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Ending the streak

Kathryn Davis (Union - 20). (Shelley M. Szwast)
Kathryn Davis and Union notched their first win since December 2014. (Shelley M. Szwast)

When the Union Dutchwomen left the ice on Saturday afternoon, it was as winners for the first time since December 12, 2014. The first win in 56 games was a big moment for the players and the program, but new coach Josh Sciba has never highlighted “win games” as a goal for the team or the program.

“It was our goal when we started to try and create that environment that was really positive,” said Sciba. “The girls can have fun, they can grow every single day, and they just love coming to the rink because they know they’re going to learn something new and they’re going to get better. That was our first step.”

Beyond the win-loss column, Sciba said he and his staff came on campus looking to create the culture of the Union women’s hockey program.

With just 19 players and 16 skaters, it’s a small roster that Sciba is working with, but his eight returning players are the leaders that are committed to turning this around and making an impact on the program that extends far beyond a single win or a single season.

To that end, the team created a set of core values that are the basis for everything the athletes are doing on and off the ice this season: team first, respect, character and commitment. Being committed to those values — and having had the agency to help choose them in the first place — has helped the team bond and become invested in the day-to-day work that it takes to be a competitive team at the Division I level. Sciba said he and his staff were committed to making sure the team felt invested and empowered in having ownership of the team and its direction.

“I think we leaned on our leaders, on our seniors, quite a bit,” said Sciba. “We talked to them about how we want to change the culture of the program first and foremost. For them, I don’t know what’s going to happen by the end of this season, but we want their ‘championship’ to be the fact that they changed the culture of this program from within and really created that environment that kids want to be a part of. We want to make it contagious every day.”

Having 11 freshmen means a large learning curve, but it also means those players are free from any of the baggage that came before this season. They know Union’s history, but they’re on campus to create their own story. Sciba thinks that blank slate is part of what allowed them to succeed so early in the season.

“…You have a group of eight returners that were just hungry for the change — they wanted a fresh start, a clean slate. The freshmen don’t know anything previous that’s happened, but they’re coming in and just want a good experience. That makes our job a lot easier. Having that young team has really helped us instill the kind of culture we want right away.”

In some respects, it’s as though everyone on the team is starting anew with Sciba. They’re not focusing on the past, nor on the win-loss column.

“We don’t talk about winning games; we’re just focusing on our process day-to-day, getting better, coming to practice, working to be the best we can on a daily basis,” said Sciba. “We believe that it’s going to give us more success long term. … It’s going to take our entire team. We have a small roster. We have three freshman goaltenders. We don’t have any superstars. When we win, it’s going to be a collective effort. That really goes in line with what we’re trying to create, that family environment. Everyone serves a purpose.”

It would be impossible for the returning skaters to completely forget about their winless season, but Sciba really wants his team to focus on “playing free,” something he knows most players have to learn how to do.

“Hockey is a game of mistakes, ” he said, adding that learning how to respond to mistakes, in practice or in games, is something he hopes the Dutchwomen are learning how to do. “Hopefully, we can develop that resiliency that I want our team to have so when we go into games, we know how to handle adversity so it makes us better down the road.”

Though having three freshman goalies is a challenge no other program in the country has to face, Sciba is loving the opportunity to create a culture of competitiveness and support via his young goaltenders. Though all three are competing with each other for playing time, they are also supporting, pushing, and motivating each other to be better every day.

Senior captain Alli Devins was part of the selection committee that chose Sciba to lead the Dutchwomen. From the beginning, she’s been the player that saw him in the formal committee interviews and the more informal team interview. And she was the player that sat down with him when he came to campus and helped him to learn the program and the roster.

Sciba says Devins is the team leader that’s patient and passionate, committed and energetic. Complementing her is Kathryn Davis, the leader that Sciba says holds her teammates accountable and leads by example.

It’s possible no one was more excited — and relieved — about Saturday’s win than Devins.

“I think it was a monkey off all of our backs,” she said. “We wanted it so bad, we were working toward it and I think every game we got better. … I don’t know if I can describe the feeling of winning. A lot of people were crying and very emotional, but rightfully so. It’s a hurdle that any team has to get over. Winning like that made it so much better.”

On the ice for the last shift of the game, Devins was across the ice when the final horn blew, but she said she’d never skated as hard as she did to get back to the bench and celebrate with her teammates.

Though the win was nice, Sciba is much more concerned with the small “wins” he sees from his players each day in practice. The team is loose and having fun. They are smiling and enjoying coming to the rink. Though it was nice, this season was never about one win.

“We know we can win here; there’s no reason that we shouldn’t be a playoff team every single year,” said Sciba. “That’s our goal. We’re not there yet today. But we’re going to get there. And we know that we have the right formula to be able to get there eventually.”

Denver’s Gambrell out 4-6 weeks with upper-body injury

Dylan Gambrell (Denver-7) Charlie Lindgren (SCSU-35) 16 March 18 St. Cloud State University  and Denver University National Collegiate Hockey Conference Tournament match-up at the Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota (Bradley K. Olson)
Dylan Gambrell will be out of action for Denver after an upper-body injury has shelved the talented sophomore (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

In a brief news release issued Wednesday, Denver announced that sophomore forward Dylan Gambrell will miss the next 4-6 weeks of action after sustaining an upper-body injury earlier this month.

A second-round pick of the San Jose Sharks this past June, Gambrell had one assist in two games so far this season.

Colorado College receives $8 million gift for new on-campus practice rink

 (unknown author)
An artist’s rendition of what the new Robson Arena on the Colorado College campus will look like when completed (sketch provided by Colorado College).

Colorado College alumnus Edward J. Robson has given the college $8 million to build a new on-campus hockey arena.

The facility, which will be located on the west side of Nevada Avenue between Dale and Cache La Poudre streets, is part of a campus master plan the college’s Board of Trustees approved in 2015. CC’s hockey team will practice in the new facility and continue to play its games at the Broadmoor World Arena.

“Ed Robson is an extraordinarily successful and generous Colorado College alumnus and former CC hockey player,” said Colorado College president Jill Tiefenthaler in a news release. “He has previously served on our Board of Trustees, established endowed scholarships for CC students and been one of the strongest advocates for the college, its mission and our Division I hockey program.”

The new facility, which will be named the Edward J. Robson Arena, is a $10 million project that the college will break ground on during the 2018-19 academic year. It will replace the Honnen Ice Arena, the college’s current on-campus facility, and include about 900 seats. In addition to the varsity team, the new arena will serve intramurals, the college’s club teams, student life activities and community hockey leagues.

“Athletics matter, and academics are even more important,” added Robson, a developer of communities for active adults and Arizona business leader. “There’s nothing like a Colorado College education. This new arena will give CC hockey players a high-quality ice rink, while keeping them on campus and part of the student body. Doing so will help uphold the college’s commitment to rigorous academics for athletes.”

News of Robson’s gift was met with enthusiasm by the college’s athletics department.

“I believe this gift and the arena it will support will be game-changing for our entire program,” said CC head coach Mike Haviland. “This is a great day for Colorado College and our hockey program.”

Robson, who graduated from CC in 1954 and received an honorary degree from the college in 2014, credits former CC hockey coach Cheddy Thompson for the program’s success, calling him the “father of CC hockey.” Thompson guided the college’s hockey team to the program’s first NCAA championship in 1950 and the team went 149-72-6 with six NCAA bids during his 10-year career as head coach at the college.

“We are thrilled that Ed Robson has chosen to invest in the hockey program at CC,” stated Ken Ralph, director of athletics for Colorado College. “The construction of Robson Arena highlights the college’s continued support for its hockey program at the highest levels.  This facility will allow our coaching staff to best prepare our players while providing them the very best collegiate experience both on and off the ice.  This facility also will benefit the entire campus and the Colorado Springs community.”

Robson Arena will be constructed using sustainable building practices and materials, building on the college’s commitment to sustainability. Currently the Honnen Ice Arena is the least energy-efficient building on the Colorado College campus. In 2015, CC received a gold-star rating from the Sustainability Tracking, Assessment & Rating System (STARS), improving on a silver designation awarded the previous year.

Big Ten kicks off season on right foot with 6-3-1 opening weekend

11 Mar 16:  Corbin McGuire (Wisconsin - 3).  The University of Minnesota Golden Gophers host the University of Wisconsin Badgers in a B1G Conference matchup at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, MN (Jim Rosvold/University of Minnesota)
Corbin McGuire netted three goals last weekend as Wisconsin split with Northern Michigan in Green Bay, Wis. (photo: Jim Rosvold/University of Minnesota).

It was a good opening week for Big Ten Hockey.

It could have been better.

Minnesota swept, Ohio State won and tied, and three other teams split their series in the first weekend of Division I play, giving the Big Ten a 6-3-1 first-weekend, nonconference record and the highest win percentage (.650) in nonconference play among all conferences – for this brief, shining moment.

We have to go back to the first weekend that these six B1G teams played together in one league to see an opening weekend as successful, when the league went 6-3-0 (.667) in the first full weekend of play in 2013-2014. By mid-October of that season, the league had a nonconference record of 11-8-0 (.579), and B1G Hockey ended 2013-14 with the best nonconference win percentage among all the leagues (50-32-8, .600). Things looked promising for the fledgling enterprise.

That promise went unfulfilled, though, during the last two seasons. To open 2014-2015, Big Ten teams went 4-4-1 to start, were 5-11-2 by mid-October (.333), and ended the season with a record of 37-43-7 (.466) in nonconference play.

The opening of last season was worse, but the net was slightly better. In the first weekend of play, B1G teams went 2-3-3, then were 5-12-3 at mid-October (.325), and ended 2015-2016 40-40-11 (.500) in nonconference play.

