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Big Red, Golden Knights rebound; Hayton ties shutout record

If any team was in need of a four-point weekend, it was Cornell. The Big Red were 1-4-1 and had only scored seven goals on the season entering Friday, but they doubled their win total and matched their season total in goals with a pair of impressive home wins.

Cornell opened the weekend with a 3-2 win over Yale Friday, and then blanked Brown 4-0 Saturday. The win against the Bulldogs came without forward Matt Buckles and defenseman Holden Anderson, each whom sat out after getting a game disqualification against St. Lawrence last weekend.

Freshman Hayden Stewart made 26 saves against the Bears for the shutout Saturday, becoming the first freshman to record a shutout for the Big Red since Ben Scrivens did it in 2006. It was Stewart’s second career collegiate start.

Cornell scored four power-play goals this weekend – matching its total from the first six games of the season.

Knights sweep

Clarkson joined Cornell as the only teams to take four points this weekend, beating Quinnipiac and Princeton at home. Friday’s win against QU snapped the Bobcats’ six-game winning streak, which was the second-longest active streak in the country.

Steve Perry was solid in net both games for the Golden Knights, but give credit to Clarkson’s defense, who allowed 40 shots on the weekend. After a seven-game winless streak that stretched into early November, Clarkson has one loss in its last six games. The Golden Knights haven’t given up more than two goals during that time, and are allowing exactly two goals a game this season, good for twelfth in the country.

Hayton ties mark

It’s been an outstanding first two months for St. Lawrence goalie Kyle Hayton.  The Saints freshman tied the school record for shutouts in a season with four in his 13th start of the season Friday against Princeton.

The four shutouts are the most for a St. Lawrence goalie since the 1965-66 season.  Hayton shares the record with three former All-Americans: Bill Sloan (1955-56), Richie Broadbelt (1962-63) and Bob Perani (1965-66). Overall, Hayton has a 2.11 goals-against-average and a .935 save percentage for the surprising 8-4-1 Saints.

 

Three Things: November 23, 2014

Three things from the weekend in Atlantic Hockey:

What a difference day makes

Friday’s action saw some dramatic results, including a 7-0 thumping delivered by Denver over Air Force, a convincing 5-1 win by Rochester Institute of Technology over Sacred Heart, and a wild 5-5 tie between Robert Morris and American International that saw the Colonials erase three deficits to earn a point.

Saturday was a different story. Air Force rebounded to defeat Colorado College 3-1 to claim the Pikes Peak Trophy and local bragging rights in Colorado Springs.

“We played a much better game tonight and our puck management was better,” said Falcons coach Frank Serratore after the game. “This was a huge win for our guys, for our fans and for our self-esteem.”

At AIC, Robert Morris looked more like a ranked team with a 6-0 win over the Yellow Jackets. David Friedmann had a hat-trick for the Colonials and goaltender Terry Shafer recorded his fourth career shutout.

Sacred Heart gained a split with RIT with a 2-1 win on Saturday. This…

 

Having their number

…win by the Pioneers snapped a 10 game winless streak for Sacred Heart over RIT. The Tigers were 9-0-1 in their last ten meetings with Sacred Heart dating back to 2010.

While SHU was able to end a frustrating streak, it was more of the same for Bentley, which was defeated by Harvard for the third year in a row. Each time, Bentley fans came out in droves to Bright Hockey Center only to see their Falcons denied. In 2012, Harvard won 5-0. Last season, it was 3-0 for the Crimson. This time around, a 5-1 win.

On an individual level, Canisius junior forward Ralph Cuddemi had a goal and an assist in Saturday’s 3-3 tie with Mercyhurst. Culdemi has 11 points including eight goals in nine career games against the Lakers. One third of his collegiate goals have come against Mercyhurst.

 

The Difference

How weird are the Atlantic Hockey standings right now?

Robert Morris continues to have a fairly large lead – currently five points separate the Colonials from second-place Holy Cross and Sacred Heart.

But less than that, just four points, separate second place from last.

Women’s D-I wrap: Nov. 23

ECAC jockeying
As ECAC Hockey teams try to work out the kinks, squads are fighting to establish position in the standings. No. 4 Quinnipiac has the early jump and is the lone remaining team unbeaten in league play.

The Bobcats claimed a key early-season showdown from No. 5 Clarkson on Friday, 1-0. Emma Woods beat Shea Tiley high to the blocker side for the only goal 13:39 into the second period. Chelsea Laden needed 15 saves to garner her seventh shutout.

