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Here’s what’s at stake as the NCHC moves into the postseason

North Dakota and St. Cloud State are the top two seeds for the NCHC playoffs (photo: Jim Rosvold).

The final week of the NCHC regular season provided varying levels of certainty depending on where and when around the league attention was being paid. It wasn’t the most climactic end to a season, but there was still plenty of excitement to go around.

North Dakota got its hands on the Penrose Cup for the second year running as the NCHC regular season champion. Whereas UND celebrated with the trophy on its home ice last season during the first round of the playoffs, the Fighting Hawks were able to do so again last weekend at Ralph Engelstad Arena before the postseason began.

St. Cloud State ended up as the No. 2 seed in the NCHC playoffs. North Dakota picked up a share of the league regular season title two weeks ago, and St. Cloud State fell out of the running for its own share of the top spot despite a sweep last weekend at Colorado College.

Plenty of eyes were also set upon Duluth, Minn., last weekend as two teams square in the middle of the NCHC pack battled each other for the final home-ice spot in this week’s first round of the league playoffs. Minnesota-Duluth earned the No. 4 seed thanks to a pair of home victories over Miami, and UMD will host the RedHawks at least twice more this week as the league playoffs kick off.

Denver finished narrowly behind St. Cloud State, and the Pioneers will host sixth seed Omaha this weekend in the first round of the playoffs. Seventh-seeded Western Michigan will travel to St. Cloud, Minn., while No. 8 seed CC sets off for Grand Forks, N.D.

This week, we take a look at each of the NCHC’s four first-round playoff series, how the contesting schools got there and what’s on the line for them in the postseason.

No. 8 Colorado College at No. 1 North Dakota

How they got here: The NCHC is nearly three complete seasons old, and Colorado College (6-27-1 overall, 4-19-1-0 NCHC) has had to visit North Dakota (28-5-3, 19-4-1-1) in the first round of the league playoffs in each of those campaigns. The Fighting Hawks come into this edition having won each of their past six games, while CC visits Grand Forks having lost each of its last nine games and 10 of the Tigers’ past 11.

What’s at stake: UND, which enters the weekend No. 1 in the PairWise Rankings, is a lock to qualify for the NCAA tournament regardless of what happens in the NCHC playoffs. Defeating CC and doing well at the NCHC Frozen Faceoff next weekend in Minneapolis, however, would help the Fighting Hawks not only receive a high NCAA tourney seed but also wrap up a spot in a geographically favorable regional. CC is eighth from last in the PairWise and will have to win the NCHC playoff championship in order to qualify for the national tournament.

No. 7 Western Michigan at No. 2 St. Cloud State

How they got here: St. Cloud State (27-8-1, 17-6-1-1) finished second in the NCHC standings despite a bumpy home stretch to the regular season. The Huskies won the North Star College Cup in late January and finished the regular season with a road sweep at CC, but SCSU went 3-3 in the six games between those two events. Western Michigan (8-23-3, 5-18-1-1) has struggled lately, going 1-11 in the Broncos’ past dozen games.

What’s at stake: At No. 3 in the PairWise, St. Cloud State is on track to join North Dakota as a No. 1 regional seed in the NCAA tournament. Qualification for that competition has been all but secured, while Western will have to pick up four wins in the next two weekends in Minnesota in order to be one of Division I’s last 16 men’s teams standing.

No. 6 Omaha at No. 3 Denver

How they got here: Denver (21-8-5, 17-5-2-0) finished tied for second with St. Cloud State, and the Pioneers played very well down the home stretch of the regular season. The Pios have won each of their last nine games and have just two losses since Dec. 12. Four of Denver’s victories since then came against Omaha (18-15-1, 8-15-1), which has gone 4-12 in the past 16 games.

What’s at stake: UNO is still on the bubble of the NCAA tournament picture. Thanks in large part to a perfect nonconference record this season, the Mavericks are still 15th in the PairWise despite their poor recent form. Denver, sixth in the PairWise, is looking to lock up at least a No. 2 seed in the national tourney.

No. 5 Miami at No. 4 Minnesota-Duluth

Miami’s Sean Kuraly has just one assist in four games against Minnesota-Duluth this season (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

How they got here: This pairing wasn’t finalized until last weekend when Minnesota-Duluth (15-14-5, 11-10-3-1) won both of its last two regular season home games against Miami (15-16-3, 9-13-2-2). Winners of four consecutive games, the Bulldogs come into this quick-turnaround rematch on a roll while Miami looks to pick up where it left off before last weekend. Prior to Miami’s second and third losses of the season to UMD, the RedHawks had won five of their last six games.

What’s at stake: Like Omaha, Minnesota-Duluth is a bubble team for the NCAA tournament. The Bulldogs have a chance to boost their spot in the PairWise (currently 13th), while Miami likely needs the automatic bid to make the NCAA tournament.

Players of the week

Offensive player of the week — Brock Boeser, North Dakota: The freshman forward picked up six points during the Fighting Hawks’ home sweep of Western Michigan last weekend. Three goals and three assists helped Boeser become the first freshman to pick up NCHC scoring and goal-scoring titles in conference play.

Defensive player of the week — Ethan Prow, St. Cloud State: The senior blueliner and captain picked up three points in two victories last weekend on the road against Colorado College. Prow also finished the series with a plus-6 rating from St. Cloud’s two wins over the Tigers.

Rookie of the week — Neal Pionk, Minnesota-Duluth: Pionk posted a career-high three points Friday in a 5-0 win over Miami in Duluth. In Saturday’s rematch against the RedHawks, the defenseman blocked four shots during the Bulldogs’ 3-1 sweep-clinching victory.

Goaltender of the week — Kasimir Kaskisuo, Minnesota-Duluth: The Finnish sophomore was a reason why UMD picked up the last home-ice spot in the first round of the NCHC playoffs. Kaskisuo stopped 40 of the 41 shots he faced last weekend in two home wins over Miami.

Acknowledgements

This is my last NCHC column of the season — Candace Horgan is set to take us home next week — although I’ll still pop up time to time on our NCHC blog for game predictions and a few stories having to do with NCHC teams once the postseason begins.

Before we get to that point, though, I’d like to thank a handful of colleagues, friends and family for their incredible support. Huge thanks go out to USCHO executive editor Todd Milewski, who has been unending in his patience and guidance at least in the time I’ve been working with him here.

Thank you to my esteemed NCHC writing partner, Candace Horgan. She’s been wonderful to work with since our days of covering the WCHA together, and I hope she makes optimal use of the beer money coming her way for winning our predictions contest. Again, annoyingly.

Thanks, as ever, to all of the NCHC coaches, players and school and league officials I’ve worked with this season, all of whom continue to make my job here a joy to hold.

Thank you to Lynn Evenson, my terrific boss at the Bottineau Courant, for continuing to let me indulge in this extra passion project.

Thank you to my parents, Doug and Karen, and my brothers, Ben and Tim. I love each of you more than I could ever begin to describe.

Last but not least, thank you to each of you that visit this website. It’s you for whom all of us at USCHO work.

Masucci ‘a great leader’ for Williams as Ephs make NCAA tournament for first time

Williams defenseman and captain Zander Masucci has the team on his back going into this weekend’s NCAA tournament game with Salem State (photo: Williams Athletics).

It is not fun to get knocked out of your conference tournament in the quarterfinal round, especially as the top seed and then have to wait anxiously on the outcome of all other games and the deliberations of the selection committee to know that your season-long body of work was good enough to get you into the NCAA tournament.

Such was the case for Williams, who earned their first trip to the tournament as an at-large bid and see some similarities to their pathway from another NESCAC opponent.

The defending national champions from Trinity got in last year as an at-large team on their way to winning the title and coach Bill Kangas hopes his team can make the most of their opportunity despite losing out on the coveted conference title.

“It was really hard those next few days after the loss to Tufts,” noted Kangas. “We were down for a little bit, but then we kept skating, hoping really that our season wasn’t over and that we would get into the national tournament. That Monday morning was all about excitement and nerves, but the fact is we are in and while it would have been great to play this last weekend for the conference title, we are excited to play in the program’s first NCAA tournament. Trinity made a run in the same circumstance we are in, so anything is possible in the postseason. We have a home game against a longtime friend in Bill O’Neill and his Salem State team, so it should be a great experience.”

The Ephs are led by the NESCAC Player of the Year in senior defenseman Zander Masucci, who literally does it all from the blue line for Williams.

Kangas could not be more complimentary of his captain on the ice and the terrific person off it.

“You look at almost every category and Zander leads us,” stated Kangas. “Blocked shots, ice time, his offensive numbers are among the leaders and he is just a great leader for us. I am really happy for this team to be able to stay together and play more hockey. At this point, we just hope to be able to spend more time together and hopefully, practice again on Monday. We know Salem State is a very good team and they are certainly on a high after winning their conference title. We are going to enjoy the time together and be ready to play our best on Saturday night.”

Salem State exploring national prominence with Zelzer leading the way in net

Salem State goalie Marcus Zelzer and his teammates will have their collective eyes on Williams come Saturday night (photo: Salem State Athletics).

With Saturday’s convincing 5-0 win over the defending champions from Plymouth State, Salem State extended its winning streak to 13 games and won not only the MASCAC title, but also the automatic qualifier to the NCAA tournament and a first-round date at Williams.

As has been the case all season, the Vikings win with great offensive balance, solid defense that can add to the offense, and great goaltending from the MASCAC Player of the Year Marcus Zelzer.

Zelzer, a junior, has an 18-1 record this season between the pipes for the Vikings. He is amongst the leaders in the nations in many statistics, including shutouts with five, a goals-against average of 1.78 and a save percentage of .932. He has not appeared in a game lost by the team since late November and has been the stalwart in goal that his teammates have complete confidence in. He will need to continue his current winning streak and level of play against the regular-season champions from the NESCAC, who received an at-large bid after losing their quarterfinal matchup with Tufts in the conference tournament.

The two teams and their coaches are not strangers to each other as they have faced each other many times dating back to the interlocking schedule shared by the then ECAC East based Vikings who played every year against NESCAC opponents.

Additionally, Salem State coach Bill O’Neill and Williams coach Bill Kangas are long-time friends further augmented by O’Neill’s son, Andrew, coaching at Williams for a season under Kangas after his graduation from Salem State.

While Williams looks to shake off the loss in their last game, the Vikings are riding high and playing their best hockey of the season at just the right time. Five players have surpassed the 20-point plateau, while 14 in total have exceeded 1- points offensively for Salem State. They have great depth and balanced scoring that also includes defensemen Gabriel Cromp and Brad Jones, who have added to the prolific scoring from Cam Moniz, Casey Miller, Brandon Platt, Michael Casale and Daniel Campbell to name a few.

The formula of pressure from four lines and solid team defense in front of great goaltending has proven to be a winner and now, the Vikings are looking for more than just being a qualifier in the national tournament — they want to show they are capable of winning it.

Salve Regina enters NCAA tournament relishing the underdog role

Freshman Blake Wojtala completed a playoff shutout hat trick in backing Salve Regina to its first ECAC Northeast title and automatic berth into the NCAA tournament (photo: Edward Habershaw).

You see the names St. Norbert, Hobart, Adrian and Trinity in the NCAA tournament and you aren’t surprised to see them amongst the competitors.

And then you see Salve Regina.

The Seahawks, from Rhode Island, have broken through in a big way for their program this year and their coach believes his team is not content with the milestones achieved to date, including the ECAC Northeast title.

“I think this team is out to put Salve Regina hockey on the map,” coach Andy Boschetto said. “All season long, the bigger the opponent, the better this team played and especially on the road. We went to Trinity, ranked No. 1 in the country at the time, and won. We played a tough Elmira team on the road and won and lost by just a goal to Hobart on the road. We played Teddy Bear night at Utica and had to beat Nichols and Endicott on the road to win our conference. Our guys are up for the challenge and it will be a very big challenge against Geneseo.”

The Seahawks did not yield a goal in their three wins on the way to the conference title. Goalie Blake Wojtala has shown maturity beyond his college experience as a freshman and the team has responded in front of him very well.

“Blake is very regimented in what he does,” said Boschetto. “He has a consistent routine and really believes in the guys in front of him as much as they believe in him. No doubt he has bailed us out more than a few times this season with how well he has played and making that big save when we really need it. He works hard as does the rest of the team and we are going to need that against a very strong offensive team like Geneseo.”

This could be the cliché battle between offense and defense as the Knights scored 17 goals in their conference tournament, while the Seahawks yielded zero.

“We know they are really talented up front,” noted Boschetto. “Don’t forget — we can score some goals, too. Our guys have stepped up to every challenge along the way and Geneseo is a big challenge, but one we are excited to prove what our program is about. It would be really nice to have practice next Monday.”

Offensive firepower the name of the game for Geneseo

Stephen Collins is the SUNYAC Player of the Year and has Genseso in the national tournament (photo: Dan Hickling).

In a season that has seen personal tragedy at the forefront of their minds, the Geneseo Knights have focused on motivating their game in remembrance of a fallen teammate and have proved to be an offensive juggernaut down the stretch and in their pursuit of the SUNYAC title, won by a 7-1 score over top-seeded Plattsburgh last Saturday night.