As every fan of any B1G team has quickly learned, the first half of the season for these six teams is more than just a warmup for the full league play of the second half. The nature of the league’s early nonconference schedule is something that can have an enormous impact on a given team’s chances for NCAA tournament play at the end of the season. Early season stumbles lead to greater chances that B1G teams on the NCAA tournament bubble will be sitting out that postseason. The variety and number of nonconference opponents that Big Ten teams face early on can nearly guarantee this, especially since the six teams in this league have struggled to find any kind of consistency in their play in the early part of the past two seasons – down to a team, down to a program.

I am in no way criticizing the way in which B1G hockey schedules its season. In fact, I thoroughly enjoy the variety of opponents I’m able to see Big Ten teams play. Living about an hour or so away from both East Lansing and Ann Arbor, I can say that it is a genuine treat to see in person teams from several other leagues during October and November, something I usually didn’t get to experience until the NCAA tournament before B1G Hockey came into being.

Consistently good play against nonconference opponents is essential for any league’s chances of having multiples representatives in the NCAA tournament. Hockey East handles this well, as does the other league that formed the same year as B1G Hockey, the NCHC. I know that every coaching staff in the Big Ten is well aware of how the league’s long nonconference schedule can impact their own programs and the league overall.

As I’ve said before, this is a league with every possible resource available to it. It’s a league of the “haves.” B1G Hockey has no excuse to underperform the way it did in its previous two seasons. One single weekend is not enough to give fans of the league and its teams much hope, but starting 2016-2017 on a far brighter note than the way the two previous seasons began can engender a little cautious optimism.

Rebounding

One of the most cautiously optimistic things about last weekend’s play was the way in which several teams rebounded.

After dropping games on their first nights out, both Michigan and Wisconsin registered second-night wins to split their weekends.

The Wolverines watched leads disappear twice in Friday’s 4-3 loss to visiting Union. Midway through the first, Michigan led 2-0 but gave up two late-period goals. After taking a 3-2 lead into the third, the Wolverines gave up two goals in the final five minutes of that game.

Saturday, though, was another story. In a 4-0 win over Union, the Wolverines led 2-0 after the first on goals by junior defensemen Niko Porikos and Sam Piazza, freshman James Sanchez netted his first two collegiate goals – one in the second, one in the third – and freshman goaltender Hayden Lavigne made 31 saves in his debut, becoming the first Michigan netminder to record a shutout in his first game since Al Montoya did so Oct. 11, 2002.

“I thought they had a step on us last night, we had a step on them tonight,” said coach Red Berenson. “I thought we were a completely different team tonight. We played with more conviction, we played stronger, we played harder, and we played with a little desperation. We played better defensively. Our goalie gave us a great game, and the puck went in for us at important times.

“It was a good game for Michigan tonight. Not a good weekend, necessarily, but a good game tonight.”

The argument may be made that it was a great weekend for Wisconsin. Yes, the Badgers dropped a 3-2 decision to Northern Michigan in Green Bay Friday, but Wisconsin scored the final goal in that game.

Then in Saturday’s 6-5 win, when the Wildcats scored at 2:21 in the third to take the 5-4 lead, the Badgers answered 59 seconds later when Corbin McGuire scored the tying goal – his second game-tying goal of the night. At 11:36 in the third, freshman Trent Frederic scored his first collegiate goal on the UW power play, and the Badgers went on to win the game.

“This was a position these guys were in a lot last year, and it didn’t go well for them,” said first-year coach Tony Granato. “We talked about being confident, wanting to be on the ice, wanting to help us win, and we went out there and made some big plays.”

Wisconsin didn’t pick up its first win of the 2015-2016 season until its seventh game. The year before that, it took 10 games to get a win. Again, it’s early. Again, perhaps cautious optimism is okay.

“It’s the second game of the year, so we’re not in midseason form,” said Granato. “What I did like was our poise with the puck – maybe too much sometimes, but our poise and composure was really good tonight.”

Then there was Ohio State, a team that was picked second in the preseason Big Ten coaches poll. After defeating host Denver, 3-2, in their opening match of the IceBreaker Tournament, the Buckeyes came from behind to tie Air Force. The Falcons went on to win the shootout and, therefore, the tournament title, but after the game, Ohio State coach Steve Rohlik was happy with his team’s performance.

“I like the way we battled back from down 3-1, especially after getting a goal disallowed early in the third and still coming back to tie it,” Rohlik said. “We have a long way to go ad have to correct some of our mistakes, but we will get to work.”

Both of Ohio State’s third-period goals were scored by guys who know how to score. Sophomore John Wiitala had the tying goal at 2:44; Wiitala had 11 goals in his rookie season. Senior Nick Schilkey – who had 19 goals last year – was set up by fellow seniors David Gust ad Matt Joyaux for the game winner at 14:43.

Combine all of that with the dozen goals that Minnesota scored in Alaska, and there is room for a wee bit of faith in the weeks ahead. Four Golden Gophers netted two or more goals as Minnesota beat Alaska-Anchorage, 6-0, Friday and Alaska, 6-3, Sunday.

For the weekend, said coach Don Lucia: “The goal was obviously to win two games. It would have been disappointing to come up and not win two. We thought a lot of our players had good weekends. Maybe a couple of guys struggled. This is as much finding out about your team as anything else.”

Good news for Gophers fans: Lucia said that junior defenseman Jack Glover will be “back in the mix on defense next weekend” when Minnesota plays the U.S. Under-18 team Friday night. Glover had shoulder surgery in the offseason.

Three stars of the week

Three teams, three different positions, two newcomers to the weekly awards.

First star – Minnesota sophomore forward Tyler Sheehy

Sheehy (Burnsville, Minn.) had three assists in Friday’s 6-0 win over Alaska-Anchorage and two goals in Sunday’s 6-3 win over Alaska, leading all conference players with five points. Friday’s game matched a career-high for Sheehy in points, and one of his goals Sunday his first career shorthanded goal. Sheehy, who had 12 goals in 37 games last season, receives his second weekly Big Ten award.

Second star – Michigan goaltender Hayden Lavigne

Lavigne (Brampton, Ont.) stopped all 31 shots in the 4-0 win over visiting Union, his first collegiate game. Lavigne faced 13 third-period shots and five power plays. Obviously, this is his first weekly Big Ten award.

Third star – Wisconsin senior defenseman Corbin McGuire

McGuire (Ridgefield, Conn.) led all Badgers with three goals – one Friday and two Saturday – in Wisconsin’s split with Northern Michigan. McGuire’s three goals in this single weekend equal his career-high three goals for a season in 32 games last year. This is his first weekly Big Ten award.

My ballot

For what it’s worth. It’s so early.

1. North Dakota
2. Quinnipiac
3. Minnesota
4. Boston University
5. Notre Dame
6. Minnesota-Duluth
7. Mass-Lowell
8. Ohio State
9. Michigan
10. Boston College
11. Denver
12. St. Cloud
13. Miami
14. Providence
15. Air Force
16. Minnesota State
17. St. Lawrence
18. Northeastern
19. Bemidji State
20. Clarkson

Wednesday Women: Surprise teams

 

Grace Harrison of St. Lawrence (Tara Freeman, St. Lawrence University)
Grace Harrison has helped St. Lawrence get off to a good start. (Tara Freeman, St. Lawrence University)

Arlan: Hello there hockey fans! It is always an exciting time in the world of college hockey as teams get back on the ice, some very familiar players are gone, returners adjust to new roles, and new pieces are added.

It is a bit like that on the staff of Wednesday Women, as I’m no longer the columnist for Women’s Division-I after my responsibilities expanded at my primary job. Nicole Haase, who has been a contributor to USCHO in recent years, has taken over as columnist and is writing great articles. She and editor Candace Horgan have been kind enough to let me join in their Wednesday Women discussions, and I’m happy to be back with you whenever that works out. Like a roster battling injuries, illness, and inconsistency, our lineup may vary from week to week.

We are three weeks into our season, and even though only a handful of teams have played more than four games and the Ivy League teams have played none, there have been plenty of twists and turns. Of the 29 teams already competing, only three still have perfect records, two in ECAC Hockey and one in Hockey East. The CHA has started slowly with only four wins through its first 20 games, and Robert Morris (3-0-1) has most of those. While it is a surprise that nobody in the WCHA has a clean slate thus far, only St. Cloud State has a losing record, and one of its two wins was an upset of then No. 7 North Dakota. That circuit has shown signs of being more balanced; on Saturday, Minnesota-Duluth was the only one of its favored teams to pull out a win, that coming over a Minnesota State squad that hasn’t won in league play since Feb. 2, 2015.

In terms of the most pleasant surprise to date, I’d go with St. Lawrence. The Saints have started by playing three of four games on the road, all versus teams that were ranked in USCHO’s preseason poll. When Nadine Edney scored with 4:16 left to give SLU a 3-2 lead at Clarkson on Saturday, I told someone that if they close that game out, I’m giving the Saints my first-place vote this week. It was not to be as Corie Jacobson’s extra-attacker goal salvaged a tie for the Golden Knights. Instead, I put Quinnipiac on top after the Bobcats have shut out three straight Hockey East opponents after a somewhat wobbly start when they nearly frittered away a five-goal lead versus Maine. The next two weeks will offer Quinnipiac a chance to cement that top position in my mind, as it faces a couple of NCAA tournament teams from last year in Mercyhurst and Boston College.

What has stood out to you thus far? Who has or has not impressed?

Nicole: I also didn’t expect this start from the Saints. I picked them to finish seventh in the ECAC, though much of that had to do with what other teams are doing as opposed to what I thought St. Lawrence wouldn’t do. That being said, they have just three seniors and 15 underclassmen, so I expected a learning curve to affect their play against these ranked teams. Instead, they scored 16 goals in four games against two pretty talented goalkeepers.

I was so excited to see Union pull out the win on Saturday against Penn State. It’s devastating for the players and the program to lose so often. They’re excited in Schenectedy for the players and coaching staff they have and a turnaround seemed in the cards, but getting the win, ending the 55-game winless streak and being able to focus on something positive so early in the season have to do miracles for their mindset.

