Friday, November 7 and Saturday, November 8 Niagara at Bentley Dan: This is an intriguing matchup between a Niagara team better than a winless record and a Bentley team that lost its only home game this year. The Falcons have been coming together over the past couple of weeks, which I think propels them this week. I think Niagara gets at least a point, but I can’t pick ties, and I hate picking splits. Bentley sweeps. Chris: The Purple Eagles are winless so far, and Bentley is home for just the second time this season. The Falcons lost their lone home game at the JAR, but I don’t think that happens this time. Bentley sweeps.
Army at Mercyhurst Dan: The last time Army won at Mercyhurst, John F. Kennedy was president. I love Army, but I have a hard time picking against the Lakers in their own barn. Mercyhurst sweeps. Chris: This series has a nice subplot of Laker sophomore Jack Riley going up against his dad, Army coach Brian Riley. Mercyhurst is coming off a huge win at Colgate last weekend and I think will earn a hard-fought sweep.
Holy Cross at RIT Dan: This is the first of teams probably glad the games aren’t in Ritter Arena; the Tigers went 9-2-4 at the old barn against the Crusaders. A new slate and a new day for Holy Cross, a team slowly winning me over after I predicted them in the bottom two of the league. And yes, I realize I said I hate picking splits. RIT wins on Friday, Holy Cross wins on Saturday Chris: RIT has dominated this series, but Holy Cross has come on as of late, including a wild win in last year’s best-of-three playoff series. But I think the Tigers are due for a good weekend at home. RIT sweeps.
Canisius at Sacred Heart Dan: Having seen Sacred Heart in person, I can tell you they’re a team that will make you a believer. Sacred Heart sweeps. Chris:This is a tough one to call as both teams have been up-and-down so far. But Canisius is 8-1-1 against SHU in their previous ten meetings, and I’m going with that trend. Canisius sweeps.
Alabama-Huntsville at Air Force Dan: Alabama-Huntsville will eventually be much better than they are, and they’re a team now fighting for a potential playoff spot in the WCHA with Alaska suspended from postseason play. That said, this is a non-conference game, a very long road trip, and an Air Force team still hungry after narrowly defeated North Dakota last week. Air Force sweeps. Chris: This is a matchup of former CHA teams, and a homecome of sorts for UAH coach Mike Corbett, who spent ten years as an assistant at Air Force. The Falcons are coming off a tough lost last Saturday at North Dakota, a game they were seconds away from winning. I think they rebound here. Air Force sweeps.
Friday, November 7 American International at Massachusetts Dan: UMass fans can call this personal for me, but I’m calling it strictly business. AIC rolls into the Mullins Center and gets it done behind strong third period goaltending. I’m on board with the idea of moving this game to Springfield and making it a thing. Perhaps a trophy is in order? AIC wins. Chris: The Yellow Jackets are coming off a sweep at Niagara, while the Minutemen lost a pair of close games to Maine last weekend. If AIC rookie goaltender Alex Murray can keep things rolling, the Yellow Jackets will prevail. But I have a hunch UMass will find a way to get it done. UMass wins.
Geneseo goaltender Nick Horrigan leads his team to battle Plattsburgh this weekend (photo: Dan Hickling).
Our East columnist, Dan Hickling, and our West columnist, Brian Lester, get into full swing this week with their picks for the weekend’s top games.
DAN HICKLING
Friday ECAC East
Skidmore (1-0-0, 0-0-0) @ UNE (1-0-0, 0-0-0) – UNE 4, Skidmore 2
Two middle of the pack teams trying to grab some early season points. The Nor’Easters will use home ice to their advantage ECAC West
Nazareth (1-0-0, 0-0-0) @ Utica (1-0-0, 0-0-0) – Nazareth 3, Utica 2
Teams play twice this weekend. Nazareth always pulls off some early-season surprises and this could well be another of those. Saturday SUNYAC
Plattsburgh (1-0-0, 1-0-0) @ Geneseo (2-0-0, 2-0-0) – Geneseo 3, Plattsburgh 1
Clashes of two titans often are decided by goaltending. Genny’s Nick Horrigan has played in a Frozen Four. Plattsburgh’s Spencer Finney has not (yet). ECAC Northeast
Nichols (2-0-0, 0-0-0) @ Curry (1-2-0, 0-0-0) – Nichols 5, Curry 1
The defending conference champs seem to be ready for another roll through the ECACNE. It begins here with Curry. MASCAC
Mass-Dartmouth (0-1-0, 0-0-0) @ Framingham (0-1-0, 0-0-0) – Mass-Dartmouth 5, Framingham 4
Could be a big night (and a game winning goal) for UMD’s top scorer Luc Sauve.
BRIAN LESTER
Wisconsin-Stout (0-1) at Hamline (1-1): The Pipers are looking to build off the confidence they gained in a win over St. Thomas last week. Kevin Novakovich leads the team in goals scored with two, while John Sellie-Hanson and Santino Vasquez have both seen time in goal and give the Pipers depth between the pipes.
Stout has played just one game and was outshot 50-27 against Lake Forest. Chase Hollander and Spencer Veale have combined to make 44 saves. This one should be close but Hamline gets the edge at home. Hamline 4-2. Wisconsin-Stevens Point (1-0) at Gustavus Adolphus (1-1): Gustavus was the runner-up in the MIAC tournament a year ago and is hoping to take the next step this year. This game is a chance for the Gusties to make a statement against the national runner-up of a year ago. Jake Bushey leads Gustavus with two goals and Erik Johnson has started the first two games in goal, tallying 52 saves.
Stevens Point flexed its offensive muscle in its opener, scoring 11 goals against Finlandia. Eight players scored goals and Brandon Jaeger racked up 11 saves. The Pointers will be tough to beat and should nail down a win. Stevens Point, 5-2. Wisconsin-Eau Claire at St. Olaf (0-2): The Oles are searching for their first win of the year. They managed to score only four goals in the first two games. St. Olaf has had four different players score goals, while Steve Papciak has tallied 38 saves in two games. St. Olaf will have to be at its best on both ends of the ice to knock off a team that is one of the best in the country.
The Blugolds are playing their first game of the year and are coming off a season where they won the WIAC tournament championship. They scored 93 goals a year ago and will come in ready to go after feeling as if they were snubbed in the NCAA tournament selection process. Eau Claire, 4-3. Concordia (Minn.) (0-2) at St. Scholastica (2-0): The Falcons are hoping to win their first game of the year. They managed only four goals in the first two games and allowed 10. They were outscored 4-2 on the power play in the two games and changing that trend will be a key to success against the Saints on the road.
St. Scholastica rolled to a pair of wins last week and will look to continue hot streak this week as it hosts the Falcons. The Saints have been led by Derek Sutliffe, who has scored five goals. Tyler Bruggeman started in goal twice and has allowed just four goals while making 65 saves. The Saints are poised to sweep the series. St. Scholastica, 5-2, 4-2. Lake Forest (1-0) at Northland (0-2): Lake Forest scored six goals in its opener against Stout, with Jack Lewis showcasing his talent, scoring three times in the win. Leo Podolsky earned the win in goal, racking up 25 saves, and if the Foresters can put together that same type of effort this weekend, they should be in position to start off league play in style.
Northland is coming off a pair of losses to nationally-ranked Adrian and will need to get its offense going to have success against Lake Forest. The Lumberjacks scored just four goals in their first two games and gave up 16. Tyler Ampe made 49 saves in the first two games. The Foresters appear to have the edge in the series and should get a sweep. Lake Forest, 5-2, 6-3.
Well, I built on my lead on Arlan last week, though neither of us set the world on fire. I went 19-7-4 (.700) to move to 83-21-15 (.760) on the year, while Arlan went 17-9-4 (.633) to move to 79-25-15 (.726) on the year.
There aren’t a lot of games this week, but we’re picking most of them.
Friday-Saturday, Nov. 7-8
Robert Morris at Lindenwood Candace: The Colonials have to win at some point, right? Robert Morris 2-1, 2-1 Arlan: Didn’t expect the Colonials to trail the Lions by three points after a week of CHA action. Lindenwood 2-1, Robert Morris
Mercyhurst at Syracuse Candace: Syracuse will break its futile streak at some point, but not this weekend. Mercyhurst 3-1, 4-1 Arlan: The Orange will defeat Mercyhurst eventually, but given they couldn’t beat Lindenwood, they’re going to have to prove it to me first. Mercyhurst 2-1, 3-1
Ohio State at Minnesota State Candace: The Buckeyes build momentum ahead of a huge game with Mercyhurst. Ohio State 2-1, 4-1 Arlan: The Schmitt sisters give the Buckeyes an edge. Ohio State 3-1, 4-3
Maine at Brown Candace: A matchup of Bears could be a split, but I’ll go for the visitors. Maine 3-2, 2-1 Arlan: The good news for Brown in the early going is that it is scoring over a goal more per game than last year; the bad news is that goals allowed has made an even bigger jump. Maine 3-2, 2-1
Penn State at Colgate Candace: This series could make me a believer in the Nittany Lions. A split seems likely, but I’ll pick a sweep. Penn State 3-1, 2-1 Arlan: Colgate has won only three games through the end of November the past two years and is starting slowly again, although this is likely a split of some sort. Penn State 2-1, 3-2
RIT at Princeton Candace: Another matchup of squads with the same nickname. Based on last weekend, I’m picking the home team. Princeton 3-1, 2-1 Arlan: Princeton took the only other D-I meeting of the two streaks of Tigers. Princeton 3-1, 1-0
St. Cloud at Rensselaer Candace: As Arlan says, I think this series is payback. St. Cloud 3-1, 3-2 Arlan: The Engineers got a road sweep in St. Cloud last year; can the Huskies get some payback? St. Cloud State 2-1, 2-1
Saturday, Nov. 8
Boston College at Northeastern Candace: A good test of BC’s depth. Boston College 4-1 Arlan: A short-handed Northeastern can’t take advantage of an even shorter BC. Boston College 4-2
Vermont at New Hampshire Candace: Both teams are missing players to Four Nations, so I’ll pick the deeper one. Vermont 3-1 Arlan: The Wildcats come in having lost five straight with BC, BC, BU, and Wisconsin twice to follow. I have a strange feeling that I should pick them here, but I lack the guts. Vermont 2-0
Dartmouth at St. Lawrence Candace: I’m torn on this game, mainly because I don’t know which St. Lawrence team will show up. Dartmouth 3-2 Arlan: St. Lawrence has gotten into the habit of playing nonconference games versus neighboring Clarkson; now the Saints and Big Green head to Rochester to play out of league. St. Lawrence 1-0
Boston University at Yale Candace: The Bulldogs came down to Earth last week. Boston University 3-2 Arlan: Neither has inspired a ton of confidence, but the Terriers have been better at finding a way. Boston University 5-4
Sunday, Nov. 9
Vermont at Boston College Candace: Yes, Arlan knows who I will pick. Boston College 3-1 Arlan: A rare game that looks to be roughly a toss up where I know exactly what Candace will pick, offering a chance to gain ground (or continue to lose it.) Vermont 2-1
Tuesday, Nov. 11
Northeastern at Boston University Candace: Back-to-back games against the Boston squads isn’t a good way for Northeastern to get untracked. Boston University 3-2 Arlan: Northeastern struggled through the first half last year and is off to an even slower start. Boston University 3-2
Mercyhurst at Ohio State Candace: This could go either way, so I’ll pick home ice. Ohio State 2-1 Arlan: The Buckeyes won in OT in Erie last year in the programs’ first meeting since 2004. Mercyhurst 2-1
I realized last week that I’d made a mistake in my ongoing picks record. I’ve rectified that this week.
