As more penalties are called in the early going, it’s also an adjustment period for NCAA’s on-ice officials (photo: Melissa Wade)
For college hockey fans that may not enjoy the increase in numbers of penalties called early in the college hockey season, there is only one way it will change and that is for players and coaches to adjust.
On a conference call with media Thursday, Steve Piotrowski, secretary of rules for the NCAA and Frank Cole, the national coordinator of officials for the NCAA, noted that the penalties being widely called throughout college hockey are not new rules, but rather a new focus on enforcement.
More importantly, though, players and coaches need to adjust to the new standard of play or else fans can expect to see frequent penalties called.
“We understand that there’s an adjustment period,” said Cole. “When something like this is rolled out, there’s usually a little uptick in penalties in the initial going. But as the weeks go by, we start to see the players are adjusting.
“This is a collaborative effort between the coaches and the officials. It’s something the coaches embraced. We’re working hard with the officials and understand it’s an adjustment for them as well. There are some games that may have been overcalled a little bit in the early going. But we feel comfortable where we are right now. We are seeing it trending in the right direction.”
The standard of play, which was first introduced in 2004 and re-emphasized this season, is an attempt to protect skilled players and allow them to play the game without being illegally interfered with as a way of slowing them down.
“Around 2004, the rules committee really felt the need for a directive to reclaim the rule book, particularly address obstruction and restraining fouls,” said Piotrowski. “Skilled players weren’t being allowed to play and players were using illegal tactics to take away legally-gained advantages.”
Piotrowski said while that initiative and subsequent directives for re-enforcement have worked, additional directives for officials to focus on player safety fouls like contact to the head and hitting from behind led to obstruction and restraint fouls to creep back into the game without proper enforcement.
“What we’d like to do now is to reclaim that rule book again and reset the standard,” said Piotrowski. “To make it simple, we’ve created a number of targeted areas that the ice hockey community can get their arms around.”
Those areas include protecting the puck carrier, to provide a heightened awareness of obstruction on play along the boards and areas that can create restraining and obstruction type of offenses like offensive zone puck dumps and faceoff plays.
One of the biggest aspects of enforcement of the rules seems to focus on body position. The rules committee wants players skating for a puck to be able to do so unobstructed by an opponent’s stick and arms. They want defensive players to use body position to legally prevent the opponent.
In years past, particularly on dump-and-chase plays, officials would use a standard known as “two seconds, two strides.” In other words, a defensive player could make contact with an attacking player who dumps a puck, but must make and release said contact within two seconds and could take no more than two strides.
Now referees are told to enforce a “tight gap” defense, meaning the defensive player can legally make contact with the puck-pursuing player, but must release immediately and failing to do so it a penalty.
“Body position is key for the defending player and body position is really determined by the skating player coming to the front or side of the opponent,” explained Piotrowski.
He also said that officials are taught to look for “red flags” for what turn out to be fouls committed by the defending player.
“If a player is coming through the neutral zone, backchecking very hard, and he is in a desperation mode now, typically, what is he going to do?” asked Piotrowski. “He’s probably going to reach out [with his stick] and that stick is going to become parallel [to the ice].
“When it becomes parallel, that’s a red flag to officials. Now having a stick parallel is not necessarily a penalty, but when it creates a restraining act of tugging an arm or slashing at a hand, that’s an illegal act.”
One of the keys of this initiative moving forward is continued emphasis and consistency among officials. Conference calls with league supervisors will be ongoing and used as a means to check in and receive feedback. But there is also the need for long-term education of players and officials to help manage their approach to games to make reclaiming the rule book an effective initiative.
“It’s not that we’re looking for a rash of penalties,” said Cole. “We’re just looking to re-educate the officials and the players in terms of what’s acceptable and what’s legal play.”
“As far as management going forward, certainly this is an educational process,” added Piotrowski. “If you really think about it from an officiating standpoint, officials will enforce the game in whatever way they are directed to do so. The management of that process has to take place on an ongoing basis.
“At the same time, coaches have to be accepting to the standard of play. It’s going to be a work in progress and it’s going to have to be managed going forward. And everyone is going to have to be onboard, cooperating in all areas: officials, coaches and players.”
Celeste Robert is back in goal for Norwich to start the 2016-17 campaign (photo: Mark Collier/Norwich University).
On Thursday, the NEHC released its annual women’s preseason coaches poll.
The poll is compiled based on rankings from the league’s 14 head coaches.
Last year’s NEHC regular-season champion, Norwich, was selected to finish first, receiving seven first-place votes. NEHC Open champion Holy Cross followed with three first-place votes, while St. Anselm ranked third. Reigning league champion Massachusetts-Boston rounds out the top four, receiving one first-place vote.
William Pelletier will be a key cog in the Norwich lineup for the 2016-17 season (photo: Jeff Dobbin/Norwich University).
The NEHC released its annual preseason coaches poll for the men’s conference on Thursday.
The poll is compiled based on rankings from the league’s nine head coaches.
Reigning league champions from Massachusetts-Boston were selected to defend their title, receiving four first-place votes. Perennial conference powers Norwich and Babson were selected to finish second and third, receiving two and three first-place votes, respectively.
Michigan Tech’s Reid Sturos is now the answer to a trivia question as he registered the WCHA’s first 3-on-3 overtime goal last weekend against Alabama-Huntsville (photo: Rachel Lewis).
It’s exciting, it’s hectic and it gives coaches nightmares.
Welcome to 3-on-3 overtime.
The WCHA adopted the new overtime format this season, mirroring the 3-on-3 set up in the NHL. Games officially end as a tie in the record book and for NCAA PairWise purposes, but the overtime winner gets an extra point in the WCHA standings.
Michigan Tech’s Reid Sturos scored the first 3-on-3 overtime goal in WCHA history this past weekend to deliver a victory against Alabama-Huntsville. Sturos scored 31 seconds into overtime on a sharp-angle shot.
It was a shot that Huntsville goalie Jordan Uhelski will want back, but the play’s build up was clinical 3-on-3 overtime strategy by Tech.
After establishing possession in the offensive zone Michigan Tech worked the puck around and eventually set up Sturos’ game-winning shot from below the circle. While 3-on-3 — particularly in the NHL — has a reputation as hockey’s equivalent to a roller coaster on skates, the patient teams are the ones that thrive in the format.
It’s really a possession game with mistakes magnified by that much more. Turnovers often end up in the back of your net, and controlling the puck and line changes can be the difference as coaches typically shorten the bench to their best six or eight players in overtime.
“We saw that, you make one mistake and the game is over,” Huntsville coach Mike Corbett said. “I think the thing a lot of people forget about are the line changes. Guys are going to burn energy faster in 3-on-3, so how do you keep them fresh? That’s going to be the trick.”
Other WCHA coaches had similar thoughts, while several pointed out that the opening faceoff and dictating the opening rush of 3-on-3 is going to end quite a few games this season.
Coaches almost universally said they’ll probably deploy a two-forward, one-defenseman format in overtime, which Tech and Huntsville both used on Saturday.
The high-paced, sudden-death format has grabbed rave reviews in the NHL. But will it take off in college hockey?
WCHA coaches had differing thoughts.
“I think we should mirror our game like the NHL as much as possible,” Bowling Green coach Chris Bergeron said, whose team played a 3-on-3 non-conference overtime session with Western Michigan this past weekend. “It’s something the fans want and it’s something that the top league in the world has embraced. We should want to be like that and I think college hockey in general should look into it.”
Northern Michigan coach Walt Kyle disagreed.
“I think we should be like the rest of the NCAA,” Kyle said. “I know I’m in the minority, but I don’t have a problem with the traditional format or a tie.”
Lakers off to a promising start
Lake Superior State’s delayed start to the season was worth the wait.
The Lakers played an exhibition game on Oct. 2 — a 3-3 tie against Laurentian — then took a weekend off before officially kicking off their 2016-17 season last Friday and Saturday.
That extra time did the Lakers some good. LSSU scored 13 goals over the course of their two-game series against Michigan State and routed the Spartans 6-1 and 7-3.
“College hockey is hard because you don’t get that long exhibition season to work on things and establish chemistry and special teams,” Lakers head coach Damon Whitten said in his postgame comments.
LSSU’s all-out slaughter of a big instate rival was made even bigger by the fact that this season is the beginning of Lake Superior State’s 50th season of varsity hockey — something that the the Lakers are celebrating all year.
That, combined with it being LSSU’s “Great Lake State Weekend” and the fact that they were playing the Spartans, gave the Lakers some of their biggest home crowds in a while.
“The crowd had a huge impact on our game,” Whitten said. “Huge credit to them and also to our student section with their energy and enthusiasm. This is a big year for us, celebrating 50 years, and also a big weekend, with it being Great Lake State Weekend. It was huge for our team to be able to feed off that crowd.”
Also huge for the Lakers: Fifteen different players recorded at least a point against the Spartans. Sophomore defensemen Owen Headrick led the way with six of them (a goal and five assists). Nine players had at least one goal, and four (Gus Correale, JT Henke, Max Humitz and Gage Torrel) had two apiece.
Not bad for a team that had the worst offense in the conference last season (1.80 goals per game).
The will look to continue that offensive barrage this weekend when they travel to Alabama Huntsville for their league opener.
Ice chips
– Alaska-Anchorage finally picked up its first win of the season Saturday when the Seawolves edged Canisius 1-0 in the second game Saturday’s Brice Alaska Gold Rush. Sophomore Mason Mitchell scored the game’s only goal, while Olivier Mantha made 22 stops for his first shutout since Nov. 14, 2015.
– Michael Bitzer helped backstop a big weekend for Bemidji State. The junior goaltender collected the 11th and 12th shutouts of his career on Friday and Saturday against Northern Michigan. BSU won both games 2-0 and Bitzer had 21 saves in each game. Bitzer is currently the NCAA’s active shutout leader and is also tied for Bemidji State’s all-time career lead.
– Bowling Green got a better effort, but Bergeron is still looking for more from his group. Bergeron said the Falcons games against former CCHA rival Western Michigan were “small steps in the right direction, combined with disappointment.”
– Michigan Tech finally snapped its season-opening four-game losing streak with a five-point weekend against Huntsville. The Huskies went 5-for-9 on the power play on the weekend and are now 6-for-34 (17.5 percent) overall — good enough for 17th in the country.