“I told the kids that they can honor ‘Hutch’ [the late Matthew Hutchinson] not by winning, but by how they live their lives every day and the people they become,” noted coach Chris Schultz. “Someone told me that a good team that has something to play for, a cause, can be really dangerous. I think we are that team and while we are still constantly taking the pulse of the team and emotion to make sure everyone is ok and coping, they have rallied around their fallen teammate.”

The Knights claim the Conference Player of the Year in forward Stephen Collins, who has recorded 22 goals and 23 assists during the season. Three other players have topped the 30-point plateau, including Trevor Hills, David Ripple and freshman Anthony Marra, who leads the team with 24 assists to go along with six goals that all add up to an impressive rookie campaign with 30 points.

During the SUNYAC tournament, Geneseo took down Potsdam 4-1 in the quarterfinals, Buffalo State on the road 6-1 and routed defending champion Plattsburgh 7-1 on the road. In the conference tournament, the Knights outscored their opponents by a 17-3 margin and look to carry that momentum and firepower into their first-round game at home on Saturday night against Salve Regina.

While the offense gets a lot of attention, Salve Regina coach Andy Boschetto points out that “they don’t give up very much either.”

Boschetto’s friend and recruiting competitor, Schultz, echoes the thought.

“You don’t win championships without good defense and good goaltending,” said Schultz. “We believe strongly in taking care of our own end and turning good defense into good offense. While we thought at the beginning of the year we would be challenged scoring goals, we have had the big line but great secondary scoring when we need it.”

Freshman Devin McDonald has emerged as the Knights’ No. 1 goaltender and has some impressive numbers of his own in his 22 games so far this season. McDonald has a 15-2-5 record in 21 starts, while recording two shutouts and impressive puck-stopping stats of a 2.48 GAA and a .921 save percentage. The Knights have always been a “take care of your own end” defensive team first and while the offense has been getting a lot of attention during the recent playoff run, Boschetto is right about them being a complete team that can shut down talented offensive opponents.

Two very poised freshman goaltenders will match up in this one on Saturday, so the offense will be counted on to do something no playoff team has done yet against Salve Regina — score a goal.

Hobart still searching for success on national stage

Hobart’s Mac Olson leads the offense for the Statesmen (photo: Kevin Colton/Hobart and William Smith).

With an overall record of 21-4-2 and second consecutive ECAC West championship in their firm grasp, the Hobart Statesmen have taken nothing for granted this season dating back to the season opener at Babson.

The goal has always been to play on a national stage and make sure that Hobart did everything possible to ensure an at-large bid coming from a conference that does not have an automatic qualifier.

“We have always put a premium on winning the league first,” said head coach Mark Taylor. “We play a challenging schedule and the only thing we can control is what we do in our games. You just focus on winning as many as you can and hope everything else takes care of itself.”

The Statesmen got their bid after dispatching Utica in the conference final by a 5-0 score and now as the top-seeded team in the East, must await the outcome of the Trinity-Massachusetts-Boston matchup to determine their quarterfinal opponent scheduled at home on March 19.

The Statesmen have received great leadership and output from a trio of seniors, including the Conference Player of the Year Mac Olson. Brad Robbins leads the team in goals with 19 and points with 31, while Ben Gamache matched the 19 number on the assist side to lead Hobart in that category. Overall, Hobart has outscored their opponents by a 111-50 margin with 19 different players recording goals.

“Our seniors have been great, especially after we graduated eight that were a big part of our team last season,” noted Taylor. “They also had to overcome the loss of our leading scorer Bo Webster from last season who would have been a senior with Mac and Benny. The group has been terrific and as my mentor Bill Beaney says, ‘You give kids with character a challenge and you will be surprised with what they can achieve.'”

On the back end, Hobart boasts two No. 1-caliber goaltenders in senior Lino Chimienti and sophomore Frank Oplinger. Both have split time this season and have put up very similar numbers in support of a team that has not posted consecutive losses the entire season.

Hobart has reached the Frozen Four twice in 2006 and 2009, but has not reached the title game in any of their four previous trips to the NCAA tournament. For Taylor, the focus has always been using the season, tough conference and nonconference games to prepare the team to earn a bid and play their best hockey with a chance to win the biggest prize of the season.

“We play the schedule we do to make sure we can win our conference first,” noted Taylor. “We schedule challenging nonconference opponents to help us get better and because those games have such a big impact on our chance for a NCAA bid without the automatic qualifier for our conference. It is all preparation for where we want to be in the spring.”

Hobart will host their quarterfinal matchup next weekend and that should scare any opponent traveling to upstate New York to play. The Statesmen are a perfect 13-0-0 on home ice this season, including 6-0-0 against nonconference opponents. One more home win will put them in Lake Placid and chance to get beyond the semifinal round in the Frozen Four.

The final eight

Meghan Fonfara of Elmira (Elmira Athletics)
Meghan Fonfara and Elmira travel to face Middlebury. (Elmira Athletics)

Two weekends left. Eight teams.

Game on.

The NCAA Division III women’s tournament gets underway this weekend as the top four teams in the country host quarterfinal matchups on home ice.

In the lone game Friday night, No. 3 Wisconsin-River Falls hosts No. 7 St. Thomas at the Hunt Arena.

The two teams tied the season series with the home team winning each — St. Thomas 2-1 on Oct. 31 and Wis.-River Falls 3-0 on Jan. 27. The Falcons are riding a six-game unbeaten streak, going 5-0-1 in their last six games, while the Tommies are in the midst of a seven-game unbeaten streak, compiling a 6-0-1 mark in that span.

WIAC playoff champion River Falls boasts WIAC Player of the Year Chloe Kinsel, who led the team with 24 goals and 43 points, while Dani Sibley and Carly Moran also combined for 40 goals this season. Goaltender Angie Hall has been dazzling: 21-5-2, a 1.63 goals-against average, and a .919 save percentage speak for themselves.

For St. Thomas, the MIAC playoff champs, Kathryn Larson has netted 13 goals and 28 points this season. Kaylee Druk has posted 10 goals and in goal, Mackenzie Torpy is 20-3-2 with a 1.55 GAA and a .930 save percentage.

Saturday, top-ranked Plattsburgh hosts No. 6 Amherst at the Stafford Ice Arena, No. 4 Middlebury plays host to the lone unranked team in the field, Massachusetts-Boston, at the Kenyon Arena, and then the Arrington Ice Arena is the venue as No. 2 Adrian brings in fifth-ranked Elmira.

Plattsburgh goalie Camille Leonard has mind-boggling numbers for the ECAC West titlists: 24-1-0, 0.61 GAA, and a .966 save percentage. She only allowed 15 goals all year and rang up 14 shutouts. Up front, six players tallied more than 10 goals, with Melissa Sheeran leading the way with 26.

Amherst was the NESCAC tournament runner-up and is led up front by the Alex Toupal-Erin Martin-Eileen Harris trio and the 57 goals the three scored this season. In net, Sabrina Dobbins has been phenomenal with a 16-2-3 mark, 1.40 GAA, and a .946 save percentage.

NESCAC champ Middlebury has sniper and conference Player of the Year Maddie Winslow and her 40 points (17 goals), Jessica Young’s 11 goals, and steady defender Julia Wardwell to go along with netminder Julia Neuburger’s 12 wins, 1.48 GAA, and .931 save percentage.

Massachusetts-Boston upset the favored Norwich team in the NEHC finals and has goaltender Rachel Myette (13-7-0, 1.55 GAA, .942 save percentage) and Jenny Currie’s 17 goals guiding the path to the tournament. Alexandra Karlis led the club with 16 assists.

In Adrian, the NCHA champion Bulldogs have a strong 1-2 punch in net with Jade Walsh and Brooke Gibson and either one is capable and ready this time of year. Kristin Lewicki notched 32 goals this year and Kaylyn Schroka 19 for the 25-2-1 Adrian squad.

On the other side, Elmira’s offense is topped by Olivia Nystrom’s 15 goals and 10 goals each from Maddie Evangelous and Meghan Fonfara. The Soaring Eagles, who lost to Utica in the ECAC West semifinals, also have a tough combo in goal with Kelcey Crawford and Kyle Nelson.

Then again, none of these stats matter all that much once this weekend arrives.

Expect hard-fought games and each player leaving it all on the ice. This is when it all matters.

Game on.

Again a champion, Michigan Tech wants to put accomplishment in rearview mirror

Tyler Heinonen and Michigan Tech earned the WCHA’s top playoff seed (photo: Rachel Lewis).

Between Marquette and Houghton on U.S. Highway 41 in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula lies the town of Champion.

This, according to Michigan Tech coach Mel Pearson, was about where the Huskies’ team bus was on Saturday night when the team got the news, via text message: Bemidji State had defeated Minnesota State 1-0 in Mankato, which meant that the Huskies were co-champions of the WCHA.

“It was a weird way to find out and celebrate a championship, but it doesn’t deter from it,” Pearson said. “I’m really proud of the players and the job they did the second half.”

The Huskies were returning to Houghton after finishing off a sweep of archrival Northern Michigan. And maybe their celebration in a place called Champion is apocryphal — it’s a bit on the nose. But considering it’s their first MacNaughton Cup since 1975-76, Pearson might be forgiven for adding a little flair to an already pretty good story.

The Huskies were three points behind co-champions Minnesota State at the holiday break. They lost just one conference game since then.

“We’ve been in playoff mode for the whole second half,” Pearson said. “We were just battling to get home ice. Then once we got that, we realize, ‘Wow, we have a chance to get first place.'”

Tech has Bemidji State to thank for that. Minnesota State thumped the Beavers 6-1 in Friday night’s series opener — then celebrated on the ice with the MacNaughton Cup. On Saturday, the Beavers stole a 1-0 win to deny the Mavericks the outright title.

Pearson said the Huskies celebrated a little when they got back to Houghton, but all of that is over for now.

“You have to put it in your rearview mirror,” Pearson said. “That’s easy for coaches, but as a player you have to encourage them to do that because there’s a bigger prize that we’re looking to get.”

Bemidji State’s win on Saturday also gave the Huskies the No. 1 seed in the playoffs, and they’ll take on eighth-seeded Alaska in first-round action this weekend in Houghton.

The Nanooks have been in playoff mode for the past month, as they needed a series sweep against instate rivals Alaska-Anchorage to even get into the playoffs.

“It’s Game 7,” Alaska assistant coach Lance West told the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner of the Nanooks’ eventual 3-2 win over the Seawolves. “That’s what it is. It’s Game 7 of the regular season to move on to the playoffs. You live for those games, everybody does.”

Meanwhile, Minnesota State earned the No. 2 seed in the tournament and will try to shake off a loss that could have given them the outright league title. They take on Lake Superior State in a rematch of last year’s first round.

“It’s over,” Mavericks coach Mike Hastings said. “The regular season is over. Nobody’s got a win or a loss.”

Here’s a look at the playoff matchups:

1 Michigan Tech vs. 8 Alaska

These teams met two weeks ago in Houghton. Although the Huskies swept the Nanooks, both were closer calls than the Huskies would have preferred. Tech won 6-5 on Friday but blew a 4-0 lead. The Huskies won 3-2 in overtime in the series finale. Overall, Tech is 4-0 against the Nanooks this season, as they won both games in Fairbanks on Nov. 27-28.

About the Huskies

Record: 21-8-5 (18-7-3 WCHA)

Top scorers: Alex Petan (17-13–30), Tyler Heinonen (15-10–25), Malcolm Gould (8-16–24), Joel L’Esperance (13-10–23)

Top defensemen: Matt Roy (7-12–19), Shane Hanna (3-15–19)

Top goalie: Jamie Phillips (21-7-5, .921, 2.00)

X-factor: The Huskies are going to score — their 111 goals in 34 games are most in the conference and they’re the only team in the league averaging more than three goals per game. The biggest question is how good Phillips and the defense are going to be. They gave up seven goals against Alaska two weeks ago but just one last weekend against Northern Michigan.

That’s a fact: Michigan Tech has won the MacNaughton Cup eight times, but before this season all of those titles were before 1976. The Huskies are still looking for their first Broadmoor Trophy title, which they can do by winning the WCHA tournament.

About the Nanooks

Record: 10-20-4 (8-16-4 WCHA)

Top scorers: Tyler Morley (16-12–29), Nolan Huysmans (7-14–21), Peter Krieger (4-16–20), Marcus Basara (7-10–17)

Top defensemen: Zach Frye (3-12–15), Josh Atkinson (3-11–14)

Top goalies: Davis Jones (5-12-1, .899, 3.15), Jesse Jenks (5-8-3, .911; 2.70)

X-factor: Morley missed the entire month of February with an upper-body injury suffered in a game at Wisconsin. It’s not a coincidence that the Nanooks won just one of those games — a 2-1 decision against Bowling Green on Feb. 19. Morley returned to the ice last weekend against Alaska-Anchorage and recorded four points (2-2) as UAF got the sweep.

That’s a fact: The Nanooks missed out on the playoffs last season after some minor academic violations turned into a one-year playoff ban and vacated wins for the program. They’re still looking for their first playoff series victory as a member of the WCHA: In 2013-14 they were upset by Alaska-Anchorage. Alaska’s last playoff series victory was 2011, when it swept Michigan State in a CCHA first-round series.