On Saturday against S. Lawrence, Woods fired a low shot that eluded the glove of Carmen MacDonald to give Quinnipiac a first-period lead. The Saints bounced back with two goals in the second period, to hand the Bobcats their first deficit of the season. Brooke Webster buried a rebound before Jenna Marks converted off a feed from behind the goal. Midway through the third period, Nicole Connery redirected a centering pass from Morgan Fritz-Ward to yield a 2-2 tie, the first blemish on Quinnipiac’s ECAC slate, after it had won its first five league contests. The Bobcats have a game in hand as they are tied with Clarkson atop the conference, both having 11 points.

St. Lawrence slides into third place on the strength of the tie and a Friday win over fourth-place Princeton, 7-3. Marks had a goal and two assists, Webster scored twice, while Kayla Raniwsky and Kirsten Padalis had two-point games.

Clarkson salvaged two points out of the weekend with a 3-2 win on Saturday at Princeton. Amanda Titus had two points, assisting on Shannon MacAulay’s third-period game-winner, after opening the scoring 10 minutes into the game.

To be continued in February
No. 6 Harvard took a break from league action to travel to No. 7 Boston University, where the clubs skated to a 1-1 tie; they will meet on Feb. 3 in a Beanpot semifinal. On Friday, the teams exchanged power-play goals. Miye D’Oench struck for the Crimson with 7:48 elapsed; Samantha Sutherland netted the tying goal just past the halfway point. Emerance Maschmeyer needed 34 saves to preserve the tie for Harvard, while Victoria Hanson was less busy making 16 stops.

The Terriers concluded their weekend by dusting New Hampshire, 6-2. All but one of the game’s goals were scored on the power play, with BU converting on five of nine opportunities. Sarah Lefort had a hat trick and assisted on one of Victoria Bach’s pair of goals. Marie-Philip Poulin had three helpers, after having only one in her season to date.

One step forward, two steps back
Cornell drew within a game of the .500 mark with a 3-1 win over Colgate on Tuesday, with Erin O’Connor tallying the deciding goal in the opening minute of the third period. Then the Big Red were swept on the road at No. 10 Minnesota-Duluth, 7-2 and 2-0.

The Bulldogs have now won nine straight after opening 1-4-2. Senior Zoe Hickel netted three goals on the weekend. Ashleigh Brykaliuk scored in both games and Sidney Morin had four points in the series. Kayla Black earned the 22-save shutout.

How the rest of the top 10 fared
The other ranked teams in action took care of business with sweeps of unranked opponents.

No. 1 Boston College yielded the first goal of the series to Connecticut’s Marisa Maccario, but cruised to 6-1 and 6-0 wins from there. Alex Carpenter and Haley Skarupa both had three-goal weekends with an assist; Emily Pfalzer contributed four helpers.

Second-ranked Minnesota also allowed a single goal in sweeping Minnesota State, 5-1 and 4-0. Dani Cameranesi led with a hat trick on Friday and added another goal on Saturday. Hannah Brandt included three goals in her five-point series.

Ann-Renée Desbiens turned in back-to-back shutouts in No. 3 Wisconsin’s sweep of St. Cloud State, 4-0 and 3-0. Brittany Ammerman was heavily involved in the attack with two goals and three assists.

No. 8 Mercyhurst twice dispatched RIT by 4-1 scores. Emily Janiga had five points, with two of them being goals.

Other action
Northeastern got its offense going at Vermont’s expense, 7-3 and 5-1, scoring the first three goals in each contest. Hayley Scamura netted a hat trick in the first game. McKenna Brand scored the first two goals on Sunday after she had a three-point effort in the opener.

After not tasting victory in its first dozen skates, Providence has now come through with a win on back-to-back weekends. The Friars fell at Maine, 4-3, on Saturday; Jennifer More scored twice for the Black Bears. Beth Hanrahan’s short-handed goal with 17 seconds left in overtime salvaged a split via a 2-1 triumph for PC on Sunday.

Lindenwood also got a road split, winning its second contest at Penn State, 2-1, after suffering a 3-0 loss in the opener. Celine Whitlinger stopped all 21 shots on Friday and Laura Bowman had a goal and an assist. Alyssa West’s first goal of the season allowed Lindenwood to claim a comeback win on the rare day when Nicole Hensley only faced 11 shots.

Syracuse and Robert Morris split their series with ties, 2-2 and 1-1. In game one, Stephanie Grossi put the Orange ahead early, but Rikki Meilleur responded less than two minutes later. Mackenzie Johnston gave the Colonials a second-period lead that lasted all of 62 seconds until Melissa Piacentini forged a lasting deadlock. On Saturday, Julie Knerr struck three minutes in for Syracuse, but Johnston scored the game-tying goal on a second-period power play. Jessica Dodds made 64 stops on the weekend for RMU; Jenn Gilligan turned in 20 each day.