Last week
Drew: 7-2-1 (.750)
Paula: 6-3-1 (.650)
Season
Drew: 22-12-3 (.635)
Paula: 17-17-3 (.500)
This week
Wisconsin returns to action this weekend after a two-week absence. There are four Big Ten teams in play; Michigan and Penn State each have a bye week.
Michigan State at New Hampshire
Drew: Michigan State is the only team that ventures away from home this weekend as the Spartans will take on a 2-4-0 New Hampshire team. The outcome of this series will depend on which Michigan State team shows up: the one that has shown some offensive efficiency or the one that has gotten shutout twice this season. New Hampshire will be looking to forget the awful last series against Massachusetts-Lowell and the Spartans will look to carry some momentum beating Ferris State and splitting their series with the Bulldogs. If Jake Hildebrand plays well, Michigan State will sweep.
Paula: I don’t see the Wildcats as easy pickings, not at all. UNH split a road series with Michigan a couple of weeks ago and looked good even in the loss. Last weekend, the Wildcats dropped a pair of road games to Massachusetts-Lowell, 2-0 and 8-2. Michigan State and New Hampshire last met in the NCAA tournament March 25, 2006, a 1-0 win for the Spartans. This is a Friday-Saturday series with each game beginning at 7:00 p.m. Both games are carried by Fox College Sports, and Saturday’s contest is also televised locally in New Hampshire by WBIN.
Drew’s picks: Michigan State 3-0, 4-2. Paula’s picks: New Hampshire 3-2, Michigan State 3-2.
Nebraska-Omaha at Ohio State
Drew: With a lot of young players on its roster, Omaha got off to the kind of start that Wisconsin wishes it would have. The Mavericks started the season by splitting a series with a ranked Minnesota State squad and followed that up by sweeping Western Michigan on the road. UNO defeated and tied Cornell on the road last weekend. The question is, can the road warrior keep it up for one more weekend? You need to score to win hockey games (that’s the kind of insider info that everybody comes here for) and Omaha makes that difficult for its opponents. UNO gave up seven goals to Mankato in its two-game series with the other Mavericks, but it gave up four goals in four games after that. Ohio State needs to be opportunistic this weekend and cash in every opportunity it gets; these games could be decided by special teams play.
Paula: I do love old CCHA rivalries, even when the parties involved barely remember the CCHA rivalries. These teams are tied 13-13-5 all time, with the Buckeyes holding an 8-4-2 edge in Columbus. The teams last met in Omaha in February 2010, skating to a 5-5 tie followed by a 4-3 UNO win. Games begin at 7:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and neither is televised.
Drew’s picks: Ohio State 3-1, Omaha 3-1. Paula’s picks: UNO 3-2, OSU 3-2.
North Dakota at Wisconsin
Drew: Wisconsin’s struggles during its first four games have been very well documented, so I don’t think it’s necessary to delve into that topic anymore. The Badgers simply need something positive from this weekend. A split would do wonders for the confidence of the team’s young players; heck, a tie and a loss would probably be viewed as something positive. It’s not do-or-die time for the Badgers. They can look in their own media guide and see that it’s possible for a team to start out 0-6-0 and finish with a record above .500, but it would still be a disappointing start. North Dakota is good, but its not a perfect team — Bemidji State showed everyone that on opening night. If I were wagering anything more than my record in a friendly competition against Paula, I’d pick a North Dakota sweep, but I’m going to say Wisconsin puts one in the win column.
Paula: North Dakota’s last two games went to overtime, a 3-2 win over Air Force (Nov. 1) and a 2-2 tie with Providence Oct. 25 following a 6-1 win over the Friars the night before. Wisconsin is 86-66-12 all-time against North Dakota, but the series is tied 14-14-3 under NoDak coach Dave Hakstol. The teams most recently met in the 2014 NCAA Midwest Regional, with North Dakota claiming a 5-2 victory (March 28, 2014). These games begin at 7:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday, with Saturday’s game televised locally in Wisconsin by The Wisconsin Channel, part of the Wisconsin public television network — and how awesome is that?
Drew: This was supposed to be the rematch of a game that many thought would take place earlier in the season but didn’t. There are a couple of interesting story lines between these two squads. First and foremost there’s Don Lucia versus Mario Lucia. There is also Don Lucia versus his alma mater. Minnesota and Notre Dame are becoming familiar foes by nonconference standards, considering they’ve played four times in the past three years, each team with two wins in those four contests. It’ll be interesting to see how Minnesota responds after not playing the greatest hockey last weekend against St. Cloud State. I went into this season saying that I wasn’t going to pick against Minnesota until it lost a game; now I’ll alter that and not pick against the Gophers at home until they lose in Mariucci. Gophers’ fans haven’t seen them lose at home since last November.
Paula: There are several former CCHA teams that I miss covering, keenly, and Notre Dame is close to the top of that list. It’s a fun program to observe, the Irish are coached very well and the gent that handles the information for the team, Tim Connor, is one of the best in the business. In addition to being well liked, his notes are epic. For example, this week he recounts the 14 times the Irish have faced and knocked off the No. 1 team in the nation, spanning from Feb. 23, 1973 (8-5 over Wisconsin) to Notre Dame’s 2-1 overtime win over Boston College March 1, 2014. Then there’s his note on senior defenseman Robbie Russo who “has been encouraged by his coaching staff to shoot the puck.” The result? Russo is leading the team in shots on goal with 31 in eight games. This is the gooey stuff that makes me and so many other sports fan blissful.
The Gophers are 24-14-3 all-time against the Irish and the teams are 2-2-0 in their last four, with each team 1-1-0 at home. The Irish defeated and tied Vermont last weekend. This is a Friday-Sunday series, with Friday’s 7:00 p.m. game carried by the Big Ten Network at Sunday’s 4:00 p.m. contest televised by ESPNU.
Although I had a mediocre week, it still smells like roses because I pulled a game ahead of Jimmy. Time for the Four Corners offense.
Dave last week: 9-5-2 Jim last week: 8-6-2 Dave’s record-to-date: 41-18-5 Jim’s record-to-date: 40-19-5
Here are this week’s picks:
Friday, Nov. 7
Merrimack at Providence
Dave’s pick: I’m going with the 2-3-1 team over the one with a 5-1-1 record and not just because the Friars are at home. As I wrote about in this week’s column, Providence is not a 2-3-1 team. PC 4, MC 1
Jim’s pick: I agree here. Merrimack has played well but hasn’t been overly tested. Plus Providence playing at home and with confidence coming off a win, I’m going Friars. PC 3, MC 1
Maine at Vermont
Dave’s pick: – Although I like what the Black Bears have done recently, I can’t pick them on the road until they actually start winning there. I’m finicky like that.. UVM 4, UM 2
Jim’s pick: I agree with Dave about the road. But I also think Vermont is the better team. UVM 5, UM 2
Northeastern at Massachusetts-Lowell
Dave’s pick: – The Huskies have about as much of a chance on the road against Lowell as a turkey drumstick has against me at Thanksgiving dinner. UML 4, NU 1
Jim’s pick: I worry about this one as Northeastern has given Lowell fits in recent years. Still, just matching records against one another, it’s impossible to pick against Lowell here. UML 3, NU 2
Boston University at Boston College
Dave’s pick: – Home ice proves decisive. I had been thinking that home ice would prevail in this battle of titans. Then I saw that BC lost to UConn. No offense to Hockey East’s newest member, but I’m flipping back to BU, a team that was undefeated until a 2-1 loss to Providence last Saturday.. BU 3, BC 2 (OT)
Jim’s pick: I love BU in this game. But I also love BC’s ability to come back after a loss (in this case two losses). And I will say that home ice is the difference maker here. BC 4, BU 3
American International at Massachusetts
Dave’s pick: The Minutemen are coming off two one-goal losses at Maine (one in overtime), but this one won’t be that close. UMass 4, AIC 1
Jim’s pick: I think AIC is a better team than Dave realizes. But I’m still not in a position to pick them. UMass 3, AIC 2
Michigan State at New Hampshire
Dave’s pick: – The Wildcats have been struggling, but Michigan State has yet to win on the road. Home cookin’ wins out. UNH 4, MSU 2
Jim’s pick: The UNH offense needs to get going against a Michigan State team that, at times, has been stingy. I think they will UNH 2, MSU 1
Notre Dame at Minnesota
Dave’s pick: The Gophers ain’t number one for nothing and they’re at home, a notoriously tough place to play. UM 4, UND 2
Jim’s pick: Notre Dame is playing well enough to pick an upset here. So let’s do it. UND 3, UM 2
Saturday, Nov. 8
Connecticut at Boston University
Dave’s pick: I need to eat some crow regarding the UConn Huskies. In last week’s picks, I said that while UConn Coach Mike Cavanaugh beating longtime mentor BC coach Jerry York would make a great storyline, it wasn’t a believable plot. Well, the Huskies beat BC, 1-0 on Wednesday night. So much for what I know about plot.
Can they knock off a second straight titan? I’m still picking BU, but I won’t be shocked if UConn pulls off another upset. BU 3, UConn 2
Jim’s pick: If BU loses on Friday, as I am picking, there is no way they lose at home on Saturday. But I agree with Dave, UConn is a lot better than many of us believed. BU 4, UConn 2
Providence at Merrimack
Dave’s pick: The Friars need a sweep to start making their move, and I believe they’ll do it. PC 2, MC 1
Jim’s pick: I think this series is well timed for the Friars. PC 4, MC 2
Massachusetts-Lowell at Northeastern
Dave’s pick: Not even home ice can get the Huskies off the schneid against the River Hawks. UML 3, NU 2
Jim’s pick: It’s hard for me to believe the Huskies could end this weekend still o-for. But they’re playing a Lowell team that is playing excellent hockey right now. UML 4, NU 2
Maine at Vermont
Dave’s pick: The result would be different at Alfond, but the Catamounts sweep. UVM 3, UM 2
Jim’s pick: Can’t disagree there. This UVM team is talented and plays well at home. UVM 4, UM 2
Michigan State at New Hampshire
Dave’s pick: – The Wildcats pull off an important sweep to get to .500. UNH 4, MSU 3
Jim’s pick: This easily could be a split, depending on which UNH team shows up. But I’ll still go with the sweep. UNH 3, MSU 2
Sunday, Nov. 9
Notre Dame at Minnesota
Dave’s pick: – Maybe the Irish can push this to overtime, but the Gophers will still be too tough. UM 4, UND 3 (OT)
Jim’s pick: I picked the Notre Dame upset on night one. But can’t pick it again. UM 3, UND 2
Tuesday, Nov. 11
Harvard at Boston College
Dave’s pick: If BC loses to BU on Friday, then this game could pose the unthinkable threat – a possible four-game losing streak for the Eagles. Whether it comes to that point or not, I see this as a get-back-on-track impressive win.. BC 4, HU 1
Jim’s pick: No reason the Eagles can’t handle the Crimson at home. BC 5, HU 2
Last week, I picked up even more ground on Matthew in our season race. I went 7-1-1 (.833) to move to 32-11-2 (.733) on the year, while Matthew went 5-3-1 (.611) to move to 25-18-2 (.577).