2 Minnesota State vs. 7 Lake Superior State

This is a rematch of a first-round matchup from a year ago, one in which the Mavericks swept the Lakers 9-2 and 4-2 to move on to the Final Five. The two teams met once this season, in Mankato with Minnesota State winning 8-0 and 5-1. The Mavericks, who are the defending WCHA tournament champions, have won all 10 games in the all-time series.

About the Mavericks

Record: 18-11-7 (16-5-7 WCHA)

Top scorers: Teddy Blueger (10-23–33), Bryce Gervais (14-8–22), C.J. Franklin (14-7–21), Michael Huntebrinker (7-12–19)

Top defensemen: Casey Nelson (4-16–20), Jon Jutzi (4-7–11)

Top goalie: Cole Huggins (10-9-2, .912, 1.94)

X-factor: Gervais, who has 65 career goals, comes to play in the postseason, it seems. In 15 career playoff games in his first three seasons, the senior forward has racked up nine goals and five assists.

That’s a fact: When it comes to puck possession, the WCHA’s regular season co-champions are unmatched. They lead the nation in shots on goal allowed per game at 20.92 and outshoot their opponents by 13 shots per game, also best in the country.

About the Lakers

Record: 13-20-5 (10-13-5 WCHA)

Top scorers: J.T. Henke (9-11–20), Gage Torrel (8-11–19), Mitch Hults (8-10–18), Anthony Nellis (4-12–16)

Top defensemen: Owen Headrick (4-7–11), James Roll (1-6–7)

Top goalie: Gordon Defiel (10-12-4, .924, 2.44)

X-factor: How ready are the Lakers’ freshmen for the playoffs? Led by Torrel, the group includes six of the team’s top eight point scorers. Including Henke, a sophomore transfer from Maine, the Lakers’ 11 newcomers had 121 points.

That’s a fact: Lake Superior State enters the postseason on a good run, going 4-3-1 in its final eight games. That includes a road victory at Alaska-Anchorage and another, on the final day of the regular season, at Ferris State.

3 Bowling Green vs. 6 Bemidji State

Bowling Green was still in contention to make the MacNaughton Cup a three-way tie until Friday night, when a wild 7-5 loss to Alabama-Huntsville knocked the Falcons out of the running. Instead, they’ll have to settle for the No. 3 seed and a series with Bemidji State, a team that they swept Dec. 11-12 in Bemidji.

Bowling Green’s Chris Nell allowed one goal in two games against Bemidji State this season (photo: Omar Phillips).

About the Falcons

Record: 20-12-6 (16-7-5 WCHA)

Top scorers: Mark Cooper (14-14–28), Brandon Hawkins (12-14–26), Matt Pohlkamp (7-15–22), Kevin Dufour (13-6–19)

Top defensemen: Sean Walker (4-17–21), Mark Friedman (4-16–20)

Top goalie: Chris Nell (16-9-6, .930, 1.90)

X-factor: Cooper, the Falcons’ leading scorer, has come on strong down the stretch. The senior has at least a point in each of Bowling Green’s last five games, including three assists in Saturday’s 5-0 win over Alabama-Huntsville.

That’s a fact: With 83 goals allowed on the season, Bowling Green has a chance to break the program record for fewest goals allowed in a season. The 1975-76 team allowed a program-low 90 goals in 32 games.

About the Beavers

Record: 16-14-6 (11-12-5 WCHA)

Top scorers: Brendan Harms (8-17–25), Gerry Fitzgerald (13-10–23), Markus Gerbrandt (7-16–23), Cory Ward (8-10–19)

Top defensemen: Graeme McCormack (6-14–20), Ruslan Pedan (3-6–9)

Top goalie: Michael Bitzer (12-14-5, .918, 2.07)

X-factor: McCormack, the senior captain, has been an underrated part of the team’s offense this season. His 20 points are tied for second in the league, but if the Beavers can get on the power play, watch out: Fourteen of those 20 points were on the man advantage, which is best among all players in the league this season.

That’s a fact: The Beavers have been a much better road team this season than they have been in Bemidji. They’re 10-6-2 away from the Sanford Center. They’ll be looking for their first playoff series victory since 2010-11, when they upset Omaha on the road and made it all the way to the Final Five semifinals.

4 Ferris State vs. 5 Northern Michigan

Getting the fourth and final home-ice spot came down to the last weekend of the season, and the Bulldogs (who split with Lake Superior State) leapfrogged the Wildcats (who were swept by Michigan Tech), winning the right to be the host of this series by just one point. The teams played four times this season, splitting each series. Ferris State had the scoring advantage, 13-9.

About the Bulldogs

Record: 15-14-6 (13-11-4 WCHA)

Top scorers: Gerald Mayhew (11-20–31), Corey Mackin (9-14–23), Chad McDonald (9-12–21), Kyle Schempp (7-14–21)

Top defensemen: Brandon Anselmini (1-14–15), Simon Denis (7-6–13)

Top goalie: Darren Smith (12-9-5, .920, 2.30)

X-factor: As predicted by the league’s coaches in the preseason, Mackin has been the top freshman in the WCHA this season. He led league rookies with nine goals and 23 points overall, 21 points in conference play. The next-closest first-year player was four points behind him.

That’s a fact: The Bulldogs have one victory in their last six games, a stretch that followed an eight-game unbeaten streak (6-0-2). Ferris State was swept in just one WCHA series this season, Feb. 26-27 at Bowling Green.

About the Wildcats

Record: 15-14-7 (12-11-5 WCHA)

Top scorers: Darren Nowick (13-17–30), Dominik Shine (14-15–29), Gerard Hanson (3-18–21), Robbie Payne (11-7–18)

Top defensemen: Brock Maschmeyer (5-8–13), Barrett Kaib (4-8–12)

Top goalie: Mathias Dahlström (7-3-1, .914, 2.37)

X-factor: Dahlström, a senior, recovered from injury and returned between the posts in the second half of the season, playing in 12 games. But waiting in the wings if the Wildcats need him is freshman Atte Tolvanen, who played in 24 games and has a .929 save percentage.

That’s a fact: Northern Michigan’s finish was its best since 2009-10 when it finished fourth in the CCHA with a 13-9-6 conference record. The Wildcats advanced to the conference title game that season where they lost to Michigan but earned a spot in the NCAA tournament.

Ice chips

• Alaska-Anchorage and Alabama-Huntsville are sitting out the WCHA playoffs. The Seawolves are out for the second year in a row after getting swept by Alaska on the final weekend of the season. Although they were unable to climb out of last place, the Chargers finished the season strong, scoring league points in all but one of their final seven series.

• WCHA players of the week were Alaska forward Morley (offensive), Michigan Tech goalie Phillips (defensive) and Bowling Green forward Stephen Baylis (rookie).

NCHC unveils All-Conference squads for 2015-16 season

Denver’s Will Butcher joined Pioneers teammate Danton Heinen on the NCHC All-Conference First Team (photo: Candace Horgan).

Denver, North Dakota and St. Cloud State have two players each on the NCHC All-Conference First Team announced Wednesday.

The conference also revealed the All-Conference Second Team and a team of All-Conference honorable mentions.

2015-16 NCHC First Team All-Conference

Player's NamePositionClassSchool
Danton HeinenFSo.Denver
Brock BoeserFFr.North Dakota
Drake CaggiulaFSr.North Dakota
Ethan ProwDSr.St. Cloud State
Will ButcherDJr.Denver
Charlie LindgrenGJr.St. Cloud State

2015-16 NCHC Second Team All-Conference

Player's NamePositionClassSchool
Joey BenikFSr.St. Cloud State
Jake GuentzelFJr.Nebraska-Omaha
Kalle KossilaFSr.St. Cloud State
Troy StecherDJr.North Dakota
Andy WelinskiDSr.Minnesota-Duluth
Cam JohnsonGSo.North Dakota

2015-16 NCHC Honorable Mention All-Conference

Player's NamePositionClassSchool
Nick SchmaltzFSo.North Dakota
Trevor MooreFJr.Denver
Sean KuralyFSr.Miami
Louie BelpedioDSo.Miami
Paul LaDueDJr.North Dakota
Kasimir KaskisuoGSo.Minnesota-Duluth

Robert Morris places pair on Atlantic Hockey All-Conference First Team

Robert Morris senior Zac Lynch is one of two Colonials to make the Atlantic Hockey All-Conference First Team for the 2015-16 season (photo: Candace Horgan).

Atlantic Hockey on Wednesday announced its three All-Conference Teams.

2015-16 Atlantic Hockey First Team All-Conference

Player's NamePositionClassSchool
Zac LynchFSr.Robert Morris
Greg GibsonFSr.Robert Morris
Max FrenchFJr.Bentley
Shane ConacherFJr.Canisius
Chase NorrishDSo.RIT
Lester LancasterDFr.Mercyhurst
Shane StarrettGFr.Air Force

2015-16 Atlantic Hockey Second Team All-Conference

Player's NamePositionClassSchool
Justin DanforthFJr.Sacred Heart
Ralph CuddemiFSr.Canisius
Andrew GladiukFSr.Bentley
Tyson WilsonDSr.Robert Morris
Johnny HrabovskyDJr.Air Force
Parker GahagenGJr.Army West Point

2015-16 Atlantic Hockey Third Team All-Conference

Player's NamePositionClassSchool
Josh MitchellFSr.RIT
Brandon DenhamFSr.Robert Morris
Derek BarachFFr.Mercyhurst
Brady NorrishDSo.RIT
Chase GolightlyDSr.Robert Morris
Terry ShaferGSr.Robert Morris

One week out, and some new at-large teams appear in the field

Charlie Sampair and Minnesota-Duluth have won four straight games to climb to 13th in the PairWise Rankings (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

It’s time once again to do what we like to call Bracketology, college hockey style. It’s our weekly look at how I believe the NCAA tournament will wind up come selection time.

It’s a look into what are the possible thought processes behind selecting and seeding the NCAA tournament teams.

We’ll keep bringing you a new one every week until we make our final picks before the field is announced on March 20.

Those of you that are veterans of the college hockey scene know that it is all about the PairWise Rankings. This is USCHO’s numerical approach that simulates the way the NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey committee chooses the teams that make the NCAA tournament.

Since USCHO began the PairWise Rankings, we have correctly identified all of the teams that have been selected to the NCAA tournament.

I am the only prognosticator to have correctly predicted the exact brackets for the NCAA tournament in four of the last five years, meaning that I have predicted how the committee thought when putting together the brackets.

This is not a be-all, end-all analysis of the bracket. I am trying to give you, the reader, an idea of what the committee might be thinking and not exactly what they are thinking.

If you want to skip the inner workings and get to the results of the analysis, then click here.

Here are the facts:

• Sixteen teams are selected to participate in the national tournament.

• There are four regional sites (East — Albany, N.Y.; Northeast — Worcester, Mass.; Midwest — Cincinnati; West — St. Paul, Minn.).

• A host institution that is invited to the tournament plays in the regional for which it is the host and cannot be moved. There are four host institutions this year: Union in Albany, Holy Cross in Worcester, Miami in Cincinnati and Minnesota in St. Paul.

• Seedings will not be switched. To avoid undesirable first-round matchups, including intraconference games (see below), teams will be moved among regionals, not reseeded.

Here are the NCAA’s guidelines on the matter, from the 2016 pre-championship manual:

In setting up the tournament, the committee begins with a list of priorities to ensure a successful tournament on all fronts, including competitive equity, financial success and the likelihood of a playoff-type atmosphere at each regional site. For this model, the following is a basic set of priorities:

1. Once the six automatic qualifiers and 10 at-large teams are selected, the next step is to develop four groups from the committee’s rankings of 1-16. The top four teams are No. 1 seeds and will be placed in the bracket so that if all four teams advance to the Men’s Frozen Four, the No. 1 seed will play the No. 4 seed and the No. 2 seed will play the No. 3 seed in the semifinals. The next four are targeted as No. 2 seeds. The next four are No. 3 seeds and the last four are No. 4 seeds.

2. Step two is to place the home teams. Host institutions that qualify will be placed at home.

3. Step three is to fill in the bracket so that first-round conference matchups are avoided, unless it corrupts the integrity of the bracket. If five or more teams from one conference are selected to the championship, then the integrity of the bracket will be protected (i.e., maintaining the pairing process according to seed will take priority over avoidance of first-round conference matchups). To complete each regional, the committee assigns one team from each of the remaining seeded groups so there is a No. 1, No. 2, No. 3 and No. 4 seed at each regional site.

Given these facts, here is the top 16 of the current PairWise Rankings (PWR), and the conference leaders or highest remaining seed in the conference playoffs through all games as of March 9:

1 North Dakota
2 Quinnipiac
3 St. Cloud State
4 Providence
5 Boston College
6t Denver
6t Yale
8t Michigan
8t Boston University
10 Notre Dame
11 Harvard
12 Massachusetts-Lowell
13 Minnesota-Duluth
14 Michigan Tech
15 Omaha
16 Cornell
17t Minnesota
21 Robert Morris

Current conference leaders based on winning percentage or highest remaining seeds remaining in conference tournaments:

Atlantic Hockey: Robert Morris
Big Ten: Minnesota
ECAC Hockey: Quinnipiac
Hockey East: Boston College
NCHC: North Dakota
WCHA: Michigan Tech (No. 1 seed in WCHA tournament)

Notes

• Bracketology assumes that the season has ended and there are no more games to be played — i.e., the NCAA tournament starts tomorrow.