– Minnesota State’s two wins against instate rival St. Cloud State were its first over the Huskies since 2011, and also the Mavericks’ first sweep of St. Cloud since the 2007-08 season. MSU hasn’t started the season 4-0 since 1998-99, when they went 6-0 to start off.
– Northern Michigan may have lost both games, but Kyle said goalie Atte Tolvanen put on a show this weekend against Bitzer. Kyle said Tolvanen could be one of the best goalies in the league and now has 92 saves on 100 shots.
Players of the Week
This week’s WCHA players of the week are Sturos (offensive), Bitzer (co-defensive), Headrick (co-defensive) and Minnesota State freshman forward Parker Tuomie (rookie).
North Dakota’s Joel Janatuinen battles for position with two RPI defenders last weekend in Grand Forks, N.D. (photo: Bradley K. Olson).
After North Dakota defeated visiting nonconference foe Rensselaer 5-2 on Saturday, UND freshman forward Ludvig Hoff joked about a “Euro connection” forming on the Fighting Hawks’ roster.
Earlier that night, the on-ice chemistry showing between Hoff and linemate Joel Janatuinen was no laughing matter for RPI.
Janatuinen, a sophomore forward from Espoo, Finland, recorded his first collegiate hat trick against the Engineers. His first two tallies came on feeds from Hoff, hailing from Oslo, Norway.
With UND trailing 1-0 15 minutes into the first period, Hoff took the puck into the near corner of RPI’s zone before threading a pass around two Engineers defenders and a third just ahead of the play. Janatuinen, having called for the puck from the slot, one-timed a shot past RPI goaltender Chase Perry to tie the game.
Midway through the second period, with UND ahead 2-1 via a go-ahead goal from Tyson Jost, UND’s Scandinavian linemates teamed up again to double the Hawks’ lead at 3-1.
Hoff dispossessed a RPI skater behind the net before backhanding a pass out front. Janatuinen was unmarked as he strode into the slot before beating Perry with a shot creeping in left of the far post.
Janatuinen later clinched his hat trick on a goal 8:56 into the third period. Janatuinen and Hoff collected a combined five points in the victory, while junior linemate Austin Poganski picked up the secondary assist on Janatuinen’s first goal of the night.
After the game, UND coach Brad Berry was asked where the Scandinavian pair’s chemistry comes from.
“I think it’s their language that they speak, probably,” Berry joked. “They always have a smile on their face, they work extremely hard and it’s nice to see guys work off of each other.”
Both of them have had to adapt from the European style of play to the North American one, although both were seasoned vets on this continent by the time they arrived in Grand Forks.
Janatuinen played his junior hockey for the Sioux City Musketeers of the United States Hockey League, and Hoff came to UND from the USHL’s Lincoln Stars.
Both underclassmen spoke about the differences in styles, as well as the extra 15 feet of ice they enjoyed when they were younger.
“Back home, the rink’s a bit bigger with the Olympic ice and there’s a lot more time and space out there and I think the pace here is a lot higher,” Janatuinen said. “I like the game here, and it really gets you going. You just have to think fast and just play hard, so I’m really enjoying it and I think it’s making me better as a hockey player.”
Hoff, only two inches shorter at 5-foot-10 than Janatuinen, experienced a similar shift to North American hockey.
“The European game, you have a little bit more time on the bigger ice sheets,” Hoff said, “so it was kind of a transition right away but I kind of like to play a little rough sometimes and get a couple of hits, so I like the small ice sheets. I think it fits to my playing style.
“I think it’s a little different back in Europe with the way you play and you like to hold onto the puck, but with our system (at UND), the coaches encourage you to keep the puck and it’s been working out so far with our line. It’s been fun so far.”
Three games — and three UND wins — into the season, Hoff is averaging a point per game and is already standing out among the Hawks’ eight-man freshman class.
“Anytime you step up a level from junior to college, that’s a big jump and you never know how fast somebody can make that jump,” Berry said of Hoff. “All I know is that he played in juniors in the USHL and he was depended on heavily, not only in all situations but in leadership, too, so he was battle-tested before he came here.
“Now, making that step in here, that’s another situation, but that’s a part of him being a good player and he has good players around him and that’s a big deal.”
That isn’t meant to say that Hoff or Janatuinen are products of UND’s system. They are, however, fitting into it well.
“It’s been a lot of skill work and going in the mornings and, every day at practice, all the boys are going hard and it makes me want to go hard, too,” Hoff said. “Just going to the rink every day makes me better as a hockey player, whether it’s in the weight room or if it’s on the ice.
“All the boys are here to become professional hockey players, and you really would understand that if you were on the ice with us with all the battles and all that stuff.”
Broncos maintaining focus through early success
Western Michigan coach Andy Murray has had little to complain about through his team’s first four non-exhibition games of the season.
The Broncos are 3-0-1, going undefeated in a pair of weekend series against ranked former CCHA rivals Ferris State and Bowling Green. After a 4-4 tie Friday at BGSU, Western pounded the Falcons 8-2 on Saturday back at home in Kalamazoo, Mich.
Through four games, WMU’s skaters have found the back of the net 19 times.
“Our puck possession was certainly good in the first four games and because of that, we weren’t spending much time in our own zone defending,” Murray said. “We played with good pace, and we’ve seen some improvement in our returning players and we’ve got a spark from our freshmen, as well.
“It’s been a good start for us, and our theme right now is just to keep the blinders on, and there’s a reason why racehorses keep their blinders on so that they stay focused straight ahead.”
Murray does have cause for wariness, though. WMU went unbeaten in its first three games last season — including one win each against Ferris and BGSU — before the Broncos’ season went south and WMU finished seventh in the final NCHC standings.
So far this year, however, Murray is trying to strike a balance between keeping the atmosphere light and keeping his team focused. With Western idle this upcoming weekend, Murray was asked Wednesday what his team’s practices have looked like this week.
In short: It’s been hard, to a point.
“We’ve been pushing them real hard all week and we’ve created game scenarios in practice, and then (Thursday), because I’m a Canadian and I can do it fairly well, we’re going curling,” Murray said. “We have a curling club in town, maybe eight minutes from campus, and we’re going to use it as a team-building thing and have our own little bonspiel. We’ve split our team and equipment staff into 10 teams of four so we’ve got 40 people curling. It’s good, as a coach, to pick a team-builder that you’re fairly good at. Being a Canadian, I have a background in curling, so that’s why we’re going curling, and I’m a bad bowler so that’s why we’re not going bowling.”
Western returns to game action late next week with a pair of games at No. 6 Denver. Miami then visits Kalamazoo on Nov. 4-5 before WMU faces second-ranked Minnesota-Duluth on the road the following week.
One might wonder if being idle this weekend before the team’s trip to Colorado might put a halt to the Broncos’ early momentum. Murray, formerly the head coach of the NHL’s Los Angeles Kings and St. Louis Blues before coming to WMU, doesn’t share that view.
“I hate the word ‘momentum,’ I’ll be very honest with you, because what is momentum?” Murray asked. “You hear coaches all the time, and I remember when Scott Linehan was the coach of the St. Louis Rams when I was in St. Louis and they won the last two games of the year and lost all of their other ones, and I remember him saying, ‘We’ve got momentum going into next year.’ Well, really? Who cares? Do you think the team that’s playing you first next year cares?
“You’ve got to go in and win that game, and I hate when teams say after a weekend series, ‘We’ve got momentum now.’ Well, really? What is momentum? You’d better be good the next time you play, because if you’re not, you’re going to get beat. Momentum’s nothing other than that you’d better be good your next game, so I don’t believe in momentum.
“I don’t think you can gain it and I don’t think you can lose it,” Murray continued. “That’s why when I say the bye is perfect, if I said anything else, we’d be sending the wrong message to my team.”
Players of the week
Offensive player of the week: Adam Johnson, Minnesota-Duluth. Much of the offensive success that UMD had in a split against Notre Dame came from the sophomore forward. In the Bulldogs’ 4-3 win Friday, Johnson marked his first career multi-goal game with a pair of tallies, including his first game-winning goal for Duluth.
Defensive player of the week: Will Butcher, Denver. The senior defenseman recorded eight blocks in two home victories over then-No. 2 Boston University. Butcher helped DU kill seven of the Terriers’ nine power-play opportunities on the weekend.
Rookie of the week: Wade Allison, Western Michigan. A four-point weekend from the freshman forward was a big reason why WMU was able to pick up a tie and victory in its home-and-home series with Bowling Green. His two goals and as many assists all came on power plays.
Goaltender of the week: Tanner Jaillet, Denver. The junior netminder stopped 47 of BU’s 51 shots last weekend in Denver’s two wins over the Terriers. He was particularly effective in DU’s 3-1 win Saturday, helping the Pioneers go 5-for-6 on the penalty kill.
Rachael Smith of Mercyhurst scored the game-winner in the upset of Quinnipiac. (Omar Phillips)
The Mercyhurst Lakers have one of the most consistent and impressive resumes in women’s college hockey. They earned an NCAA at-large tournament bid for 10 consecutive seasons, starting in the 2004-2005 season and ending in 2013-2014. They’ve won the CHA regular season title all but one year since its inception and the CHA tournament title 11 times. They have four Frozen Four appearances. Yet, they don’t seem to have the notoriety or name recognition that accompanies such an accomplished resume.
Coach Michael Sisti, who’s been with the Lakers since they first took the ice in 1999, says that while he, his staff, and the current players are aware of the legacy of the program, they don’t focus too much on what’s happened in the past.
“We’re just trying to do the best we can today,” Sisti said. “Anything we’ve done in the past we’re very proud of, but we don’t really have time to worry about what people think or say. We’re proud of what we’ve done and we’re just trying to keep doing great things each day.”
At times, the history and the tradition of the program can cast a shadow on whatever the current team is or is not doing. Though that can put a lot of pressure on the players, Sisti said it can also encourage them to “reach for a little more.”
That “here and now” philosophy can apply to a full season, but it’s also something Sisti said he uses on a day-to-day basis. The Lakers’ first four games were against ranked opponents, and their next series is against a rival in Cornell. With eight new players — roughly half their roster — it’s been a quick and difficult transition into the season for the Lakers.
Any coach who says they don’t spare a thought for March or the postseason is probably lying, but Sisti said that the postseason is just a theory if the team doesn’t take care of their games now.