There are a few hard picks this week, so let’s see how we do.
Friday-Saturday, Nov. 7-8
Western Michigan at Denver Candace: Denver swept this one last November, and the Pioneers also knocked the Broncos out of the NCHC tournament. This might end up a split, but I’ll go with the Pioneers to sweep. Denver 2-1, 2-1 Matthew: Western has struggled out of the gate this season, but I think their recent weekend off came at a good time before they make the long trip to Colorado. Denver’s the better team here, but I can see the Broncos stealing one. Denver 3-1, Western Michigan 2-1
Colorado College at Miami Candace: If this was in Colorado Springs, I might pick a split. Miami 3-2, 4-1 Matthew: I have real concerns for CC this weekend. The Tigers took a pair of 6-2 poundings in their last two games at Boston College and New Hampshire, and although they’re coming off of a bye week and have had plenty of time to regroup, the RedHawks are still solid favorites to take care of business at home. Miami 3-0, 3-1
Minnesota-Duluth at St. Cloud State Candace: Minnesota-Duluth seems to like Saturday nights, while the Huskies can win on either, but seemingly not both. St. Cloud 4-2, Minnesota-Duluth 3-2 Matthew: Neither of these teams have really blown me away thus far, but although UMD is on the road this weekend, I have a feeling the Bulldogs will pick up a split. St. Cloud State 3-1, Minnesota-Duluth 3-1
North Dakota at Wisconsin Candace: North Dakota will miss Mark MacMillan, as shown last week against Air Force, but Wisconsin has been dreadful so far, and until the Badgers pick up a few wins, I can’t pick them. Wonder what I’ll do in two weeks when they come to Denver? North Dakota 3-2, 3-1 Matthew: Wisconsin has had a very poor start to the season, but the Kohl Center will be a tough place for UND to have to play this weekend. I can see the Badgers picking up one win, but nothing more. Even still, though, I’ll take the league homer pick. North Dakota 2-1, 3-1
Nebraska-Omaha at Ohio State Candace: Something tells me this will be a split, but I expect both games to be very tight. Nebraska-Omaha 4-2, Ohio State 3-2 Matthew: Ohio State has had a tough schedule early on this season, and it won’t get much easier this weekend when UNO comes to Columbus. I think the Buckeyes will get something from this, but UNO has proven itself to be a good enough team to go on the road and pick up at least a split in what in Columbus isn’t the most hostile environment. Nebraska-Omaha 3-2, Ohio State 4-2
St. Cloud State’s Jonny Brodzinski (left) and his brother, Minnesota’s Michael Brodzinski, have played against each other in college four times, including twice last weekend (photo: Jim Rosvold).
When you’re born into a hockey family, you’re expected to live up to the family name.
But St. Cloud State forward Jonny Brodzinski and his brother, Minnesota defenseman Michael Brodzinski, have done more than that. They’ve both been drafted by NHL teams and both have found success by doing their own thing.
It started with their father, Mike Brodzinski, who set the tone when he played for Minnesota to begin his collegiate career.
“Back then they probably had 40 players. They had varsity and JV just like high school does,” Mike said. “I was only there for about a year and a half before I decided it wasn’t for me. There was just too many players there.”
Mike then transferred to St. Cloud State upon hearing about the chance to play under the man who orchestrated the Miracle on Ice in the 1980 Olympics. Herb Brooks coached at SCSU for the 1986-87 season, posting a 25-10-1 record and claiming third place in the NCAA Division III championship before helping the Huskies move to Division I the following season.
“I got to be the captain for Herbie my senior year,” Mike said proudly.
Herb Brooks died at the age of 66 in August 2003, but since then St. Cloud State honored what he brought to the university as well as the game of hockey by renaming the newly renovated National Hockey Center after him. Since April 2013 it has been known as the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center.
“Herbie was probably the biggest influence of St. Cloud going Division I,” Mike said. “They probably accelerated it by 10 years by just him being there.”
Mike passed on what he learned to his sons at an early age. Jonny and Michael, as well as their two younger brothers Easton and Bryce, put on the skates early.
“Me, Michael, Easton and Bryce were all about 3 when we started skating,” Jonny said.
Once they got the skating going, hockey came naturally. But Jonny and Michael don’t get their competitiveness from just hockey — some of it comes from family rivalry.
Over the summer, the Brodzinski family was playing a game of football. To raise the stakes a little bit, anyone who dropped the ball had to pay $5 to whomever was covering them.
While nobody ended up paying up in the end, it did keep the sibling rivalry alive and it only made the brothers want to beat each other even more.
That carries over to the ice, including last weekend when Jonny’s Huskies and Michael’s Gophers split a home-and-home series.
“I get competitive,” Michael said. “Nobody likes to lose. I think I’m the most competitive in the family on the whole losing side of the point. I get pretty competitive in literally anything we do. I don’t like losing very much.”
“It’s all for fun,” Jonny said, laughing. “It’s fun when we can get underneath each other’s skin. We just say that for the sake of having a little more incentive to play harder.”
Jonny and Michael Brodzinski signed autographs and met with fans after last Saturday’s games (photo: Jim Rosvold).
And for the sake of not letting that opponent on the other side of the ice — or, in this case, field — beat you.
Of course, it’s different when Jonny and Michael face each other on the ice than when they’re face-to-face across the line of scrimmage. Their teams have played each other in four college hockey games since the start of last season.
“It was a different experience, but I’ll never forget it,” Jonny said of the matchups with Michael.
Michael’s Gophers have beaten Jonny’s Huskies three out of four times, including the 4-0 victory at the NCAA West Regional final last March that sent Minnesota to the Frozen Four and ended St. Cloud State’s season.
But once that game was over, all Michael wanted to do was find Jonny.
The moment time expired at the Xcel Energy Center, they were no longer opponents. They were brothers again and they showed it by sharing a long embrace on the ice. It was a great game, but it was hard for Mike and his wife Kathy to watch their two oldest sons face each other.
“It’s one of the most unsettling things, watching your kids compete against each other,” Mike said. “They’ll do whatever it takes to win. You’re really proud of their accomplishments but it’s tough to watch them play against each other.”
“One of their successes is another person’s failure,” Kathy said. “It’s nice because I get to watch them both play, but I don’t want one of them to be successful at the expense of somebody else not being [successful].”
While Jonny was in high school in Blaine, Minn., a suburb of the Twin Cities, scouts originally came to watch his teammate and linemate, former Golden Gophers and current Florida Panthers forward Nick Bjugstad.
Jonny was never discouraged and just kept doing his thing. He eventually did get noticed by scouts, and after graduating from Blaine at the age of 17, he went to play for the USHL’s Fargo Force for the majority of two seasons, scoring a total of 12 goals and putting up 15 assists.
In his season and a half up in Fargo, Jonny developed a better defensive style.
“I sharpened the edges of my defensive game,” he said.
After visiting with a handful of schools including Maine, Jonny eventually decided on St. Cloud State. Even though his father played there, Jonny has made his own name with the Huskies — with a little bit of help from the coaching staff, of course.
“[SCSU’s Bob Motzko]’s a great coach,” Jonny said. “He said, ‘Defensively, you’re gonna follow my systems, but once you get in the offensive zone you can do whatever you want.’ That’s one of the things that makes him such a great coach.”
Michael got scouted in his junior year and ended up graduating high school in Michigan after he joined the Muskegon Lumberjacks of the USHL. During his time there, he put up 16 goals and 19 assists in 67 games.
Michael valued his time with Muskegon, saying it made him a better all-around hockey player.
“It really helped me a lot,” Michael said. “Being away from home elevated me into college. My defensive game really grew at Muskegon.”
It was a little bit harder for Michael to decide on a college after fielding around 20 offers and visiting schools like the North Dakota and Minnesota. Eventually, he met Minnesota associate head coach Mike Guentzel, who had the same defensive mindset as Michael.
Michael then made the decision to develop his defensive game under Guentzel and committed to playing for the Gophers.
“[Guentzel] knows everything there is to know about hockey,” Michael said.
Mike and Kathy were pleased with his choice.
“It was a pretty good fit for Michael to go with Guentzel,” said Mike, who played with Guentzel at Minnesota.
“Guentzel was the same type of defenseman that Michael is,” Kathy added.
But there’s more to the Brodzinski family than what meets the eye of a hockey fan. They are also very avid outdoors people.
Mike taught his boys how to hunt and fish at a young age, and they like to take trips to visit their grandparents in the Brainerd Lakes area in central Minnesota, where both hunting and fishing are plentiful.
“Mike’s always been a hunter,” Kathy said. “They went fishing and hunting up at Grandma’s. As soon as they [the four brothers] could, Mike had them out hunting with them.
“They really enjoy bowhunting,” she added. “Up in Crosslake, they also go bowfishing. They go at night and use a bow. It’s almost like spear fishing.”
The Brodzinskis have backing from family, but also from fans. And the brothers never fail to let their fans know how much their support means to them.
After Minnesota’s 4-3 overtime win at home over St. Cloud State last Saturday, Jonny and Michael met with friends, family and fans to take pictures and sign autographs. Not one person walked away without a smile on their face.
Jonny and Michael were both drafted into the NHL in the summer of 2013, just after Jonny’s freshman year at SCSU and just before Michael’s at Minnesota. In the fifth round, Michael was selected 141st overall by the San Jose Sharks, while Jonny went seven picks later to a team 340 miles south from there in the Los Angeles Kings.
They became the first non-twin brothers drafted in the same round. Once Jonny and Michael eventually go to the NHL, you can bet Mike and Kathy will be delighted to watch them in the league for the first time.
“Maybe they’ll buy us a couple plane tickets,” Mike said, laughing.
Herb Brooks once said, “Great moments are born from great opportunity.” Jonny and Michael Brodzinski are making plenty out of theirs.
