with a trio of East vs. West series: RIT at Bentley, Army West Point at Robert Morris and AIC at Mercyhurst

Bragging rights

Rensselaer defeated RIT 6-3 on Saturday thanks in part to two goals and an assist by senior captain Riley Bourbonnais. Riley is the son of former RIT player John Bourbonnais, who helped the Tigers win a Division III title in 1985.

Bourbonnais can also claim bragging rights over RIT goalie Mike Rotolo. They were teammates in 2009 on the Greece, N.Y. high school team that won a state title.

How the top 20 fared: Oct. 21-22

22 Oct 16:  The St. Cloud State University Huskies host the University of Minnesota in a non-conference matchup at the National Hockey Center in St. Cloud, MN. (Jim Rosvold/USCHO.com)
St. Cloud State went into the weekend ranked No. 14 and came away with a sweep of No. 7 Minnesota (photo: Jim Rosvold/USCHO.com).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll of Oct. 17 fared over the Oct. 21-22 weekend:

No. 1 North Dakota – swept No. 18 Bemidji State

No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth – idle, but lost to U.S. NTDP Under-18 Team in exhibition

No. 3 Notre Dame – tied, lost in overtime to Penn State

No. 4 Quinnipiac – defeated Connecticut, lost to No. 8 Boston University

No. 5 Massachusetts-Lowell – defeated No. 12 St. Lawrence, lost to Clarkson

No. 6 Denver – swept Michigan State

No. 7 Minnesota – swept by No. 14 St. Cloud State

No. 8 Boston University – defeated Sacred Heart, defeated No. 4 Quinnipiac

No. 9 Minnesota State – split with Alaska

No. 10 Boston College – defeated Colorado College, defeated Holy Cross

No. 11 Michigan – defeated, tied Michigan Tech

No. 12 St. Lawrence – lost to No. 5 Massachusetts-Lowell, lost to No. 15 Providence

No. 13 Harvard – tied Dartmouth

No. 14 St. Cloud State – swept No. 7 Minnesota

No. 15 Providence – tied Clarkson, defeated No. 12 St. Lawrence

No. 16 Yale – idle

No. 17 Northeastern – swept Arizona State

No. 18 Bemidji State – swept by No. 1 North Dakota

No. 19 Ohio State – swept Bowling Green

No. 20 Omaha – tied, lost to Vermont

Three things from a promising wash of a weekend

The Big Ten went 4-4-2 for the weekend, with the highest-ranked team in the league, Minnesota, dropping two games to St. Cloud State. Even though the only team to earn a sweep was Ohio State, it was still a good weekend for B1G Hockey. Here’s my take on things.

1. The Buckeyes look like they’re the real deal.

Long-time Buckeye fans know that the most typical thing for Ohio State to have done this past weekend was to win a close road game against in-state rival Bowling Green before finding a way to lose at home in the follow-up performance Saturday night. Not only did the Buckeyes gut out Friday’s 5-4 win — scoring two third-period goals to come from behind — but Ohio State spanked Bowling Green Saturday in Columbus, scoring three goals in the first period en route to a 6-1 victory. Senior Nick Schilkey is hot in the opening games of the season, with three goals and an assist against BGSU and four goals in five games overall. If the Buckeyes remain healthy, they absolutely will challenge for the league title.

2. The Spartans didn’t look as bad as I expected them to.

No, that’s not an insult by any means. I was so impressed with the way Michigan State played in its 2-1 loss to Denver Friday night. The Spartans were a team that learned a lot from their very rough road trip to Sault Saint Marie, Mich., the week before, when Lake Superior State scored 14 goals to Michigan State’s 4. In Friday’s game, the Michigan State defense stymied Denver’s offense through two periods and helped the Spartans hang around long enough to be competitive. In fact, I got the sense that if that game had gone on for five more minutes, the Pioneers would have been in big trouble. Saturday, the Spartans scored an early third-period goal when down 2-0, and they kept the shots close in that contest. When lower-tier (so to speak) B1G teams that are young and rebuilding can hang that tough with highly ranked teams from leagues that have seen more success than B1G Hockey has, that’s good news for the whole league.

3. Look at both the Nittany Lions and Wolverines representing.

I really thought that Penn State would struggle more with Notre Dame, as I said in the weekend picks blog. I also said that their struggle would have more to do with the improved Fighting Irish than it would with the Nittany Lions. How nice, then, that Penn State proved me wrong, earning a 3-3 tie and a hard-fought 3-2 overtime win against the ranked Irish. With a record of 3-0-1, it looks like freshman Peyton Jones is emerging as the starter in Hockey Valley.