Ohio State came back from a two-goal deficit on Friday at North Dakota thanks to a pair of late tallies by Claudia Kepler, including a tying goal with two seconds left. Amy Menke and Andrea Dahlen had staked UND to a lead. The Buckeyes won the shootout to gain the extra point after the 2-2 tie. North Dakota bounced back with a 4-3 win on Saturday. Menke had a goal and two assists.

For some reason, Yale thought it would be a good idea to schedule Sacred Heart and won, 13-0, with a 74-6 bulge in shots. Jamie Haddad and Aurora Kennedy had hat tricks.

Hockey Humanitarian Award seeks nominations for college hockey’s finest citizen

The BNY Mellon Wealth Management Hockey Humanitarian Award will be presented at the Frozen Four in Boston (photo: Jim Rosvold).

The BNY Mellon Wealth Management Hockey Humanitarian Award, in its 20th season, is looking for nominations for college hockey’s finest citizen.

College coaches and athletic department personnel are encouraged to consider which of their athletes embrace hockey as an opportunity to enrich both their own lives and those of others in the community.

Nominations are being accepted through Dec. 14 at the HockeyHumanitarian.org page.

Players from all areas of NCAA hockey — men’s and women’s, Divisions I, II and III — are eligible for the award, which will be presented April 10 at the Frozen Four in Boston.

Holy Cross’ Jeffrey Reppucci was the 2014 recipient.

U.S. College Hockey Online has been a Hockey Humanitarian Award media and marketing partner since 2007.

Three things: Nov. 23

RedHawks sitting pretty in first place
Seventh-ranked Miami has plenty to be thankful heading into their Thanksgiving break, not least of all the fact that they moved into first place in the NCHC last weekend.

The RedHawks found themselves at the top of the league’s eight-team pile after downing former CCHA rival Western Michigan twice in Oxford, Ohio. After beating the Broncos 1-0 on Friday, the RedHawks’ offense came to life in the rematch en route to a 5-2 triumph.

In the attacking sense, Friday provided Miami with something of a struggle. Backstopped well by goaltender Jay Williams, the RedHawks were outshot 27-23 by Western and were made to make a Blake Coleman power play goal 3:20 into the game stand up as the winner.

On Saturday, a big goal-scoring outburst in the second period put Miami over the top. Western opened the game’s scoring through Will Kessel at 3:41 of the period, but the RedHawks then scored four goals in 7:20 during the frame to turn the game on its head and make the points safe.

Miami (10-4-0, 6-2-0 NCHC) will be idle this next weekend before welcoming to Oxford another former CCHA rival Nebraska-Omaha on Dec. 5-6.

Ortega, Mavericks send a message to North Dakota
Speaking of UNO, it appears the Mavericks were trying to make a statement on Saturday during their 4-1 win over Minnesota-Duluth.

They had a point to prove to themselves, too, though. On Friday, UNO found itself up 2-0 in the second period of the Mavericks’ first home game in a month and a half, but the Bulldogs rattled off three unanswered tallies in the third period to nab a 3-2 win.

UMD gained the upper hand early in the rematch when a shot from Kyle Osterberg found the back of the net 4:40 into the game. After that, however, UNO took over and even picked up its game-winning goal through Austin Ortega – his first of two tallies on Saturday – before the opening frame was over.

The Mavericks (7-2-1, 3-1-0) are heading up I-29 later this week to meet up with second-ranked North Dakota. The two-game set in Grand Forks could end up being a defensive struggle between the top and third-best defenses in the NCHC.

Speaking after Saturday’s win over Duluth, though, Ortega took what he felt was an opportunity to send a shot across the bow.

“Tonight we were able to get up on the board; we really showed we’re a scoring team,” Ortega said. “Kind of sending a message to North Dakota that we can score on any goalie out there.”

CC takes one step forward, another back
To a certain degree, it feels as though Colorado College built itself up on Friday only to knock itself back down the following night.

In front of 7,081 fans on Friday in Colorado Springs, the Tigers scored three second-period goals and were able to cruise to a 5-2 victory over Wisconsin. The game saw CC snap its seven-game winless losing streak while Wisconsin – I repeat: Wisconsin – inexplicably fell to 0-7-0 on the season.

The Tigers had every reason to feel good about themselves late on Friday night, as they’d performed well in front of a huge home World Arena crowd and looked as though they’d started to figure it out after a rough start to the season. On Saturday, though, CC fell back to earth.

The Tigers made the short trip to Cadet Ice Arena to face local rival Air Force, and it was on the Falcons’ home ice that they picked up a 3-1 win over CC. Charlie Taft opened the scoring for the Tigers 99 seconds into the game, but AFA scored twice in 32 seconds later in the opening period and got all the insurance it needed in the second.