It probably shouldn’t be a surprise, given their recent meetings and Britni Mowat, but I still was surprised by Bemidji’s win over Minnesota.

One of the best things about the WCHA is how what match-ups look like on paper rarely matters when the teams actually take the ice. Bemidji State has seen incredible growth and coach Jim Scanlan has really instilled a new culture for the Beavers, but they graduated nine seniors that were crucial to their turnaround and expectations were probably pretty low for them this season. None of that matters when you take on Minnesota, however. Give Bemidji State goalie Britni Mowat credit for keeping that potent Gophers offense off the board.

Things certainly seem to be up in the air in Boston. I’m not ready to say I’m unimpressed with any of those programs, but certainly Boston University, Boston College, and Northeastern have lost games we expected them to win. We figured BC and Northeastern would see a drop off with the players they lost to graduation, but it’s definitely not been the start to the season they would have hoped for.

There were a lot of surprise wins and unranked teams beating ranked teams this weekend. Which of those games do you think will be the most important as the season moves on?

Arlan: Looking beyond the past weekend, I think that the most significant result to date was Minnesota-Duluth’s series win over Boston College. Because there are so few of those East versus West series that match contenders, the few that do take place are magnified and tend to have a trickle down effect involving other teams from those conferences. With the Bulldogs getting the better end of things, that could help Wisconsin and Minnesota in a comparison with BC, and it could hurt teams like Boston University and Northeastern when compared to UMD. Later in the season, BU hosts Minnesota, but there aren’t really any other Hockey East versus WCHA series that figure to match contender versus contender. Next weekend when Wisconsin heads to Clarkson, that will be the first big WCHA versus the ECAC pairing. North Dakota won a series from Mercyhurst and Bemidji State swept Syracuse, but because the latter duo have never earned at-large bids and the former haven’t in a few years, as well as the fact that those two leagues play each other with more frequency, those match-ups tend to be slightly less crucial.

Focusing on the past weekend only, I think that St. Lawrence drawing first blood in the first of four games with Clarkson, even though those were not conference games, may be telling in the league pecking order. St. Lawrence spent much of last season trying to figure out who its starting goaltender was. Now it looks like Chris Wells has settled on sophomore Grace Harrison between the pipes, and while her numbers through the first four games might be on the low side of average, you can’t overlook her 3-0-1 record. Meanwhile, the Saints score four goals a game, trailing only Colgate and UMD.

BU losing to Vermont on Sunday was unexpected, but that seems to be what the Terriers do, particularly early in the season. Even when Brian Durocher has had tournament teams, they’ve tended to mix in a couple of very puzzling results.

You mentioned Bemidji State upsetting the Gophers. I was at that series, and there really wasn’t much that we haven’t seen before. The Beavers didn’t give much away, Mowat was strong in net, and they managed to get the first goal in both games. Saturday, new Minnesota starter Sidney Peters made one mistake, and her team couldn’t find an equalizer. After having a power play that converted more than 30 percent of the time in all four seasons of Hannah Brandt’s career, the Gophers currently have clicked on only one of their first 10 tries without her, and that’s probably not just a coincidence. I expect Minnesota to drop a bit over the first half of the season, but if things fall into place, they might still contend once the postseason arrives. The Beavers will be a thorn in the side of anyone they play, and if they can find enough offense to hold their own against teams like North Dakota and UMD, they should hang around the playoff picture.

I think a bigger surprise was Wisconsin needing to rally to salvage a tie versus Ohio State and new coach Nadine Muzerall. Given the Badgers have most of their key pieces back, and Muzerall’s still trying to sort out exactly what she has on her roster, I wouldn’t have figured it to come down to a shootout. We can chalk it up to the old hot-goalie explanation, but Wisconsin needed a late surge to take game two at St. Cloud State on opening weekend. Have you seen the Badgers yet? Do they miss Courtney Burke that much, or why do you think their scoring is down versus two opponents who ranked near the bottom nationally last season?

Nicole: I did see the Badgers on Friday, and I’ll get to that, but I do think that we need to acknowledge Ohio State goalie Kassidy Sauve. She missed last season after surgery to repair both her right and left labrums. In 20 games in 2014-2015, she had a 9-11-0 record and a .925 save percentage. We’re obviously looking at a small sample size here, but in her first five starts, her save percentage is .967, she’s 2-1-1, she was named WCHA Defensive Player of the Week and she gave the Badgers fits this past weekend.

She’s incredibly improved, has done nothing but gain confidence, and clearly used her time in rehab to get better.

As for the Badgers, they looked a little tentative this weekend. They were missing the crisp passing and dangerous shots that are part of their hallmark. They were coming off a bye week and were dealing with some emotional off-ice things. Lines were mixed up because of Sophia Shaver being gone. Sauve was very good. Those things could be excuses, or they could add up to an explanation.

As someone who’s spent a lot of time watching them the past few seasons, it does seem like they go through stretches where they struggle to bury the puck, even when everything else seems to be going well. I’m not ready to worry about them, yet, but I would say I’m slightly concerned. They’re still averaging 3.5 goals a game and both OSU and St. Cloud have shown they aren’t the teams they were last season.

You were at the Minnesota/Bemidji game. Should Gophers fans be concerned? You mentioned Minnesota’s power play in your recap — what did you see from them that could account for the 1-for-10 conversion rate?

Arlan: I forgot about Wisconsin dealing with family tragedy. My condolences to the Shaver family on their loss. Sometimes when teams have to deal with such things, it strengthens the bonds in the long term.

Gophers fans have been concerned all along because they knew that graduation was creating big holes to fill in goal, on the blue line, and up front. Minnesota had to deal with not having Amanda Kessel for more than two and a half years, so her loss is simpler to overcome. Brandt was the glue on the power play and for the offense in general. No matter what else was going on, Brad Frost knew he would always have at least one scoring line with her and any other two forwards. Milica McMillen also racked up a lot of power-play points during her career, and it will take time to replace her shot from the point.

One can’t read too much into the power-play’s performance in the opening weekend, and at Bemidji, it only had two opportunities in each game with all of them coming in the third periods. The second one on Friday was a case of the Gophers being up two goals with about two minutes left and just playing keep away rather than trying to score. So the real concern is failing on the two chances on Saturday when down a goal and needing one. That’s the problem with looking too closely at this time of year — the numbers are all based on tiny sample sizes.

Minnesota’s staff will have to build new power-play units and forward lines. I’d guess that sometime between now and February they will settle on some configuration. In my opinion, the biggest single question is how quickly Peters settles into the role of the starting goaltender. She’s played so few minutes over the last three years that she doesn’t yet seem to be at game speed. She’ll need to adjust in the same way that freshmen skaters must.

There are a number of teams looking to break in new starters. Teams like Colgate, UMD, and North Dakota return goalies who saw quite a bit of action when they were backups. Others, like Peters, have to make the transition from playing rarely to starting most of the time. Sometimes, even an inexperienced backup goalie can prove costly. Senior Lexie Shaw has done great for the Fighting Hawks, but they started a freshman on Saturday, and St. Cloud scored three times on 14 shots against her to pull the upset.

Are there other goaltending situations around the country that you are watching?

Nicole: There was a good bit of goalie turnover this season. I struggled writing some of the conference previews because I felt like almost every team needed to answer its goalie question.

One that we won’t get an answer to for a bit is at Harvard. Emerance Maschmeyer may be the goalie of the future for Hockey Canada. She’s literally world-class. With the other Boston teams struggling, there may be a chance for Harvard to make waves, but they’ll need to find someone solid in net first.

Another will be at Princeton. The Tigers’ Kimberly Newell was crucial to their success last season.

I’m not a big fan of goaltending by committee, so in my opinion, any of the teams that are rotating goalies are question marks.

Union obviously overcame one hurdle, but I think if they can find someone solid to rely on in net, that win won’t be a novelty, but a trend. They’ve tried all three of their freshman, sometimes splitting up games, but I still think they need to find a starter and stick with her.

Boston University has used both Victoria Hanson and Erin O’Neill in its first three games. The Terriers too will probably need to name a starter sooner rather than later.

St. Cloud State’s Taylor Crosby had a big game against Wisconsin, despite the loss, but she left Saturday’s game with a possible injury. She’s been splitting time with Janine Adler.

However, the team that is most missing its graduated goalie is Lindenwood. Nicole Hensley turned out to be a heck of a get for the Lions. Now they’ve been spoiled by stellar goalkeeping and there’s a lot of pressure on Jolene deBruyn and Morgan Skinner.

Looking ahead to next week, which games are you keeping an eye on?

Arlan: In general, I agree with you regarding goaltending by committee not working, but in both of Wisconsin’s first two NCAA Championship seasons, Jessie Vetter emerged from a rotation during the season to be lights out in the big tourney, so it can work. I think this is the third season of a Hanson/O’Neill rotation at BU, and it hasn’t produced quite that level of success.

I don’t miss writing those conference previews, in large part because I had no idea who many of the incoming freshmen were and what they were expected to do.

As far as games next week go, Wisconsin at Clarkson is the obvious highlight of the schedule. The two teams met in Madison two years ago when the Golden Knights were the defending champs and played to a 1-1 draw in the series opener. Annie Pankowski exploded for a hat trick in one of the many shutouts that Ann-Renée Desbiens has produced in her career to give the Badgers a series win. It’ll be interesting to see if Clarkson has some revenge in store in Potsdam.

Quinnipiac is at Mercyhurst for a couple of games that should be the best test to date for the Bobcats. The Lakers are still looking for their offensive touch after graduating Emily Janiga and Jenna Dingeldein and scoring just a goal per game versus North Dakota. Maybe Mike Sisti discovered something during their bye week. The teams met a year ago and the Bobcats ground out a one-goal win after the two teams tied in the opening game.

Minnesota-Duluth visits Minnesota; that used to be one of the best rivalries before the Bulldogs’ stock dipped. I believe that the last time that they defeated their sister program was early in 2012; I don’t remember the last time that they owned the better record heading into one of these showdowns.