“We try not to get ahead of ourselves,” said Sisti. “We just want to be the best team we can be today. You can’t win your league or get in the polls if you don’t win the games right in front of you. You win the games on your schedule, then everything else will take care of itself. It’s a difficult road. We realize we can’t win a championship in October, but we’re trying to position ourselves. These early games you’re trying to win as many as you can and get better as a team and steadily improve throughout the season.”
Mercyhurst has been lucky to have some of the top talent to ever play the game among their alumni, but not every roster is stocked with the same level of talent. Sometimes there are superstar players that help lift a team or a program, but what Mercyhurst — and Sisti — have proven with their consistency is that they have a knack for finding a way to win.
This early in the season, coaches are still find and evaluating their players’ strengths and weaknesses and working on ways to improve upon those weaknesses, but the sign of a great coach is one who can take the team they have and formulate a plan to win, regardless of who is or is not on the roster. It’s something Sisti has proven adept at.
“We’ve won all different ways with all different teams; I think that’s something we’ve done well — we’ve adjusted,” said Sisti. “We’ve had all kinds of team find their way along the season. There’s so much adversity during the year, there’s so many highs and lows. The trick is just to grow and figure out a way that particular group can be successful.”
Despite their big win over Quinnipiac on Friday, the Lakers are just 1-2-1 to start the season. It’s been a chaotic first few weeks to the season, but with so many years of experience under his belt, Sisti said the increase in parity can only be good for the growth of the game.
“You should have to play really well to earn wins, not play average and still win just because your team is that much deeper than the other team. We love competition and I think it brings out the best in everyone. If your team is good enough, you’ll find a way to win those games. It’s such a fine line between winning and losing. If you win six or seven one-goal games or lose six or seven one-goal games, it can really change your season and dictate if you’re a good team or a great team.”
Thus far, it’s not clear which Mercyhurst will be, but Sisti said he saw marked improvement in his team from their first series into their second. A week off in-between certainly helped, but Sisti also says playing top teams — and needing to rise to that challenge — is only going to help his team get better.
“We thought we were a way better hockey team last weekend compared to our first weekend,” said Sisti. “When you play really good teams, you learn a lot about your team. We proved that we can play with anybody. We proved that we’ve got big-time players that can win games. Now we just have to do that consistently and I think that’s the next challenge for us to see if we can play like we did Friday all the time and that’s our norm throughout the season. That’s a tall order, but that’s what we’re going to try to do.”
Kyle Hayton will need to be steady and solid for St. Lawrence this season with new coach Mark Morris behind the bench (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).
Mark Morris’ first win as St. Lawrence’s head coach came against a school that didn’t even a have Division I hockey program during his last stint as a collegiate coach.
The Saints’ 6-3 win over Penn State on Oct. 7 was Morris’ first NCAA win since 2002. He spent the 14 years since then as a coach AHL and NHL after being let go by Clarkson three games into the 2002-03 season.
New competition isn’t the only thing that’s changed for Morris, who took over as the Golden Knights’ coach in 1989.
“It’s been an eye-opener for me; it’s been quite a while since I’ve been back in the college game,” said Morris, who was hired at St. Lawrence on May 3 following Greg Carvel’s departure for Massachusetts. “It’s certainly a lot different than it was in the past; we’re recruiting younger players and things of that nature.”
On the ice, Morris inherited a talented group of players that has advanced to the ECAC championship weekend two seasons in a row.
St. Lawrence is off to a 3-1 start this season, thanks to a balanced offense and goalie Kyle Hayton, who is poised to be the top goaltender in ECAC Hockey this year. The Saints also have one of better skating defensive groups in the league.
“It’s a nice situation to come into,” said Morris, who is the only coach to win 300 college and 300 professional games.
Morris, a Massena, N.Y. native who played at Colgate and was an assistant at St. Lawrence under Joe Marsh from 1985 to 1988, is excited to be back in the collegiate game after a lengthy absence.
“I’m really looking forward to it,” Morris said. “I’ve always been interested in the ECAC, especially watching the last 14 years how the league has grown and progressed. I think about the fact that some of these programs continue to be in the hunt for national prominence. It’s really heartwarming to see that the league has remained strong and being able to look at the personalities and people that I’ve been associated with in the past. It brings a great amount of pride to myself and I’m also glad to have the opportunity to be back in college hockey.”
Big Red helping out
Cornell’s season doesn’t officially start until Oct. 28, when it travels to face Merrimack, but the Big Red kept plenty busy in the offseason.
Members and friends of the hockey program spent part of the summer on a mission trip in the Dominican Republic. It’s the fourth time since 2009 the team have traveled to the country.
During its trip, members from Cornell have built schools and churches for residents of the Dominican Republic.
“We’re really seen the quality of life improve,” Big Red coach Mike Schafer said, adding that the government has helped build on to the schools that were built during previous trips. “It’s always an experience for our people to go down and see the quality of life. This past year, we were able to bring down computers and 22 bags of shoes and clothes. It was a just a phenomenal experience.”
But while trip presents a chance for Cornell to do some good on the island, it also gives Schafer a chance to get to know his players better.
“The biggest thing is getting to know the players in a five-day span [and] I get to know them better in those five days then I do during a whole year,” he said. “No phones, no electricity, no nothing. It’s a tremendous experience to see them grow.”
Part of that growth comes by being able to see people live their lives without the things that most Americans take for granted.
“To see the relationships that the people have down there; they have nothing,” Schafer said. “They teach us really what kind of relationships we should be having in the United States. It’s a tremendous experience and something that we hope to continue for many years.”
• Despite the graduation of Jason Kasdorf, Rensselaer looked to be set in goal with sophomore Cam Hackett, who filled in admirably for a stretch last season when Kasdorf was out with an injury. But it’s been sophomore Chase Perry, a Detroit draft pick and Colorado College transfer, who has started the first three game of the season for the Engineers. Perry has an .886 save percentage, but he’s not the only culprit for the team’s 0-3 start. RPI has scored five goals thus far and is 1-for-19 on the power play. The goals likely won’t come in bunches for the Engineers this season, but its defense and goaltending should be strong.
• St. Lawrence defenseman Gavin Bayreuther (player), Clarkson forward Devin Brosseau (rookie), and Hayton (goalie) were named ECAC Hockey’s weekly award winners by the league on Tuesday.
• Jimmy Vesey and Rob O’Gara met plenty of times on the ice during their careers at Harvard and Yale, respectfully. Now it looks like the two will play against each other for the fifth straight season – only this time in the NHL. Vesey, who signed with the New York Rangers after a much-publicized free agency this past summer, has played in all three of the Rangers’ games so far, scoring his first NHL goal Monday against San Jose. Meanwhile, injuries to Boston’s defense gave O’Gara an opportunity to make the Bruins’ opening-night roster. He’s played in each of the Bruins’ first three games. New York and Boston meet for the first time this year on Oct. 26.
• Finally, former Connecticut coach and current Franklin Pierce coach Bruce Marshall passed away last weekend. I began my career at USCHO as an arena reporter at UConn, covering every home game for a team that 7-27-3. Despite being a new reporter straight out of college, Marshall was always respectful and helpful after games, despite what must have been a frustrating season. Marshall was honored with a moment of silence prior to Quinnipiac’s game against the Huskies on Wednesday night.
Bruce was a great friend to me. Helped me a ton when I started out as an assistant. We will miss you! https://t.co/ivM9uiP6en
Max Letunov is one of many bright spots so far this season for Connecticut (photo: Jim Rosvold).
There are positive signs a plenty in Storrs, Conn.
In their third season in the league, the Connecticut Huskies are poised to have their best season since joining Hockey East. Following back-to-back shutout victories at home over Alabama-Huntsville to open the season, UConn earned two road ties last weekend at Colgate and RIT.
The second of those ties might have been the best sign this team is strong.
According to coach Mike Cavanaugh, his Huskies were severely outplayed by RIT, but thanks to great goaltending from freshman Adam Huska, UConn was actually in position to win the game before Chase Norrish scored for the Tigers with 8:29 remaining.
Huska then saved all five shots he faced in overtime to escape with a 1-1 tie.
“You’re going to have those nights,” said Cavanaugh. “We’re able to get a tie out of the game because we still have the skill level to score and our goaltender was very solid.”
Cavanaugh admitted that in years past, this is a game his team likely would have lost and could have done so handily. But he recognizes the fact that his team’s depth and timely goaltending earned the tie.
Depth, in fact, is something Cavanaugh believes his team can count on throughout this season, particularly on offense.
UConn still will look to their blue-chip players like Max Letunov and Tage Thompson to score, but also believes that he has a number of additional players ready to contribute.
“Letunov and Thomson, those guys are going to be focal players,” Cavanaugh said. “We’re going to have to have secondary scoring. All three lines have chipped in offensively [thus far].”
The one area where the Huskies still need to improve is the power play. In a season where penalties, and thus power play opportunities, are increased throughout college hockey, UConn needs to find a way to execute.
Through four games, the UConn power play has scored just three goals in 23 opportunities, a 13 percent efficiency rating. That’s down about seven percent from the 19.7 percent rate of a season ago when the UConn power play was often a difference-maker.
“Power plays are funny – you can’t get caught up in percentages,” said Cavanaugh, who noted generating quality opportunities is the key. “It’s just like a streaky hitter. You have to keep creating chances.
“You really have to get a goal a game [on the power play]. Somebody studied it and if you’re getting a power-play goal a game, your chance of winning is around 65-to-70 percent.”
Still, Cavanaugh likes a lot of what he’s seeing and hopes this can continue throughout the season.
“The first half of the year, it’s hard to tell a lot about teams,” said Cavanaugh. “The thing with the first half is it is hard to win anything. You just don’t want to play yourself out of contention in the first half.”
Are teams adjusting to penalty emphasis?
We’re two weeks into the season for Hockey East teams, which means we’re also two weeks into the renewed emphasis on calling penalties that slow down players.
My colleague Dave Hendrickson wrote extensively on the subject last week, so I won’t get too deep into whether or not the renewed emphasis is good for the game or not. But with two weeks of data, it does seem that it is working.
In the first week, officials whistled 175 penalties on Hockey East teams in 21 games, or an average of 8.33 per game. Last weekend, there were 134 penalties called in 19 games, or 7.05 per game, more than one penalty less.
Do we learn anything from that? Probably not. But looking at the following chart, you can see that most teams that were called for 10 or more penalties in their opening game have not repeated the double-digit violations since.