It wasn’t altogether for a lack of trying – Falcons goaltender Chris Truehl made 35 saves in the winning effort – but being beat soundly by a local nemesis hours after defeating a Big Ten school and former WCHA foe had to sting.

CC (3-8-0, 0-5-0) is off for Thanksgiving weekend before heading northwest to face eighth-ranked UMD on Dec. 5-6.

Rankings roundup: How ranked teams fared, Nov. 17-23

Omaha’s David Pope celebrates his second-period goal in a 3-2 loss to Minnesota-Duluth on Friday (photo: Michelle Bishop).

Here’s how the teams in the Nov. 17, 2014, USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll fared from Monday, Nov. 17 to Sunday, Nov. 23:

RANK LAST WEEK’S RESULTS RECORD THIS WEEK’S GAMES
1
Michigan Tech
Friday: lost to No. 9 Minnesota State 2-1
Saturday: lost to No. 9 Minnesota State 3-2
10-2 Friday-Saturday: at Alabama-Huntsville
2
North Dakota
Friday: lost at No. 16 St. Cloud State 3-1
Saturday: won at No. 16 St. Cloud State 3-2
9-3-1 Friday-Saturday: vs. Omaha
3
Boston University
Friday: beat Maine 3-2, OT
Saturday: won at Connecticut 5-2
8-1-1 Tuesday: vs. Harvard
Saturday: vs. Colgate
Sunday: at Dartmouth
4
Minnesota
Friday: lost to U.S. Under-18 Team (ex) 7-3 Friday: at Boston College
Saturday: at Northeastern
5
Massachusetts-Lowell
Thursday: won at Notre Dame 3-1
Friday: tied at Notre Dame 2-2
8-2-3 Saturday: vs. Harvard
6
Colgate
Friday: beat Brown 4-3, OT
Saturday: lost to Yale 3-1
9-4-1 Saturday: at Boston University
7
Miami
Friday: beat Western Michigan 1-0
Saturday: beat Western Michigan 5-2
10-4 Off
8
Minnesota-Duluth
Friday: won at No. 13 Omaha 3-2
Saturday: lost at Omaha 4-1
9-5 Off
9
Minnesota State
Friday: won at No. 1 Michigan Tech 2-1
Saturday: won at No. 1 Michigan Tech 3-2
9-3 Friday-Saturday: at Lake Superior State
10
Denver
Friday: beat Air Force 7-0
Saturday: beat Wisconsin 3-2
8-3 Off
11
Vermont
Friday: lost at Connecticut 2-1
Saturday: won at Massachusetts 11-1
8-3-1 Tuesday: vs. Massachusetts
Friday-Saturday: at Maine
12
Boston Colege
Friday: won at Massachusetts 5-3
Saturday: beat Maine 4-1
7-5 Friday: vs. Minnesota
Saturday: at Providence
13
Omaha
Friday: lost to No. 8 Minnesota-Duluth 3-2
Saturday: beat Minnesota-Duluth 4-1
7-2-1 Friday-Saturday: at North Dakota
14
Quinnipiac
Friday: lost at Clarkson
Saturday: won at St. Lawrence 3-2, OT
8-3-1 Friday: vs. MassachusettsSaturday: at Massachusetts
15
Union
Off 6-5-1 Friday: at Notre Dame
Saturday: vs. Ohio State/Western Michigan at Shillelagh Tournament
16
St. Cloud State
Friday: beat No. 2 North Dakota 3-1
Saturday: lost to No. 2 North Dakota 3-2
5-6-1 Friday-Saturday: at Bemidji State
17
Northern Michigan
Friday: won at Alaska-Anchorage 1-0
Saturday: lost at Alaska-Anchorage 4-0
7-2-1 Friday-Saturday: at Alaska
18
Bowling Green
Friday: beat Bemidji State 3-1
Saturday: beat Bemidji State 3-2
10-3-1 Off
19
Providence
Friday: at New Hampshire, ppd, ice
Saturday: won at New Hampshire 1-0
5-5-1 Tuesday: vs. Army
Saturday: vs. Boston College
20
Robert Morris
Friday: tied at American International 5-5
Saturday: won at American International 6-0
8-1-3 Off

The trio to beat, 11 goals and Eichel

We’re about a third of the way through the league slate for most of the teams in Hockey East and it appears that there is a trio of teams to beat a top the Hockey East standings. That leads my three things I learned this weekend:

1. UML, BU and UVM: The alphabet soup trio at the top

Massachusetts-Lowell and Boston University have gotten off to fast starts in the first third of their seasons enough so that they are an obvious pair that should be in the running come season’s end for the Hockey East title. Vermont also can be thrown into that mix, though with a little bit more caution. Lowell has played seven games in league play without a loss (5-0-2). BU has played one more game and sits a point ahead at 6-1-1. Tied with BU is Vermont, though the Catamounts are the only team in the league to have already played 10 league contests or nearly half of the 22 league games. But their 6-3-1 record warrants them to be placed in this trio at the top that everyone is chasing.