• For Big Ten teams, who have two games left before the postseason starts, I will be using winning percentage, not points accumulated, to determine the current leader. This team is my assumed conference tournament champion.

• For leagues whose regular season is complete, the highest seed remaining in the conference tournament is my assumed conference tournament champion.

Step one

From the committee’s report, choose the 16 teams in the tournament.

We break ties in the PWR by looking at the individual comparisons among the tied teams, and add in any current league leaders that are not currently in the top 16. The only teams that are not are Minnesota and Robert Morris.

From there, we can start looking at the ties and bubbles in a more detailed fashion.

The ties and bubbles consist of Denver and Yale, and Notre Dame and Boston University.

We break all of our ties based upon the RPI.

Therefore, the 16 teams in the tournament, in rank order, are:

1 North Dakota
2 Quinnipiac
3 St. Cloud State
4 Providence
5 Boston College
6 Denver
7 Yale
8 Michigan
9 Boston University
10 Notre Dame
11 Harvard
12 Massachusetts-Lowell
13 Minnesota-Duluth
14 Michigan Tech
15 Minnesota
16 Robert Morris

Step two

Now it’s time to assign the seeds.

No. 1 seeds: North Dakota, Quinnipiac, St. Cloud State, Providence

No. 2 seeds: Boston College, Denver, Yale, Michigan

No. 3 seeds: Boston University, Notre Dame, Harvard, Massachusetts-Lowell

No. 4 seeds: Minnesota-Duluth, Michigan Tech, Minnesota, Robert Morris

Step three

Place the No. 1 seeds in regionals.

No. 1 North Dakota is placed in the West Regional in St. Paul.
No. 2 Quinnipiac is placed in the Northeast Regional in Worcester.
No. 3 St. Cloud State is placed in the Midwest Regional in Cincinnati.
No. 4 Providence is placed in the East Regional in Albany.

Step four

Now we place the other 12 teams so as to avoid intraconference matchups if possible.

Begin by filling in each bracket by banding groups. Remember that teams are not assigned to the regional closest to their campus sites by ranking order within the banding (unless you are a host school, in which case you must be assigned to your home regional).

If this is the case, as it was last year, then the committee should seed so that the quarterfinals are seeded such that the four regional championships would be played by No. 1 vs. No. 8, No. 2 vs. No. 7, No. 3 vs. No. 6 and No. 4 vs. No. 5.

So therefore:

No. 2 seeds

No. 8 Michigan is placed in No. 1 North Dakota’s regional, the West Regional.
No. 7 Yale is placed in No. 2 Quinnipiac’s regional, the Northeast Regional.
No. 6 Denver is placed in No. 3 St. Cloud State’s regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 5 Boston College is placed in No. 4 Providence’s regional, the East Regional.

No. 3 seeds

Our bracketing system has one regional containing seeds 1, 8, 9, and 16; another with 2, 7, 10 and 15; another with 3, 6, 11 and 14; and another with 4, 5, 12 and 13.

No. 9 Boston University is placed in No. 8 Michigan’s regional, the West Regional.
No. 10 Notre Dame is placed in No. 7 Yale’s regional, the East Regional.
No. 11 Harvard is placed in No. 6 Denver’s regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 12 Massachusetts-Lowell is placed in No. 5 Boston College’s regional, the East Regional.

No. 4 seeds

One more time, taking No. 16 vs. No. 1, No. 15 vs. No. 2, etc.

Since Minnesota is a host institution, we must place Minnesota in the West Regional.

No. 15 Minnesota is sent to No. 1 North Dakota’s regional, the West Regional.
No. 16 Robert Morris is sent to No. 2 Quinnipiac’s regional, the Northeast Regional.
No. 14 Michigan Tech is sent to No. 3 St. Cloud State’s regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 13 Minnesota-Duluth is sent to No. 4 Providence’s regional, the East Regional.

The brackets as we have set them up:

East Regional (Albany):
13 Minnesota-Duluth vs. 4 Providence
12 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 5 Boston College

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
16 Robert Morris vs. 2 Quinnipiac
10 Notre Dame vs 7 Yale

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
14 Michigan Tech vs. 3 St. Cloud State
11 Harvard vs. 6 Denver

West Regional (St. Paul):
15 Minnesota vs. 1 North Dakota
9 Boston University vs. 8 Michigan

Our first concern is avoiding intraconference matchups. We have Massachusetts-Lowell vs. Boston College.

Like we did last week, let’s take a look at the third band and attendance drivers. We have to get Massachusetts-Lowell out of that spot, and the only team that can slot in there is Harvard, because all the other teams are Hockey East teams in that third band.

Therefore we know Harvard will play Boston College in Albany.

Now, how about the rest?

We have stated in previous blog posts that we would love to see Notre Dame in Cincinnati. So we put Notre Dame there.

Now, does Massachusetts-Lowell or Boston University get to go to Worcester? The higher seed does.

Thus, we have:

East Regional (Albany):
13 Minnesota-Duluth vs. 4 Providence
11 Harvard vs. 5 Boston College

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
16 Robert Morris vs. 2 Quinnipiac
9 Boston University vs 7 Yale

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
14 Michigan Tech vs. 3 St. Cloud State
10 Notre Dame vs. 6 Denver

West Regional (St. Paul):
15 Minnesota vs. 1 North Dakota
12 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 8 Michigan

We move onto attendance aspects of the bracket.

I still like Michigan in Cincinnati, so we swap the Wolverines with Denver.

East Regional (Albany):
13 Minnesota-Duluth vs. 4 Providence
11 Harvard vs. 5 Boston College

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
16 Robert Morris vs. 2 Quinnipiac
9 Boston University vs 7 Yale

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
14 Michigan Tech vs. 3 St. Cloud State
10 Notre Dame vs. 8 Michigan

West Regional (St. Paul):
15 Minnesota vs. 1 North Dakota
12 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 6 Denver

So that’s about all we can do for this week.

See you here next week for the final Bracketology before the conference championship weekend starts.

Here’s a summary of everything that we have covered.

This week’s brackets

East Regional (Albany):
13 Minnesota-Duluth vs. 4 Providence
11 Harvard vs. 5 Boston College

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
16 Robert Morris vs. 2 Quinnipiac
9 Boston University vs 7 Yale

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
14 Michigan Tech vs. 3 St. Cloud State
10 Notre Dame vs. 8 Michigan

West Regional (St. Paul):
15 Minnesota vs. 1 North Dakota
12 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 6 Denver

Conference breakdowns

Hockey East — 5
NCHC — 4
ECAC Hockey — 3
Big Ten — 2
WCHA — 1
Atlantic Hockey — 1

On the move

In: Minnesota-Duluth, Michigan Tech

Out: Omaha, Minnesota State

Attendance woes?

Cincinnati is looking a little better this week.

Last week’s brackets

East Regional (Albany):
13 Omaha vs. 4 Providence
11 Harvard vs. 5 Boston College

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
16 Minnesota State vs. 1 Quinnipiac
10 Boston University vs 8 Yale

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
15 Robert Morris vs. 3 St. Cloud State
9 Notre Dame vs. 6 Michigan

West Regional (St. Paul):
14 Minnesota vs. 2 North Dakota
12 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 7 Denver

Canisius emerges with a rivalry victory and an extended season

Canisius’ Simon Hofley allowed just one goal over the final two games of the Atlantic Hockey first-round series against Niagara (photo: Omar Phillips).

The drama and excitement surrounding hockey playoffs at any level has no comparison. The twists and turns at every motion, the emotion of the battle and the energy expended to win even a single game is like nothing else in sports.

People who sit and watch a hockey playoff game can’t help but be wrapped up in the atmosphere on the ice. Overtime playoff hockey is a whole other beast, one that causes aging to happen ungracefully and gray hair to sprout almost immediately.

Just ask the Canisius Golden Griffins, who had a front-row seat to the women’s hockey championship weekend for the CHA. They had a chance to sit and wait for their playoff games against Niagara while watching the semifinals at Buffalo’s HarborCenter on Friday. They had an especially good seat for the Syracuse-Penn State game, which saw the Nittany Lions erase a two-goal, third-period deficit to force overtime.

One overtime is something everyone can enjoy. Three overtimes, however, turns it into something totally different. As Niagara and Canisius waited for their game to start roughly an hour late, the nearly four-hour, triple-overtime, 3-2 Syracuse victory was something they knew needed to be enjoyed, not rushed.

“It was a surface distraction for both teams,” said Canisius coach Dave Smith. “But immediately after you looked past that distraction, it was absolutely great. You couldn’t help but watch it with that youthful enthusiasm that comes with watching playoff hockey. Our guys knew they would play at a different time, but they knew it was special even as they sat around and watched the game.

“It was good to work on our routine during the week, knowing there was a chance at overtime [in the earlier games],” said Smith. “Before the game ended, we let our captains dictate what the team was doing, and our guys were doing what they needed to do to stay warm — both figuratively and literally since it was cold in the rink.”

Playoff hockey drama in Buffalo is nothing new, so it was a good time for the Griffins to sit back and enjoy it as opposed to partake in it, especially since their own story was about to be written. They’ve advanced to Rochester each of the past three seasons, winning one championship and appearing in another tournament final. This year, they found themselves matched up in the first round with their biggest rival, the Niagara Purple Eagles, in an unexpected return bout to the Griffs’ three-point weekend in the Battle of the Bridge earlier in the year.

“It definitely added something having a series that included bragging rights in Western New York,” said Smith. “In some regards, that even took precedence over the fact that this was a playoff matchup.”

In that delayed start first game, Canisius outshot Niagara by nearly double (33-17), but the Purple Eagles cashed in twice on five shots in the first period en route to a surprising 3-2 victory. For Niagara, Jackson Teichroeb made 30 saves and put Canisius in a spot it became known for putting opponents through the last three years — potentially losing a playoff series in which it expected to come in and win.

“I thought we dominated on Friday, but we made a couple of errors and it cost us the game,” said Smith. “That really shook us down to the core. This particular team had never really had its back to the wall before, and now they’ve lost to the No. 10 seed who is also a rival in Western New York.”

With Niagara hungry and Canisius with their back to the wall, Saturday turned into an instant classic, with the Griffs winning a 1-0 game in which the teams combined for 64 shots. Simon Hofley made 33 saves in net, and even though Teichroeb was once again on point, it was a duel that turned momentum back to the blue and gold.

The next night, in Game 3, Canisius regained its mojo and took the series with a 4-1 win in a game in which it opened up a 3-0 lead in the third period.

“I thought Saturday was a tremendous hockey game,” said Smith. “It was a dangerous game, and we were able to get through it. Once we reached Sunday, we were able to say, ‘OK, we’ve done this before’ and play with more confidence. We had the school band out and a great crowd on hand, and our attitude shifted to just going out and getting it done.”

The Griffs’ reward for winning is the normally unenviable trip west to take on Air Force. The Falcons are 14-6 lifetime in Atlantic Hockey home postseason games, having won seven of nine series played at Cadet Ice Arena.

Air Force has been swept at home only four times in the regular season or the playoffs, but two of them, including the only one in the postseason, has come at the hands of Canisius.

“It’s a tribute to our conditioning plan,” said Smith. “People talk all the time about the altitude, but we believe we can plan to play out there. It’s a little humorous, but we have to feed our guys. We go to five meals per day since we find that our guys respond well after eating. It keeps them charged up, and it helps prepare for the physical things because you have to be ready for everything.”

Breaking down the quarterfinals

Mercyhurst and RIT play a quarterfinal series in Erie this weekend (photo: Omar Phillips).

Canisius-Air Force is one of four matchups that will determine who moves onto Blue Cross Arena for single-elimination games and a shot at the ultimate prize of a trip to the NCAA tournament.

Canisius is looking for its fourth straight trip to Rochester, while Air Force seeks its first trip it last won it all in 2012. The Falcons took the trip east this year, taking three points in late January from Canisius. They haven’t played in Colorado since the last weekend last year, when Air Force and Canisius split.

Rochester Institute of Technology heads to Mercyhurst for a rematch of the last weekend of the regular season. It’s also a rematch of last year’s Atlantic Hockey championship, which the Tigers won 5-1 before over 3,500 hometown fans at Blue Cross.

The Lakers sweep to end the season forced a 2-2 split on the season after RIT swept them in a home-and-home series in early January.

At least one “eastern” team will advance to Rochester for the first time since Connecticut in 2013 after Army West Point heads to Holy Cross. Holy Cross last advanced during the 2011 season, but Army seeks its first trip to the semifinal round since 2008. That year, the 10-team Atlantic Hockey standings used a final five format, with the fourth and fifth seeds meeting in a play-in game after the quarterfinals to determine who’d meet the top seed in the semifinals.

This season, the teams met twice in February at West Point, with the Black Knights taking three points.

And in the last matchup, Bentley heads to top-seeded Robert Morris. The Colonials won the league in 2014 and seek their third consecutive trip to Rochester after winning their second consecutive regular season crown. Bentley, meanwhile, is looking to qualify for the semifinals for the first time since 2009.

Strike up the band

It’s worth noting that the playoffs brought out the best in pep bands. The pep band played Sunday for the Canisius Golden Griffins, but my tap of the stick goes to Sacred Heart’s band. Playing Saturday at Bentley, they turned around and made the three-hour drive back to Fairfield, Conn., for the Pioneers’ women’s basketball game on Sunday. Following the hoops game, they turned around and drove right back to the Boston area for Game 3 of what might’ve been the most even, most complete series played all weekend.