There are also a couple of interesting series that pit CHA teams against Hockey East. Syracuse looks for its first win as it heads to Northeastern to face a team that likely hoped to be better than .500 at this point. The Orange are one of those teams that needs to find a goalie after Jenn Gilligan graduated, and they’ll have to replace the spark that Melissa Piacentini and Nicole Ferrara provided.

We also have a series with two unbeaten teams when Vermont visits Robert Morris. The Colonials had some good young talent last season, and freshman Jaycee Gebhard is off to a quick start, tying for the team lead with six points through four games. The Catamounts never reached double digits in wins last season, so a fast start this time would be a most welcome change.

Where would you have the pilot fly this weekend if you had a private jet fueled and waiting on the runway?

Nicole: I think I’d have to head to Clarkson, though that Minnesota-Duluth/Minnesota match-up is mighty tempting. We’ll see those two teams play again and Wisconsin at Clarkson is another of those rare East/West meetings that can help to gauge the relative power of other teams, so I’d have to pick that one.

Both games are intriguing because I have questions and want to know more about all four of those teams. Is UMD for real? Were Minnesota and Wisconsin’s stumbles just that, or symptomatic of bigger issues they’ll face down the stretch? Is Clarkson slipping from its perch atop the ECAC? Regardless of results, I think we’ll have a clearer picture of who each of these teams really are after these series.

Reading back, I was worried I’d focused too much on the WCHA teams, but with five teams in the top 10, it’s hard not to talk about what’s happening out West. Despite the bumps this weekend, WCHA teams do seem to be out to prove something this season, especially UMD, Bemidji State, and North Dakota.

I’m not sure what to make of North Dakota yet. I’m not sure if they’re ranked because of what they’re doing or if it’s just because they started on the poll and no one’s forced them off yet. Lexie Shaw has thus far proven to be up to the task in net, though I do think they need to figure out some scoring if they want to keep in the national conversation.

As expected, Lara Stalder and Asheligh Brykaliuk have been stellar up front for UMD and the Bulldogs are averaging more than four goals a game. They certainly make it difficult to beat them when they’re putting up those kinds of numbers.

If we’re talking individual performances, we have to talk about Kennedy Marchment, Hannah Miller, and Brooke Webster at St. Lawrence. All three are in the top six in the country in scoring. They’ve accounted for 10 of the Saints’ six goals after scoring a combined 34 goals all of last season. Clearly that line found another level this season.

Who else has caught your eye with early season performances?

Arlan: There was bound to be a changing of the guard at the top of the scoring charts after many of the top scoring threats graduated. Still, I’m a bit surprised when I glance at the list of those who lead the way in points per game thus far, and see nobody from BC, Minnesota, or Wisconsin.

Twelve people have exceeded a point and a half per game, and beyond the trio from St. Lawrence and the duo from UMD, there aren’t many that I even remember mentioning in this column in the past. Taylar Cianfarano of Quinnipiac is one, and she’s likely to be in the discussion throughout the year. BU’s Sammy Davis had a knack for scoring timely goals as a rookie, and she leads in scoring average now, although it is ironic that all eight of her points came via assists. Meanwhile, teammate Samantha Sutherland has seven goals and no assists; evidently, the Terriers got their roles down early.

Vermont was one of those teams that had a tough time scoring last year, so it could be a sign of better days ahead that sophomore Saana Valkama and freshman Ève-Audrey Picard are both in the top 10. Maybe the Catamounts can improve on their Hockey East campaign of a year ago when they finished sixth, but won only six league games.

In terms of players that I’ve watched this season who stood out, after Brykaliuk and Stalder, it tapers off in a hurry. Caitrin Lonergan showed flashes for Boston College, and I expect she’ll make some noise when she gets a few more games on her resume.

In general, there hasn’t been a ton of scoring. It doesn’t help that there is always talk of the officials cracking down on hooking and interference, but once the puck drops, such obstruction usually goes uncalled. I doubt we’re going to see an increase in attendance to watch women’s games where the game’s only goal banks in off of a shin pad.

I’d best free up time to go check out some highlight videos. Maybe there are some tic-tac-toe goals being scored around the country and I’m oblivious, largely because I watch too many WCHA games. It makes me wonder what the over/under will be for Bemidji State versus North Dakota this year. I’m guessing about three … for all four games combined.

If you were tasked with increasing scoring in our sport, how would you go about it? Or do you think that it isn’t necessarily a bad thing if we see a higher percentage of 1-0 games? Why not? It seems to work for soccer.

Nicole: I dislike the idea of trying to force changes in order to try and effect more scoring. I think things like this ebb and flow. Maybe it makes me a snob or a purist, but I also don’t think the game should have to change to appease some need for scoring or excitement. If that’s what it would take to gain more fans, I’m not sure I’d be on board.

This past week was a great example of the closing of the gap between the have and have-not schools in women’s hockey. If a more even talent pool means that we have more 1-0 games, I’m on board.

I have a soft spot for goalies and we’ve been spoiled to see some stellar ladies between the pipes. I hope that fans can and do get just as excited for a great glove save as they do for a top-shelf goal.

I really believe that for women’s hockey to continue to grow and gain respect, fans have to learn to appreciate the beauty of it as a separate entity from the men’s game. The fluidity and flow, the passing and the skating — the things that come as a product of no checking and less stoppages of play — are what make women’s hockey so interesting to watch, in my opinion.

Early success a sign of what’s to come in Atlantic Hockey?

T.J. Moore (17 - Holy Cross) (Omar Phillips)
TJ Moore put on an offensive show last weekend for Holy Cross (photo: Omar Phillips).

Every coach always spends time evaluating. There’s evaluating in-game performances, practice situations, and case studies. They have to look at who plays in what situations with who, against who, and who can follow who. There’s no scientific formula to a judgment, but there’s reasonable expectations for how their decisions impact how a team plays.

That’s why fans and analysts are so quick to reference the “unexpected.” There’s no way they could see it coming.

As Holy Cross’ leading returning scorer, TJ Moore turning a red light on isn’t surprising; it’s probably expected. Scoring twice? Not unheard of.

Scoring a hat trick? That’s something special.

Scoring a hat trick on back-to-back nights? That’s unexpected.

Scoring a hat trick on back-to-back nights where the second night saw a natural hat trick in the first period? That’s downright mystical.

“Scoring a hat trick on consecutive nights is something that’s unique and special,” said head coach David Berard. “On Saturday, it was even more special because it was a natural hat trick scoring on his first three shots of the game. As a coach, I’ve seen how hard he’s worked, which is something not everyone might get to see. He’s made that progression since his freshman year, through the exhibition with Carleton this year, and he keeps earning more opportunities, seeing more ice time on the penalty kill, which allowed him to get into a rhythm.

“TJ might not be the biggest or the strongest guy on the ice, but he can really wire a puck. When you get the first, it just starts building confidence, and I just told him to keep shooting.”

Only in Atlantic Hockey would a hat trick not be enough to win a game. Even though Friday night saw the Crusaders place a snowman on the scoreboard with an 8-2 victory over Niagara, they found themselves tied with the Purple Eagles after two on Saturday – after Moore’s first period chapeau. More than halfway through the third, Kris Spriggs put the host team up by one, meaning the hat trick would’ve been for naught if Michael Laffin hadn’t scored an extra-attacker goal.

“It was a completely different game (for us) on Saturday,” said Berard. “The games aren’t related from Friday to Saturday, and you know it’s never going to be the same. At the same time, nobody likes losing 8-2 at home, so we knew we had to prepare for a reality where it was going to be a completely different game. I thought we played well and competed hard, and it was a big positive to show the mental toughness to get that tying goal late. You don’t like to make that a trend of having to come from behind late in games, but the more you do it, the more you’re going to believe you can. I really liked how we played on Friday, and we got away from that a little bit on Saturday, but we found a way to work through it. It just shows you how hard it is to sweep teams in this league, especially on the road.”

Moore’s offensive output earned him well-deserved Atlantic Hockey Player of the Week status. His six goals are more than a third and eight points more than a quarter of the way to matching last year’s totals. But it’s also a testament to the ceiling of a team entering a brutally tough weekend ahead with home games against Hockey East powerhouses Providence and Boston College at the off-campus DCU Center.

Diaper Dandies

Keeping in line with the evaluation of a roster, we turn to the Bentley Falcons.

Last year, Ryan Soderquist began assembling his roster knowing he would need to address a couple of pieces. At a surface level, that’s easy to explain; Andrew Gladiuk, one of the league’s most consistent goal scorers, was graduating, and Max French, another of the league’s best at putting the puck in the net, was entering his senior season.

In the past, the strategy would’ve been to just find the best available athlete. But given Bentley’s recent success through the years, it’s a little different.

“Last year, we knew specifically what roles we wanted to fill (through recruiting),” said Soderquist. “We knew that we needed depth scoring. With the way our program currently stands, where we used to go out and find the best available player or talent, we now can recruit players that can play a specific role. And in our league, where we don’t have true 18 year old freshmen, you hope that they’re college hockey ready. Usually in the first month, that’s a toss-up, but you watch them play and hope they can be ready.”

Safe to say, it’s already paying dividends.

In their 5-1 victory over New Hampshire on Saturday, the freshman stepped to the front of the line. Defenseman Connor Brassard earned the first goal of the game, and forwards Jonathan Desbiens and Dino Balsamo also scored. A fourth goal came from sophomore Alexey Solovyev – just his second career goal.

“We were extremely pleased with (the freshmen),” said Soderquist. “They were ready to play, and they went out and performed. It absolutely helps to get the win.”

The youngsters pushed the older players off center stage, which is ironic considering the older players could’ve been their own storyline. French led the team with three helpers, putting him atop the scoring table, and junior Kyle Schmidt, who joined French and Gladiuk last year in the 40-point club, scored an empty net goal. Even goalie Jayson Argue, also a junior, got in on the scoring, adding a primary assist on the Falcons’ last goal.