And speaking of Vermont… 11 goals?

It is rare that you see a team reach double digits in goals, but that’s exactly what Vermont did on Saturday night, embarrassing their western New England rival Massachusetts, 11-1. Surprisingly, no one recorded a hat trick. If fact, only two players – Brady Shaw and Malcolm McKinney – had multi-goal game. But the UVM offense simply exploded scoring four times on the power play (though three came in the third when the game was out of reach). The loss was so bad that UMass coach John Micheletto apologized to his fans in the post-game press conference. These two faceoff again on Tuesday night in their traditional pre-Thanksgiving midweek game.

Eichel being Eichel

By now, I’m sure many of you have seen Jack Eichel’s game-winning goal from Friday’s 3-2 overtime win against Maine. If not, you only have to watch the first 15 or so seconds of this Youtube video:

[youtube_sc url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OP9l8alY2T0]

We all know by now that Eichel will be the most talked about rookie (and possibly player) in Hockey East this season. His 19 points in 10 games leads the nation in points per game (1.90). But where does he rank among some of the other great forwards to go through Hockey East in recent years? Some players who posted impressive rookie years include Brian Gionta (1.55 points per game), Darren Haydar (1.48 PPG), Marty Reasoner (1.32 PPG) and Stephane DaCosta (1.32 PPG). Last year’s Hobey Baker winner Johnny Gaudreau averaged only a point a game as a rookie while another Hobey winner, Jason Krog, put up just .58 points per game his freshman year. And then there is probably the best rookie comparison for Eichel right now, Paul Kariya. In his legendary rookie campaign Kariya, the last person to score 100 points in a season, averaged 2.56 points per game. Those stats came in a totally different era for offense in college hockey. More on this on Thursday.

Three things

Three things I learned from this weekend in the WCHA …

 1. Mavericks make statement

Minnesota State has been an offensive-minded team for much of this season. But the Mavericks survived a tough, physical road series against No. 1 Michigan Tech and swept the Huskies with the help of its own brand of rock-solid defending along with the goaltending of junior Stephon Williams. The series could have tilted either way, with MSU winning two one-goal games and scoring twice in the third period of each game to get the sweep. Circle your calendar for Feb. 27-28 when the Mavericks and Huskies meet again in Mankato because it’s sure to be meaningful.

2. Don’t rest on Bowling Green

Sitting neck and neck with Minnesota State and two points behind Michigan Tech is Bowling Green, which, after sweeping Bemidji State (a team that probably deserves better than the 0-for in its last six games), has won six of its last seven games. The Falcons seem to know how to win the close games. Counting games that saw an empty-net goal at the end, Bowling Green is 4-2-1 in games decided by one goal or less. Six of those games have been decided by a 3-2 score.

3. Just got tougher

Alabama Huntsville and Lake Superior State scored big wins over the weekend, with the Chargers winning at Ferris State on Friday and the Lakers edging Alaska in overtime on Saturday, for series splits. That’s made for a clogged-up middle of the standings where teams will be battling for home ice in just a few months. Four points separate six teams sitting fourth to seventh. Huntsville is 3-2-1 in its last six games and 2-6-0 in conference games (a schedule that has already seen Minnesota State and Bowling Green). Meanwhile, the Lakers are 3-2-0 in their last five games and 3-7-0 in league play.

Three things from the weekend that was

Happy Sunday afternoon before a shortened work week!

The first weekend of Big Ten conference play is officially in the books. Four of the league’s six teams played each other this weekend. Here’s how things shook out:

  • Ohio State and Michigan State split their Thursday/Friday series. The Spartans took the first game 3-1 and the Buckeyes responded with a 3-0 victory.
  • Michigan and Penn State split a two-game series at Yost Ice Arena. The Nittany Lions won 3-2 on Friday and the Wolverines captured an 8-1 victory on Saturday.
  • Wisconsin dropped two games in Colorado, losing 5-2 to Colorado College on Friday and 3-2 to Denver on Saturday.

Here are three things that I saw this weekend:

1. Two B1G series = Two splits. More to come?

After one weekend, four teams are tied for the lead in the Big Ten and, even though I still think Minnesota will win this conference pretty convincingly, close series throughout the conference season could be a common occurrence. This should come as no surprise, considering the conference standings weren’t set in stone until the final weekend last season. Add on the fact that Penn State looks like it will be, at the very least, a larger thorn if everybody’s side this season, and we should see more of the same this year. If the Nittany Lions keep playing at this level, we could be looking at another situation where the final weekend of conference play will determine playoff seeding. Big Ten play will resume in two weeks. All six teams will play nonconference opponents next weekend.