The most dramatically improved is Notre Dame, which played a penalty-filled opener against Arizona State, but has averaged just five penalties per game since. UMass Lowell was tagged with 11 penalties in its opener against Minnesota-Duluth, but hasn’t committed more than seven in the three games since.
Does this mean teams are learning? Quite possibly.
Though there are all other possibilities. Crew-to-crew and league-to-league variances in officials could also explain the penalty reductions, which in some cases is dramatic.
But I’d like to believe that players are beginning to learn what is a penalty and what they can do legally.
And let’s hope this is the case because anyone who was in an arena on the opening weekend saw an on-ice product that looked very little like hockey.
Remembering Bruce Marshall
After Wednesday night’s game between Quinnipiac and Connecticut, both teams gathered at center ice to honor the late UConn coach Bruce Marshall (photo: Rob Rasmussen).
If you’re a casual fan of Hockey East, you might not even recognize the name Bruce Marshall. But his impact on bringing Hockey East its most recently-added member, UConn, was monumental.
Marshall served as coach at his alma mater, UConn, for 25 years. When he took over the program, it was a Division III sport at the school, possibly even an afterthought for the athletic department.
But Marshall was a game-changer. He oversaw the program’s rise to Division I and its membership first in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference and then Atlantic Hockey. Marshall coached the Huskies to the school’s only championship, the 2000 MAAC title.
Marshall passed away on Saturday night at the young age of 54.
“He had a tremendous impact on this program,” said current UConn coach Mike Cavanaugh. “I remember sitting with him at a game at St. Sebastian’s last year and we talked for about an hour on different aspects of the program. He had so much history here. I picked his brain. He had a genuine interest in the UConn program.”
Personally, Marshall was a tremendous help when I began writing back in the late 90s. Working for USCHO in its infancy, I was one of the few writers to cover the MAAC as a beat.
If I called his office, likely he would answer (or always returned my call quickly). And he would talk. As a writer covering a league where I didn’t get to see a lot of teams play, I depended on people like Bruce to provide me honest assessments not just of their own team and players, but others around the league.
Bruce was a true gentleman and had such a love of the game of hockey. He always saw potential for UConn, something that is coming to fruition each and every day as this program grows as a member of Hockey East.
So the next time you’re at an arena watching the UConn Huskies, remember Bruce Marshall. I know I will.
Quinnipiac and Connecticut faceoff in a midweek, in-state matchup at the TD Bank Sports Center. The Huskies are on the upswing, and may challenge Quinnipiac and Yale for the top team in the state, but UConn isn’t there just yet. Quinnipiac wins
Connor Clifton is one half of the potent Clifton sibling duo at Quinnipiac (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).
HAMDEN, Conn. — Time is winding down in Quinnipiac’s game against Northeastern on Oct. 8.
With just over a minute to go, Tim Clifton is a yellow blur flying past the Northeastern bench on a break. He beats the defender down the ice and slides the puck into the empty net to secure Quinnipiac’s first win of the season.
As he celebrates with his teammates, one of his defenders comes into the celebration huddle to give Tim a hug. This isn’t any defender – it’s his brother, Connor.
There’s a special bond between brothers. One minute, they’re best friends, and the next, it’s the heat of competition. Both brothers are competing with each other to be better, and that’s good news for Quinnipiac who is banking on the brothers to help propel the program back to the national championship game.
When the horn sounded after the national championship game in April, speculation began as to which Quinnipiac players would return for the 2016-17 season. All-American junior Sam Anas left early to sign with the Minnesota Wild and many Bobcat fans were wondering if the Clifton brothers would return for their senior campaign.
It wouldn’t have been a surprise after the impressive seasons both Cliftons had last year. Connor Clifton was selected in the fifth round by the Phoenix Coyotes in the 2013 NHL Draft and had an impressive postseason for Quinnipiac, earning the ECAC tournament’s MVP award and was named to the All-Frozen Four Team.
That said, junior defenseman Devon Toews left school this past April to sign an NHL deal with the New York Islanders.
While Connor has helped anchor the defense, Tim emerged as a power play specialist and as a key offensive contributor. Last season, Tim finished the season with 33 points, but found the back of the net on the power play eight times. With both key pieces for the Bobcats’ run to Tampa last season, it was easy to see why fans thought they had seen the Clifton brothers in a Quinnipiac uniform for the final time.
Luckily for coach Rand Pecknold and Quinnipiac fans, both Cliftons have returned for their senior years.
The expectations for both the brothers and the program are high entering this season. Quinnipiac was picked second in the USCHO Preseason Division I Men’s Poll and was voted as the preseason favorites to win the ECAC.
As for the Cliftons, both made the preseason All-Conference Team and were the only ones to represent the Bobcats.
Despite the offseason of uncertainty, both brothers were excited for their senior years. For Tim, the decision to return may not have been easy, but he knows it was the right one.
Tim Clifton and brother, Connor, returned to Quinnipiac for their senior seasons in 2016-17 (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).
“It was a hard decision, but was happy about the outcome,” said Tim. “I love this university and while I can only speak for myself, I definitely made the right decision. I love this team and I love this program. I had a year of eligibility left to play, [so] why waste it? I mean, where else would you rather be?”
While the Cliftons both ultimately made the choice to return, they are looking to finish their college careers strong. One advantage that Tim and Connor both have is a healthy sibling that helps both push themselves to be the best players they can be.
“We do have that healthy brother rivalry,” noted Connor. “We also love that sense of brotherhood here. It was great having Tim there during the summer for training, such as the off-ice. We push each other and it’s great to have someone to do that for you.”
Quinnipiac has utilized this healthy sibling rivalry to its advantage in the past. The school has had a few different pairs of brothers in recent years such as the Renouf, Pieper and Jones brothers. However, this competitive sibling rivalry theme seems to have paid of for Pecknold in recent years with the second most wins in the NCAA since 2012-13.
Still, the underlying reason why the Clifton’s returned to Hamden was because of the unfinished business from last April, when Quinnipiac fell for the second time on four years in the national championship game, this time to North Dakota.
“As the seasons have progressed, so have the expectations of this program,” Tim said. “We’re at the point where we are expected to be at the top of the ECAC, being in the NCAA tournament, and making a run. However, as far as we are concerned, it’s business as usual.”
The spotlight has never been brighter on Quinnipiac. With two national championship appearances and four consecutive NCAA tournament appearances, the Bobcats have established themselves as a national contender.
In order for Quinnipiac to make another run in the tournament, the Clifton boys will both need to make an impact.
Bailey Larson is part of a balanced offensive attack at Colgate. ((c) Shelley M. Szwast 2014)
Candace: Well Nicole, the more things change, the more they stay the same, at least with the top Western teams. Wisconsin got challenged by Clarkson on Friday. The Badgers fired 41 shots, but Shea Tiley played exceptionally well. A third period power-play goal by Sam Cogan at 9:34 sent the game to OT, and then Emily Clark won it for the Badgers in OT. Wisconsin didn’t fire as many shots on Saturday, only 28, but Presley Norby got the game-winner to break a 1-1 tie midway through the third period.
The other big ranked battle saw Minnesota take on Minnesota-Duluth. The series was much closer than recent games between the two, but Minnesota won both, each by a goal, and Saturday’s contest went to OT before Sarah Potomak struck. I think it speaks to how much improved Duluth is.
I think you could say that about the entire WCHA though, especially after the split between Ohio State and Bemidji. I actually put six WCHA teams in my poll this week, giving Ohio State a nod after another strong outing.
What is your take on the WCHA right now? Certainly I think Ohio State has been a surprise, but the depth among the teams is outstanding top to bottom. Minnesota State, which hasn’t won a conference game since Feb. 2, 2015, almost two seasons ago, took North Dakota to OT on Saturday, and St. Cloud beat North Dakota the previous weekend and also gave Wisconsin fits on opening weekend.
Nicole: Last week Arlan and I were lamenting the small sample size on which we had to build our opinions, but an additional week’s worth of games really only made the picture more cloudy for me. I’m pretty happy not to have a poll ballot, because I’d have no idea what to do with it this week.
I think that Wisconsin and Minnesota are still atop the league, but the gap between them and everyone else has certainly got smaller. You probably could have argued for three tiers in the WCHA in the past, with UW and UM at the top, followed by North Dakota and Minnesota-Duluth, and then another gap before the rest of the conference. I don’t think that third tier exists anymore. Any of those teams can beat each other on any given day and they can all give Minnesota and Wisconsin a run for their money.
You could definitely argue that it seems to be a bit of a down year in Minneapolis, but even if that trend continues, we’d expect them to recover in short order. There are programs across the country that would love to have a “down year” like the one the Gophers may or may not be having. It’s only their own standard and precedent that makes any small stumbles look amplified.
Ohio State has always shown that they were a threat to garner an upset, but in years past, they’d also stumble against teams that they should have beaten. The lack of consistency always made it difficult to figure out if they were just playing above themselves when they gave Minnesota and Wisconsin scares. Thus far, the Buckeyes haven’t shown that to be the case.
I give a lot of credit to the new coaches that have joined the league in that past two seasons in Columbus, Duluth, Bemidji, Mankato, and St. Cloud. They’ve instilled a lot of confidence in their players and caused a bit of a shakeup. Teams don’t seem content to fulfill the roles they have in the past.
If we’re talking conferences in chaos, though, let’s talk Hockey East. Vermont is the only team who’s played a conference game so far that doesn’t have a loss. They’ve beaten Boston University. Maine upset Boston College this weekend. And those are just the conference match-ups that raised eyebrows. It certainly seems like the conference is as wide open as we’ve seen in in years.
Candace: You knew Hockey East would probably be more volatile this season, as Northeastern star Kendall Coyne, who accounted for approximately 50 percent of her team’s points, graduated, while Boston College lost two all-world scorers in Alex Carpenter and Haley Skarupa. Coyne and Carpenter won the last two Patty Kazmaier Awards, and at least with the Eagles in recent years, if any team got close, you could expect Carpenter and Skarupa to work their magic at will.
Boston University makes up the third team of the Boston triumvirate that has dominated Hockey East. The Terriers lost Marie-Philip Poulin to graduation two seasons ago, and lost Sarah Lefort, Rebecca Russo, and Kayla Tutino from last year’s team, who were the 3-5 scorers on the team last year.