For Bentley, it’s an encouraging start ahead of this weekend’s home-and-home rematch with the defending Hockey East champions. Despite hanging their name in the rafters of Boston’s TD Garden, Northeastern lost to Bentley earlier in the year – twice, including a 4-1 demolition at the John A. Ryan Arena.

“Playing UNH on (an Olympic sheet) is different from playing Northeastern at the JAR,” said Soderquist. “Obviously you have to prepare different based on your opponent, but our identity as a team will not change. We have to keep that as a constant. The more games we can play as a team we want to be will translate to more games that we can win.”

I’m All The Way Up

The Air Force Falcons won the Atlantic Hockey championship in 2012, earning the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. They went to the Northeast Regional that year, narrowly losing, 2-0, to the eventual national champion Boston College Eagles.

In the final regular-season USCHO.com poll of that season, released on March 19, 2012, Air Force ranked 16th. Now 1,667 days later, the Falcons are back.

Air Force cracked the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll this week, placing 18th with 160 votes after winning the IceBreaker Tournament in Denver. After beating Boston College 2-1 with a third-period comeback, the Falcons officially tied Ohio State in the championship game, though they won the shootout, 1-0, that determined who took home the trophy.

The cadets lead a four-team grouping of Atlantic Hockey teams earning votes. RIT took home seven votes after splitting their weekend series with Robert Morris; Bentley earned six votes for their win over UNH; and Holy Cross earned two points for their three-point weekend against Niagara.

In an era where non-conference wins are huge, all four will play out of the league this weekend. While Air Force heads to the desert for two games at Arizona State, the other three schools all play games against Hockey East. RIT will host Connecticut at Blue Cross Arena, while Bentley plays Northeastern in a home-and-home. Holy Cross plays Providence and BC in two games at the DCU Center in Worcester.

Professional Taste

The NHL descended on Army West Point’s Tate Rink on Saturday, with the Florida Panthers and New Jersey Devils playing their exhibition season finale at the home of the Black Knights.

There’s a number of connections throughout the Florida organization. Panthers owner Vincent Viola graduated West Point in 1977, while President and CEO Matt Caldwell graduated in 2002. In the AHL, Florida’s affiliate in Springfield, which shares their home rink with American International, has a West Point grad as their general manager – Eric Joyce. So it’s a natural fit for the Panthers to make their fourth trip to the academy. They highlight a number of teams who have made several trips up the Hudson River.

During the game, the Panthers honored 1st Lt. Derek Hines and Maj. Tom Kennedy, West Point hockey graduates who were killed in action.

Players of the Week

Brought to you by the league’s front office in Haverhill, Massachusetts!

Player of the Week – Holy Cross’ TJ Moore: No big shocker here. I suggest scrolling up for more details on the Crusader forward, who had a weekend for the ages.

Goaltender of the Week – Air Force’s Shane Starrett: Starrett got the job done in winning the MVP award for the 2016 Ice Breaker Tournament. With 83 saves on 87 shots, the sophomore helped the Falcons to their first regular season tournament win since 2013

Defenseman of the Week – Robert Morris’ Eric Israel: It was a six-point weekend for the sophomore, helping the Colonials to a weekend split against the RIT Tigers. He also gave up the body by blocking four shots.

Rookie of the Week – Niagara’s Kris Spriggs: With a three-point weekend, Spriggs sits atop the rookie scoring for Atlantic Hockey in the first weekend. He scored a goal in the 4-4 tie with Holy Cross on Saturday.

Atlantic Hockey hands Niagara’s Dzakhov one-game suspension for hit against Holy Cross

DzakhovAtlantic Hockey announced Tuesday a one-game suspension to Niagara junior forward Stanislav Dzakhov, who was issued a five-minute major and game disqualification in last Friday’s contest against Holy Cross.

After review of the play in question, Atlantic Hockey determined that the hit that Dzakhov placed on the Holy Cross skater warranted both penalties he received, as well as an additional game suspension.

Dzakhov will be unavailable for Niagara in the Purple Eagles’ next game against Mercyhurst on Tuesday, Oct. 18.

Elmira promotes women’s assistant Martalock to head coach position

Elmira has announced the appointment of Kelsea Martalock as new women’s head coach.

Martalock had previously been the Soaring Eagles’ assistant coach.

“I am pleased to announce the promotion of Kelsea Martalock from assistant ice hockey coach to her new role as head coach,” said Elmira VP of athletics Pat Thompson in a statement. “Her past experiences in Division III hockey as a player and assistant coach, along with her knowledge and dedication to our program, positioned her to take over the reins after Coach [Dean] Jackson’s departure. Coach Martalock’s philosophy aligns with our established women’s ice hockey tradition and her involvement in recruiting this past season and for our next class in 2017 is notable.  Additionally, her certification as strength and conditioning Coach is not only a benefit for the women’s ice hockey team, but for our department as a whole.”

“I am very honored to have the opportunity to continue the history of excellence that has been known as Elmira College women’s hockey,” added Martalock. “Coach Jackson established a culture of academic and athletic success and I am looking forward to continue that tradition with our program. I want to thank Coach Jackson for taking me on as his assistant a year ago and mentoring me to prepare me to be a head coach. I also want to think Pat Thompson for the opportunity and the support to lead our team to another successful season.”

Martalock becomes the fifth women’s coach in the program’s 15-year history, after the Soaring Eagles produced their fifth consecutive 20-win season and the team’s fourth straight NCAA Division III tournament appearance.

“I think the opportunity to transition from assistant to the head within the team will be a huge benefit for the program,” stated Martalock. “Having worked with Coach Jackson for a year, I am familiar with the culture and history of the program, I know the direction we will need to go, and I know what our team will need to do to accomplish another national title. I want to keep Elmira women’s hockey as an elite program and I am very excited and thankful to have the opportunity to do so.”

Prior to her time as an assistant with the Soaring Eagles, Martalock served as the assistant coach and strength and conditioning coach at St. Norbert.

A 2012 graduate of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, Martalock also spent time as an assistant coach with her alma mater from 2012-14 as the strength and conditioning coach, while completing her master’s degree. She played her first two seasons of collegiate hockey at Bethel before transferring to UWSP.

Summer recap, UConn broadcaster Coppola on Oct. 11 edition of USCHO Live!

USCHO_FinalFile.fwOur guest on the October 11 edition of USCHO Live! was Rich Coppola, Sports director at Fox 61 in Hartford and one of the radio voices of UConn hockey. Jim and Ed also reviewed the happenings in college hockey over the summer.

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 iOSAndroid or Windows phone.

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

About the hosts

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

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

TMQ: For openers, let’s talk underdogs, ‘reclaiming the rule book’

Jonathan Kopacka of Air Force, Air Force vs. Ohio State, Icebreaker Tournament, 10/08/16, Denver, Colorado (Candace Horgan)
Jonathan Kopacka helped Air Force to the Ice Breaker championship last weekend in Denver (photo: Candace Horgan).

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

Jim: Well, Paula, seeing as we are through the first full college hockey slate of games, it seems like a good time to play Tuesday Morning Quarterback.

Where to start?

There certainly were some eye-opening games, starting with the Ice Breaker tournament in Denver. I think if you were handicapping those games, you’d have placed Boston College and Denver in the title game. I would go as far to say that I thought Denver would be the champion. Instead, all of the results were opposite of expectations. Air Force beat the Eagles and Ohio State knocked off the Pioneers. Then the Falcons needed overtime and a shootout, but took home the championship by beating the Buckeyes. For good measure, my pick of Denver went winless, losing to BC in the consolation game.

Not a bad start to the season if you’re a fan of the underdog.

Paula: Not a bad start to the season at all if you’re a fan of the underdog – or a fan of the Big Ten.

Yes, straight off the bat, I’m going to point out that B1G hockey went 6-3-1 on the weekend and is currently sporting the top nonconference win percentage in Division I. I know that one weekend at the start of the season defines nothing and that there isn’t enough available data – so to speak – to extrapolate about the state of college hockey, but given the mediocre to awful early seasons that the Big Ten has had since its inception, it’s nice to savor the moment.

B1G hockey showed some good signs this weekend, too, with Michigan and Wisconsin earning splits after dropping their first games of the season, Minnesota netting 12 goals against the two Alaska teams, and the Buckeyes beating Denver and finding a way to come from behind to tie Air Force. For the first time ever, I liked what I saw from the young league that I cover, right out of the gate.

Back to the underdogs. Air Force was picked second in the Atlantic Hockey coaches preseason poll, so maybe we shouldn’t be so surprised at the Falcons’ performance in the IceBreaker. As you and I discussed last season, Atlantic Hockey isn’t a weakling as a conference overall, even if there’s a starker contrast between top-tier and bottom teams in Atlantic Hockey compared to some other leagues. The Falcons may only have three seniors, but they also only have three rookies. They’re experienced and well coached.

Jim: The point you make about Air Force can be made for a good portion of Atlantic Hockey. As much as I want to credit the Big Ten for a good start, no league has made the gains that the AHC has in the past couple of seasons.

First, you can start with scholarships. The league is finally offering the full complement of 18 scholarships, which immediately helps level the playing field versus the five other conferences. Add to that the fact that RIT and Canisius are both playing in relatively new arenas, Bentley is building a new arena and the schools that played at the two worst arenas in the league – AIC and Sacred Heart – have moved to buildings that house professional teams in Springfield and Bridgeport, respectively.

On the ice, besides Air Force, you had Bentley trouncing New Hampshire 5-1 and Sacred Heart beating Merrimack 2-1, with both of those games played on the road.

Like you said, one weekend can’t tell us everything, but for Atlantic Hockey, the off-ice story combined with those two victories on the ice paints a wonderful picture.

Paula: I agree, 100 percent. Looking through the first weekend’s results, I was tempted to throw votes Bentley’s way, especially.