Cornell @ Princeton
An interesting opening league match for each team: Each squad is hoping to discover some offense to support a strong commitment to team D. The Big Red mustered just one goal apiece in a loss and draw against Omaha in Ithaca last weekend; the Tigers scored three total in a tie against Yale and a loss versus Merrimack. I’m tagging Cornell for the win, edging Princeton on both talent and experience.
Colgate @ Quinnipiac
Great opportunity for each team here. QU’s record is “officially” 3-1-1 at home, but the lone loss actually took place in Bridgeport against Connecticut. The TD Bank Sports Center will be hopping for the Raiders, who aim to shake off a stunning 2-1 home loss to Mercyhurst. Colgate hasn’t allowed more than two goals in a game in nearly a month, while the Bobcats are averaging over three per. As they say, something’s gotta give… I like Colgate to make a bounce-back statement.
Harvard @ Rensselaer
The Crimson have not won in Troy since the first week of 2007, and RPI is nothing if not energized following last weekend’s astounding sweep of Route 7 rival Union. Kasdorf and the Engineers FTW.
Dartmouth @ Union
Quite frankly, I don’t see Union losing a shift this weekend, much less a game. Not after last weekend.
Clarkson @ Yale
The Knights aren’t so golden lately, winless in six (0-4-2) and allowing three goals a game over that stretch. The latter is not a good sign for a team that expected to build on a foundation of stalwart team defense. Yale played to positive reviews in Newark last weekend, winning the Liberty Hockey Invitational with wins over Princeton (in a shootout) and Connecticut. It’s the home opener for the Bulldogs as well, where the Blue are 80-29-7 (50-20-7) since the 2007-08 season. Edge: Yale.
St. Lawrence @ Brown7:30
Bruno is a popular dark-horse pick this season, for good reason. Six seniors guide a team that performed respectably for stretches last year, and it will be hard to look away when the likes of Lappin, Naclerio, and Lorito are on the ice. That said, a 4-2 win over Army doesn’t say much, so we’ll see what the Bears bring to the table against SLU. The Saints are playing perfectly mediocre hockey so far by failing to sweep or get swept in any of their four weekends’ worth of action. They have allowed three or more goals thrice, but also have two shutouts; they’ve scored four in a game, and five, and 10, but also one, and two… four times. So what I’m trying to say is, who knows? I’m sure SLU will muster a point or two this weekend, but I like Brown’s odds Friday.
Saturday, Nov. 8
Clarkson @ Brown
While Brown may not field as deep a roster as Yale, the Bears nonetheless possess enough firepower to challenge the already-challenged Golden Knights. I don’t see this weekend ending well for Clarkson: Brown wins.
Colgate @ Princeton
This is a mismatch, and the only way Princeton ekes out a point is through ironclad goaltending and a borderline lunatic commitment to defense and shot-blocking. ‘Gate wins.
Cornell @ Quinnipiac
Nothing better than a big road crowd in a lively home building. These programs have such a great history already, and that’s saying something when one of those programs is Cornell: While Cornell has owned QU during nine years of regular-season meetings (12-5-1, including just one Bobcats sweep), Quinnipiac has terminated Cornell’s ECAC tournament aspirations twice in three postseason series. It would appear that Cornell has the edge again this season, except that the Big Red have yet to demonstrate the offensive capability that will likely be necessary to beat the Bobcats in Hamden. I’ll take the hosts, in a mild upset.
Dartmouth @ Rensselaer
Dartmouth comes into the season with so much experience, yet still so many questions… mainly, what’s experience worth if the only thing the roster has experienced is lousy? RPI is an utter unknown right now despite its eight games, so I haven’t the faintest idea which teams will show up at the HFH Saturday night. So… hosts? RPI wins… I guess?
Harvard @ Union
The Crimson haven’t beaten Union in four years (0-7-1), making the Capital District a decidedly unfriendly road trip for the Cambridge club. See note above re. Union and losing this weekend. UC wins.
St. Lawrence @ Yale
The Bulldogs have more or less had the Saints’ number of late, defeating SLU in two playoff series and taking 10 of 16 regular-season points (4-2-2) since the 2010-11 season. Time to see if Kyle Hayton is (still) the real deal against Yale’s young, high-energy forwards. ‘Dogs take this one.
Tuesday, Nov. 11
Harvard @ Boston College
Ugh, another one of these? Harvard hasn’t beaten (man, that sentence-starter is getting old) the Eagles in eight tries dating back to 2007, and most of those losses haven’t been close. I’m as optimistic about Harvard as the next Cantabrigian, but there’s no way I’m picking BC to drop this one. Eagles win.
Jack Eichel helped Boston University to a 4-0 start and earned national rookie of the month honors for October in the process (photo: Melissa Wade).
Colgate sophomore goaltender Charlie Finn has been named the Hockey Commissioners’ Association National Division I Player of the Month for October, while Boston University forward Jack Eichel has captured HCA Rookie of the Month honors.
Finn registered six wins in seven contests in October, going 6-1-0 overall and allowing just eight goals while recording a nation-best three shutouts. He finished the month with a 1.15 goals-against average and a .952 save percentage.
Finn was also tabbed as ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Week and NCAA.com First Star of the Week for his two-shutout performance against Northeastern. In addition, he was voted as ECAC Hockey Goaltender for the Month in October.
For Eichel, the highly-touted NHL prospect led Terriers to their best start in 13 years, capturing a perfect 4-0-0 record in the month of October while also averaging two points per game.
Eichel began his career by notching five primary assists in an exhibition contest on Oct. 4 to earn Hockey East Rookie of the Week accolades. In four regular-season games played in October, he posted four goals and four assists, including two goals and adding two helpers in his first-ever collegiate contest at Massachusetts on Oct. 10.
He currently leads Hockey East in conference scoring, recording three goals and four assists in league play with a plus-9 rating. Eichel was also named Hockey East Rookie of the Month for October.
Said sanctions include a postseason ban on the Nanooks hockey team for this season, along with scholarship reductions and a $30,000 fine. (Other sports, like the men’s and women’s basketball and even the women’s ski team, are receiving similar punishments).
To be sure, the Nanooks certainly screwed up department-wide eligibility infractions, involving 40 athletes in nine of the school’s 10 sports between 2007 and 2011. But it seems like a harsh penalty for what amounts to, and I’m paraphrasing Chris Dilks of SB Nation College Hockey here, putting the wrong cover letter on their TPS reports. If you’d like some light reading, the entire 44-page NCAA report is here.
For the purposes of the WCHA, the NCAA’s decision is significant because it means the Nanooks will also miss out on the conference playoffs this year.
While this doesn’t alter the playoff format — there will still be eight teams in the tournament — it does mean that the conference’s ninth-place team is going to make the playoffs (provided that team is not Alaska).
That may rob the league of some of the drama was had a season ago, when nine teams were fighting for eight playoff spots in the last month of the season.
I’m sure Alaska will still give their conference foes some great games — they have a solid team and a, before the ban, had a legitimate shot at making a deep WCHA playoff run. But something is definitely going to be a bit weird for teams playing the Nanooks all season.
Anyway, I’m off my soapbox now (and it’s not anything others haven’t said elsewhere… and I’m sure Shane has more to add). On to the picks. They’re going up a little bit early this week because I’m going to a wedding in Michigan Friday and Saturday.
Maybe I should print out the NCAA report to bring with me on the plane?
Ferris State (3-4-0, 0-2-0) at Northern Michigan (5-0-1, 2-0-0)
Jack: Not sure I would have picked Ferris to be the one with a losing record and NMU to be the undefeated one at this point in the season, but here we are. The Bulldogs have faced a tougher schedule — on the road against St. Lawrence and Michigan State and games against Michigan and Michigan Tech — but I’m not discounting the Wildcats. They’ve been one of the top defensive teams in the country through six games (small sample size, obviously, and against both LSSU and Huntsville, but still) so it will be interesting to see how they fare against a better offensive team. If it was in Big Rapids I would have called it a narrow FSU sweep, but I’ll call for the split in Marquette. Wildcats 4-2, Bulldogs 5-1.
Shane: Why does this feel like a must-win weekend for Ferris State? At the very least, it’s a must-score weekend for the Bulldogs, who have just three goals in their last five games. I don’t care how good C.J. Motte is, you’re not going to win many games with that rate. Northern Michigan is off to a great start, but I’m still in a bit of a prove-it mode when it comes to the Wildcats because of their schedule. I sense a low-scoring split. Bulldogs 1-0, Wildcats 1-0
Alaska Anchorage (4-2-2, 1-1-0) at Michigan Tech (6-0-0, 4-0-0)
Jack: After their hot start, the Seawolves have struggled a bit — including a loss to previously winless Lake Superior. Michigan Tech, meanwhile, looks legit. Even if Michigan might not be the team we thought they were, that offensive firepower the Huskies showed off is nothing to shake a stick at. I’m calling a big Huskies sweep. Huskies 4-1, 5-2
Shane: I’m not in prove-it mode when it comes to Tech. I think they’re legit, winning two games at Ferris State and sweeping Michigan at home on a weekend full of hype and potential distractions. I don’t know how long they’ll be able to keep it up, but they’ve certainly got a good thing going right now and still will after the weekend. Huskies 3-2, 4-2
Bemidji State (3-3-0, 2-0-0) at Minnesota State (5-3-0, 3-1-0)
Jack: This is the series of the weekend in the WCHA (it seems like we say that often about series that the Mavericks are in). But this one should be entertaining. The Beavers are coming off a sweep against the Nanooks in which they scored 10 goals. It’s the type of scoring depth I haven’t seen from a BSU team in a long time. Meanwhile, MSU keeps playing about as well as folks have been expecting, minus their troubles in goal. This could be a high-scoring series and I’m kind of mad I have to go to this wedding instead of Mankato (well, maybe not… open bar…). I’ll call a high scoring split. Mavericks 5-4, Beavers 6-3
Shane: Disappointed you won’t be down in Mankato for this series, Jack. Can’t offer you an open bar but would have been happy to buy you a tasty beverage. Perhaps next March in Bemidji. You have to be impressed with what the Beavers are doing right now. Seems like a veteran team doing veteran things. The Mavericks have a ton of talent up front, of course, and their own veteran experience. Since it’s in Mankato where the Mavericks have been so good under Mike Hastings, and not in Bemidji I’m calling an MSU sweep. Mavericks 4-3, 4-2
Bowling Green (5-2-1, 3-1-0) at Alaska (5-3-0, 0-2-0)
Jack: While the Bemidji/Mankato matchup may be the most promising from a competitive standpoint, this one will certainly be from a storyline standpoint. How do the Nanooks respond after news of those sanctions? Do they pack it in or do they get mad? I have no idea, but I know the Falcons can score. And after how the Alaska goaltenders played last week, I don’t have much faith in them stopping the Falcons. BGSU sweep. Falcons 5-1, 6-2.