I guess this is my long-winded way of stating that those three teams had players who could pick their team up and put them on their backs in tight games, and they don’t have them anymore. So yes, Hockey East is more chaotic. Maine, as you mentioned, beat BC, and that, combined with a one-goal loss earlier in the year to Quinnipiac and a one-goal loss to the Eagles, would make me think the Black Bears are closing the gap, but they also seem to suffer from the aforementioned Ohio State syndrome, as evidenced by a disappointing 5-1 loss to Merrimack on Friday at home. Those aren’t the types of losses a team that could be in the home ice hunt can afford.
Having said all that, it still seems that the Boston triumvirate will battle for the top spot in Hockey East. The Eagles are sitting atop Hockey East right now with six points, and the Terriers are in second with four. Northeastern hadn’t played a Hockey East game until Tuesday, where they started their conference schedule with a 6-2 shellacking of Boston University, serving notice. Even before that, the Huskies seemed to have shown signs of a rebound after the sweep by St. Lawrence, which, given how the Saints have performed since, probably shouldn’t be looked at as a surprise anymore.
Speaking of Quinnipiac, the Bobcats went on the road to face Mercyhurst, a team that used to be an NCAA tournament staple and boasted of all-world players like Meghan Agosta and Vicki Bendus. The Lakers seemed to drop off in recent years, needing to capture the CHA autobid to make the tournament, and no longer getting the at-large, as they did for years before the CHA even got an autobid for its tournament winner. Last weekend, Mercyhurst split with Quinnipiac, playing impressive defense, winning 3-2 Friday and then falling in OT Saturday 1-0. Do you think the Lakers might get back into at-large contention this year, in which case the CHA could send two teams to the NCAA tournament?
Nicole: Whew, that’s a tough question. Not to move the conversation backwards, but I think Mercyhurst’s fate will depend not only on its own schedule, but how the WCHA plays out and how the committee chooses to hand out those at-large bids. The Lakers have just six games left on their schedule against teams that are currently ranked. Those quality win bonus points that WCHA teams are getting just by playing each other in conference while five of the eight teams are ranked are going to be difficult to overcome, I’d think.
Despite not having any of the more recognizable names in the game right now, Mercyhurst does have coach Michael Sisti, who’s been with its program since its inception. The way they went defense-first against Quinnipiac this weekend was a pretty inspired bit of coaching, though I’m not sure if it’s sustainable for a full season. It took the Bobcats by surprise, but opponents now know to look for it. On top of that, while they packed it in on their end, the Lakers struggled to balance that with any sustained offense. As evidenced by the Saturday loss, it just takes one shot to beat them when they aren’t putting any pucks on net themselves. That’s a tenuous situation to be in, at best. It’s a bit of a catch-22 for them because they can’t develop any player — or line — as an offensive threat without giving them time on the ice to grow and gain confidence. However, this strategy doesn’t really allow much room for that.
In any event, I love that they found a way to throw a speed bump in front of Quinnipiac, who looked like they might roll on through as the season got underway. I expect more teams to try to frustrate the Bobcats that way. It’ll be fun to see if a team with a good transition game can not only fluster them on defense, but steal some pucks and make Sydney Rossman work on the other end.
It seems like Robert Morris has pole position in the CHA, though we’ve not had any conference games yet. The Colonials play even fewer ranked teams than Mercyhurst does, but the two teams will meet each other four times and it seems like those four games could decide who gets the autobid.
I guess that only leaves the ECAC. A couple of the Ivies played exhibition games last weekend, but will officially get underway this weekend when Harvard meets Dartmouth and Princeton heads to Providence. What have you seen so far in the ECAC? And piggybacking on your question, if we assume Quinnipiac wins the conference, do we see an autobid for Clarkson? What about St. Lawrence?
Candace: Tough question right back at you! I expect the ECAC to send at least two teams to the NCAA tournament, and possibly three, but I’m not sure who. Right now, my gut is saying that the only Hockey East team to make it will be whomever wins the the Hockey East tournament, and the same with the CHA. That leaves, realistically, three open spots, after you take into account the ECAC tournament winner and the WCHA tournament winner, plus whichever of Minnesota-Wisconsin doesn’t win the WCHA, barring a huge upset. I think honestly it’s a tough ask to beat Minnesota and Wisconsin back-to-back to win the WCHA tournament, so while the other WCHA squads are really good, and most would be in the running to win any of the other conferences, I don’t see them beating the two top dogs consecutively.
With three spots available after those five are taken care of, I think the WCHA could likely land one more, and the ECAC two. You mentioned Clarkson and St. Lawrence, and both are teams I’d expect to be in contention, but don’t forget Colgate. I like what I see from the Raiders early on. We also haven’t seen Cornell play yet, and they’ve often been a good team, and Princeton was a strong team last year as well. It’s still awfully early to be prognosticating out that far, so for now, let’s look at teams that might dethrone Quinnipiac. If I had to pick, I’d probably go, in order, St. Lawrence, Clarkson, Colgate, Princeton, Cornell.
Anyway, I want to focus in on the Red Raiders a little. Sophomore goalie Julia Vandyk currently leads the nation in save percentage at .963, and is third in goals-against at 1.005, both very impressive stats. Vandyk’s play is one reason the defense is fifth in the country, giving up only 1.5 goals per game.
What’s even more impressive to me about the Raiders though, is the offense. It’s second in the country, averaging 4.25 goals per game, despite not having a single player ranked in the top 20 in scoring. Usually in the past, what we’ve seen is the teams with potent offenses have one or two players who are lights out, and they lift everyone else. Think of Minnesota with Hannah Brandt and Amanda Kessel, or BC with Carpenter and Skarupa, players who were all frequently at the top of the nation’s scoring charts. Colgate’s highest scorer is currently 28th in the country, Bailey Larson. Of course, they have three other players tied for 28 in Annika Zalewski, Cat Quirion, and Jessie Eldridge. Teams that get balanced scoring like that are in many ways harder to shut down.
Colgate has a big test this weekend when it plays Syracuse in a home-and-home. To really prove worthy of at-large contention, this is a series the Raiders need to win. Do you think they can do so, and, more importantly, handle the pressure of being the favorite? After all, the Raiders are a young squad.
Nicole: You’re right, I did forget to mention Colgate, which is silly since I picked them third in the conference and to get an at-large bid in my preview. It certainly seems like the Red Raiders should continue their winning ways against Syracuse, who’ve struggled early on this season. The Orange haven’t had a favorable schedule, but still probably didn’t expect to start the season 0-3-1.
I think one of the advantages of being a young, upstart kind of team like Colgate is this season is that there isn’t actually a lot of pressure. They’re playing above expectations, so anything from here on out is just kind of bonus. There’s no win-or-go home mentality like if it was a senior-heavy squad. They’ve already added to last season’s successes – their No. 5 ranking this week is the highest in program history. The team got an idea of what it could feel like to be successful last season and they seem to have come back looking to take that even further.
The thing about their scoring is that it’s not coming from just their top two offensive lines. Cat Quirion, a defender, led all ECAC scoring last week with five points. Shelby Perry, on the Red Raiders’ fourth line, has three goals. It’s one thing to say balanced scoring, but the fact that teams are needing to match up to four lines and keep an eye on the blue liners is what really makes Colgate such a tough opponent.
Looking ahead, Colgate’s game against Cornell on November 1 should be must-watch and give us a good idea of where the teams stand.
Cornell has the opportunity to play spoiler, but they’re starting from behind and will need to get up to speed quickly. They have the firepower to be a prolific offense, but struggled to show it at times last season. They lost a huge presence on the blue line in Cassandra Poudrier and they’ve not got a solid answer in goal yet. They start with two at home against Mercyhurst, so we should get a pretty good read on them right away.
Before we saw St. Lawrence, I thought it would be Colgate and Cornell fighting each other and Princeton to make waves at the top of the standings, but I gave Colgate the nod because of the momentum of last season. The more we talk about it, the more the ECAC feels a lot like the WCHA. Quinnipiac is the clear front-runner, though they’v shown some chinks in the armor. Clarkson is holding on to the two spot, possibly a bit out of deference to past performance. Colgate, Cornell, Princeton and St. Lawrence are the upstarts, breaking out of the middle-ranks and proving they’re forces to be taken seriously. Quinnipiac and Clarkson’s top positions are more vulnerable than Wisconsin and Minnesota’s, in my opinion. We’ve been calling it chaos, but the increased level of play and parity are actually great things for the sport overall. They make our jobs a bit harder, but also a lot more fun.
You mentioned Colgate’s goalie, but what other players have stood out to you early on? North Dakota’s Lexie Shaw leads all goalies with a .9721 goals against average. Some were worried the Fighting Hawks would suffer after the graduation of Shelby Amsley-Benzie, but Shaw has stepped right in. Minnesota-Duluth’s Lara Stalder has six goals and six assists in six games played to lead the country in scoring. The Swiss national seems to have found comfort and confidence this season. Looking at the rest of the top scorers, there are just two that played in last year’s Frozen Four — Minnesota’s Kelly Pannek and Dani Cameranesi. Quinnipiac’s Taylar Cianfarno is near the top, but the rest of the top of the list is a lot of new names. Should we be reading anything into the lack from Minnesota, Wisconsin, Clarkson, and Boston College?
Candace: Minnesota, Wisconsin, and BC interest me in that though they don’t seem to have top scorers as they’ve had in the past years, they are still scoring at a fair clip. Wisconsin is fifth in the country with 3.5 goals per game, Minnesota seventh with 3.17, and BC eighth with 3 goals per game. Wisconsin also has the country’s best defense, letting up only a goal per game, which is why it’s odd to me that Ann-Renée Desbiens is second in GAA and only ninth in save percentage among goalies.
The issue for BC, and to a lesser extent Minnesota, is defense. Minnesota is giving up 1.67 goals per game, which is respectable, especially since it’s the first year for Sidney Peters as a starter, and it’s good for a goal differential of 1.5 goals per game. You’ll win most games with that stat.
BC, on the other hand, after averaging barely a goal per game last year on defense, is at 2.33 goals per game, only 17th in the country, so that means the Eagles’ goal differential, which used to be among the best in the country, is now less than a goal per game. Of course, Arlan always used to tell me last year that BC played defense by dominating offensive time of possession, so other teams couldn’t really get too many scoring opportunities when they were stuck playing defense all the time. BC needs to clamp down defensively to give themselves a better chance since the Eagles don’t have Carpenter and Skarupa to run up the points and dominate puck possession.