2. Michigan’s roller coaster ride continues

One of the splits this weekend was Michigan and Penn State at Yost Ice Arena. The Wolverines dropped the first game 3-2 and trounced the Nittany Lions 8-1 in the second game. Saturday’s game was important, even though it was only the second conference game of the season. A 0-2 start, and getting swept it their own building, would not have been good for a Wolverines team that is struggling to gain any consistency this season. Saturday’s performance was, in my opinion, the Wolverines’ best performance of the season, but they need to build on it. So far this season they haven’t been able to carry momentum from one game to another.

3. Oh Wisconsin

I also thought that Saturday’s performance against Denver was the Badgers’ best effort of the season. The fact that it resulted in a 3-2 loss really tells the story about how Wisconsin’s season has gone so far. The one-goal loss effort also came one night after giving up five goals in a three-goal loss to a subpar Colorado College team. The Badgers will play their next eight games at home. They went 17-2-1 at the Kohl Center last season, so one would think that they should be able to pick up a victory or two. However, their opponents are Ferris State, Penn State, Michigan Tech and Boston University (combined record of 32-12-3).

At Carrier Dome, Utica, Oswego play before largest crowd to see Division III men's hockey game

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The organizers of the Frozen Dome Classic at the Carrier Dome made no secret of their goal — to break the U.S. professional hockey indoor attendance record with their feature game between two “local” American Hockey League teams, the Syracuse Crunch and the Utica Comets.
The U.S. pro indoor record was 28,138 set at Tropicana Field during Game 4 of the 1996 NHL Eastern Conference quarterfinals between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Philadelphia Flyers.
The organizers met their goal as the Carrier Dome now owns the record with an official attendance count of 30,715 on Saturday.
The U.S. indoor record for any hockey game was a college game — the 2010 NCAA national final between Wisconsin and Boston College at Ford Field in Detroit. That was 37,592.
The semifinals for that Frozen Four is second on the list with 34,954.
For the college participants in the Frozen Dome Classic, it was a thrill.
“It was awesome. The guys were excited about it,” Oswego coach Ed Gosek said after a 4-4 tie with Utica. “The ice really wasn’t that bad. More than the ice is the boards. The boards are dead because they are not permanently mounted into the surface. You got to work for everything off the walls.”
“This is fun,” Utica coach Gary Heenan said. “When you get off the bus, it had that feeling it was the big time. It’s great for us.”
The college game also set a record. The official attendance was 7,047, setting the mark for an NCAA Division III hockey game.
Two games were played on Friday — Cicero North Syracuse beat Baldwinsville 3-2 in overtime in a high school game and the Syracuse club team beat West Virginia 4-2.
The first game of Saturday’s tripleheader was also between the two nearby cities — Syracuse firefighters and medical versus Utica law enforcement. The police won 4-1.

New Hampshire, Providence set Jan. 13 as date to make up Friday’s postponed game

New Hampshire and Providence will make up Friday’s postponed game on Tuesday, Jan. 13.

The teams weren’t able to play Friday because of problems with the ice surface at the Whittemore Center.

The rescheduled game will start at 7 p.m. EST. Fans with tickets for Friday’s game can use them on Jan. 13 or return or exchange them at the point of purchase.

Saturday’s game is scheduled to be played at 5 p.m. EST.

Northeastern’s Snydeman suspended 1 game for hit that sidelined Merrimack goalie Tirronen

Hockey East suspended Northeastern senior forward Torin Snydeman for one game on Saturday after he collided with Merrimack goaltender Rasmus Tirronen early in Friday’s game.

Snydeman was given a goaltender interference penalty during the game; Tirronen had to leave the game with what the Boston Herald reported was a suspected concussion.

“He’s out for a while,” Merrimack coach Mark Dennehy said of Tirronen. “He got elbowed in the head.”

Snydeman has two goals and 12 penalty minutes in 10 games this season for Northeastern. He’ll miss Saturday’s home game against Merrimack.

Gallery: Minnesota-Duluth rallies in third period to beat Omaha

Here are images from Minnesota-Duluth’s 3-2 victory over Omaha on Friday.

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Gallery: Webster scores two as St. Lawrence beats Princeton

Here are photos from St. Lawrence’s 7-3 victory over Princeton on Friday in Princeton, N.J.

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Roy earns prestigious Spirit of Courage Award from Christopher Reeve Foundation

Travis Roy was presented the Christopher Reeve Foundation’s prestigious Spirit of Courage Award at its annual gala in New York City on Thursday.