Another thing that struck me about the weekend was the number of shutouts we saw. Connecticut senior Rob Nichols had back-to-back shutouts as the Huskies defeated Alabama-Huntsville 6-0 and 4-0. In total, there were eight shutout games on the weekend and there have been nine total for this young season.

And three goalies made their collegiate debuts with shutout victories: Minnesota-Duluth’s Hunter Miska (Oct. 1 vs. Michigan Tech); Massachusetts’ Ryan Wischow (Oct. 7 vs. Colorado College); and Michigan’s Hayden Lavigne (Oct. 8 vs. Union). Talk about announcing your presence with authority.

Jim: I think any shutouts this weekend should be considered impressive given the number of power plays that teams had across college hockey. The re-emphasis of calling fouls on plays where players are slowed down by hooks, holds, etc., I thought made the number of individual penalty calls – and thus power plays – obnoxious at times.

Power plays certainly do create excitement, but when the average game has 16 or so power plays (and some has in excess of 25), there simply is no flow. If we place the median number of power plays around 16 (and I think that’s conservative) more than half of the average game is specialty teams. To me, that’s just too much. I understand the concept of “reclaiming the rule book” as I have heard mentioned a number of times by administrators in recent weeks, but I also think that hockey was meant to be played 5-on-5.

Paula: Jim, I was able to attend just one game this weekend, the Friday night Union-Michigan game, and while I’m relatively certain that Michigan earned every one of its seven minor penalties to Union’s well-deserved four, I was struck by how the penalties interrupted the game and I was disappointed that I wasn’t able to get a good sense of either team 5-on-5. I saw all of that who thought the officiating in that game was fine. So you and I are definitely in agreement about how disruptive the penalty calling can be.

Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down

Thumbs up to Robert Morris.

There are comebacks. And then there are comebacks. Robert Morris had the latter on Saturday, erasing a 5-1 deficit at RIT with four second-period power-play goals in a span of 1:48 before netting the game winner with less than 15 minutes remaining. The Pioneers were 4-for-8 on the power play in the game.

Thumbs down to Arizona State.

Yes, they’re the relatively new kids on the block and it’s not fair to pick on the new kid. But the Sun Devils, in two games, have already been whistled for 148 penalty minutes. On night one against Notre Dame, ASU gave the Irish 19 power-play opportunities, surrendering six power-play goals. Things were a little better on Saturday, but there is no way to be competitive when an opponent has the man advantage that often.

Women’s D-I wrap: Oct. 10

Union ends winless drought
Penn State and Union split a weekend series, with Union earning its first win in 56 tries. On Friday night, Nittany Lions seniors Laura Bowman and Amy Petersen each tallied a hat trick in Penn State’s 8-1 win. On Saturday, Haley Shugart and Emily Erickson each scored two to lead the Dutchwomen to a 4-2 win, their first since December 12, 2014.

Bemidji State upsets Minnesota
The Beavers earned a series split with Minnesota with a 2-0 victory on Saturday. Britni Mowat stopped 31, the defense blocked 29 shots, and Summer Thibodeau’s goal just 1:21 into the game proved to be enough. Ciscely Nelson’s empty-netter sealed the victory.

The Gophers needed three third-period goals, two of which came from captain Dani Cameranesi, to edge past Bemidji on Friday night.

St. Lawrence enters the picture
The Saints, who were picked to finish seventh in the ECAC in the preseason polls, showed they’re going to be a contender with a win and a tie against No. 4 Clarkson. That comes on the heels of wins over Northeastern. They were just 27.2 seconds away from a weekend sweep.

On Friday, Brooke Webster and Kirsten Padalis each tallied a power-play goal just 32 seconds apart to give St. Lawrence the come-from-behind win. On Saturday, Webster had two assists to reach 100 career points. Hannah Miller scored two of the Saints’ goals.

St. Cloud rallies against North Dakota
On Friday, the Fighting Hawks won 1-0 on the back of Amy Menke’s power-play goal and Lexie Shaw’s 25 saves. On Saturday, the Huskies rallied to beat North Dakota, 3-2. NoDak scored twice in the final minutes of the second period to take a 2-1 lead, but Julia Tylke and Kelsey Saelens netted goals to give St. Cloud the win. Freshman goalie Janine Adler came on in relief of Taylor Crosby, who left the game after a collision, and stopped all 21 shots she faced.

Vermont moves to 2-0
The Catamounts upset Hockey East rival No. 9 Boston University with a late goal by Alyssa Gorecki. Melissa Black, who transferred from Union, had 38 saves and went a perfect seven-for-seven on the penalty kill.

How the rest of the top 10 fared
Wisconsin, coming off a bye week, beat Ohio State on Friday night, 3-0, on the back of two goals from Emily Clark. Jenny Ryan added the final goal on a nice break from the penalty box off a pass from Clark. On Saturday, Ohio State ended Wisconsin’s 26-game home win streak, which dated back to the end of the 2014-15 season, as the Buckeyes earned a hard-fought tie. Goalie Kassidy Sauve made 37 saves. Wisconsin freshman Abby Roque was the only player to score in the shootout, giving Wisconsin the extra conference point.

Quinnipiac moved to 4-0 with wins against Connecticut and New Hampshire. On Friday, Taylar Cianfarano scored twice and Sydney Rossman notched a 21-save shutout as the Bobcats topped the Huskies, 3-0. On Saturday, Rossman had her third straight shutout and Meghan Turner had a goal and an assist in the Bobcats’ 3-0 win over UNH.

Boston College goalie Katie Burt stopped a penalty shot on Saturday and Caitrin Longeran gave the Eagles the lead just seconds after Maine tied the game to give BC the 2-1 win. On Sunday, the freshmen showed they’re ready to make an impact as Delaney Belinskas became the first BC freshman to tally four goals in a game in 20 years. Bridget McCarthy capped off the scoring to give Boston College the 5-1 win over the Black Bears.

Minnesota-Duluth became the only WCHA team with a perfect conference record as it swept Minnesota State-Mankato, 4-0 and 5-1. The Bulldogs scored three power-play goals on Friday night. Lara Stalder led the Bulldogs with three goals and three assists on the weekend while Katherine McGovern added two goals and two assists.

Olivia Zafuto scored a power-play goal with 17.2 seconds left to give Colgate the 4-3 win over Merrimack Friday night. On Saturday, Annika Zalewski’s goal and three assists led Raiders to a 6-0 win.

Splits and near-misses and glimpses of good things to come

We had an interesting first weekend in the Big Ten, with every team picking up at least one win and two teams rewarding the B1G coaches for a little preseason faith.

1. The Nittany Lions, the Wolverines and the Badgers each earned splits.

After a decisive 4-2 win over St. Lawrence Thursday night, Penn State surrendered three first-period goals to the Saints Friday and trailed 4-0 by the 3:30 mark of the second before losing 6-3. Friday night in Ann Arbor, the Wolverines gave up two late third-period goals to lose to Union, 4-3, but rebounded Saturday by shutting down the Dutchmen, 4-0, Saturday. And Wisconsin earned a split with Northern Michigan in Green Bay by coming from behind in the third period of Saturday’s 6-5 win after losing 3-2 Friday.

With Minnesota’s sweep of teams in Alaska and Ohio State’s 1-0-1 performance at the IceBreaker Tournament, it was a very good opening weekend for the Big Ten. Given B1G hockey’s difficulty with its necessary first-half nonconference schedule since the league’s inception, this is especially good news and the kind of lift the league needed to begin 2016-2017.

2. The Buckeyes came this close to the IceBreaker title and Minnesota owns Alaska.

How nice it would have been to bring the IceBreaker title to the Big Ten to kick off the 2016-2017 season. After beating host Denver, 3-2, Friday night, the Buckeyes came back to tie Air Force, 3-3, in the title game of the IceBreaker Tournament. The Falcons claimed the hardware, though, in the post-OT shootout.

With two clutch goals, it was a good weekend for Buckeye sophomore John Wiitala, who netted the game winner Friday and registered the first of two goals in the third period Saturday in OSU’s comeback in that tie. Three senior Buckeyes — Nick Schilkey, David Gust and Matt Joyaux — combined for the tying goal in that contest.

Meanwhile in Alaska, the Gophers scored a dozen goals in wins over the Seawolves and Nanooks. Four different Gophers had multi-goal weekends, and sophomore Brent Gates, Jr., had three goals in two games — equaling the total number of goals he scored as a freshman in 35 games. His classmate, Eric Schierhorn, made 14 saves in Friday’s 6-0 win, his fourth career shutout.

The Buckeyes and Gophers were picked No. 2 and No. 1, respectively, in the preseason B1G coaches poll.

3. Glimpses of good things to come.

Not only was it good for the two teams expected in preseason to do well to actually do well in the opening weekend, but there are other things to take away from the weekend to give B1G hockey fans a little hope.

Wisconsin’s come-from-behind win Saturday was just the gritty thing that Badgers fans need. Kudos to coach Tony Granato and his staff on the first win of their tenure.

Congratulations, too, to Michigan goaltender Hayden Lavigne, who made 31 saves in his debut in the Wolverines’ net Saturday. Rookie James Sanchez also had two goals in that game, and freshman Will Lockwood had a pretty goal the night before.

There is more than a little to like about this first weekend of B1G hockey play.

Hockey East’s opening weekend

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

1.Beware the Atlantic Hockey Conference.

It wasn’t that long ago that games against the Atlantic Hockey Conference were considered close to automatic wins. Maybe not by the lower end of the Hockey East, but certainly among the elite.

Not this past weekend.

Atlantic teams swept Hockey East, taking all three contests: Air Force 2, Boston College 1; Bentley 5 New Hampshire 1; and Sacred Heart 2 Merrimack 1.

Ugh!

2.How about them Black Bears?

Raise your hand if you thought Maine would sweep Rensselaer?

Liar!