As for players impressing me early, Mercyhurst netminder Jessica Convery has been impressive, with a 1.05 goals-against, and freshman netminder Janine Alder of St. Cloud has also been strong, with a 1.15 GAA and a .962 save percentage, the latter of which is second in the country.
For offense, I don’t think you can say enough about what junior Kennedy Marchment of St. Lawrence has done early. She’s averaging 2.5 points a game, best in the country. St. Lawrence is also getting impressive production from junior Hannah Miller and senior Brooke Webster, who each have eight points, for an average of 2 points a game, equal to Stalder.
Duluth’s Lara Stalder leads all scorers with 12 points, but has played two more games than Marchment. I think you also have to recognize Robert Morris freshman Jaycee Gebhard, who is third in the country with 1.67 points per game.
Did I miss anybody? Who stands out to you?
Nicole: Though it’s not exactly surprising after her performance in last year’s Frozen Four, Sarah Potomak had a great weekend for the Gophers. They shuffled lines a bit and put her on wing instead of center and she scored both game-winning goals for Minnesota in close games this weekend. She tends to not get mentioned behind some of her more well-known teammates, but she stepped up big as a freshman and has the tendency to be in exactly the right place in front of the net.
There’s a lot of names to watch at Wisconsin, but one player quietly making a difference is Sam Cogan. She scored with under two minutes to go in Wisconsin’s second game against Ohio State to salvage the tie and force overtime. She did the same thing again against Clarkson, scoring in the third to tie the game. Both were power-play tallies. She benefits from being on the top line with Emily Clark and Annie Pankowski, but is capitalizing on the opportunities that come her way when the defense focuses on those two.
Mary Parker transferred from Harvard to BU and has continued her scoring proficiency with little hesitancy after sitting out a year. She led the Crimson in scoring two years ago when they played in the national championship game. She’s tied for second on the Terriers with eight points.
St. Cloud State’s Julia Tylke has already netted five goals after tallying just nine all of last season. Freshman Terra Lanteigne has started four of RIT’s six games and has a .946 save percentage and a 1.495 goals-against average, despite her 1-3-0 record.
Looking ahead to next week, you mentioned Syracuse and Colgate, but what other games are must-follow for you this weekend?
Candace: I’m interested to see how Ohio State performs against Minnesota. The Buckeyes are the home team, and if they are serious about being a contender this year, they need to at least earn a tie in one game, if not a win. The Bemidji State-Minnesota-Duluth series should be super competitive. Duluth is a great offensive team, but the Beavers counter with Brittni Mowat in goal, and as the Gophers found out two weeks ago, she can be tough to solve.
The one I’m most interested in is the home-and-home between Boston College and Quinnipiac. As I mentioned, BC has had some defensive struggles, but the Bobcats aren’t known for having a lot of firepower, so it could help the Eagles. BC needs to get at least one win this weekend to rebuild its confidence and show it is still in the NCAA conversation.
What about you? What are your must-watch games this weekend?
Nicole: I haven’t gotten a chance to watch Colgate yet, so I’m interested to see them against Syracuse. Four of the WCHA’s ranked teams meet each other, and the fifth, Minnesota, faces the sixth team you voted for, Ohio State. We’re either going to get a clearer picture or a lot more chaos — either way, it’ll be interesting. Lastly, I’m just anxious to finally see the Ivies. Harvard could play spoiler, Cornell looks to be interesting, and Princeton has been ranked without playing any games.
Christian Frey made 33 saves in Ohio State’s season-opening 3-2 win in Denver on Oct. 7 (photo: Kirk Irwin).
Getting through the first three games of the season with a 1-0-2 record may not exactly qualify as setting the world on fire but comparatively speaking, Ohio State is off to a great start.
Considering the Buckeyes lost their first seven games last season, started 1-4 the season before that and dropped their first three in head coach Steve Rohlik’s first year at the helm, Ohio State fans have a reason to be quietly optimistic about this year’s squad.
Many of those early-season losses came at the hands of in-state rivals Miami and Bowling Green. The Buckeyes weren’t able to pick up a win at Miami last weekend, but came away with a 1-1 draw. This weekend, OSU gets a chance to exercise some more demons when they meet up with Bowling Green for a home-and-home series.
Despite getting preseason praise, the Falcons have fallen victim to the type of start Ohio State has suffered through in previous seasons. The Falcons own an 0-3-1 record.
Winless record aside, Rohlik said that BGSU is still a dangerous team.
“I’ve got a lot of respect for coach [Chris] Bergeron there, how his teams play and what they bring every night,” he said. “It’s no secret, they play hard. They’re a very dangerous hockey team, they were picked in that league up top for a reason.
“As you know, in college hockey if you’re not playing your best game, you’re going to get beat no matter who you play. For us, you look at our schedule, there is no letup. We’ve got to play our best starting this Friday at Bowling Green, up there in that great environment, to win a hockey game.”
Rohlik said he’s happy with the team’s 1-0-2 start, but added that there’s still room for the team to improve.
“There’s so much room for growth with these guys, still,” he said. “We’ve made some mistakes and we certainly haven’t played our best hockey yet.”
The Buckeyes returned all four players that scored 30 or more points last season. Combine that with a fairly upperclassmen-led team that features only five freshmen and Ohio State has a recipe for success with one of the most experienced teams in the conference.
“Experience is always a good thing [and] certainly, you’ve got to lean on your guys that have been through it,” Rohlik said. “For me, I’m fortunate, I’ve got three really good captains and I rely on those guys, and also a lot of guys that have been through some close games over the past couple of years. We’ve played an awful lot of one-goal games and that trend has continued this year.”
The Buckeyes dropped most of those one-goal games last season, especially in the season’s first half. If Ohio State can flip the script in those type of games, it may be able to live up to expectations this year.
“No one wants to start off slow and again, we played in so many one-goal games the last couple years,” Rohlik said. “I can’t tell you how many times I pulled the goalie in the first half last year, at least 10 times. We talked a bit about it with the guys this year, we want to get out and kind of throw the first punch and get after it.”
Rohlik has been rolling two goaltenders so far this season. Christian Frey started the first two games of the season and Matt Tomkins was stellar in last weekend’s 1-1 draw at Miami. Both Tomkins and Frey are seniors.
“They have both won big games here, they’ve both played a lot of games here,” Rohlik said. “Frey played very well when he was called upon and Matt Tomkins was ready when his number was called and he’s played very well.
“For a coach, you can’t ask for much more. If you’ve got two guys back there playing at the top of their game it’s certainly better than one. I have full confidence in either one of those guys.”
Rohlik credited Tomkins with making a couple “unbelievable saves” during last week’s game at Miami and said that Redhawks coach Enrico Blasi could say the same thing about his goaltender Ryan Larkin.
“It was nice to see a low-scoring game, but we’re comfortable playing either way,” Rohlik said. “If we’ve got to score two goals to win, or one goal to win, or four goals, we’ve got to adapt to the games being played.”
Rohlik signs extension at Ohio State
It was announced Tuesday that Rohlik would be sticking around Ohio State for a while, through the 2020-21 season to be exact.
“It’s certainly a nice feeling,” he said. “But it has to do with a lot of good people around you and a lot of good players.”
Rohlik said that they began talking about the extension at the end of July and thanked athletic director Gene Smith and associate athletic director Shaun Richard.
“I’m the fortunate one and obviously, it’s very humbling,” he said.
Through three complete seasons and three games this year, Rohlik has amassed a 47-51-14 record.
Badgers hope to build on victory over Boston College
A high-scoring game that resulted in a loss may have ended Wisconsin’s weekend on a sour note.
But a split with Boston College is nothing to shake a stick at. Head coach Tony Granato talked about the weekend as a whole at Wisconsin’s Monday press conference.
“Offensively, we have some really skilled players – they’re exciting to watch,” he said describing the team’s offensive-prowess, which was one of the highlights of the weekend.
Granato also said that he liked the Badgers’ special team play, especially the penalty kill. He said the power play was good at times, but not as consistent as the weekend before.
“I liked our comeback in the third period [on Sunday],” he said. “We had two choices going into the third period, either we were going to quit and wait next week or we were going to battle and try and win the game. When you’re down 6-2 to a team like that, it didn’t look good and we dug down and found a way to fight and get ourselves back in the game.”
Goaltender Matt Jurusik played great during Friday’s victory over the Eagles, but struggled and was eventually pulled from Sunday’s game.
“That position is hard, and he’s still a young kid,” Granato said. “He got the experience he did last year on a team that played real sit back style defensive hockey where he got a lot of shots. This team is going to be a little different. so I think there’s a little bit of an adjustment with how we’re playing for him. Hopefully he will settle in and be more consistent.”
Three stars of the week (All Freshmen Edition)
First star — Michigan freshman forward Jake Slaker: Slaker scored his first collegiate goal during the second period in Michigan’s game against Ferris State last weekend to give the Wolverines a 1-0 lead. He added an assist on the game-winning goal late in the third. This is his first career weekly B1G award. Second star — Wisconsin freshman forward Trent Frederic: The St. Louis native put up four points during Wisconsin’s split with Boston College. He had one goal and three primary assists during the Badgers loss to the Eagles on Sunday. This is his first career weekly B1G award. Third star — Penn State freshman goaltender Peyton Jones: Jones stopped all 20 shots he faced during the Nittany Lions’ game against Mercyhurst for his first career shutout. This is his first career weekly B1G award.
B1G in the poll
No. 7 Minnesota, No. 11 Michigan and No. 19 Ohio State represent the Big Ten in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll. Penn State and Wisconsin received votes.
My ballot
1. North Dakota
2. Minnesota State
3. Quinnipiac
4. Minnesota-Duluth
5. Notre Dame
6. Boston University
7. Boston College
8. Massachusetts-Lowell
9. Minnesota
10. Denver
11. St. Cloud State
12. Harvard
13. Michigan
14. St. Lawrence
15. Providence
16. Northeastern
17. Bemidji State
18. Ohio State
19. Yale
20. Omaha
This week’s matchups
Ohio State at/vs. Bowling Green (Friday at BGSU Ice Arena, Saturday at Value City Arena)
Denver at Michigan State (Friday and Saturday, Munn Ice Arena)
Penn State at Notre Dame (Friday and Saturday, Compton Family Ice Arena)
Michigan Teach at Michigan (Friday and Saturday, Yost Ice Arena)
Minnesota vs./at St. Cloud State (Friday at Mariucci Arena, Saturday at Herb Brooks National Hockey Center)
Senior goalie Parker Gahagen has been solid through three games thus far for Army West Point (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).