Roy, who fell head-first into the boards just 11 seconds into his first game with Boston University in 1995 and wound up paralyzed, has been involved with his self-named foundation for years, but has never been after any recognition.

“For a long time, almost 10 years, I never felt comfortable with the attention my story received,” Roy told the Portland Press Herald. “Basically, all I did was break my neck.

“The first seven, eight years, the impact [of the Travis Roy Foundation] was very small. The last eight, 10 years, we’ve changed the lives of 1,000 people. We’re funding research. I realize [the Spirit of Courage Award] is important. It means a lot to me because I share it with so many others. I’m just the lead singer of this band.”

Roy’s annual Wiffle ball fundraiser tournament in Essex, Vt., has raised $2,910,000 over the past 13 years.

“Every year I try to get through it without emotionally breaking down,” said Tony McNaboe, a longtime friend of Roy’s, to the Press Herald. “Essex, for the three days of the tournament, is a little bit of utopia. It blows my mind what he’s turned that tournament into. It’s such a profoundly poignant time and it’s all because of Travis. He’s so selflessly concerned with you.”

Michigan’s Yost Arena to undergo improvements to ice systems

The University of Michigan Board of Regents approved on Nov. 20 improvements to the ice systems at Yost Ice Arena.

The existing equipment has been in use since 1973, when the Wolverines began play at Yost, and has exceeded its life expectancy, according to a school-issued press release.

Michigan has hired Stevens Engineering, Inc. to design the project, which will include removing and rebuilding the existing rink floor to facilitate replacement of refrigeration piping.

Minor architectural changes will occur, including the modification of the current ice equipment room, enclosing the existing Zamboni flood water treatment system, extending the wall in the Zamboni area to increase separation from the west concourse, expanding the existing snow melt pit and the construction of two new brick screen walls at the south façade of the building to enclose the cooling tower and dumpsters.

In addition, the current dasher board system will be removed and replaced to improve the safety of the players.

The project, funded by Michigan Athletics resources, will cost an estimated $5.8 million. Construction is expected to be completed in the summer of 2015.

Friday night’s Providence-New Hampshire game postponed due to ice problems

Due to problems with the ice surface at New Hampshire’s Whittemore Center, Friday night’s (Nov. 21) game between Providence and New Hampshire Wildcats has been postponed.

The teams are expected to play Saturday’s game as scheduled at 5 p.m. and will then make up Friday night’s game later in the season.

Women’s D-III picks: Nov. 21

It’s almost the most wonderful time of the year, but for now, it’s the best time of the week, the weekend with games on the schedule.

USCHO Women’s Editor Candace Horgan and Division III writer Matt Mackinder give their thoughts on the big games on the upcoming schedule.

Friday, Nov. 21

No. 3 Norwich at Salve Regina
Candace: Home ice will make this close, but I like the Cadets to pick up the win. Norwich 3-2
Matt: This Friday night contest could conceivably go either way.

Norwich is ranked third in the country for a reason, while Salve Regina is playing very respectable .500 hockey (2-2-0) so far, including a 2-1-0 mark on home ice.

That being said, Norwich is, well, Norwich, and the Cadets’ 4-1-1 overall record to date moves to 5-1-1 tonight. Give a couple goals to Erin Joyce, too.

Friday-Saturday, Nov. 21-22

No. 5 Wisconsin-Stevens Point at No. 8 Wisconsin-Superior
Candace: I don’t go into as much detail as Matt does, but I do like his idea of a split. It seems to be the trend with ranked teams facing each other. Wis.-Superior 4-2, Wis.-Stevens Point 3-2
Matt: The marquee matchup this weekend, as the two ranked squads go at it. Overall, Superior is 6-1-0 and Wis.-Stevens Point is 5-1-0, so what gives?

Superior has many of the WIAC’s top scorers, while the Pointers seem to have a more balanced attack. Janna Beilke-Skoug (Stevens Point) and Megan Leikkari (Superior) are arguably the conference’s top two goalies.

While two ties would perhaps be poetic justice, I’ll go with a split with Superior winning Friday night and Stevens Point taking Saturday night’s game.

No. 10 Adrian at St. Norbert
Candace: While St. Norbert is improving, the team isn’t quite the dominant force the men’s squad is. Home ice will make at least one close, but I think Adrian sweeps. Adrian 5-3, 3-2
Matt: The Bulldogs are off to a 4-0-0 start and entered the rankings this week. Long overdue, in my opinion.

Adrian’s Kelsey Kusch is averaging better than a goal per game, and looks to be the catalyst for the offense. Jade Walsh has played every minute of every game to this point, and will most likely get the call to keep the ball rolling this weekend.

St. Norbert is 3-3-0 and is a streaky team so far, having opened with two wins over St. Benedict, then lost two to Lake Forest and split with St. Scholastica. Consistency is needed against the No. 10 team in the country.