Shane: The more I think about this Alaska situation, the more harsh it sounds. I’ve never liked the idea of punishing current student-athletes for violations that took place before their time. In this situation, it seems worse because the problem was Alaska’s own administrative oversight. What advantage is gained by punishing the kids? Unless the school isn’t doing what it should to rectify the situation (and all signs point to it doing so), I see no reason to be so harsh. How will the Nanooks respond? Long trip for a good Falcons team, too. Falcons 4-1, Nanooks 3-2
Alabama Huntsville (0-7-1) at Air Force (2-5-0)
Jack: I was going to say, “Poor Huntsville,” for them getting a tie but not earning a conference point due to a scheduling quirk. But also, “Poor Air Force!” The Falcons were beating North Dakota 2-0 in Grand Forks before UND came back to beat them 3-2 in overtime on a shorthanded goal with 7 seconds left. Ouch. (But at least UND fans can be empathetic, as they know how it feels to be on the other side of that, too). As far as this series go, UAH’s goalies are playing out of their minds right now. Maybe this is the weekend one of them can steal a low-scoring win? Chargers 2-1, Falcons 3-1.
Shane: Huntsville continues to rotate its excellent goaltenders each night, and I can’t blame coach Mike Corbett for that, considering they’re the two best players on his team. But I think Carmine Guerrero has a little more of the magic touch and is more capable of stealing a game, just as he stole a tie last week in Marquette. I think he does that on Friday against his coach’s old employer. Chargers 1-0, Falcons 3-1
Last week: Jack 6-5-1, Shane 5-6-1. Overall: Jack 34-19-4, Shane 31-22-4
Bowling Green is 5-2-1 after splitting with Minnesota State last weekend (photo: Jim Rosvold).
Before the season began, new WCHA commissioner Bill Robertson said that he expected the league to get three or more teams in the national tournament this year.
Bold statement by the new boss, considering how conference realignment reshaped the league.
Last March, two WCHA teams got into the NCAAs. Minnesota State captured the autobid by winning the Final Five, and Ferris State, which won the regular season title and was considered a top team all season, got an at-large berth.
Had the Mavericks not won the Broadmoor Trophy, beating Ferris State, they likely would have received a bid, too, although that was anything but a lock before Final Five began.
While this season is relatively young, the WCHA is off to an impressive start, one that not only caught the attention of followers outside the conference but one that just might grant Robertson’s wishes 4½ months from now.
Seven of the league’s 10 teams have winning records (although one of those teams is recently banned-from-postseason-play Alaska), and one of the teams that sits below .500 is Ferris State at 3-4 despite allowing just 14 goals in seven games. Scoring just 10 thus far, of course, is the problem for the Bulldogs).
Michigan Tech is 6-0, having swept Ferris State and Michigan in back-to-back weekends, and Northern Michigan is undefeated at 5-0-1 (see below).
Hardly the Little Sisters of the Poor conference people were predicting it would be a couple of years ago.
“As a coach, I like to deal with facts and not opinions,” Minnesota State coach Mike Hastings said. “And the facts are that Bowling Green played Miami one and one and tied and won at Clarkson. Bemidji went in to North Dakota and won 5-1. …
“Northern Michigan is undefeated, and you look at Tech and they gotta be one of the best teams in the country right now. Why not?”
The WCHA is 20-16-3 against nonleague teams, a record that includes an 0-6 record by Lake Superior State and Alabama-Huntsville (combined record 1-16-1).
A strong nonconference performance can only help WCHA teams once the PairWise Rankings become a factor.
“It says something when Ferris State stays in the top 20 (in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll) after being swept at home by Tech,” Hastings said, “and I think they deserve it.”
Minnesota State, the favorite to win the league, knows it will be no cakewalk to try to keep pace with Michigan Tech and stay ahead of other teams trying to do the same.
The Mavericks split at Bowling Green in a matchup of what had been the league’s top two scoring teams.
Now Michigan Tech (3.83 goals per game) is tops in the league and fifth in the nation, followed by Bemidji State (3.5, more than a goal over last year’s average), which goes to Mankato this weekend. The Mavericks are third at 3.38.
With a playoff format that drops out the bottom two teams from contention, the Nanooks’ exclusion will mean that the WCHA’s ninth-place team (provided it’s not Alaska) will make the playoffs and will face the MacNaughton Cup champion (again, provided it’s not Alaska).
Cohen Adair and Northern Michigan are 5-0-1 this season (photo: Adelle Whitefoot).
Undefeated in the U.P.
It’s still early, but two of the three teams in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula are undefeated and nationally ranked.
Michigan Tech is off to its best start since 1972-73 after its sweep of Michigan last weekend in Houghton. The Huskies leaped into the top 10 with the two wins and are No. 9 in the country and even received a first-place vote.
“One of the key thing is, when we’re winning it gives us some confidence,” coach Mel Pearson said after Saturday’s game. “When you’re playing the right way, it goes through the team that you can have success playing the right way. Also, we have some depth. It’s going to create some competition.”
Down the road in Marquette, Northern Michigan is 5-0-1 through six games and entered the poll this week ranked No. 20. The Wildcats’ lone blemish was a 1-1 tie against Alabama-Huntsville last Friday. NMU rallied for a 4-1 win Saturday night.
Coach Walt Kyle isn’t taking his hot start for granted, however.
“We get into the meat of our schedule right now,” Kyle told the media following Saturday’s game. “Between now and the break at Christmas it’s all WCHA. We have some real tests here.”
Tech and NMU don’t meet until a home-and-home series in January, so it’s likely neither will still be undefeated by the time that matchup happens. But if both teams continue their strong play it could still be a marquee matchup.
Losing streaks end
The league’s other U.P. team, Lake Superior State, got its first victory of the Damon Whitten era on Saturday, defeating Alaska-Anchorage 3-2 in overtime on a Bryce Schmitt goal.
The win broke a nine-game losing streak to open the season and a 13-game skid dating to last season.
The Lakers, mercifully, get a weekend off after playing five straight weeks starting with the opening day of the season, a day most teams conducted their first official practices.
Meanwhile, Alabama-Huntsville snapped a six-game losing streak to start the season (nine games in total) with that 1-1 tie at Northern Michigan.
Under normal circumstances, this would have given the Chargers their first WCHA points of the season. Unfortunately, a scheduling quirk shut them out. The series was a nonconference set left over from a scheduling contract that predated conference realignment.
Ice chips
• Bemidji State’s sweep of Alaska was its first two-game weekend sweep at home since Feb. 10-11, 2012, against Colorado College.
• Bowling Green’s Kevin Dufour continues to lead the nation with nine goals as well as three power-play goals in eight games.
• Ferris State goaltender CJ Motte recorded his 11th collegiate shutout on Friday, most among active players.
• Northern Michigan has the best defense in the nation, giving up just 0.83 goals per game (five goals in six games).
• Minnesota State leads the nation in shots on goal against, allowing a mere 20 per game. The Mavericks have 121 more shots than their opponents and average 15.12 more per game, which also leads the country.
Players of the week
This week’s players of the week are: Bemidji State sophomore forward Nate Arentz (offensive), Michigan Tech junior goaltender Jamie Phillips (defensive) and Bowling Green freshman forward Tyler Spezia (rookie).
Bob O’Connor will be honored with the USA Hockey Builders Award as part of the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame induction ceremony and dinner on Dec. 4 in Minneapolis.
“Bob has had an enormous impact in the on-going development of our coaching education program,” said USA Hockey president Ron DeGregorio in a news release. “He continues to be remarkably passionate about education and is always willing to share and transfer his knowledge for the betterment of coaches, players and all involved in the game. The USA Hockey Builders Award is one of our organization’s highest honors and we look forward to presenting it to Bob in Minneapolis.”
O’Connor played at Providence and later spent two seasons as an assistant coach at Hamline.
He was also an assistant coach for the 1984 U.S. Olympic team and was an assistant coach for the 1991 and 1992 U.S. National Junior Teams, as well as either a head or assistant coach for seven U.S. Select teams.
Holy Cross associate director of athletics and business manager Bill Bellerose announced Thursday that he will retire, effective Dec. 31, 2014.
Bellerose has been with Holy Cross for 37 years, including the last 23 in his current role.
From 1988 through 1993, Bellerose served as the head coach of the Crusaders’ team after previously spending time as an assistant coach from 1977 to 1988.
During his days as an undergraduate from 1973 to 1977, Bellerose was a member of the Holy Cross hockey team and still ranks eighth all-time in career points (152) and 10th all-time in career goals (71). In 2002, he was inducted into the Holy Cross Varsity Club Hall of Fame.
Bellerose served on the NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey committee from 2005 to 2010 and was the chairman of the committee during the 2009-2010 season. Bellerose was also instrumental in the formation of the MAAC hockey league, which allowed Holy Cross and several other institutions to move up to the Division I level.
Ryan Massa has Omaha off to a good start (photo: Matthew Semisch).
Before this season started, Omaha coach Dean Blais seemed to be trying to keep outside expectations low.
It was a smart move to make on his part. The Mavericks had one of the country’s best freshman classes coming in, but with 12 fresh faces making up the bulk of UNO’s lineup, the team always was going to be a somewhat unknown quantity.
Most of his best players this season are freshmen, he said, and the team’s veterans would need to hold down the fort for a while until the newcomers shed their newness.
So far, that’s exactly what’s happening.
Going into this weekend’s series at former CCHA rival Ohio State, the Mavericks are sitting pretty at 4-1-1 after six games. The only loss was to No. 13 Minnesota State on Oct. 11, and UNO has won three of its four games since then.
All four of those latter games were on the road. UNO swept Western Michigan in the teams’ first two league games during the middle of last month, and the Mavericks picked up a 1-1 tie and 2-1 win last weekend at Cornell.
Blais said he’s pleased with his team’s early run of form, and especially three wins from four games against Cornell and WMU, the nation’s tallest and fourth-tallest teams, respectively, and also two of Division I’s most physical outfits.
“We’ve played some tough teams, really physically tough teams, and they’re a lot to handle,” Blais said. “Cornell’s like that, and Western Michigan’s big and physical, too, in our own league. I don’t know what we’re going to do when we start playing some faster teams, because we played four straight games on the road against bigger teams that did a good job of beating us up, and then there’s the traveling that takes its toll, too.”
Omaha doesn’t have a ton of veterans this season, but the more seasoned players have led the way thus far.
Eight of the Mavericks’ top 10 scorers are vets, and forwards Jake Randolph (one goal and three assists) and Luc Snuggerud (one goal, two assists) are the only freshmen among them.
Another big reason for UNO’s early success has been the play of senior goaltender Ryan Massa. The Mavericks have had well-documented netminding issues in recent seasons, but Massa has become a rock at the back at the beginning of his final campaign in Omaha.
“Ryan has played really well,” Blais said. “He’s been the league’s best goalie a few weeks in a row here now, but he doesn’t want it to just end here.