And I thought the Wolverines would sweep Michigan Tech this weekend, but I’ll take their 4-3 Friday win and Saturday’s 3-3 tie, two games in which they had to come from behind to accomplish what they did. In Friday’s win, freshman Will Lockwood had the shorthanded game-winning goal with 52 seconds left in regulation; in Saturday’s tie, junior defenseman Cutler Martin had the tying goal with less than five to go in the third after the Huskies had netted two third-period goals to take the lead. Lockwood had a goal and an assist each night, and his classmate, Jake Slaker, had two goals Friday and an assist Saturday. The two are tied for the lead in scoring for the Wolverines, a team that looks like it may have a very good season indeed.

ECAC Hockey picks: Oct. 21 and 22

Here’s a look at the upcoming weekend in ECAC Hockey, with several good matchups with Hockey East on the schedule. All games are at 7 p.m. unless noted.

Last week: 7-2-2

Overall:  9-10-2

Friday, Oct. 21

Niagara  at Rensselaer   

It’s been a bumpy go of it so far for RPI, but the Engineers are back home after a trip to defending national champion North Dakota last weekend. I think RPI will get its first win  of the year in the home opener. Rensselaer wins

 RIT at Union

Like RPI, the Dutchmen have been on the road for the first two weeks of the season. Union hasn’t been dominant at home the last few seasons, but I think returning to Messa Rink should be a boost for them. Union wins                                            

 Clarkson at Providence, 7:05 p.m.

The Golden Knights have won three straight games against Providence, and the Friars only have six goals in three games. These are two hard-skating teams and I think should be a tight defensive battle, which might tilt it in Clarkson’s favor. Clarkson wins

St. Lawrence at Massachusetts-Lowell, 7:15 p.m.            

St. Lawrence has won three in a row in Mark Morris’ return to college hockey, while the Riverhawks have yet to lose this season. I’ll take the home team in what should be a tight game. Massachusetts-Lowell wins

 Colgate at Merrimack, 7:35 p.m.             

Neither team has a win so far, but Merrimack’s two goals in three games make it awfully tough to pick them. Colgate wins

  Saturday, Oct. 22

Niagara at Union, 4 p.m

Dutchmen finish the weekend on a good note. Union wins

RIT at Rensselaer

RIT has scored plenty of goals, but has had problems in its own end. Can the Engineers take advantage? RIT wins

Clarkson at Massachusetts-Lowell

Should be another close one, but the Riverhawks are averaging over four goals a game. Massachuetts-Lowell wins

Quinnipiac at Boston University, 7:05 p.m.

The Terriers snapped Quinnipiac’s 17-game unbeaten streak last Dec. 12, beating the Bobcats 4-1 in Hamden. Boston University is just 1-2 this year, but should be one of the top teams in the country and might be a challenge for a Quinnipiac team working in new players in several important positions. Boston University wins

Colgate at Merrimack, 7:05 p.m.

Warriors bounce back for the split. Merrimack wins

St. Lawrence at Providence, 7:05 p.m.

The Saints are strong on both ends of the ice and should have enough to take down the Friars on the road. St. Lawrence wins

 

 

SUNYAC coaches have Geneseo at top of annual preseason poll

The well-traveled Stephen Collins has come home to play for Geneseo and has led the Knights to an impressive first half. (Dan Hickling)
Stephen Collins should be an offensive force this year for Geneseo after a 22-goal season in 2015-16 (photo: Dan Hickling).

The SUNYAC has released the results of the 2016 preseason coaches poll.

Geneseo was selected by the conference coaches as the No. 1 team, garnering 61 overall points.

SchoolTotal points
1. Geneseo61
2. Plattsburgh59
3. Oswego49
4. Buffalo State48
5. Brockport32
6. Potsdam27
7. Fredonia23
8. Cortland18
9. Morrisville7

UMass Lowell names Falite a ‘Legend of Lowell Hockey’

Former Massachusetts-Lowell player Kory Falite (2006-10), a 100-point scorer, has been named a “Legend of Lowell Hockey” and will be honored during Homecoming weekend on Saturday, Oct. 22, when UML hosts Clarkson at the Tsongas Center.

Atlantic Hockey Picks, October 21-22

Last week:

Dan: 6-4-3
Chris: 5-5-3

On the season:

Dan: 14-6-5 (.666)
Chris: 12-8-5 (.580)

 

This Week’s Picks:

Friday, October 14 and Sunday, October 16
Bentley at Air Force
Dan: Bentley has had success out west, splitting last year and taking three points back in 2013-2014. It’s not to say there’s a secret for success, but if someone is going to be able to do it, it’ll be them. I don’t they get swept, but since it’s hard to figure out who wins on what day, I’m just going to pick a Falcons sweep. See what I did there?

(Okay, fine. I’ll take Air Force).
Chris: The annual battle of the Falcons are the first conference games for each team. Each is coming off a lopsided loss after opening the season strong. I think the home team will pick up at least three points here, so I’m going with an Air Force sweep.