There’s something about a band playing a fight song that is so essentially college. Fight songs are an intricate part of some schools’ identities, and it adds something that simply can’t be recreated in the professional ranks. Some of the larger, more well-known schools like Cornell or Boston University have ingrained cultures thanks to their bands. Here’s to hoping we see more of this as the seasons go on.

The final word

Since this is my final weekly column of the year (Chris brings us home next week), I wanted to take an opportunity to send out some recognition. This is, as always, a labor of love, and it’s a passion that grows more and more each year I have the opportunity to be a part of the amazing hockey community and culture. But I wanted to single out a few in particular:

• My editor, Todd Milewski, does more yeoman’s work than anyone through the course of the year. He’s been an absolute godsend in terms of patience and feedback, and he’s probably the best person we could all ask to work for. I’ve really grown to appreciate the background more and more, and how much really goes into it. The discussions, which I’m sure have occasionally left him annoyed with me, have helped me grow every time. I also want to thank him in particular for showing me that Wisconsin brats are one of the single greatest things on the planet.

• The Atlantic Hockey coaches deserve special recognition for all that they do and the time they take to deal with us pesky media folks. They’ve been an absolute thrill to talk to, this year more than others, and I think our league in particular has a special kinship that other leagues don’t enjoy. There’s something that’s pure about the game in this league, and it’s because of what you do.

• A big thank you to the coaches at Bentley — Ryan Soderquist, Ben Murphy and Steve Silverthorn — for continually teaching me about the game. Another big thank you to Kyle Mack for providing me with the occasional proofread and advice. Hard to believe I’ve been there for eight seasons now, and there’s no group that makes game day better.

• Thanks to Chris Lerch, my partner for the past three seasons. I don’t think anyone realizes the wealth of knowledge Chris brings to the table, and one of my favorite pastimes will be sharing stories with him and Ed Trefzger. It’s funny to think that because of those two and Scott Biggar, I probably would’ve gone to RIT if I had the chance to do it all over again. Chris is an amazing ally to have, and I would be lost if I didn’t have him to work with. Plus, I found out this year that like me, he’s a huge Springsteen fan.

• Last, thanks to my wife, Michelle. Hockey season isn’t just about the sacrifices of the players, coaches, media members or fans. It’s about the sacrifices of people who put up with us. There have been countless car rides, dinners delayed and rescheduled, nights and plans with families and friends ruined so I could go and do this. She had the hockey life forced on her without asking, but she’s made it all her own in her own way. I can never thank her enough for her patience, her feedback or for being the ear and shoulder for the highs and lows of a season. As the offseason dawns, there’s one thing I always look forward to, and that’s simply being Mrs. Rubin’s Mr. Rubin.

• And of course, thanks to all of you for reading, tweeting, chatting and joining us for the ride. You’re what makes college hockey great, and we’ll be doing it all again very soon. I can’t be humbled enough to have had the opportunity to do this, and you’re all the reason why I can’t live without this. I wish you nothing but the best for a healthy and happy summer.

Rensselaer shakes off home pressure, late-season slump in first-round series sweep

Rensselaer advanced to the ECAC Hockey quarterfinals with a pair of one-goal victories over Brown (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

Rensselaer’s win against Brown on Saturday was significant for a number of reasons. First, the Engineers overcame a 3-0 first-period deficit to advance to the ECAC Hockey quarterfinals for the second year in a row.

The win was also the first time that RPI had won a home playoff series since 2004 when it beat Princeton.

“It was something,” RPI coach Seth Appert said of his first home playoff series win. “You don’t get to be a part of a lot of those types of games in your career as a player or a coach. And it’s fitting that this team won that way. I’ve said all year, what I love the most about this group is how resilient they are.”

Brown gave the Engineers trouble in the opening round of the playoffs. Twice — in 2010 and 2013 — the Bears beat RPI at Houston Field House. Despite the struggles at home, the Engineers are back in the quarterfinals; they beat Clarkson on the road to get there last year.

“You guys [the media] will stop asking me about it,” Appert said when asked what it meant for the home postseason losing streak to end. “I don’t have to hear that question and give you the same answer — that it isn’t something I worry about. It’s not about does it feel good for me; I don’t worry about that. I do think there was some pressure that comes with that our team felt a little [Friday] in the first period.”

The series win came after RPI went 2-5-1 over the final month of the regular season. But the Engineers have defenseman Parker Reno back from injury, while some of their players have been coming on strong at the right time. Leading scorer Riley Bourbonnais had three points in the series after having only a pair of assists over the final month of the season. And senior Milos Bubela had a pair of goals to help lead RPI’s comeback Saturday.

“He’s been so good down the stretch,” Appert said of Bubela. “He’s playing the best hockey of his career, which you love to see your seniors do. He was just a beast [Saturday]. He had to play against [Brown’s] best players and had a lot of responsibility on the penalty kill and in the defensive zone.”

With the win, RPI booked a trip to Harvard this weekend to face the Crimson in the quarterfinals. Here’s a look at the four best-of-three series this weekend. Check the schedule for start times. All won-loss records are for conference play only.

No. 8 Cornell (8-8-6) at No. 1 Quinnipiac (16-1-5)

Season series: Quinnipiac, 1-0-1

The Big Red played the Bobcats tough, gaining two separate three-goal leads in Quinnipiac’s 5-4 overtime win in November. This is a matchup of two good defensive teams that get it done in different ways. The Bobcats play an up-tempo possession game, while Cornell is the biggest team in the country and can wear opponents down when its forecheck is going. These teams last met in the playoffs during the 2013 quarterfinals. The Big Red won the opener but lost 10-0 in Game 2 before dropping the deciding game 3-2 in double overtime.

What Cornell needs to do to win: Stay out of the box. The Big Red have 235 penalties minutes in 31 games this year, which averages out to just over seven minutes a game. That’s not an extraordinary amount, but four of the seven goals the Bobcats scored against Cornell came on the power play. It’s a bit surprising that the Big Red enter the weekend 30th in the country in penalty kill percentage, as junior Mitch Gillam (.929 save percentage) has been strong in goal this season. The Big Red can’t afford to give the fifth-ranked power play in the country any extra opportunities.

What Quinnipiac needs to do to win: Get an early lead. Yes, Quinnipiac has the offense to stage a comeback — and did just that in a 5-4 overtime win against the Big Red in November — but the Bobcats played from behind in several games during the second half. That can wear on a team.

No. 7 Dartmouth (11-11) at No. 2 Yale (14-5-3)

Season series: Yale, 2-0

Overshadowed by neighboring Quinnipiac’s dominance this season, Yale has nonetheless put together an excellent season, especially in the second half. The Bulldogs have only two losses in the second half, including a 4-1 setback to Quinnipiac in the regular season finale on Feb. 27. Dartmouth has been an improved second-half team as well, as its players have begun to settle into their roles after a tough early part of the season.

Yale’s Stu Wilson has three goals and four points in his last three games (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

What Dartmouth needs to do to win: The Big Green beat a speedy team Colgate team in the first round. Yale has plenty of speed as well but is much better defensively than the Raiders. Dartmouth needs to be solid in its own end and not let it develop into a back-and-forth game because it’s going to be hard getting goals past junior Alex Lyon, whose .941 save percentage is the best in Division I.

What Yale needs to do to win: Stay consistent. Despite a dominant second-half record, Yale did have some lapses at times. The Bulldogs had some trouble finishing off their chances throughout the year, but the top line of Joe Snively, Stu Wilson and John Hayden has been playing well.

No. 6 Rensselaer (8-7-7) at No. 3 Harvard (12-6-4)

Season series: 1-1-1

Defending Whitelaw Cup winner Harvard has a first-round bye for the first time since the 2011-12 season. The Crimson are averaging over three goals a game and have the nation’s top power play. Jimmy Vesey is arguably the top player in the league and snapped a mid-February dry spell with six points over his last three regular season games. Harvard’s defense had some blips this year but finished third in the league in goals allowed per game. RPI finished right behind the Crimson at fourth, but the Engineers should have the advantage if this turns into a tight, defensive series.

What Rensselaer needs to do to win: Get physical with Harvard’s forwards. RPI has had success in the past against teams that like to push the pace. If the Engineers can win the possession game, they could be able to wear down the Crimson defense.

What Harvard needs to do to win: Don’t get frustrated. The Engineers block a ton of shots and do a good job keeping the front of the net clear. The Crimson will need to generate second-chance opportunities against senior Jason Kasdorf (.933), who has finally been healthy in the second half and is playing very well.

No. 5 Clarkson (10-9-3) at No. 4 St. Lawrence (11-8-3)

Season series: 1-1

The powers-that-be in the league office must like this series, as it guarantees a North Country team and its fan base will be at Lake Placid in two weeks. But first things first: This should be a phenomenal series between two of the league’s best rivals. Both teams are solid defensively and can get some offense from their defense. The Saints might have one of the most dynamic back ends in the league, highlighted by leading scorer Gavin Bayreuther.

What Clarkson needs to do to win: Win the possession battle. After facing Princeton’s Colton Phinney in the first round, the Golden Knights will once again face another good goalie in St. Lawrence’s Kyle Hayton (.933 save percentage). They will need to get plenty of shots on net to have a chance.

What St. Lawrence needs to do to win: St. Lawrence is the only team in the league with a defenseman as its leading scorer. That ability to generate offense from the blue line could help against a physical Clarkson team.

Around the league

• Brown senior forwards and linemates Mark Naclerio and Nick Lappin signed professional contracts on Tuesday. Naclerio signed with the AHL’s Providence Bruins, per a tweet by Brown coach Brendan Whittet, while the New Jersey Devils announced a two-year deal for Lappin. That deal will begin next year, as Lappin will play the remainder of this season on an amateur tryout agreement with Albany, the Devils’ AHL affiliate. He’ll be reunited with former Bears linemate Matt Lorito, who has 45 points in 53 games for Albany.

• The ECHL’s Brampton Beast announced that it signed Princeton senior forward Kyle Rankin. The Beast are the ECHL affiliate of the AHL’s St. John’s IceCaps and Montreal Canadiens.

• Dartmouth’s Brad Schierhorn (player) and Connor Yau (rookie) joined Cornell’s Mitch Gillam (goalie) as the weekly award winners. Schierhorn had the Big Green’s first hat trick since 2010 Friday against Colgate, while Yau had three points on the weekend and Gillam stopped 59 of 60 shots in a sweep of Union.

Looking back

The league’s media will vote on the end-of-year awards, with the winners being announced on Thursday, March 17 during the Slap Schotts college hockey segment. It will air at 11:05 a.m. on Fox Sports 980 out of Troy, N.Y.

With that in mind, here’s a look at how I voted in the preseason media poll. The numbers in parentheses indicate where each team finished the regular season. I underestimated Rensselaer and Clarkson, while not taking into account how some early departures would impact Colgate.

1. Yale (2)
2. Quinnipiac (1)
3. Colgate (10)
4. St. Lawrence (4)
5. Harvard (3)
6. Union (9)
7. Brown (11)
8. Rensselaer (6)
9. Cornell (8)
10. Dartmouth (7)
11. Clarkson (5)
12. Princeton (12)

Wednesday Women: Puzzling Pairings

Kimberly Newell ( Princeton - 33). (Shelley M. Szwast)
Kimberly Newell and Princeton got sent to play Minnesota in the NCAA tournament. (Shelley M. Szwast)

Candace: Well Arlan, it’s down to eight. The conference tournament semifinals and finals, at least, brought few surprises. Boston College continued its quest to match Minnesota’s perfection of 2013 by winning the Hockey East tournament, defeating Boston University 5-0 in the final. BU was the lone upset winner of the weekend, defeating No. 6 Northeastern 4-3 in the semis. However, the Terriers looked overmatched in the final against the Eagles, and so miss the NCAA tournament. The top seeds in the other conferences all advanced to finals that played out much closer than Hockey East. Wisconsin and Quinnipiac each won 1-0 games over the No. 2 seeds, Minnesota and Clarkson, respectively, and Mercyhurst defeated Syracuse in overtime to capture that league’s automatic bid. I do have to feel for Syracuse. It’s the second year in a row the Orange have lost the CHA title game in OT, and this one came on the heels of an emotional three overtime win over Penn State in the semis.

With the conference tournaments in the books, the NCAA Selection Committee set up the tournament draw, and on the face of it, nothing makes sense. Rather than bus No. 7 Princeton to Boston College, the Tigers are flying to Minneapolis, and Northeastern gets on a bus and heads across town to face Boston College, again. That just doesn’t make sense to me, and frankly, reinforces the notion I have that there is still a lot of sexism that women face in college sports. The NCAA would never dream of doing that in men’s hockey, yet they seems to routinely give a metaphorical slap in the face to some of the top women’s teams. There’s even no consistency. Someone on the USCHO.com boards pointed out that if they’d done the same thing last year, they’d have sent Boston University across town to play Harvard and sent Quinnipiac to Madison to face Wisconsin, but instead they maintained bracket integrity and shipped BU to Madison.

The NCAA talks a lot about growing the game, but talk is cheap, and it seems to me that the NCAA cares about little except keeping things as cheap as possible. Sometimes it almost feels the NCAA wishes it didn’t have to put on a women’s national tournament, and would have preferred that Title IX never came about.