“He wants to be a first-team All-American this year and just have all there is to get in his senior year. So far, he’s lived up to his own expectations.”
All told, although there’s a sizable imbalance between fresh faces and old hands on Omaha’s roster, the experienced vets are doing their job of keeping the Mavericks competitive while the newcomers get up to speed.
“That’s the way it’s going to have to be for now,” Blais said. “The veterans aren’t necessarily providing the most offense or defense because we only have a handful of upperclassmen, but they’re certainly leading the team well.
“Our older guys, even some that aren’t known to be big-time players, they’re hard workers and the freshmen are getting leadership that they need from their peers that’s different to what they can get from coaches, and I think that’s important to have.”
Bryn Chyzyk scored the overtime winner for North Dakota last Saturday (photo: Rachel Lewis).
UND huffs, puffs, completes comeback
Not a whole lot was going right for North Dakota through the first 40 minutes of its home game last Saturday against Air Force.
In front of a sold-out crowd for the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame game, UND found itself down 2-0 to the Falcons in the second intermission. Air Force struck early in both the first and second periods, and although UND was outshooting the Falcons 18-9, UND wasn’t creating enough quality scoring chances at the visitors’ end of the ice.
Highly-favored UND was going to need to dig deep just to get back into the game, and that’s what the hosts did in the third period.
The comeback started early in that final frame of regulation. UND freshman defenseman Tucker Poolman got his team onto the board at 6:53 after beating Falcons goaltender Chris Truehl through a screen in front.
Higher drama was to come later in the game. Very late, in fact, as with goaltender Zane McIntyre on the bench in favor of an extra attacker, forward Drake Caggiula netted a game-tying goal with 29 seconds left.
A little over two minutes into the resulting overtime period, UND provided Air Force with another chance to pull off an upset. The Falcons were given an effective 2:43 power play after Brendan O’Donnell was assessed a checking-from-behind major penalty.
While on the power play, however, a lapse from the Falcons in the neutral zone led to their demise. UND’s Michael Parks gained possession of the puck in the middle of the ice, beat one defender in the attacking zone and slipped a pass in front of the net to linemate Bryn Chyzyk, who tapped the puck in to give UND a short-handed overtime winner with 6.4 seconds left on the clock.
“[It was the] definition of a roller coaster game, I think,” Chyzyk said. “We came out really poor and we left ourselves 20 minutes to earn a W and I thought we did that, and that was big for our team and for our locker room.
“Our third period was excellent, but definitely we’ve got to work on our starts [to games] after that one.”
UND played with more and more urgency as the game went on. That, Parks felt, was what won his team the game.
“We kept saying on the bench and in both of those intermissions, being down during the game, we’ve got to play desperate,” he said. “We found a way to get more pucks to the net and really possess the puck and kind of take over.”
Players of the week
Offensive player of the week — Blake Coleman, Miami: The senior RedHawks forward had a four-point weekend for Miami against Minnesota-Duluth. In the RedHawks’ 4-3 loss on Saturday, Coleman found his name on the score sheet three times after having played a part in each of his team’s goals.
Defensive player of the week — Ethan Prow, St. Cloud State: The junior defenseman was essential to the Huskies picking up a split last weekend against top-ranked Minnesota. In his team’s 4-1 win over the Gophers on Friday, Prow provided two assists, with one coming on the Huskies’ game-winning goal.
Rookie of the week — Danton Heinen, Denver: The forward picked up already his second rookie of the week award for his performances last weekend against Denver. On Saturday, two of his seven shots in a 2-1 overtime win against Boston College found the back of the net.
Goaltender of the week — Ryan Massa, Omaha: The senior Mavericks netminder continued his hot start to the season last week in UNO’s successful trip to Cornell. Massa posted a .968 save percentage and gave up only two goals — one of them on a power play — in a win and a tie against the Big Red.
Meghann Treacy of Maine is a part of her team’s recent success. (Melissa Wade)
Having entered the November portion of its schedule, Maine sits atop the standings in Hockey East. That may not sound all the impressive, given the Black Bears have played five games and nobody else has played more than four. Vermont has only played one conference game, and along with Boston College, has a perfect record in league play.
Yes, Maine’s .700 winning percentage in the circuit may only be the fourth-best mark, but to fully appreciate its seven points from a 3-1-1 record, including a win over No. 6 Boston University, one must remember where the Black Bears were a year ago.
Maine entered December 2013 winless, and was still looking for its first Hockey East win as the new year arrived. There were reasons for this. The Black Bears were hardly a juggernaut in the prior season of 2012-13, when they won only two league games and five overall. Then former coach Maria Lewis was placed on administrative leave in September and resigned at the end of October due to questions concerning the program’s compliance with NCAA rules. Her assistants, husband and wife Richard and Sara Reichenbach, took over the coaching position jointly on an interim basis.
“I think the Christmas break was a huge step for us, just letting go of the first semester and reviewing what worked for us and what didn’t,” Richard Reichenbach said.
Slowly, things started to improve. Maine got its first league win, 1-0, over Providence, on Jan. 19. February, it had a winning month, its first in two years, going 4-3. That gained a fifth-place finish in Hockey East and resulted in a 117-plus minute marathon playoff game at Vermont. In that contest, the Black Bears dropped behind early and tied it up with just over three minutes left in regulation before ultimately falling, 3-2.
“I think the second half and February and our playoff game and some of the success we had down the road definitely helped us understand the plan that me and Sara had in place was one that could work and one that could have success,” Reichenbach said.
In July, he was named the new coach of the program with his wife as an assistant, and he added former St. Cloud State goaltender Kendall Newell to his staff in August.
“Having a plan and having five months to prepare for a season was incredibly helpful,” Reichenbach said. “Just having the time to review the season before; also, seeing what you think can work and what didn’t work and the direction that you want the team to go as opposed to do that on the go in the middle of the season has been a huge part of our development this year so far.”
There were also benefits from the journey the returners shared last year.
“I think the end of the year last year really helped us for the start of this year,” goaltender Meghann Treacy said. “I think where we left off last year, we just kind of continued to grow from that. We never went back any steps. We just continued growing into the summer and with our off-season workouts.”
In particular, there were was growth in the triple-overtime game versus Vermont.
“I think back to that game a lot,” Treacy said. “It was honestly one of the most memorable games of my life. It was so much fun. Our team came back from a two-goal deficit. We just worked so hard. I did everything I could to make sure my team got a ‘W.’ Every shot I got, I just made sure I had it, made sure I had total confidence in myself and my team. It was one of the greatest feelings, knowing that I was there for my team and keeping them in that game.”
She finished the day with 46 saves.
The gains weren’t merely made on the ice.
“The biggest part of that game for us as a program, I think, is just the bonding and the chemistry that we developed through one game,” Reichenbach said. “We had had some success down the stretch, but being able to play at the level that we felt we did in that game for six periods is something that one, I think they’ll never forget, an experience they’ll always remember as a hockey player. But being able to go through that with their teammates and sitting in the locker room in between periods time after time after time and almost not believing that that was actually happening, and then being able to go out there and have success and play the way that they wanted to, I think was a huge step for them and something that did boost their confidence and help them become closer as a program.”
That sort of postseason experience can leave a team hungry for more.
“The excitement of the playoffs is something truly special, and no matter whether it’s home or away, every team in the league is pretty excited,” Reichenbach said. “Especially this year, when it moves to a series.”
While Hockey East’s new best-of-three series takes away the drama of a single-game knockout, past postseasons in other leagues have resulted in series that go the distance and feature multiple overtime games.
“We haven’t talked much about playoffs and like what we want towards end of the season,” Treacy said. “We’re kind of just focusing on each weekend. Obviously, it’s in the back of our minds, it’s something we want, having that home-ice advantage, something we’ve always wanted as a group. We’re just kind of taking one game at a time and seeing how it goes from there.”
The Black Bears do a lot of things as a group, and that usually includes scoring goals.
“I think it kind of goes more into the philosophy that we have as a program where it is going to be a total team effort,” Reichenbach said. “I don’t know if it makes it easier or harder, because I’m sure there are some nights where if you just have that kid who can put in a couple goals and maybe not play so great and get the victory, but I think the players really understand that for us to be successful and for us to accomplish our goals that every single player on our roster who dresses in a Maine uniform has to play that night. It’s going to be scoring by committee, and it’s not going to be one person going end-to-end and scoring a pretty goal, it’s going to be a breakout involving five people, some sort of dump in and a hard forecheck, and we’re going to have to generate offense that way.”
Through 11 games, nobody has more than five points, on a roster where nobody has more than 45 points as a collegian. That can produce some droughts; Maine endured a stretch where it was shut out in five out of six games.
Lately, the offense has been on the rise. The team is unbeaten over its last three games. where it has totaled eight goals.
“With practices, we’ve put a lot of emphasis on finishing,” Treacy said. “You get that first shot, and the emphasis is to crash the net, get that rebound, put it in the back of the net. I think at key times, my team gets excited. You can tell the difference between them getting overexcited about that rebound and getting it in and just actually finishing what they’ve been doing. They’ve been doing a great job of it lately. Putting in that second effort, just really moving the goalie and not just giving her easy shots, but just like attacking the net.”
Treacy has had to exercise patience in her own game. When she arrived at Orono, she was one of four goaltenders on the roster and sat out a redshirt season and learned from one of the best.
“Brittany Ott was very special in that she could make saves that very few goaltenders can make in our league, and she could pull off stuff that was jaw dropping,” Reichenbach said.
More than what she could do in the crease, Treacy learned from Ott’s attitude.
“If things didn’t turn out her way, she kept up that positive attitude and she always kept that confidence in herself and the team,” Treacy said. “Even her last year where we really weren’t winning, but she, I think more than any other player on the team, she had more confidence in us than most of the other girls.”
Now a redshirt junior, Treacy is in her second year as the starter, and she’s trying to pass on lessons to her understudy, sophomore Mariah Fujimagari.
“Playing under a goalie is never the easiest thing,” Treacy said. “Just take full advantage of the opportunities that you do get. I think she has done that quite well. The time is going to come, and when it comes, it’s like the best thing ever. Those times when you are the starting goalie are some moments that you’ll never forget.”
The two have combined to form a goaltending tandem that holds opponents under two goals per game.
“I think some nights, they do make some pretty incredible saves and keep us in the game, but I think other games our team played really well defensively whether they got 20 shots or 40 shots, there weren’t too many scoring chances,” Reichenbach said. “I don’t think it’s necessarily the way that we have approached things, but I think as a coaching staff, we definitely understand that you can’t have success in any Division-I league without really strong goaltending.”
The Black Bears need goaltending, plus, they need everyone else as well.
“We’re a very gritty, hardworking team,” Reichenbach said. “I think that the way that we play is relentless, and we try and take every battle in all three zones with the same importance, whether we’re playing for a puck for a breakaway or whether we’re diving to block a shot, and that’s kind of the expectation we have on all of our players. Audra Richards scored 15 goals last year; her role is still to block shots and to play strong defensively, and we really try and emphasize that to all team members.”