What’s new in the world of Atlantic Hockey?
We’ve got you covered…
A little biased
Recently, there’s been a national conversation on “media bias” — whether it exists and how it can affect the political landscape.
I’m here to tell you that when it comes to college hockey, media bias definitely exists, and I’m exhibit “A.”
I pull for Atlantic Hockey teams to win. There is no cheering allowed in the press box, so I keep it to myself. But it warms my heart to see AHC teams do well.
I’ve been covering the league since 2007, a year after Holy Cross shocked the world with a 3-2 upset of Minnesota in the first round of the NCAA tournament. In the past 10 years, there have been other upsets, but the league as a whole has managed to win only about 25 percent (141-511-65) of its nonconference games. Atlantic Hockey won only nine non-league games total my first year covering the league.
But this season is off to a promising start, with the league currently at 6-7-5. Yes, I know, it’s still below .500, but at this early juncture last season, AHC teams were 5-18-2 out of conference.
New facilities and more scholarships will help, so things should only get better. That makes me happy, because I spend time each season talking to a very talented and experienced group of coaches, who have done more with less for years. It’s about time that the scoreboard reflects that.
So while I can’t speak for my co-correspondent Dan Rubin — wait, yes I can because I know he feels the same way — my bias is showing so far.
Picking up…
We’re only three weekends into the season, but Army West Point looks a lot like the team that came on strong at the end of last season, coming from the middle of the pack and advancing all the way to the conference semifinals. The Black Knights were 7-11-6 in late January, but went 9-4-3 after that, not allowing more than three goals in a game since Jan. 9.
The Black Knights allowed a total of six goals in six postseason games last year.
So far this season? Two goals allowed in three games.
“We’ve kind of picked up where we left off,” said Army West Point coach Brian Riley, in his 13th season at the school. “Our goalie [senior Parker Gahagen] played extremely well in the second half [last season]. He has an experienced D-corps in front of him.”
The Black Knights lost only one regular defenseman from last season, and added sophomore Dalton MacAfee, who transferred from Boston University.
“They’ve got a year under their belts and play with that poise,” said Riley. “We’ve had a fun three weekends so far. Nobody’s pushed the panic button when we’ve been down.”
Riley’s team found themselves in a hole in their first game of the season, behind 2-0 in the second period to Colgate in the inaugural game at the Raider’s new rink, the Class of 1965 Arena.
“I really liked the way we responded,” he said. “We were able to stick to our game plan and get two goals and tie it up.”
Riley said it gave his team a boost to spoil the Raiders’ party.
“Sure, they invited us for a reason,” he said. “We knew they would come out strong. It was a great atmosphere and the building was awesome. It was an experience we won’t forget.”
Gahagen made 28 saves against Colgate, then followed that up with consecutive Friday night shutouts of league foe Sacred Heart, making a combined 55 saves.
“[In the first game], they outshot us 14-2 in the third period,” said Riley. “They really had us on our heels. Their top line (seniors Evan Jasper, Justin Danforth and Jordan Minello) might be the best line in the league. They’ve got a high-powered offense, but we were able to weather the storm.”
The Black Knights have another single-game weekend coming up, traveling to Massachusetts on Friday. Riley is looking forward to the challenge of another non-league opponent, and says his team will try to do its part to get Atlantic Hockey another victory against a Hockey East opponent.
Air Force kicked off its season by knocking off Boston College, Bentley beat New Hampshire on Oct. 8, and Holy Cross defeated Providence last Saturday.
“We all watch and are pulling for each other in non-league games,” Riley said. “I text the other coaches right away after games and offer congratulations. When one of our teams teams does well, it helps all of us.
“It used to be that we were going to shock the hockey world by winning a non-league game. It’s not like that at all anymore. Now there’s an expectation that you’re going to win.”
New kids
Atlantic Hockey boasts 11 teams that have experienced starting goalies this season, bringing a combined 639 collegiate games between the returning netminders.
That means the opportunities for a rookie to get between the pipes has been rare so far.
But three freshmen have made their debuts in net, all with strong showings:
* Canisius’ Daniel Urbani allowed just one goal on 25 shots in his first start, but unfortunately, the Golden Griffs couldn’t find the back of the net in a 1-0 loss to Alaska-Anchorage last Saturday.
* In a game at Rochester Institute of Technology on Oct. 8, Robert Morris rookie Francis Marcotte entered the game with his team trailing 4-1 early in the second period. He allowed just one goal and made 27 saves to spark a big 6-5 comeback win for the Colonials.
* Bentley’s Aidan Pelino had a nice outing in relief at Northeastern last Saturday, stopping 14 of 15 shots over the final half of a 7-4 Falcons loss.
Pumpkin convention
Another year and another capacity crowd at Rochester’s Blue Cross Arena for RIT, which last Saturday tied Connecticut 1-1 in front of 10,556 orange-clad fans.
The Tigers settled for the tie, as they did last year against Bowling Green in the annual Brick City Homecoming game.
RIT hasn’t won a Brick City game since 2011, choosing to bring in top teams like Boston College and Michigan. No cupcakes allowed.
“Homecoming is supposed to be an easy win, but we’re not going to get any of those,” RIT coach Wayne Wilson told the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle after the game. We want to challenge ourselves. I think having good teams like UConn come in is great for our fans. It’s not a school where they said, ‘Who are they, or who is that?’ I’m not looking for an easy win.”
Weekly Awards
Player of the Week — Johnny Coughlin, Holy Cross: The sophomore defenseman scored the game-winning goal in overtime for Holy Cross as the Crusaders defeated No. 11 Providence, 2-1 last Saturday. Coughlin has four career goals so far, and three of them have been game-winners.
Goalie of the Week — Parker Gahagen, Army West Point: The senior from Buffalo, N.Y. picked up his second shutout of the season and eighth of his career, stopping all 25 shots in a 3-0 blanking of Sacred Heart. Through three games, Gahagen has a 0.65 GAA and a .977 save percentage.
Defensive Player of the Week — Alexey Solovyev, Bentley:
Solovyev, a defenseman, scored a pair of goals, one each night, as Bentley tied and lost to Northeastern. He has three goals so far this season after tallying just one in his rookie campaign.
Rookie of the Week — Neil Robinson, Holy Cross: The freshman scored his second goal of the season on Saturday in a 2-1 upset of No. 11 Providence.
Sad news
I, like everyone in college hockey, am mourning the passing of former Connecticut coach Bruce Marshall. Marshall was taken from us way too young, at just 54. He was the head coach at UConn for 25 years, starting in 1988 when he was just 26 years old. He left the school in 2013 and was about to start his second season behind the bench at Division III Franklin Pierce.
I first interviewed Bruce in the mid 90s and we talked many times over the years. Our talks always left me impressed with his love of the game, and the desire to do things the right way for his players. The last time I saw him, about 18 months ago, he was full of enthusiasm about the new opportunities ahead of him, and was looking forward to a fresh start. He will be missed.
New Robert Morris volunteer assistant coach Brandon Blandina (left) joins head coach Derek Schooley at a recent Colonials practice (photo: RMU Athletics).
Robert Morris alum Brandon Blandina has joined the Colonials coaching staff as a volunteer assistant coach.
Blandina played in 133 games for the Colonials from 2008 to 2012, scoring 11 goals and 27 assists.
Following his RMU career, Blandina played professional hockey in the ECHL for two seasons, playing 117 games, scoring 15 goals and recording 45 points.
Since retiring from professional hockey, Blandina has run his own business in the Pittsburgh area – Elite Strides – using a synthetic ice treadmill to teach skating. Blandina also works with the Pens Elite organization as a coach.
“Brandon was a very good defensive forward for our hockey team,” said RMU coach Derek Schooley in a news release. “He was part of the penalty killing unit that was No. 1 in the nation and he was very good at faceoffs.
“To be able to add an alumnus like Brandon to our staff will be very beneficial to not only our coaches, but our players. He’s been in their shoes and knows exactly what it means to play Colonials hockey and we’re excited to have him on board.”
“I’m happy to be able to come in and help the team,” added Blandina. “I’m glad to be able to give back to the organization.”
Ohio State’s Steve Rohlik directs from the bench during a recent Buckeyes game (photo: Jamie Sabau).
Steve Rohlik has signed a contract extension to remain Ohio State’s head coach through the 2020-21 season.
Rohlik has been behind the Buckeyes’ bench since the start of the 2013-14 season and has compiled a 46-51-12 mark going into the current 2016-17 season, where OSU is 1-0-2 through three games.
“It’s certainly a nice feeling, but it has to do with a lot of good people around you and a lot of good players,” Rohlik told USCHO.com. “We sat down and talked probably the end of July. Obviously to be in a position to be at this great institution and have (athletic director) Gene Smith and (associate athletic director) Shaun Richard have faith in you and like the direction of where the program was going, I’m the fortunate one and obviously, it’s very humbling.”
Andrew McDonald (13) and Tyler Deresky (11) celebrate Deresky’s goal for Bentley last Saturday in Boston against Northeastern (photo: Melissa Wade).
Each week during the season, we look at the big events and big games around Division I men’s college hockey in Tuesday Morning Quarterback.
Paula: Jim, this weekend was a reminder that the season is young and that some favored teams have some work to do. Look at how the top 10 teams in last week’s USCHO.com Poll fared. As a group, they were 9-8-0, although two series featured top-10 teams playing other top-10 teams.
It’s not surprising that No. 4 Minnesota-Duluth and No. 5 Notre Dame split a pair of games, but it is surprising that No. 2 Boston University dropped both of its games to No. 10 Denver, especially since Friday’s 4-3 win was Denver’s first of the young season.
I’m also not surprised completely that No. 3 Quinnipiac split a pair of overtime games with a good Maine team, if though the Black Bears weren’t ranked in last week’s poll, nor am I shocked at No. 7 St. Cloud having been swept by No. 14 Minnesota State, as the NCHC looks to be very competitive again this year.
No. 6 Boston College’s struggles with Wisconsin, though, really blew me away. I watched both games. In Friday’s 3-1 loss, the Eagles couldn’t muster any kind of cohesive game. In Sunday’s 8-5 win, BC had a 6-3 lead going into the third period and allowed the Badgers back into the game with two Wisconsin goals by the middle of the third period.