Maine finished 11th in the league last year, and this season Hockey East coaches picked the Black Bears to drop one spot into the cellar. RPI, by contrast, was a plus-.500 team a year ago and projected to be in the middle of the ECAC pack.

Quite the opening weekend for the Black Bears!

3. Welcome to Splitsville

Most Hockey East teams came away with their glasses half full (or half empty). The only schools that pulled off two wins were Maine, as noted above, Notre Dame (playing Arizona State, a new program playing as an Independent), and Connecticut (playing Alabama-Huntsville, a program on the very of extinction not that long ago and coming off a 7-21-6 season).

Nothing to really write home about.

Three things: You didn’t expect this

1. Standings upside-down

If you had Bemidji State, Alabama Huntsville and Minnesota State on top of the league standings after the first two weeks of the season… wait, scratch that. You didn’t have those teams on top of the league standings (at least not two of them), so don’t say you did, because you’re certainly lying. Conversely, league favorites Bowling Green, Michigan Tech and Ferris State are a combined 0-6 in WCHA play and in the cellar (and none of the three teams has looked particularly sharp so far). It’s obviously early and the teams on the bottom have the time to redeem themselves (and the teams on top have plenty of time to stumble) but it just goes to show how unpredictable things can be in the WCHA.

2. Awful non-conference start

Perhaps a bit more troubling is the league’s terrible out-of-conference record. WCHA teams are 1-9 against the rest of the country so far. The lone win was Northern Michigan’s 3-2 victory over Wisconsin in the first game of their series in Green Bay. (The ‘Cats also lost a wild 6-5 contest in the series finale.) Otherwise, it’s been pretty dismal. Michigan Tech was swept by Minnesota Duluth by a combined 13-4. Ferris State lost both sets of a home-and-home with instate rival Western Michigan. Both Alaska teams were schooled by visiting Minnesota in Anchorage. And Alabama Huntsville followed up an outstanding season-opening road sweep of Ferris with a brutal sweep at UConn in which the Chargers were shutout in both games of the series. Again: It’s still early, but these brutal nonconference results aren’t going to do much to bring up the league’s end-of-season Pairwise (or, for that matter, outside perception of the conference as a whole).

3. Bright spots

Both Minnesota schools did their jobs. Minnesota State, which started out 0-4 last season, swept Michigan Tech in a battle of last season’s co-champions and outscored Tech 7-1 in the process. Bemidji State, which went 1-4 against Bowling Green last season and lost to them in the first round of the WCHA playoffs, also got the sweep. The Beavers looked like the stronger team for a good 100 of the 120 minutes of the series in Bemidji. As Lake Superior has yet to play an official game yet, these two squads are the only two unbeatens in the conference at the moment.

Three things: Oct. 9

Title defense starts brightly
North Dakota began its quest for a ninth national championship and second in two years strongly. Atlantic Hockey’s Canisius was the Fighting Hawks’ first test this past weekend in Grand Forks, and UND ran into few problems while winning both games of the teams’ series by a combined 10-1.

UND’s offense was particularly strong in the second period of Friday’s 6-0 win. After Shane Gersich and Rhett Gardner gave the Hawks a 2-0 lead through one period, second-period goals from Austin Poganski, Tyson Jost, Dixon Bowen and Brock Boeser put the game’s result beyond doubt.

Hawks goaltender Cam Johnson opened his junior season with a shutout, stopping 17 Canisius shots. The Golden Griffins were also unable to score on any of their four power-play opportunities Friday.

Saturday’s rematch provided much of the same, especially in the final 40 minutes. After a power-play goal from Nick Hutchison gave Canisius a 1-0 lead late in the first period, UND used four unanswered goals to win 4-1 and sweep the weekend set.

Gersich and Poganski both picked up their second goals of the weekend in Saturday’s third period. Johnson again went the distance in UND’s net and made 10 saves.

UND has an extra day to practice this upcoming week, with a Saturday home tilt against Rensselaer the only game on the docket.

Western Michigan opens 2-0
We’re dealing with small sample sizes at this point, but a Western Michigan team many have picked to finish second-to-last in the NCHC this season has opened with a pair of wins.

The Broncos opened a home-and-home series against former CCHA rival Ferris State on Thursday in Big Rapids, Mich., and left Ewigleben Ice Arena with a hard-fought 5-3 victory. Two power-play goals kept WMU in contention with the teams tied at 3-3 after two periods before Western’s Lawton Courtnall and Sheldon Dries scored the go-ahead and game-clinching goals in the third.

WMU followed its success Thursday night up with a 2-1 win over Ferris on Friday in Kalamazoo. All three goals came in the game’s first 33 minutes, as Western’s Matheson Iacopelli and Scott Moldenhauer combined in the second period to cancel out Chad McDonald’s first-period tally for FSU.

Western will hope to continue its good early form this next week with another home-and-home series against another old CCHA foe. The Broncos travel to No. 14 Bowling Green on Friday before the Falcons return the favor Saturday.

CC storms back
In a non-conference weekend series between two teams expected to finish last in their respective leagues, neither Massachusetts nor Colorado College was able to prove itself vastly superior to the other.

Say this for CC, though: On Saturday, one night after falling 3-0 to the Minutemen, the Tigers responded with a big offensive statement.

CC’s 7-4 win Saturday at the Mullins Center started with the Tigers storming out of the gates. Branden Makara opened the scoring exactly one minute in before sandwiching a Kristian Blumenschein goal to give the Tigers a 3-0 lead just 7:15 into the first period.

Massachusetts did eventually beat CC goalie Alex Leclerc four times, and the Minutemen scored on half of their four shots on goal in the second period but never led in the game.

CC faces Hockey East opposition again later this week. While the Tigers will be playing back at home in Colorado Springs, however, they’ll be facing what should be a tougher test against No. 8 Massachusetts-Lowell. UML picked up a pair of ties at home Friday and Saturday against Minnesota-Duluth.

How the top 20 fared: Oct. 7-9

Michael Compoli of Boston College, Boston College at Denver, Icebreaker Tournament, 10-08-16, Denver, Colorado (Candace Horgan)
Boston College freshman defenseman Michael Campoli helped the Eagles to a 3-1 win at Denver Saturday night at the Ice Breaker in Denver (photo: Candace Horgan).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the USCHO.com Preseason Division I Men’s Poll fared over the Oct. 7-9 weekend:

No. 1 North Dakota – swept Canisius

No. 2 Quinnipiac – tied and defeated No. 15 Northeastern

No. 3 Denver – lost to Ohio State, lost to No. 5 Boston College

No. 4 Boston University – defeated Colgate

No. 5 Boston College – lost to Air Force, defeated No. 3 Denver

No. 6 Minnesota-Duluth – tied No. 8 Massachusetts-Lowell twice

No. 7 St. Cloud State – was idle

No. 8 Massachusetts-Lowell – tied No. 6 Minnesota-Duluth twice

No. 9 Notre Dame – swept Arizona State

No. 10 Providence – split with Miami

No. 11 Michigan – split with Union

No. 12 Harvard – was idle, but defeated the U.S. NTDP in an exhibition game

No. 13 Minnesota – defeated Alaska-Anchorage, defeated Alaska

No. 14 Bowling Green – swept by Bemidji State

No. 15 Northeastern – tied, lost to No. 2 Quinnipiac

No. 16 St. Lawrence – split with Penn State

No. 17 Michigan Tech – swept by Minnesota State

No. 18 Yale – was idle

No. 19 Minnesota State – swept No. 17 Michigan Tech

No. 20 Ferris State – swept by Western Michigan

Three thoughts from ECAC Hockey’s opening weekend

Union coach Rick Bennett isn’t afraid of facing tough opponents on the road, and that paid off for the Dutchmen, who beat  No. 6 Michigan 4-3 in the season opener for both teams at Yost Arena Friday.

Union rallied from an early two-goal deficit to tie the game, and then scored two unanswered goals after the Wolverines took the lead again in the second period.

However, that momentum didn’t carry over into Saturday, as the Dutchmen were shutout 4-0 despite outshooting Michigan 31-27.

The Dutchmen have finished in the bottom half of the league the last two seasons, but return much of its production from last season.  With so many departures around the league, Union has the pieces in place to move up the standings this year.

An answer in goal for Quinnipiac?

Of the all the questions surrounding the Bobcats entering this season, who would play in goal may have been the biggest one.

It was only one weekend, but the Quinnipiac coaching staff has to be feeling pretty good about the play of junior transfer Chris Truehl. A transfer from Air Force, Truehl sat out the 2015-16 season due to NCAA transfer rules, but stopped 60-of-64 shots in a win and tie against Northeastern last weekend.

His 16 second-period saves against the Huskies on Friday were the most by a QU goalie since Michael Garteig had 19 against St. Cloud last October.

Quinnipiac’s four straight NCAA tournament teams have always featured one main goalie, whether it was Eric Hartzell in 2013 or Michael Garteig for the last three years. It’s likely Truehl will get the bulk of the playing time this year, but the Bobcats all have freshman Andrew Shortridge and junior Sean Lawrence at the position as well.

A slow start for the Engineers

Rensselaer’s defense struggled at times during the second half last year. And it didn’t look much better this weekend against Maine.

RPI allowed nine goals in a pair of losses to the Black Bears. The Engineers led 2-1 after two periods on Saturday, but allowed two goals early in the third period en route to a 4-2 loss.

The defense will need to get better for the Engineers, as RPI doesn’t appear to have enough offensive threats to take part in shootouts.

Three Things: Moore’s The Man

To be the man, you gotta beat the man.

Had TJ Moore not put on a show, it’s likely Air Force and Bentley would’ve led off the weekend. Instead, in a wild weekend series at Niagara, we’re talking about back-to-back hat trick nights for the Crusader junior.

On Friday, the Crusaders scored seven goals in the second and third en route to an 8-2 victory, outshooting the Purps, 30-12, along the way. After an evenly played first period, where each team scored once and split the shot totals almost evenly (Holy Cross led, 8-6), the visiting team piled on four goals. Moore scored twice in the second, adding to his first period strike to earn a chapeau shower.