As far as teams go, the Reichenbachs form a pretty good one in the coaching ranks.
“I’m just lucky that I can look across the bench and have Sara as my wife,” Reichenbach said. “Sara is amazing. Obviously, there is success in some other sports with husband and wife combos, but when looking at how things work, it’s really, really easy for us, because Sara is a great hockey mind, she was a great hockey player at St. Lawrence, and knows the game really well. We work really well as a combo and it makes meeting as a staff much easier, because we can have so many conversations at any point about what we want to do as a team.”
Where might it lead? That remains to be determined. But more than 10 years ago when she was still Sara Simard, the current Maine assistant coach was a Saints teammate for three years of the then Shannon Smith, who proved at Clarkson that it’s possible for a coaching couple to achieve the ultimate success in women’s NCAA hockey.
Chris Maniccia leads Massachusetts-Lowell with four goals and eight points (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).
It’s a good time to be a Hockey East fan. Three league teams (Boston College, Boston University and Massachusetts-Lowell) are ranked in the top six in the country, and another three (Providence, Vermont and Notre Dame) are in the top 20.
Let’s take a closer look, then, at two of those teams and a third that is at least receiving votes.
Lowell: At the top
After two straight Hockey East titles, River Hawks fans braced themselves for life after a strong senior class graduated. It would be difficult, but a three-peat was possible.
Then Lowell was hit with arguably the most significant losses to the pros of players with remaining eligibility: forward Scott Wilson, defenseman Christian Folin and, worst of all, All-American goaltender Connor Hellebuyck, who just happened to double as the winner of the inaugural Mike Richter Award, given to the country’s top goaltender.
Dreams of a three-peat flew out the window. With only three seniors on the roster and gaping holes left behind by the departures, the River Hawks would have to be content with middle-of-the-pack status.
Someone, however, forgot to tell the team and its exceptional coach, Norm Bazin.
The season is mighty early, but Lowell stands atop Hockey East with a perfect 3-0 league record and a 5-1-1 overall mark. The River Hawks moved to sixth in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll with a sweep of New Hampshire last weekend, shutting the Wildcats out 2-0 in their own barn before shellacking them 8-2 at the Tsongas Arena.
That said, Bazin, who is perhaps the personification of the term “even keel,” isn’t making preparations quite yet for a banner-raising next October.
“The sample size is so small that it’s tough to get a good grasp as to what we have,” he says. “We’re encouraged by the start. We feel like we’ve got a good workmanlike group. So from that standpoint, I’m encouraged. But to say anything more than that is difficult at this point.
“Our goal is to be the best team at the end of the year. So we’re working toward building a team. I like this young group so far because they’re hardworking. I don’t think they’ve fully developed an identity yet; they’re still working on it.”
Ironically, this year’s young squad, for whom preseason expectations were muted, have succeeded in getting off to a great start while its highly touted predecessors struggled out of the gate. Two years ago, the River Hawks opened with a 2-5-1 record before catching fire. Last year, they lost three of their first four, including the home opener on banner-raising night to a Sacred Heart team coming off a 2-30-4 season.
Did Bazin concoct a new approach to launch his young team so successfully?
“We try to get off to a good start every year, to be frank,” he says. “We change a number of things each year based on our personnel. I don’t necessarily think it’s been the changes or this or that. We play every game to get a little bit better than the last.
“I think our goaltending has been solid, our defensemen have hung in there, and our forwards are working hard to help out. It’s a committee effort. It’s a unit of five out there, and that’s what we’re basing some of our success on.”
To replace Hellebuyck and graduated-senior Doug Carr between the pipes, Bazin first selected junior Kevin Boyle, a transfer from Lowell’s sister school in Amherst where he appeared in 20 games two years ago.
After the River Hawks’ loss to Michigan, in which Boyle got the hook, however, Bazin gave freshman Jeff Smith his shot and he’s run with it. Smith allowed only a single goal against Michigan State and then after Boyle shut out UNH on the road, Smith came back and anchored the 8-2 win at home.
“We’re going week to week, seeing how they look in practice,” Bazin says. “I gave the older kid [Boyle] a little bit of a leash, but Smitty has done well in his first two starts and Boyle is coming off a shutout. We’re pleased with how they’re competing, and they’re going to have to continue that competition if they’re going to get better.”
With only three seniors in the lineup, the team has been forced to rely on the underclassmen, and they have delivered. The top five scorers are all sophomores and No. 6 is freshman C.J. Smith.
“I’ve been pleased with not only the sophomore class, but the younger classes in general,” Bazin says. “They’ve been contributing, and they’re going to have to make contributions if we have any hope of getting anywhere. That’s who we’re depending on.”
Nick Saracino has three goals in six games this season for Providence (photo: Melissa Wade).
Providence: Better than its record
The Providence Friars were picked to finish first in Hockey East but limped out to a 1-3-1 record before toppling previously undefeated Boston University on its own ice 2-1 on Saturday.
One can make a pretty good case, however, that the Friars’ record is a better indication of the difficulty of their schedule rather than a reflection of their collective abilities.
“We’ve played five of our six games on the road … all against top 20 teams,” Providence coach Nate Leaman says.
He has a point. The Friars opened with two games at Ohio State, which has since fallen out of the national rankings but entered that series at No. 17. Since then, they’ve traveled to second-ranked North Dakota, then faced fifth-ranked BU in a home-and-home series.
A veritable gauntlet, especially on the road.
“We’ve been tested early,” Leaman says. “We’ve probably played the most difficult schedule in the country, but it’s making us better and that’s what we need right now. It’s part of the adversity you go through within a season. At this time of the year, we just need to keep improving one day at a time.
“I’m good with where we’re at, but it hasn’t been, by any stretch of the imagination, five of six wins. Everything hasn’t been easy for us.”
The win at BU had to be a great morale booster, not to mention an important boost in the standings, but none of that concerns Leaman.
“Polls are distractions,” he says. “Standings, right now, are not what we’re focused on. What we’re focused on is finding our identity as a team and getting to play the type of hard-nosed hockey that we’re used to playing here.
“I thought we did that Saturday night [in the win over BU]. That’s why I was really happy. I thought we did that Saturday night up at North Dakota also.
“Every year is different. Every team is different. It’s understanding what our identity is, what makes us successful as a team, that is what’s important early.
“We’ve had the type of schedule that if you do make mistakes, they’re going to burn you. We’ve had the type of schedule that you usually have at the end of the season. We’ve learned lessons. At the end of the day, we’re getting better and that’s what’s important.”
In particular, Leaman expects significant improvement on the Friars’ specialty teams. To date, they’ve scored only twice on the power play, converting at only a 6.2 percent clip, while coming in as Hockey East’s worst penalty kill, having surrendered seven power-play goals (72.0 percent).
“That’s an area we definitely need to pick up,” he says. “We have too many good players here to have our power play be at the level it’s at now. We certainly need to produce more. I thought we had a really good power play on Saturday against North Dakota and on Saturday against BU. We generated a lot of chances, and we scored a goal both of those nights.
“I know our power play is going to get better. We have a lot to offer in that area; we have a lot of ability in that area.
“Our penalty kill is coming around. It’s coming up in big moments in games. I thought North Dakota was the best power play we’ve seen, and Saturday night out there we did a good job against them. I think BU had a terrific power play as well and we did a pretty good job against them on Saturday.
“Those two areas need to get better for us to be successful.”
Maine: A big turnaround
Maine opened the season in a tough way. The Black Bears traveled to Alaska, where they lost both games. They then came back home and faced eighth-ranked Union and got swept.
Oh-for-four. Ugh.
Since then, however, they’ve taken three of four points from an Alaska-Anchorage team making the reverse trip, then swept Massachusetts.
The difference?
“Playing better,” Maine coach Red Gendron says matter-of-factly. “It’s simple. There are certain things you have to do, and if you don’t do them, you generally don’t [win]. It’s really that simple.”
Gendron says there’s been no one area that was struggling and has since taken a leap forward. Rather, it’s been a broad-based improvement.
“It’s been every phase of our game,” he says. “We haven’t been great defensively some nights. Often, [we’ve struggled] offensively, and sometimes it’s been special teams.
“You’ve got to be able to hit on all cylinders. When we’re losing games, we’re lacking in that way; when we’ve won, we’ve been a heck of a lot better across the board, in all phases of the game.”
The biggest concern entering the season was between the pipes, where last year’s seniors, Martin Ouellette and Dan Sullivan, left a huge hole behind. This season, Matt Morris, who saw six games of action as a freshman two years ago, has played in six contests and freshman Sean Romeo three. Neither has posted glittering statistics, but Gendron has been satisfied.
“I think they’ve done really well,” he says. “I think they’ve gotten off to a good start. A few bumps along the way, but that happens. There are some ups and downs when you don’t have a lot of experience.”
When you think of this year’s Black Bears, you instinctively think of forward Devin Shore and defenseman Ben Hutton, but it’s sophomores Cam Brown and Blaine Byron that are leading the team in scoring with seven points.
“They’ve both progressed from last year to this year,” Gendron says. “When I think of both of those young men, I see people who love hockey in a big way. Doing extra work to improve yourself — some people might call it work, they’d say, ‘I’m having fun.’
“That’s how they conduct their business every day. They’re always playing with a smile on their face. [Although] with Brownie, he’s got a bridge so when he smiles, there’s a missing tooth.
“He’s a fabulous kid, one of the smallest players in college hockey, with a real big heart. Afraid of nothing.
“And Blaine Byron is always smiling no matter how hard he’s working.”
Their success, Gendron contends, is tied to that attitude.
“It’s pretty tough to be good at anything if you don’t love it,” he says. “The price that one pays to be exceptional at something is pretty high. It’s a lot easier if you really enjoy it.”
While Maine’s recent success has been great to see, the Black Bears will be hard-pressed to keep that momentum going. They head out on the road, where they won only one game last year, to face 14th-ranked Vermont for two games, then play two against fifth-ranked BU, one against No. 3 Boston College, another two against Vermont and then a game at sixth-ranked Lowell.
If you weren’t counting, that’s eight games, all against nationally ranked opponents. Then they play a home-and-home with New Hampshire to close out the first semester.
“We take it one game at a time,” Gendron says. “And truth be told, there was a time in college hockey where there were certain teams that were always going to win, and there were certain other teams that weren’t. From year to year there were basically the same results. Occasionally, there were a few teams that got up a little higher than they should and a couple teams that got down a little lower than you’d expect.
“It’s not like that in college hockey anymore. It’s parity. Everybody’s good. It’s hard to win. I don’t care who you are, it’s hard to win.
“For us, we’re going to take ’em one at a time. We respect all; we fear none.”