Is this just a symptom of the early season? What does this kind of weekend really say?
Jim: I think what we learned this weekend is that it’s so difficult to predict just how good each team will be when the season begins. Let’s look at St. Cloud State. While some teams entered last weekend having played two (in some cases four) games, this weekend was the opener for the Huskies. And despite being ranked 7th, they got manhandled by Minnesota State, which has opened the season with four straight wins over ranked opponents.
Should we write off St. Cloud? Heck no. But rest assured, coach Bob Motzko is probably working this week to refocus his team.
The reality is that sometimes it takes until Christmas to really know which teams are contenders to be standing come season’s end.
All that said, the mixed results for ranked teams resulted in some shakeups in the USCHO.com Poll. Still undefeated, defending national champs North Dakota held onto the top spot. But after that there was plenty of movement.
Not surprising, the teams that had the most success this weekend made the biggest jumps. UMass Lowell, which swept Colorado College, moved from eighth to fifth. Denver jumped from tenth to sixth. And Minnesota State, at 4-0-0, made the biggest jump from 14th to ninth.
Does all of this mean much to me? Not really. Because any team at this point in the season is one good or one bad weekend away from some major poll fluctuation.
Paula: And we’ve both discussed the genuine parity we’re seeing in college hockey in recent seasons, so it’s not unusual for a good or bad weekend to be relative, too, in the greater scheme of things.
As the season is just underway, not only are current records impossible predictors of what may happen in the coming months, but statistics are often likewise unintentionally misleading. That doesn’t mean, though, that there aren’t early indicators that are interesting to examine.
One thing that caught my eye this weekend – especially in light of our conversation last week about penalty calling – was the play of Bemidji State junior goaltender Michael Bitzer. Bitzer posted shutouts in both of the Beavers’ road games against Northern Michigan this weekend, killing off 10 total Wildcat power plays in the process. In his four games this season, he’s allowed just two goals. This performance piggybacks on his solid sophomore season (.915 SV%, 2.16 GAA). I think that Bitzer may be someone to watch this season.
Another stat which is interesting is Lake Superior State’s 13-goal weekend against Michigan State. Last year, the Lakers were 59th in the nation offensively (1.80). That’s the same number of goals that the Lakers scored in their last seven games of 2015-16, including their season-ending, three-game WCHA playoff series. It may be nothing more than a confidence-building first weekend, but it could be a sign that Damon Whitten is poised to turn some things around in his third year with the Lakers.
It could just as easily be a sign that the Spartans are in trouble this year.
What have you seen so far that’s grabbed your attention, even though the season’s young?
Jim: First off, let me say that if Lake Superior can stay anywhere near its 6.5 goals per game pace that it showed this past weekend, it could be an exciting season for the Lakers. But as you pointed out, it is quite possible this is a harbinger of disaster for Michigan State as much as anything.
I know we talked about penalties a lot last weekend. Looking through box scores, for the most part the number of power plays were down and, in the games I watched, there seemed to be more adaptation from the players that helped in that direction.
That said, saying that special teams are having their impact at this point is an understatement. And nowhere is that more evident than looking at a somewhat unique stat of combined special teams. You can find this stat on collegehockeystats.net and it adds together a team’s efficiency on the power play with its efficiency at killing penalties.
The five bottom teams in this category – Merrimack, Union, Bowling Green, Michigan State and St. Cloud State – have a combined 2-11-2 record and that includes a 2-1-1 mark for Union which has been relatively successful despite a power play that is 4-for-25 and a penalty kill that is 11-for-15. Take Union out and the other four teams are 0-10-1.
Maybe a team can get by with a power play that is struggling or a penalty kill that is allowing the opponent to score. But if your team struggled in both aspects of special teams, count on wins being difficult to come by.
Paula: I totally agree on that last point. If your team is deficient in one aspect of specialty play and can make up for it somewhere else five-on-five, then you may be able to see some success over the course of a season. But if your team is deficient in both the power play and penalty kill, that’s an enormous problem – especially if games are called more tightly through the season.
From your end, what looks good this weekend? I’m looking forward to the Michigan Tech-Michigan series. The improved Huskies playing a young Michigan team is exciting, especially with the coaching ties between the programs. I’m really interested in the Maine-Miami series, too. I think Miami is improved this season, but I think Maine is as well. Traditionally, the CCHA had a difficult time with Hockey East and games between teams of each conference were good indications of how each league would fare in a given season. The CCHA is no more, but I’m thinking that this matchup will be a good measure of each team’s improvement.
Jim: Well, I think before we even get to the weekend, I’m looking forward to Connecticut and Quinnipiac playing on Wednesday night. This in-state rivalry game is always a fun one, but I think UConn is a pretty solid team this season and will give Quinnipiac all it can handle.
There are a number of games between nationally-ranked opponents, but the series I want to watch are the two games in North Dakota between the Fighting Hawks and Bemidji State, which quietly has risen to No. 18 in the rankings and now sports a 4-0-0 record. I think this series is a test for both teams: NoDak to show how it handles a hot team and Bemidji State to show whether or not it is the real deal.
To Boston College. BC may have begun the season at 2-2-0, but imagine how much better the Eagles could be it they got their power play going? BC has had 23 chances with the man advantage to date and have exactly ZERO goals. You read that right, 0-for-23. This team could be scary good if they get that power play clicking.
Our guests for the October 18 edition of USCHO Live! were North Dakota coach Brad Berry — whose defending national champions are a unanimous No. 1 in this week’s USCHO.com Division I men’s hockey poll — and Maine beat writer Larry Mahoney of the Bangor Daily News.
Join us for the conversation and information, Tues., Oct. 11 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.
It really feels like hockey season now. The WCHA schedule is finally in full swing and we have a full slate of games each Friday and Saturday for the rest of the season.
Here’s what I learned this weekend:
1. Michael Bitzer is pretty good. Ok, we already knew the Bemidji State goalie was one of the best in the NCAA. But after back-to-back shutouts against Northern Michigan he deserves the recognition. Bitzer improved to 4-0 this season with the back-to-back wins and the Beavers are in a nice spot on top of the WCHA standings.
2. Overtime is fun, especially when it’s 3-on-3 hockey. Western Michigan and Bowling Green played a 3-on-3 session in non-conference play while Michigan Tech beat Alabama Huntsville in WCHA play in 3-on-3. It’s fun to watch, why don’t we just embrace it in the standings instead of officially calling it a tie?
3. Lake Superior State waited a bit before opening the season, but 13 goals in a sweep against Michigan State certainly won’t hurt the morale for the Lakers. The Lakers head south to Alabama Huntsville this week and will look to keep their offense rolling.
Good morning everyone. I usually try and post these Sunday evening, but I ran my first full marathon yesterday so my motivation to do anything else was very low. Paula also completed the Detroit Free Press Half Marathon yesterday. It’s safe to say we covered more miles than any other columnist duo.
Five of the six Big Ten teams played games that counted this weekend with Minnesota demolishing the U.S Under-18 Team in an exhibition game on Friday. Here is how things played out:
Wisconsin split a home series with Boston College, winning 3-1 on Friday and dropping Sunday’s game 8-5
Michigan State was swept by Lake Superior State, 6-1 on Friday and 7-3 on Saturday
Penn State beat Mercyhurst 7-0 on Friday night
Ohio State and Miami tied 1-1 Saturday evening in Oxford, Ohio
Michigan went to Ferris State and defeated the Bulldogs by a 2-1 score on Saturday
Here’s my three thoughts from the weekend:
1. Ohio State is still undefeated
Having a 1-0-2 record isn’t as good as 3-0-0, but considering the Buckeyes haven’t played at home yet and have played three very good teams, I’d consider this start a success. If you consider the way Ohio State has started seasons the past couple years then getting through the first three games without a loss is definitely an accomplishment.
Ohio State headed west on Saturday to face a team that it had struggled against in the past and came away with a 1-1 overtime draw against Miami. David Gust gave the Buckeyes the lead at the 4:32 mark of the first period. Louie Belpedio tied things up for the Red Hawks about four minutes into the second with a 5 on 3 power-play goal. It was a very defensive game, with the two teams combining for only 45 shots.
The Buckeyes have a home-and-home series with Bowling Green next weekend. The Falcons were picked to finish near the top of the WCHA, but have started the season 0-3-1. I’m planning on focusing on Ohio State in this week’s column, so be on the lookout for that.
2. Wisconsin showed how good it can be on Friday, but its shaky defense returned on Sunday
Wisconsin downed Boston College Friday night, but the Eagles outpaced the Badgers on Sunday. Grant Besse scored in the first period of Friday’s game and Ryan Wagner added another in the second. Seamus Malone gave the Badgers a short-lived 3-0 lead before JD Dudek cut the lead back to two 12 seconds later. Matt Jurusik had 29 saves during Friday’s contest. Friday’s game was the exact recipe Wisconsin needs to follow for success this season, grab and early lead and get good goaltending.
Jurusik was not as sharp during Sunday’s game. He gave up six goals and was yanked during the second period. BC scored the first two goals before the Badgers came back to tie things up three minutes into the second period. However, the Eagles scored the next four goals in the period before Cameron Hughes cut the lead to 6-3 (here’s Hughes’ goal, it’s pretty). Wagner and Besse scored in the first half of the third period to cut the defect to one, but Boston College scored two goals with Wisconsin’s goaltender pulled.
I think that this weekend, along last weekend’s split with Northern Michigan, confirms what a lot of us thought going into the season; the Badgers are going to be better, but they will still be prone to defensive lapses and some down games. Regardless, things are looking up in Madison.
3. It’s looking like Michigan State is in for a long season
Michigan State lost a lot from a team that underperformed last season. Having a lot of young players usually means that a team can go one of two ways, the youngsters can adapt to the game quickly and the team continues on or they take time to develop and the team struggle mightily. Penn State also had a lot of turnover, and though the sample size is very small the Nittany Lions seem to be doing OK. On the other hand, Michigan State looked dreadful this weekend. The Spartans got swept by Lake Superior by a combined score of 13-4.
Michigan State is going to miss Jake Hildebrand this season, both Ed Minney and John Lethemon struggled this weekend. The Spartans offense didn’t do much to help their goaltender, mustering only 20 shots on goal Friday night. MSU put 33 shots on frame Saturday, but Lake Superior scored the first four goals of the game so the Spartans were chasing from the get go.