Robert Morris at Canisius
Dan: Robert Morris was off last week, and I think they’ll be ready and rearing to go. Canisius, meanwhile, is coming off a weekend in Alaska. I have to think the travel will weigh on them for at least one night. RMU wins on Friday, Canisius wins on Saturday.
Chris:This should be a great series. Canisius is coming off two challenging weeks on the road, with series at North Dakota and Alaska. RMU was idle last week. I think this will be a split, and am going with an RMU win on Friday and a Canisius victory on Saturday.

Friday, October 21
Sacred Heart at Boston University
Dan: It’s the home opener for a Terrier team that’s incredibly long on raw talent. While it’s not past Sacred Heart to beat them in a one game series, I think home cooking will do a 1-2 BU team more good than the Pioneers. BU wins.
Chris: I’d almost lean SHU if this game was in Bridgeport, but BU is coming off a pair of stinging loses to Denver and that, combined with this being the home opener for the Terriers, is going to be the difference. BU wins.

Niagara at Rensselaer
Dan: These are the depth games that Atlantic Hockey teams need to win in order to keep the drive alive for multiple tournament berths. RPI lost two to Maine, which leads me to think Niagara has a very good chance to win here. Unfortunately, the game’s in Troy, which balances that out. RPI wins.
Chris: Niagara leads the all-time series between the schools 4-2. Both teams are looking for their first win of the season, and I think the home team will claim the prize. RPI wins.

Rochester Institute of Technology at Union
Dan: Union continues its tour against the AHC with a home game against RIT. Key to watch in this game? The Dutch really struggled to put AIC away and tied Sacred Heart. RIT, as the defending champions, can really put a stamp on Union’s struggles against the conference with a win. RIT wins.
Chris: Old-timers remember that this was quite the Division III rivalry in the 1980s before Union moved up to Division I. The teams didn’t play each other for 14 years, picking up when the Tigers joined the D-I ranks. While RIT got the better of the Dutchmen in the D-III days, Union is 4-0-1 in the Division I era, and I think we’ll have more of the same. Union wins.

American International at Connecticut
Dan: If this game were in Springfield, I might think otherwise, but it’s in Connecticut, so I’m taking the Huskies. UConn wins.
Chris: AIC has played just one game so far, a 5-4 loss to Union. This will be the Huskies’ sixth game of the new season, and I think that will play a factor. UConn wins.

Army West Point at Massachusetts
Dan: I know I’m with Chris in this regard. Army is GOOD, and anyone who calls this an upset hasn’t paid much attention to what we’ve been selling. I’m taking the Black Knights, and if they play like we know they can, this one could be all black and gold from start to finish. Army West Point wins.
Chris: I’m picking the Black Knights, and I’m not going to call it an upset. Army West Point has looked very, very good through its first three games. Army West Point wins.

Saturday, October 22
Boston College at Holy Cross
Dan: This is a huge game for Boston College, a team desperately in need of a win after running into problems. The young Eagles will play desperate, which is something that might work out for the Crusaders. The AHC has had success against BC, and I think Providence is better than them, meaning this one should have Holy Cross as slight favorites via the transitive property. With BC using Colorado College as a warmup, I still can’t pick against the Crusaders. Remember that this is a regional rivalry dating back to ancient times for old-tyme alumni in the area. Holy Cross wins
Chris: I’m very tempted to go with the Crusaders for a number of reasons: The AHC has done pretty well against Hockey East so far (including Air Force beating BC three weeks ago), Holy Cross knocked off Providence last week at home, and the Crusaders are again hosting. Also, BC will play Friday while Holy Cross will not. But despite all that, my gut says Boston College will rebound from their slow (2-2) start. BC wins.

RIT at RPI
Dan: In the All Abbreviation Bowl, I’m going to take RPI. But never let it be said that this matchup won’t make the makers of Scrabble proud. RPI wins.
Chris: I’m referring to Rensselaer by its former name, RPI because the students at the rival (and sometimes mistaken for each other by the general public) tech schools used to call athletic matchups between them, “The battle of the alphabet schools.” In hockey, they have only met six times in 31 years with Union holding a 5-1 advantage. Even though their last meeting was in 2011 so no players on their team have faced off against each other, I’m going with history here. RPI wins.

Niagara at Union
Dan: I was going to make a realignment joke about Union playing all the AHC schools and wanting into the league, but I know that would just make someone mad. Union wins.
Chris: Despite the AHC winning more than its usual share of non-league games, I don’t think this weekend’s non-conference battles will result in very many wins, including this one. Union wins.

 
Sunday, October 23
Sacred Heart at AIC
Dan: I hope both benches get a chance to appreciate being in the building at the same time since they’re in similar boats in terms of facilities. That said, I think the Pioneers are slightly ahead on the ice at this point, though I wouldn’t put it past AIC to win on home ice. SHU wins
Chris:SHU has had a strange schedule so far with a single conference game each weekend with some non-conference tilts mixed in. Despite a couple of shutout losses to Army West Point, I think the Pioneers are going to have a pretty good season, and it starts here. SHU wins.

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