What is your opinion on the NCAA? Do you think it shows a lack of respect for women’s hockey?

Arlan: To start, I’d like to apologize to our readers. Since Friday, I’ve been in the midst of a family medical emergency, the prognosis is uncertain, and that’s likely coloring my perception of the world in general and our sport in particular. In all honesty, I feel quite disillusioned about the future of our game overall.

The NCAA is barely cognizant that women’s ice hockey exists. Once a year, some underling in its massive bureaucracy likely reaches into a pocket, grabs a handful of coins and forks it over, pocket lint and all, to someone in charge of running a National Collegiate Women’s Ice Hockey Tournament. I doubt it is accompanied by a pat on the head, but it may as well be. The bureaucrat checks off a box on a list of tournaments that the NCAA cares zero about. “There. That’s out of the way for another year.” Maybe this year the hand contained fewer coins and more pocket lint, so that bus from Princeton to Boston was a deal breaker.

Are the decisions made by the NCAA sexist? I don’t know. Does the organization’s hierarchy care any less about women’s cross country than it does men’s cross country? Probably not. I’d guess that zero is roughly equal to zero.

The NCAA does not care about women’s ice hockey. Period. If it cares about the men’s D-I hockey tournament, I’ve seen little indication of that over the years. It cares only to the extent that there is a television deal in place, and the thing it cares most about is money. The poor television cameramen have difficulty giving us crowd shots at the men’s hockey regionals that don’t consist largely of empty seats. The positive sign for women’s sports is that at least there are sports like women’s basketball, volleyball, and softball that are in a better place in terms of interest than they were not that long ago.

Our tournament, on the other hand, is at best going nowhere. More accurately, it is getting worse. Ten years ago, it had a television deal, and now it does not. The biggest crowds at a Frozen Four came quite a while back. I guess the positive on that front is that the crowds are surpassing 3,000 on a more consistent basis, but clearly, every change in how the brackets are populated in the last 10 years has been another step in the wrong direction.

Candace: Well, the regionals may be sparsely populated, but the Frozen Four is always electric, and it’s always packed. From my own admittedly biased viewpoint, I think you can say that there is sexism tied to money. Put it this way. I’ve covered the men’s game for 10 years now, and am the NCHC columnist for USCHO. I can guarantee that there is no way a similar bracket would have been cooked up in the men’s game, and if it did, the entire fandom would be apoplectic. Can you imagine say North Dakota being named the No. 1 seed and then having to play Minnesota-Duluth as a 15 or 16 seed, just because it’s a bus ride, and then sending, say, No. 16 Robert Morris over to play the No. 4 seed, perhaps Quinnipiac? To be clear, I’m not putting down any of those programs, but Duluth and North Dakota are both in the NCHC, and play each other four times a year.

There was more information posted on BC Interruption Monday, including clarification from Sarah Fraser. Based on her comments, I want whatever she and the rest of the Selection Committee were smoking, because it must be one hell of a hallucinogenic high. There is no way anyone can possibly state that a Princeton team, one that got knocked out in the quarterfinals by St. Lawrence, is a tougher team to play than Northeastern, with Kendall Coyne leading the charge. Northeastern played more games than the Tigers, and played Boston College four times and also CHA winner Mercyhurst twice. Princeton also played six games against NCAA tournament teams, and did fairly well in them, but also had more puzzling losses. Northeastern’s one puzzling loss was to Lindenwood, and maybe that factored into the committee’s decision, but if it did, it’s still a travesty.

So now we get a bracket that any fan of the game is going to say is absolutely horrible. It makes zero sense, and seems to truly disrespect the women’s game. That again gets back to my point: regardless of money, there is no way that the NCAA would treat the men’s teams the way it treats the women’s teams, and again makes me think that the NCAA wishes it didn’t have to put on a women’s national tournament.

Arlan: The current bracket just makes me sad. I hope selection committee chair Fraser, and members Mark Johnson, Nick Reggio, and Mike Sisti, like this bracket, because it would be hard to find anyone else who does. If they don’t like it, but there hands are forced by some constraint to which we’re not privy, then I hope that is stated clearly and emphatically in every report that they submit.

I’m glad I don’t have to attempt to market these pairings, because I’m not sure how one could. Congratulations to Northeastern on making your first NCAA tournament! Isn’t this exciting! Now go play Boston College for the fifth time. Also, congratulations to Quinnipiac on hosting a quarterfinal — yet another milestone in a historic season. To celebrate, let’s have you play the same team twice in a seven-day period and fourth time overall. Maybe someone will get to 20 shots this time. Princeton has reached its second-ever NCAA tournament and the first in 10 years. Let’s send the Tigers back to the same place they went the last time. There’s a city named Princeton in Minnesota; maybe that’s causing confusion, and the committee thinks Princeton is like North Dakota and always has to be sent to Minneapolis, no matter what. Finally we get the Mercyhurst at Wisconsin matchup that has been spaced out at four or five-year intervals, but I fear is likely to become more frequent going forward if the Lakers adapt to owning the CHA automatic bid like they have owned the CHA season.

As a fan of the game, I was looking forward to seeking Kendall Coyne play in person for the first time. Sending Northeastern to Minnesota and Princeton to Boston College seemed so obvious that I couldn’t dream of how that could get screwed up. When Northeastern popped up as the opponent for the Eagles during the selection show, I couldn’t understand what was happening. Had North Dakota or Bemidji State suddenly been resurrected? Why else could the committee be getting this so wrong? The biggest problem isn’t that some team or other is getting a much easier draw than it otherwise would have. The problem is that the whole point of this should be creating great opportunities for the student athletes, and BC is a lame destination for the Northeastern players. It feels so much less like a national tournament experience. Some lame excuse about Princeton having a supposedly tougher schedule isn’t going to change that.

To be clear, it isn’t like the yearly pattern of disappointing national tournament brackets is the sport’s only competition problem. For instance, a lot is made of poor Wisconsin and Minnesota always winding up on the same half of the bracket and having to meet before the final. Other than consistently being one of the more boring pairings of contending teams that you’ll find, I’m not sure it is all that much of an injustice.

Certainly, the coaches of the two teams have done nothing to prevent it with how they crafted their nonconference schedules. Johnson led his Badgers against teams that finished 10th in the ECAC, seventh in Hockey East, and fifth in the CHA. I suppose we could applaud the fact that none of those teams finished last. Minnesota’s Brad Frost took on the ninth team in the ECAC and the third team in the CHA. Compelling stuff, guys. You’re really helping to spark national interest in the sport.

In past years, this would work out for the WCHA because teams like Bemidji State and North Dakota would make some noise knocking off contending teams from other leagues. Now that the Beavers and Fighting Hawks have national aspirations of their own, they’ve taken to watering down their nonconference slates as well.

To be fair, this is largely a problem with the criteria currently in use. There is no incentive to schedule more difficult games out of conference. The Ratings Percentage Index is a total joke that can’t figure out what is or is not a difficult schedule and winds up totally dropping far too many games from its calculations. A week ago, it had Wisconsin rated above Minnesota based on the fact that the Gophers’ weak schedule was slightly better than the Badgers’ weaker schedule, and thus, Wisconsin got a bigger boost from its opponents’ opponents’ winning percentage.

While it is most glaring in the WCHA, where are the marquee nonconference matches in any of the leagues? Credit to Mercyhurst for playing Quinnipiac, Northeastern, and Princeton, who all made the tournament, twice apiece. The Lakers also scheduled an up-and-coming Colgate team. Beyond that, schedules of tournament teams were rather dismal. The defense of some may be that Harvard and BU were expected to be better than they were, but I didn’t get the sense that anyone was really looking to load up its schedule. Maybe it just doesn’t make sense to do so. It didn’t work out all that well for teams like Yale and Minnesota-Duluth that had difficult nonconference schedules. However, that’s another aspect of the game 10 or more years ago that I look back on more fondly: all the contenders wanted to play other contenders. Now, almost nobody will.

So how does any of this get fixed? I don’t think any meaningful improvement will happen unless there is a bit more funding for the tournament. By that, I don’t mean increasing the size of the tournament. That would just give us more conference retreads. Maybe they could find somebody who would sponsor the tournament and agree to an uptick in travel budgets. A couple more flights in the budget could make a huge difference in some seasons. I’d also make the top priority to avoid conference pairings in the quarterfinals. Those are throwaway games that will always be less interesting than any other option. If they are allowed, it is a sign of capitulation to the belief that nobody cares about the sport and its tournament. To eliminate those single-conference quarters, one can’t afford to have any sanctimonious coaches complaining about lack of bracket integrity. With the rankings system in place, bracket integrity is a nebulous concept. This time of year should be about champions. You want to be the best, then go play whoever shows up. You’ve spent the other five months avoiding each other.

Obviously, I’d get rid of the PairWise Rankings. Shame on anyone who has been on a selection or competition committee, or wherever such things are decided, and did not do everything possible to get rid of the Ratings Percentage Index. Seriously.

What improvements would you like to make?

Candace: I would like to see a few things. The first is that coaches like Sisti and Johnson should in no way be on the Selection Committee. If your team makes the tournament, you are out and you find coaches from programs who aren’t in the tournament. I’d like to think Sisti and Johnson wouldn’t have been biased, but given how the WCHA has been screwed over the years, I wouldn’t put it out of the realm of possibility that there was some subconscious thought about payback.

I agree that you don’t expand the tournament, and perhaps you do get some sponsorship. The PairWise isn’t perfect, but it seems to work well enough in deciding the teams in the men’s tournament. KRACH might be better for both, but it would be a tough sell to get the NCAA to adapt it. Still, I think strength of schedule should factor into it, and perhaps that would encourage teams to play the top teams in other conferences more often. I’ve been dying to see Boston College face Minnesota the last few years, and at least they played in the NCAA tournament a couple of times, most recently in 2013, but regular season matchups between the two would be nice. BC has scheduled teams like Quinnipiac in the past, as well as Merchyhurst, but the WCHA hasn’t seemed to want to travel as much. BC did play Dululth twice at the start of the year at home.

It’d also be nice to see some of the top ECAC teams facing HE and WCHA teams. Harvard is always guaranteed to games against BC, BU, and Northeastern through the Beanpot. This was a down year for the Crimson, but they’ll be back, but it’d be nice to see Harvard play Wisconsin, or Quinnipiac face Minnesota in the regular season, and using KRACH and factoring in strength of schedule into the selection to the tournament would be a great start toward getting that to happen.

I also think it’s critical to avoid first round intraconference matchups. I don’t care about geographic proximity. Fraser, Sisti, Johnson, and Reggio can spout on and on about Princeton being a tougher team, but nobody’s buying it. No, the NCAA saw a way to cut down on travel fares and sent Northeastern across town. I’m surprised they don’t make the players take the subway to further cut down on travel.

You are right: something has to change, and it’s a shame that it played out this way, because now instead of focusing on what could be an amazing tournament, all anyone can talk about is what the hell the Selection Committee was thinking.

However, now that we’ve established that the NCAA is a misogynist organization that doesn’t give a damn about women’s hockey, let’s talk about the tournament. Do you see any upsets in the quarterfinals, or do you think the top four seeds advance to Durham?

Arlan: I like the suggestion that coaches whose teams are in contention get replaced. My understanding is that they can’t be involved in any discussion regarding their own teams. So that means that for something like populating the quarterfinal in Madison, both Johnson and Sisti would have to be excluded by rule. That leaves us with people who perhaps don’t even follow women’s hockey all that closely. In this case, the Mercyhurst to Madison was pretty much a slam dunk, but there could be years where it wouldn’t be.

Before the quarterfinals, I’d first like to talk a little about the conference tourney results. One has to commend Syracuse. On Friday, they could have gotten down when Penn State rallied in the third period to force overtime, but the Orange stuck with it and survived that marathon. In the past when a team has won a game that lasted as long as the Orange-Nittany Lions game did on Friday, it hasn’t had to come back and play the next day like they did. It would have been easy to fold their tent and go away on Saturday after Mercyhurst scored three times in two minutes to go ahead by two goals. To battle back in the final three minutes of regulation like Syracuse did says a ton about the character of that team. Kudos.

Connecticut also showed some fight in getting back to level versus BC from two goals down. Even though Elaine Chuli is graduating, I expect the Huskies to find their way back to the top four of Hockey East next year. I can see Annie Belanger filling that role down the road, even though Chuli will no doubt be missed. Although BU got the upper hand on Northeastern, it didn’t have any Hockey East tournament magic this year versus the Eagles.

In the ECAC, St. Lawrence at least was able to score on Quinnipiac for the first time this year in the semifinal. The problem was that once Hannah Miller tied the game for the Saints, they weren’t able to generate much else offensively, and Randi Marcon won it for the Bobcats with five minutes left. In the other semifinal, Colgate once more lost in a game where it had held a lead. That seemed to be the Achilles’ heel of a talented but young team. I doubt we’ve heard the last of the Raiders during a championship weekend. In the final, first goal was always going to be huge, and in this case, it proved to be the only goal. Quinnipiac is certainly a team that an opponent doesn’t want to have to come from behind against, and Clarkson wound up in that tough position.