Adrian takes both games, with one being decided in the final three minutes.

Fredonia-Buffalo State men’s game Nov. 21 postponed

Buffalo State’s men’s game scheduled for Friday night at Fredonia has been postponed due to continued travel restrictions related to the severe snowstorm that pounded Western New York this week.

The game has been rescheduled for Saturday, Feb. 14 at 7 p.m.

Atlantic Hockey Picks, Nov. 21 – 25

Last week:

Dan: 4-3-4
Chris: 2-5-4

On the season:

Dan: 43-26-10 (.608)
Chris: 44-25-10 (.620)

 

This Week’s Picks:

NOTE: Dan Rubin, away on his honeymoon, sent me his picks before his wedding. He asked me to write “some awesomely funny comments for me”. Uhuh. Plus we have some bonus picks due to pair of games on Tuesday.

Friday, November 21 and Saturday, November 22
Canisius vs. Mercyhurst
Chris:Friday’s game at Mercyhurst has been postponed due to a snowmaggedon that hit the area between Buffalo and Erie hard. At the time this is published, Saturday’s game in Buffalo is still on. I usually go with the home team in these home-and-home series, but I’ve been burned a lot using this method so far this season. Plus I think Mercyhurst is the better team right now so I am picking the Lakers to keep the Golden Griffins winless at HARBORCENTER.
Dan: Dan might make some crack about how HARBORCENTER is now all in caps in the school’s and league’s press releases. Is it supposed to be an acronym? Have fun making some up. Anyway, Dan likes Canisius at home on Saturday.

Robert Morris at American International
Chris: The Colonials suffered their first defeat last Saturday at home to Air Force and look to rebound on the road. AIC has the reputation of stinging teams ahead of them in the standings but I think RMU gets it rolling against a struggling Yellow Jackets defense. Robert Morris sweeps.
Dan: Dan has been saying for the past couple of seasons that when he picks against RMU, they win and vise versa. Sorry, Sons of Schooley, but he’s picking an RMU sweep.

Army at Niagara
Chris:Niagara got its first win on Nov. 8, 3-2 in overtime at Bentley, and then was off last weekend. The Purple Eagles have several of their injured players back, and I think this weekend marks the return of a little of the Dwyer magic that made NU almost unbeatable at home prior to last season. Niagara Sweeps.
Dan: I (Chris) thought I was making a gutsy call as one could easily make a case for Army to be the favored team, but Dan is also picking Niagara to sweep. Now I don’t feel so intrepid.

Sacred Heart at Rochester Institute of Technology
Chris: RIT has owned Sacred Heart since joining Atlantic Hockey: 16-4 all time and unbeaten (8-0-1) in its last nine games with the Pioneers. But this is an improving SHU team that knocked off UConn last weekend and has beaten Bentley and Canisius. I’m going with a split. Sacred Heart wins on Friday; RIT wins on Saturday.
Dan: Sacred Heart has had some success against Bentley the past couple of seasons, and Dan sees a lot of Bentley games, so I can understand why he picks Sacred Heart to sweep.

 
Friday, November 21
Air Force at Denver
Chris: The Falcons are coming off a good weekend at Robert Morris and came with seconds of knocking off (then) third-ranked North Dakota a couple of weeks back. But I think No. 10 Denver gets it done at home.
Dan: Dan deems Denver desirable to deliver. Pioneers win.

Bentley at Harvard
Dan: Dan is going to tell you that the third time will be charm for the Falcons, who for two straight seasons have brought 500 fans to the Bright Hockey Center to see their team shut out (5-0 in 2012 and 3-0 in 2013). He’s picking (cough, homer, cough) Bentley to win.
Chris: History repeats. Harvard wins.

 
Saturday, November 22
Colorado College at Air Force
Chris: Air Force hasn’t had much success at home so far this season (2-3-1) but Colorado College is 2-7 and has scored two goals in its last three games. I’m predicting an Air Force victory.
Dan: Dan fails to see the superiority of my logic and picks CC to win.

 
Tuesday, November 25
Bentley at Holy Cross
Dan: Dan’s going with the home team here in a game he would probably be broadcasting if he didn’t decide to GET MARRIED IN THE MIDDLE OF HOCKEY SEASON. He thinks Holy Cross will win.
Chris: I will definitely be catching this one on atlantichockey.tv. These teams have a nice little rivalry going and I expect this to be an entertaining contest. I like Bentley to pull out a win on the road.

Army at Providence
Chris: Providence has tumbled down the polls but has had a tough schedule so far and I think still has the ability to defeat an improving Army squad. PC wins.
Dan: Dan is also picking Providence. Wait, can I change my pick?

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