On Saturday, Holy Cross took a 3-2 lead, all behind Moore. His second hat trick of the weekend paved the road for the Crusaders, who held that lead through the first 20, only to surrender it in the second, then fall behind in the third. They rallied, scoring late with their net empty to earn a tie, proving that even with a dominating player, nothing is over until it’s over.

One player had six goals in a weekend. A player with one career hat trick had two in two nights, making him the first person in program history with three in his career. He became the first player in Holy Cross history to have hat tricks on consecutive nights, and he became the third player in program history to do it in a single period (matching Tyler McGregor in 2005 and Adam Schmidt in 2012).

Not a bad start, right?

East Coast, West Coast Falcons Fly

For college hockey’s elite, the first weekend of the regular season is always an exercise in exhibition. Teams give their fans the first glimpse into the roster as they skate through a victory over a team from the proletariat.

Someone didn’t send Atlantic Hockey that memo.

At New Hampshire’s fabled Whittemore Center, the Bentley Falcons loudly announced their arrival, defeatin the host Wildcats, 5-1, behind three goals from freshmen. Leading 2-0 after the first period thanks to rookie Connor Brassard and sophomore Alexei Solovyev, they added a third from freshman Dino Balsamo. Up 3-1, they put the Wildcats away behind an early third period goal from another diaper dandy, Jonathan Desbiens, before adding an empty net goal late.

Meanwhile, Air Force carried the torch out west, winning the Ice Breaker Tournament held in Denver. In the opening game against fifth-ranked Boston College, the Falcons simply outworked the Eagles. Trailing 1-0 in the second period, they scored twice in the third, potting the game winner with under nine minutes left to take a 2-1 decision.

The next night, they tied Ohio State, 3-3, winning a shootout, 1-0, to decide the trophy’s residence.

It’s an encouraging first step for a league that’s struggled to get non-conference wins with regularity over the past few years.

As advertised

As expected, the AHC opener between Sacred Heart and Army West Point provided a look at the potential of both teams.

For Army West Point, a 4-0 victory marks a 1-0-1 start to the season. They held serve on their own home ground, finding the back of the net for a decisive scoreboard victory. In the quest to challenge the league’s top slots, they handled their business and walked away with two points.

But Sacred Heart kept coming. The Pioneers outshot the Black Knights 26-8 over the final two periods, including a 14-2 margin in the third with the only goal coming on an empty net.

They’ll meet again on Friday with an expectation of more fireworks.

NCHC roundups: BC defeats Denver in battle of Frozen Four teams

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DENVER — College hockey teams are faced every year with the daunting task of rebuilding, due to losses from graduation and early departures to the pro ranks. Last season, No. 3 Denver and No. 5 Boston College made it to the Frozen Four.

Neither team looked like a Frozen Four team this weekend in the Icebreaker Tournament, and though the two squared off Saturday night at Magness Arena, it was surprising in that it was the consolation game, after the Eagles were upset by eventual tournament champion Air Force and the Pioneers lost to Ohio State.

For BC, one of the biggest losses was starting netminder Thatcher Demko. However, judging by freshman Joe Woll’s performance, goaltending won’t be an issue. On Saturday against Denver, Woll made 40 saves, including 23 in the third period, in leading BC to a 3-1 win over Denver.

“I thought our back-to-back game, he was certainly a catalyst for us,” said BC coach Jerry York. “Almost beating Air Force, he kept us in that game and made some terrific saves, and tonight he was the same. He moves so easily and has a great feel for the game. You can talk about gloves and angles, but he just has a sense of where the puck is moving to. In that respect, he’s a very smart goaltender.”

Denver lost two-thirds of its top line to the pros, and it showed. Saturday, they only got a goal from senior defenseman Will Butcher, and no goals on the weekend from its top two lines.

“When you look at our top six, we don’t have a senior, we don’t have a junior really,” said Denver coach Jim Montgomery. “It’s going to take a little while for these young men to get comfortable and be go-to guys, except for (Dylan) Gambrell and maybe (Troy) Terry, who expect to be those guys. The other guys are kind of feeling their way.”

Though Terry and Gambrell were held without points in their two games this weekend, Montgomery did see postives in their performance.

“I thought they were generating a lot of chances,” said Montgomery. “I thought Terry was very creative, and I thought Gambrell’s work ethic was great.”

While both Denver and BC have a long way to go to get back to the form that took them to last year’s Frozen Four, there were signs that the pieces are in motion.

“We had a really good compete level,” said York. “Last year’s teams, both of us were completely different teams. We have some players back from last year, both of us, but we’re completely different teams. Now we have to build kind of from scratch, and build it back up again. I think we made a terrific step forward.”

NCHC results

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Canisius 1, at North Dakota 4
The Fighting Hawks rallied from a one-goal deficit after one period with four unanawered goals. Brock Boeser assisted on two second-period power-play goals to help break the game open, including the game-winner with 48 seconds left in the second period. North Dakota fired 45 shots, and Cam Johnson made 10 saves.

Colorado College 7, at Massachusetts 4
The Tigers scored four goals in the first period, including one just one minute into the game by Branden Makara, to earn a 7-4 win over Massachusetts and split the weekend series. Makara also scored CC’s third goal. After Jonny Lazarus scored at 12:07 of the third to make it 5-4 CC, Alex Berardinelli scored 17:26 to give the Tigers a cushion, and Westin Michaud added an empty-net tally to seal the win.

Miami 2, at Providence 1
Kiefer Sherwood scored a game-winning five-on-three power-play goal at 11:35 of the third period to give Miami a 2-1 win over Providence and a split of the weekend series. RedHawks goalie Ryan Larkin made 20 saves.

Minnesota-Duluth 1, at Massachusetts-Lowell 1
Neal Pionl scored with 3:54 left in the third period to tie the game and give Duluth a second tie in a weekend series with Lowell. Nick Deery made 24 saves for the visiting Bulldogs, while River Hawks goalie Tyler Wall made 40 saves on the Bulldogs.

ECAC roundups: Quinnipiac scores 5 in penalty-filled affair

Two top tier teams met for a rematch on Saturday, with a much different result than the hard-nosed tie the night before, as the Quinnipiac Bobcats pushed five goals past Ryan Ruck en route to a 5-2 win against the Northeastern Huskies.

Quinnipiac scored a pair of goals in the first 10 minutes of a game with a lead it would not relinquish. The second and third periods were chopped up as the battles became too physical, resulting in nine penalties. Forty eight minutes worth of penalties were assessed in the game, and neither team could garner any momentum.

“Yeah, the phrase the referees are using is ‘They’re reclaiming the rulebook.’ So we’ve been told that, we certainly saw that,” Quinnipiac coach Rand Pecknold said. “We need to adapt, all the teams need to adapt. That why you’ve seen the power plays are so high. I think they had 10, we had eight. It is what it is. They’re reclaiming the rulebook so we’ve got to adapt and figure it out if we want to win games.”

The Bobcats’ penalty kill went 1-for-10 on the night with 24 blocked shots in total, stifling all but one goal by Zach Aston-Reese.

“I thought our shot blocking was phenomenal,” Pecknold said. “That 3-on-5, I don’t know how many blocks but it was impressive; they were 1-for-4.”

Both teams were caught up in penalties, many of which overlapped in the middle period, leaving the Huskies feeling like they were chasing their tails.

“We tried to get some momentum building but every time we did we went on the power play, we couldn’t convert on the power play, then we took penalties,” Northeastern head coach Jim Madigan said. “After we have three power plays in a row, you know they’re gonna even the score up. It’s ECAC officials, so you know the ledger’s gonna be even; we were just waiting for it to come.”

Aston-Reese’s power-play goal had the potential to kick-start another Huskies’ late-game rush, but instead sparked more penalties after the goal was reviewed for a high stick. Quinnipiac’s Pecknold discounted the goal, even though it made no major dent in his team’s lead.

“The review on that goal, they don’t have that overhead shot, like it’s pretty clear it’s no goal, but they only have straight down so you can’t tell,” Pecknold said. “Unfortunately the call on the ice is what stands, the four guys didn’t get together and communicate. It’s disappointing but that’s life, we get the win.”

Quinnipiac and Northeastern continued the trend of high overall penalty totals that have skyrocketed across Division I hockey so far this season. Quinnipiac travels for a pair of games at Maine next weekend, while Northeastern has a home and home with Bentley.

ECAC results

Union 0, at Michigan 4
The Michigan Wolverines shut out the Union Dutchmen 4-0 Saturday, as Hayden Lavigne made 31 saves en route to the victory. The first of James Sanchez’s two goals on the night came shorthanded in the second period.

Boston University 6, at Colgate 1
Boston University Terriers overwhelmed Colgate 6-1, as six different players tallied on the night. BU’s Jake Oettinger turned away 29 of 30, as Bruce Racine came on in relief of Charlie Finn, who gave up three goals on 22 shots.

Rensselaer 2, at Maine 4
Maine’s three-goal third period pushed them past Rensselaer for a sweep of their weekend. Both RPI goals were short-handed tallies by Riley Bourbonnais and Drew Melanson. The game-winner came on Mitchell Fossier’s fourth goal of the year.

Clarkson 3, at Vermont 2
Clarkson took the second game of the weekend series in the Green Mountain State 3-2 as Ben Dalpe scored a short-handed goal 6:08 into the first. Each team put up a power-play goal in the first, as the Golden Knights went 1-for-10 on the man advantage, while the Catamounts went 1-for-5.

US Under-18 Team 2, at Harvard 5
In an exhibition tuneup between the Ivy League squad and the national team development program, Harvard skated to an easy 5-2 win. Harvard’s Clay Anderson scored a power-play goal and NTDP alum Adam Fox notched four assists, while Merrick Madsen turned away 25 of 27 shots.

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