In the WCHA Final Face-Off, all three losing teams were shut out. Defense was the theme of the season in that conference, and it held true to the end with Ann-Renée Desbiens not allowing a goal in any of her four playoff games. She didn’t have to do much in the semifinal when Minnesota-Duluth didn’t look to have a ton left in the tank, but she was called on to make 35 saves over the final 50 minutes or so against Minnesota, some of the spectacular variety.

Speaking of Desbiens, she was named a top three finalist for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award. Last week you asked who I thought would be on that list. Now that it is official, what are your thoughts on the top three?

Candace: It’s hard to see any players but those three as the finalists, and I think it’s what everyone expected. Minnesota’s Hannah Brandt was a top three finalists the last two years, and a top 10 finalist her freshman year, but she was a little down this year in production, and Coyne and BC’s Alex Carpenter both had better years, which leaves Brandt going up against Desbiens and Brandt’s teammate Dani Cameranesi for representation from the WCHA. While both Brandt and Cameranesi had great years, neither was better than Carpenter or Coyne offensively, and given Desbiens setting the shutout record, I don’t see how she can get left off.

In the race as it stands now, I think you have to favor Coyne. The voting is already over, and Coyne has way more to do with Northeastern making its first NCAA tournament than Carpenter or Desbiens did for their respective teams. Desbiens has been a great goalie this year, but Wisconsin plays very good defensively as a team. Desbiens was brilliant last weekend in the WCHA tournament, not allowing goals against Duluth in the semifinals or Minnesota in the finals, but that weekend won’t factor into the voting.

In a race between Coyne and Carpenter, I give the nod to the former, especially since the voting is over. Carpenter came up big for the Eagles against BU in the Hockey East final, but she was curiously quiet in the series against Maine the weekend before, whereas Coyne was a huge presence for Northeastern in its best-of-three quarterfinal against Providence. Coyne also accounts for more of a percentage of her team’s scoring than Carpenter. I think Carpenter makes everyone on BC better, but as you pointed out to me a few weeks ago, when Carpenter was playing for the U.S. at the Sochi Olympics in 2014, the Eagles still won the Hockey East regular season crown and still advanced to the NCAA tournament, going 27-3-3, while with Coyne at Sochi, Northeastern finished third and lost to Boston University in the Hockey East tournament semifinals and didn’t make the NCAA tournament, going 19-14-2. As good as forwards Denisa Krížová and Hayley Scamura are, and even with solid netminding from Brittany Bugalski, with Coyne graduating next year, I don’t see Northeastern having the same level of success next season. You can say the same for BC, which will lose Carpenter, Hayley Scarupa, and Lexi Bender, but I think BC will still be in contention for the Hockey East crown and the NCAA tournament next season.

Do you see it differently than me? Would you favor Desbiens or Carpenter over Coyne?

Arlan: No, not with when the voting took place. You asked me who I would place on top last week, in advance of the conference finals, and I agree that Coyne led the way at that point. Considerations like leadership and love of the game are a wash between Coyne and Carpenter, with both being seniors who took a season off after being sophomores for the Olympics. Desbiens, as a junior who is completing her second season as the starter, is in a slightly different point in her career. Academic considerations favor Coyne. At the time of the final vote, I think Coyne was in front.

The timing of the vote has always been a factor in the Kazmaier process. Coyne had a strong Hockey East quarterfinal series while Carpenter was comparatively quiet. That was reversed last weekend, with Coyne having one assist and being a minus-1 as her team was eliminated in its semifinal. Carpenter was also a minus one in her semifinal, but she had an assist plus the game-winning goal. In the championship game, she was a plus-3, scoring twice with an assist. Meanwhile, Desbiens likely had the most-impressive weekend with two more shutouts, including the 35-save effort over the country’s second-highest scoring offense.

There have been a number of years where players did their best work in the postseason, and naturally, it wasn’t considered in the Kazmaier voting. Several of those went on to be the Most Outstanding Player of the Frozen Four. Some that come to mind are Kristy Zamora of Brown in 2002, Krissy Wendell of Minnesota in 2004, and Emmanuelle Blais of Minnesota-Duluth in 2010. Nobody from that trio even made the Kazmaier final three in those years, but they clearly would have, and may have even won, had the Kazmaier voting occurred later.

The only difference in how we view the Kazmaier voting is I don’t see it as Desbiens being the third choice, with Coyne and Carpenter automatically being in ahead of her.

Earlier, you asked about the possibility of upsets in the NCAA quarterfinals. I guess I’ve stalled long enough.

It isn’t a shock in any eight-team tournament that the No. 4 seed would be most at risk of an upset, and the same holds true here. There are reasons why Quinnipiac is seeded below the top three, and it has drawn the most-accomplished opponent of the four road teams. The Clarkson seniors are playing in their fourth-straight NCAA tournament, while none of the other visiting squads reached the event last year. I think it is important that the Bobcats don’t psyche themselves out and turn Saturday’s game into something more than it is. They can’t focus on it being their first NCAA game on home ice or as the favorite, and take added pressure from that. It’s still just playing a hockey game, something they’ve already done 37 times this year.

The challenge for Quinnipiac is that it is playing a very similar team. Over the course of their seasons, the Bobcats outscored opponents by 84 goals in 37 games, while the Golden Knights outscored opponents by 86 goals in 38 games. In terms of average scoring margin, that’s an edge of less than 0.01 in Quinnipiac’s favor, which is about as equal as two teams can get. Head to head, the advantage for the Bobcats has been a little more pronounced, scoring six goals in the three games to Clarkson’s two. The Golden Knights can be encouraged by the fact that the outlier in that group came in the game back in November when Taylar Cianfarano scored a hat trick. Nicole Brown’s second-chance goal on Sunday is all that separates the teams in the two games since. Both teams have key seniors. Clarkson has Erin Ambrose and Renata Fast on its blue line, and Olivia Howe and Shannon MacAulay up front. Quinnipiac has even more of a veteran look with defensemen Kristen Tamberg, Cydney Roesler, and Lindsey West, plus forwards Nicole Connery, Nicole Kosta, and Brown. The Golden Knights start sophomore Shea Tiley in net, while the Bobcats’ Sydney Rossman is a junior, but she’s in her first season as the postseason starter. That game is nearly a coin flip, but given intangibles like playing at home and a general sense that this is Quinnipiac’s year, I’d favor it slightly, say a 55 percent chance that the Bobcats win.

What are your thoughts on the upcoming quarterfinals?

Candace: I agree that Clarkson against Quinnipiac has the potential for an upset. Those two teams are very close, and while Quinnipiac has won all three games against Clarkson so far, the games haven’t been slam dunks. Rossman stopped a breakaway in the third period last weekend; otherwise, it might have gone to overtime. Rossman is I think not getting enough credit for Quinnipiac’s outstanding defense, but it’s hard to recognize it when the Bobcats limit their opponents to under 20 shots.

I think Minnesota and Wisconsin are locks to advance to the Frozen Four. Mercyhurst is playing good hockey right now, but I still see the Lakers as at a tier below the upper echelon. They’ve struggled with scoring at times this year, and going up against the best goaltender in the country won’t improve those odds. Minnesota against Princeton will come down to the Gophers’ superior offense. I expect to see Minnesota score at least three or four goals and roll to a win and another shot at Wisconsin in Durham.

That leaves Northeastern at Boston College, which to me is another potential upset. The two have played four times so far, and two of those games were extremely close. BC won the last one 5-3, with the last goal being an empty-net goal and the game-winner being a power-play goal in the waning seconds of the second period, right after Coyne had tied the game. Northeastern’s top line of Coyne, Krížová, and Scamura is capable of racking up points in a hurry, and will be amped up to be playing in the postseason for the first time. To counter that statement, BC is deeper offensively, with two lines that can score. I’d imagine coach Katie Crowley will at least start with Carpenter between Skarupa and Kenzie Kent. That line was lethal last weekend against the Terriers. Crowley has sometimes moved Carpenter and Skarupa to different lines to generate more offense, but those two are really hard to shut down, especially when they are playing well.

The key for Northeastern will be to prevent BC from scoring a couple of goals early. When the Eagles do that, they tend to get on a roll and come in waves. Last Sunday against BU, I think over 13 minutes went by at the start of the game where the Terriers could barely get it out of their zone, and didn’t register a single shot on goal. If Northeastern can keep it from getting away from them early, as happened in the Beanpot game, it will be a dogfight of a game that might come down to a bounce or two.

Do you see any hope for Mercyhurst or Princeton against the WCHA’s terrible twosome, and do you agree that Northeastern against BC is going to be a rough out?

Arlan: According to WCHODR, the chances for any of those three being upset are fairly close. All are nearly three-goal favorites. Wisconsin is the biggest favorite, then BC, then Minnesota, but all three are within about a tenth of a goal.

For each, there are reasons to like the underdog. Mercyhurst’s seniors have gone on the road and won an NCAA quarterfinal a couple of different times in their careers. Those were more highly regarded teams — they got in as an at-large team, not through an auto-bid — but I do think there are some mitigating factors for this year’s Lakers. Sisti said they’ve had to deal with an abnormal quantity of injuries this year, but they’re healthier now. Players like Emily Janiga and Jenna Dingeldein were quiet earlier in the season, but they showed up in a big way when needed this weekend. The power-play percentage was anemic, but the power play carried the day in the win over Robert Morris and scored a couple times against Syracuse. Goaltending, which was inconsistent early, has been strong of late. With Sisti’s experience in the tournament, the Lakers aren’t a team to be so easily discarded.

The problem, of course, is that if Wisconsin isn’t the best team in the country, it is close. The Badgers feature one of the best defenses ever, allowing 0.68 goals per game. Desbiens is playing at such a high level that the best case for an opponent might be scoring two goals. The Badgers have a top-four offense, so two goals might still not be enough.

Princeton has better balance than we give it credit for, ranking eighth in offense and sixth in scoring defense. A great senior goaltender like Kimberly Newell is always a good place to start. The Tigers have more pop on offense than they had a year ago, and some of that is attributable to Karlie Lund, one of four players who are Minnesota natives. Princeton played the Gophers a year ago and played in Minneapolis two years ago, and that familiarity is bound to help the underdog.

The challenge for Princeton is that Minnesota is going to be very focused after being shut out by Wisconsin on Sunday. I don’t know if Kelsey Koelzer will be able to play for the Tigers after being injured in the deciding game versus St. Lawrence. That leaves a big hole on their blue line if she can’t go. The Gophers’ senior class has accomplished so much in their careers that it would be surprising to see them lose their final game on home ice, after losing only three times at home over four years.

I don’t share your concern that BC could be upset by Northeastern. I expect that we’ll see something like the Eagles’ 5-0 win over BU. When Minnesota had to defeat North Dakota for a sixth time three years ago to reach the Frozen Four, that was a far different visiting team, with three Olympic veterans on the roster. Coyne is terrific, no doubt, but if the Eagles can stop her, and they’ve proven that they can, there really isn’t a Plan B for Northeastern. Beyond that, I have seen no evidence that the Huskies can shut down the BC’s lethal offense. Boston is the last place I’d look for an upset.

Minnesota nears another Big Ten title, but Gophers took a big step back

Connor Reilly and Minnesota host Wisconsin in the regular season finale (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Three conference points is all that stands between Minnesota and its third consecutive Big Ten regular season championship.

The Gophers are four points ahead of second-place Michigan in the standings and will host Wisconsin at Mariucci Arena this weekend. Minnesota skated circles around the Badgers at the Kohl Center in late January, beating them by a two-game combined score of 13-2.

Yes, Minnesota is a heavy favorite to wrap up the conference’s regular season crown this weekend, but the vibe surrounding the team isn’t that high right now, due in large part to defeats like last Saturday’s at Michigan State.

Mason Appleton gave the Spartans the lead 46 seconds into Saturday’s game and the team didn’t look back, scoring four more unanswered goals to get a shutout victory.

“We just weren’t good enough; they were the better team tonight,” Minnesota coach Don Lucia said after Saturday’s game. “We made a couple mistakes tonight … right off an offensive-zone faceoff, giving up a breakaway, it can’t happen this time of the year.

“You make mistakes this time of year, you’re going to pay,” he added. “And we paid.”

A sweep of the Spartans would have given the Gophers the Big Ten title when Michigan lost to Ohio State on Sunday afternoon. With the split, Minnesota will need positive results against its shared-border rival, or for Penn State to handle Michigan, to take home the hardware.

The Badgers will try to make things difficult for the Gophers after getting embarrassed at home earlier this year.

“When you are around sports long enough, it was unfortunate timing,” Wisconsin coach Mike Eaves said at the Badgers’ Monday news conference. “We have our biggest crowd of the year and our biggest rival, and the roof crashes in on us, because of the score. That’s stuff you hate to happen, but it did, and now we have a chance to get back in the saddle again.”

Big Ten champions or not, a long list of nonconference losses means that the Gophers more than likely have to win the Big Ten tournament to make the NCAA tournament field. Minnesota is tied with Penn State for 17th in the PairWise Rankings.

“We’ve just got to win games at this point of the year,” Minnesota forward Justin Kloos said after Saturday’s game. “We were in a similar situation last year. We’re down to it now. We’ve just got to find a way to win no matter what. If we’re feeling good that night or not, we’ve just got to find a way.”

Michigan looks to rebound before postseason

Goaltender Steve Racine and Michigan look to bounce back from being swept by Ohio State (photo: Jim Rosvold).

With a pair of losses to Ohio State last weekend, Michigan made the quest to capture its first Big Ten title a lot more difficult.

It also allowed Penn State, the Wolverines’ opponent this weekend, to close the gap between second and third place. The top two regular season teams get a first-round bye at the Big Ten tournament March 17-19.

Michigan holds a three-point advantage over the Nittany Lions in the standings. Penn State can jump the Wolverines with a sweep or a win and a shootout victory.

Both teams lost their last game, but Michigan’s loss on Sunday meant that Ohio State completed a Friday-Sunday, home-and-home sweep. The Wolverines gave up 13 goals to the Buckeyes.

Michigan coach Red Berenson said it was important that his team learned its lesson from the defeats, but also said that moving on was equally important.

“We can’t feel sorry for ourselves all week, but we have to learn from it and we have to refocus on parts of our game that need to be better moving forward,” he said. “It’s going to be important to play better. We can’t give up six goals plus an empty-net goal at home and then we go down there and give up six more. You’re not going to beat anybody playing like that.”

So what exactly went wrong last weekend?

“I can’t tell you what exactly went wrong, whether it was the fact that you had spring break and maybe the team thought it was a week off,” he said with a deadpan tone. “We were not ready to play.”

The majority of Ohio State’s goals found their way past senior goaltender Steve Racine. Berenson said that he didn’t fault his netminder and that he planned on sticking with him between the pipes.

“Sometimes a game takes on a different direction than you would expect or prefer, but that’s too bad. You have to live with it — it’s like the weather,” Berenson said. “Racine, he’s not happy about giving up five goals in a game or six goals. But did he help us stay in the game? Absolutely.

“I couldn’t fault him. I thought he had a couple bad bounces on Friday and we pulled him after five goals,” Berenson added. “But when he went in there Sunday, the first 10 minutes of the game they had seven scoring chances, and he stopped them all.”

The last time the Wolverines and Nittany Lions squared off, Michigan swept the two-game series, with one contest being played at Pegula Ice Arena and the other being held at Madison Square Garden. Berenson said he expects a pair of closely contested games this weekend.

“We know the way their team plays, and they’ve had a terrific year this year,” he said of Penn State. “They put a lot of shots on the net, they crash the net and they work hard defensively. They’re really a hard-working — I don’t know whether they call themselves this — blue-collar team. They work as hard as anybody, and if you don’t match that work ethic then you’re going to be playing on your heels all night.

“These games are more than meaningful, when you look at their PairWise ranking and their situation in the Big Ten,” Berenson added. “These games are huge for both teams.”

Three stars of the week

First star — Ohio State junior forward Nick Schilkey: Schilkey had two goals and two assists in the Buckeyes’ sweep of Michigan last weekend. He scored both goals, the second being the overtime winner, on Sunday in Columbus.

Second star — Michigan State senior goaltender Jake Hildebrand: Hildebrand bounced back from a loss on Friday with a 28-save shutout over Minnesota on Saturday evening. The shutout was the 13th of his career.

Third star — Wisconsin freshman goaltender Matt Jurusik: Jurusik made 46 saves on Saturday to help the Badgers split with Penn State. He made 19 saves in the third period to guide Wisconsin to the 4-3 victory.

B1G in the poll

Michigan dropped three spots to No. 9 after getting swept. Penn State stayed at No. 14 and Minnesota dropped a couple spots to No. 19.

My ballot

1. Quinnipiac
2. North Dakota
3. Boston College
4. Providence
5. St. Cloud State
6. Denver
7. Yale
8. Boston University
9. Michigan
10. Notre Dame
11. Massachusetts-Lowell
12. Harvard
13. Michigan Tech
14. Penn State
15. Northeastern
16. Minnesota State
17. Minnesota
18. Cornell
19. Robert Morris
20. Rensselaer

This week’s matchups

Ohio State at Michigan State (Friday and Saturday, Munn Ice Arena)

Penn State at Michigan (Friday and Saturday, Yost Ice Arena)

Wisconsin at Minnesota (Friday and Saturday, Mariucci Arena)

For Harvard’s Kyle Criscuolo, giving back is ‘100 percent worth it’

Kyle Criscuolo has captained Harvard for the last two years (photo: Melissa Wade).

Kyle Criscuolo learned the importance of giving back at a young age and he has never forgotten the importance of that lesson.

Now, as a senior at Harvard, the talented forward and co-captain of the Crimson is one of five finalists for the Hockey Humanitarian Award, presented by BNY Mellon Wealth Management.

“My parents always stressed the value in doing good for others, and it’s always been important to me,” Criscuolo said. “I wanted to make sure I got involved in the community when I got to Harvard. It’s a great honor to be recognized as a finalist. It’s something I am very proud of.”

Read the full story at the Hockey Humanitarian Award site.

New Hampshire’s Poturalski forgoes last two years, signs with Carolina

New Hampshire sophomore forward Andrew Poturalski has signed a two-year, entry-level contract with the NHL’s Carolina Hurricanes.

“We are absolutely thrilled for Andrew,” said UNH coach Dick Umile in a statement. “He has been a tremendous player for us in the two years he has been here and we wish him nothing but the best.”

Poturalski will report to Carolina’s AHL affiliate, the Charlotte Checkers, on an amateur tryout for the remainder of the 2015-16 season.

Currently, Poturalski ranks second in the NCAA in scoring (52 points) on 22 goals and 30 assists in 37 games this season.

He finishes his Wildcat career with 81 points on 36 goals and 45 assists in 77 games.

St. Cloud State places pair on NCHC All-Rookie Team

North Dakota freshman Brock Boeser makes a move around Minnesota-Duluth’s Willie Raskob during a game earlier this season (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

The NCHC revealed Tuesday its 2015-16 All-Rookie Team, which consists of six players representing five different schools.

St. Cloud State was the lone team to place two players on the squad.

2015-16 NCHC All-Rookie Team

Player's NamePositionSchool
Brock BoeserFNorth Dakota
Dylan GambrellFDenver
Jack RoslovicFMiami
Jimmy SchuldtDSt. Cloud State
Will BorgenDSt. Cloud State
Evan WeningerGNebraska-Omaha

TMQ: Around the country, margin for error is getting smaller

Canisius got past 10th-seeded Niagara in the Atlantic Hockey first round (phoo: Omar Phillips).

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

Paula: This week we welcome Dan Rubin, who covers Atlantic Hockey for USCHO, while Jim Connelly is away.

I would like to start with Atlantic Hockey. All three first-round AHC playoff series took three games to decide, and two of the second games in those series went to overtime. In each of those overtime games, the team that had lost Friday scored in the third period to tie and then won in OT. What a crazy opening weekend of playoff hockey for the AHC.

Do you think this typifies Atlantic Hockey this season?

Dan: You know, Paula, it’s indicative of the way this league operates. Top to bottom, the seeding really doesn’t matter. You have a team that finishes seventh in Canisius, a team that was sixth going into the last day of the regular season, and it goes three games with a big-time rival in 10th-seeded Niagara, a team that was borderline finishing 11th.

You have a team like American International, which finished 11th, being able to beat Army West Point, one of the hottest teams in the league over the second half of the season, to push it to three games. And you have Bentley and Sacred Heart taking each other to the limit in one of the best series of hockey games I’ve ever personally seen.

It’s what the league does. The margin for error is razor thin from start to finish. A loss or tie in October doesn’t seem like much until March rolls around and all of a sudden, it’s the difference between a first-round bye or home series. It’s the difference between Sacred Heart playing at Bentley, which is only a couple of hours away, and Bentley going the other direction to play on the road — or even out to Buffalo to play Canisius or out to Air Force in Colorado. It’s like this from start to finish, and you just kind of learn to live your days with a Maalox bottle in the press box.

Paula: It’s interesting that you talk about losses and ties in October and how that can affect what happens in March. One of the criticisms of Big Ten hockey has been how its collective early season nonconference performance — before Big Ten conference play begins in December — put the league behind in the PairWise Rankings at the end of the 2014-15 season, and now we’re seeing the same thing happen this year.

Each of the top three teams in the league — Minnesota, Michigan and Penn State — lost at least a game last weekend to one of the league’s bottom three teams; each of the top three teams was in the hunt for an at-large NCAA tournament spot entering the weekend, and each of the bottom three teams was not.

That really took a bite out of Minnesota’s and Penn State’s NCAA hopes. With one weekend remaining in regular season play, Minnesota still leads the Big Ten and Penn State is in third place, but each is now tied for 17th in the PWR. Michigan — which was swept by Ohio State — dropped from sixth to a tie for eighth place. If Michigan does well against Penn State next weekend, the Wolverines will probably be solid for the NCAA tournament, but each of the other five teams will have to win the league’s autobid to get into the tournament. For a while, it looked like the Gophers, the Wolverines and the Nittany Lions were in good shape to make the tourney, but that isn’t the case anymore.

And perhaps that’s rightly so. When you have a three-team league, have a mediocre run through an extended nonconference schedule before league games begin, and your league’s top teams can’t play consistently well for the season, your league deserves to have just one team go to the big dance.

Dan: I agree. With the Atlantic Hockey example, everyone talks about the need for nonconference wins, and until everyone from top to bottom gets more of those wins more consistently, it’s always going to be a one-bid league. It’s a lot like grading on a curve. Unless you have one team that’s breaking the curve and really busting out, the entire league is responsible for its collective performance.

If you look at the NCHC and Hockey East, your last point really can be driven home. Both conferences could be sending upwards of five teams apiece to the national tournament, including all four top seeds. The only team standing in their way of that is Quinnipiac, a team with by far the nation’s best winning percentage but a team that’s only second in the PairWise.

Why is Quinnipiac second in the PairWise? It’s not necessarily the bottom of the league, but the tops of the other leagues were so consistently good when they needed to be that they had more trump cards than the Bobcats.

Paula: Absolutely agree there. ECAC Hockey is no slouch, but in the bigger leagues from top to bottom, it’s difficult to maintain a high enough degree of excellence — or even consistency — that the league’s own conference schedule isn’t a potential hindrance.

My gripe, of course, is that this is the very problem in the Big Ten, that a league with such resources hasn’t been able to achieve and maintain any kind of level of decent play and consistency from top to bottom. It’s not quite the super conference that I think the Big Ten envisioned. But I’ll stop beating that horse for now.

You mention the NCHC, and that is a league that is impressive, for sure — so impressive that Denver’s second-half run within the conference helped to bolster its NCAA tournament chances. I’m looking at the first round of the NCHC playoffs this coming weekend, and it kind of blows my mind that third-seeded Denver is hosting sixth-place Omaha, and that both teams are in the at-large hunt, although UNO has struggled mightily recently, ending the season with six consecutive losses. Yet the Mavericks are still in the mix and on the bubble.

The other really interesting playoff pairing in that league this weekend is Miami vs. Minnesota-Duluth. The RedHawks are not in the mix for an at-large bid but had a nice second half.

Dan: That’s what makes the quarterfinals so compelling in all of the leagues. In Hockey East, Boston University is a higher ranked team in the PairWise but finished behind UMass-Lowell. They meet this weekend in Lowell after the Terriers swept through UMass. Northeastern, which is now a borderline bubble team, heads to Notre Dame. I’m really excited for that series.

In the ECAC, Cornell goes to Quinnipiac. If the Big Red somehow beat the Bobcats, they can win their way into the tournament while eliminating a conference brother from a potential top seed. How that messes with the bracketology could be incredibly fun to watch.

Thumbs up

Thumbs up to the Michigan Tech Huskies, the trustees of the 103-year-old MacNaughton Cup, for bringing home the trophy for the first time in 40 years when they claimed a share of the WCHA regular season championship Saturday night. The Huskies beat Northern Michigan 5-1 and co-champ Minnesota State lost 1-0 to Bemidji State. Michigan Tech holds the tiebreaker over Minnesota State and is the No. 1 seed for the WCHA tournament.

Thumbs down

To Massachusetts. The Minutemen started this season with so much promise, going 4-0-1 and 6-2-1 to open things up. After that, however, they only won two games the remainder of the year, both coming in nonconference games. Despite pushing Boston University to overtime on Friday, they lost a pair of one-goal games to end their season in sweep fashion. On Sunday, athletic director Ryan Bamford fired John Micheletto.

The next coaching search for UMass is going to be incredibly important. Four years ago, Micheletto accepted the job after several other candidates turned down their chance to coach in Amherst. As the coaching slot becomes open again, what happens next will be very interesting to watch as the Minutemen attempt to climb back up the ladder of one of the nation’s best leagues.

Coming up

There are some key games and playoff series this weekend for teams on the bubble:

• No. 14 Penn State plays at No. 9 Michigan in the final weekend of Big Ten regular season play.

• No. 15 Cornell plays an ECAC Hockey first-round series at No. 1 Quinnipiac.

• No. 17 Omaha returns to No. 6 Denver, where it closed the regular season, for an NCHC playoff series.

• And No. 11 UMass-Lowell hosts No. 8 Boston University for a spot in the Hockey East semifinals.

See the full schedule here.

BC keeps perfect season intact with Hockey East tournament victory

Images from BC’s 5-0 shutout of BU in the Hockey East tournament final at Merrimack College on Sunday, March 6. The Eagles are 38-0-0 on the season. They will host Northeastern as the number one seed in the NCAA tournament.

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