Alaska must vacate two Governor’s Cup wins over Alaska-Anchorage because of NCAA violations (photo: Sam Wasson).
The NCAA imposed penalties and sanctions on the Alaska athletic department on Wednesday as a result of a series of infractions first discovered by the Fairbanks school during the 2011-12 academic year.
The infractions impacted the men’s ice hockey program as well as eight of the school’s nine Division II sports from 2007 through 2011.
The NCAA found that six hockey players competed in games during the four-year span despite being academically ineligible. The athletes either had not declared a major or had not completed sufficient credits toward their degree program.
The NCAA further found that four athletes were ineligible because they enrolled in a pre-major program instead of a regularly enrolled degree program. These infractions started in 2008 and continued through 2012. (Read the full NCAA documentation here.)
The ruling summed that “all hockey contests from 2007 to 2011 included competition by ineligible student-athletes and more than 60 percent of the contests in 2011-2012 included competition by ineligible student-athletes.”
“These infractions were the result of university errors and were not due to any wrongdoing by student-athletes,” Alaska-Fairbanks Chancellor Brian Rogers said at a news conference Wednesday. “Our student-athletes are high academic achievers. They have integrity in their sport. I’m proud of our student-athletes.”
The infractions came to light as a result of the university misunderstanding an NCAA policy in 2011, school officials said.
The school self-reported the infractions to the governing body and imposed new methodology by which they would remain compliant. They also self-imposed sanctions, including scholarship reductions.
While hockey competes at the Division I level in the WCHA, the remainder of the school’s sports compete in the Division II Great Northwest Athletic Conference.
“These infractions are the university’s responsibility,” Rogers said. “They are old news. We discovered and reported them first in 2011. It took three and a half years to conclude the NCAA process. It was not intentional. It was self-reported. There are new procedures [already in place]. This is all well-documented, and we took responsibility.”
“The penalties range from the university to the individual sports,” said athletic director Gary Gray, “and they include university sanctions that were already self-imposed.”
The sanctions include a three-year probation period, during which Alaska needs to devise a program designed to educate athletes about eligibility and requirements. The school already fulfilled that request, having created an athletics academic advisor position before the NCAA handed down its sanctions.
“[The program] has been in place for some time,” said Gray. “We will continue to educate everyone, and we have a great process in place. We have monthly meetings with the registrar’s office and advisers, and I would hold [our process] up as a model.”
Per the university’s athletic website, that advisor position is filled by Andrea Schmidt, who is responsible for “overseeing the academic advising of Nanook student-athletes, including major and minor exploration, career goals, course registration, compliance, and eligibility related to Progress-Toward-Degree requirements.”
As a result of the findings, the hockey team lost one scholarship per year for three years (down from 18 scholarships to 17). It did receive credit for two years of self-imposed sanctions leading up to the governing body’s decision, meaning that punishment will last only one year.
The team also must vacate all wins, points and individual statistics for games during the impacted period.
That means the Nanooks’ 2010 appearance in the NCAA tournament will be wiped away, as well as two Governor’s Cup wins over Alaska-Anchorage. Coach Dallas Ferguson, who had 103 wins after last weekend and was within two wins of the all-time program record, instead lost 63 victories.
Ferguson could not be reached for comment.
The team also is ineligible for postseason play for this season. While it can win the WCHA’s regular season championship, the NCAA sanctions being honored by the league means the Nanooks will be unable to play beyond the regular season.
If the Nanooks finish in one of the WCHA’s eight playoff-qualifying positions in the standings, the teams below them will move up a spot so the ninth-place team is the last team to make the postseason. If the Nanooks finish in the top four, the fifth-place team will gain a home series where it ordinarily would be on the road.
All of Alaska’s regular season games count toward the league standings and in Ratings Percentage Index and PairWise Rankings calculations.
The WCHA affirmed its support for Alaska while also affirming the NCAA decision.
“[The league] has to be prepared for anything that might come down the line,” said Matt Hodson, the WCHA’s assistant commissioner for public relations. “That includes anything that’s celebratory and those unfortunate times when things aren’t so celebratory. We were alerted [Wednesday] as to the NCAA’s decision, and we’re going to respect that decision.”
The next step for the Nanooks is to identify the records, games, statistics and awards that will need to be vacated for the sports impacted by the 40 student-athletes (across nine sports) who were declared ineligible.
They will have 45 days to identify those records and report back to the NCAA, something that will fall under the umbrella of the new positions and processes created by the institution.
“Both the chancellor and the athletic director are proud of the new model in place,” said Drew Desrosiers, Alaska’s assistant AD for athletic communications. “The university has already completed some of the steps required by the NCAA, and there are monthly meetings already in place to ensure this never happens again. They see the current model as something that can be used for other institutions.
“That said, it doesn’t fix the past,” Desrosiers continued. “The school feels like it let down its current students. It takes full responsibility for what happened and what is happening. But we’re going to continue to grow, and while it’s unfortunate, we’ve taken strides toward some great progress.”
The Nanooks return to the ice this weekend at home against Bowling Green.
The University of Alaska-Fairbanks received notice Wednesday from the NCAA of a series of penalties from a series of eligibility infractions spanning the 2007-2008 through 2011-2012 academic years.
The university discovered the infractions in 2011 and 2012 and self-reported them to the NCAA at the time, in addition to imposing some self-penalties. These new penalties include some of those self-sanctions.
According to the university’s statement, “these infractions were due to the university’s failure to establish and maintain adequate systems to ensure that NCAA eligibility was being performed correctly. They are not the result of any wrongdoing by student-athletes.Since these infractions were first reported, UAF has worked to completely overhaul its eligibility process and controls. Today, our student-athletes have the advising, records and eligibility support they deserve.”
The penalties include the university being fined of $30,000, public reprimand and censure and three years of probation through Nov. 4, 2017.
In addition, the Nanooks’ hockey program will be sanctioned by awarding one fewer scholarship each year for three years (no credit for one scholarship a year for two years self-imposed), no postseason play for the 2014-15 season and the team must vacate wins, points and individual statistics for ineligible games, including those for coaches and ineligible student-athletes.
The ruling also means Alaska is ineligible for the WCHA playoffs this season, the league confirmed. If the Nanooks finish in one of the top eight places in the standings, the ninth-place team will be added to the playoff field.
Jackson Brewer was the Joe Concannon Award winner and NESCAC Player of the Year in 2013-14 and is looking for an encore performance for Trinity this season (photo: Melissa Wade).
Jackson Brewer – and his NESCAC-leading 33 assists – is coming back.
So, too, are John Hawkrigg and Sean Orlando, with their 17 goals apiece in tow.
And who can forget Ryan Cole, a freshman like Orlando, and his 16 league tallies.
All of that is great news for Trinity, not so great for the rest of the NESCAC pack.
In all, the defending NESCAC regular-season champs return the prolific bunch that led not just the NESCAC, but the nation in points per game as well.
Brewer, the NESCAC Player of the Year, led the way with 56 points (overall) encompassing 14 goals, 42 assists (7-33-40 NESCAC), with Hawkrigg (22-30-52, 17-21-38), Cole (19-29-48, 16-18-34) and Orlando (22-18-40, 17-13-30) all following suit.
Little wonder that the Bantams made a clean sweep of NESCAC First Team forward selections, with Orlando being a notable omission.
Even defenseman Michael Flynn (6-17-23 NESCAC) – fifth among the Bantams and a conference first-teamer himself – would have been the top point-getter on nine other NESCAC rivals.
All this damage done with just one puck.
What more could one want?
Well, a postseason run for one thing.
What did Trinity get for its glittering 21-5-0 (15-3-0 NESCAC) record?
A second-round conference ousting by those Lords of Destiny, fifth-seed Bowdoin.
With such an accomplished returning cast, Trinity coach Matthew Greason has set his sights high.
“We are hoping to get better everyday,” said Greason, “in hopes of putting ourselves in position to do something special at the end of the year.”
The view from around the league is that, while there is tremendous balance throughout (how else can one explain how a fifth-place club can make it through the NESCAC tournament and into the NCAAs), the Bantams are still the rulers of the roost.
“Trinity is the favorite,” said Hamilton coach Rob Haberbusch. “They bring back almost their whole team although they lost a really good goalie (departed senior Benjamin Clouthard).”
Colby coach Blaise MacDonald expressed the same view.
“The top teams have stayed the same and will continue to be at the top,” said MacDonald. “Trinity should win both the regular-season and tournament championship as they are loaded in all areas.”
Even so, the cupboards are hardly bare in other NESCAC houses.
Amherst, which came within a hair (make that a double-overtime championship game loss to Bowdoin) of making the NCAAs, returns a solid group led by junior goalie Dave Cunningham, and a strong class of recruits.
“We have a group that will be a little younger than we have been in recent years and are counting on the new players to contribute,” said Jack Arena, the aptly named Lord Jeffs coach. “I think our overall group is solid and we should improve as our young guys adjust to the level of play.”
Third-place Williams can point to similar strength in net in the person of senior Sean Dougherty, who led the NESCAC in goals against (1.79), save percentage (.938), and shutouts (2).
Middlebury, with the likes of forward Derek Pimentel, and Bowdoin,with forwards Connor Quinn and John McGinnis (fifth in conference scoring) will both likely force their way into the conference crown conversation.
Even last-place Tufts has second team All-NESCAC defenseman Blake Edwards coming back.
Arena gave voice to what every NESCAC coach is no doubt thinking as the new campaign approaches.
“We always want to be playing our best hockey at the end of the year ,” he said. “If we accomplish that, we consider it a successful season.”
Amherst
Last Year’s Record: 16-8-3 (overall), 12-4-2 (NESCAC)
Coach: Jack Arena, 32nd yr. (407-306-56)
Key Returning Players: G Dave Cunningham, Jr., D Jake Turrin, Sr. , F Mike Rowbotham, Sr., F Conor Brown, Jr., F Brendan Burke, Jr..
Key newcomers: F Keenan Hodgson, Nepean CCHL, F David White, Fairfield Prep., F Thomas Windstorm.
Key departures: F Brian Safstrom, F Andrew Kurlanski.
Noteworthy: Safstrom (20 points) and Kurlanski (18) were the Jeffs’ top pointgetters.
Bowdoin
Last Year’s Record: 17-9-2, 9-8-1
Coach: Terry Meagher, 32nd yr. (515-237-51)
Key Returning Players: F John McGinnis, Sr., F Connor Quinn, Sr.
Key newcomers: D Mitch Barrington, Dexter School, F Zach Kokosa, Waubonsie Valley.
Key departures: F Colin Downey, F Harry Matheson, G Steve Messina.
Noteworthy: Bowdoin penalty killers produced a league-best nine shorthanded goals. Downey had three of them.
Colby
Last Year’s Record: 11-11-3, 8-9-1
Coach: Blaise MacDonald, 18th yr, 3rd at Colby (254-267-65, 18-26-6)
Key Returning Players: G Sam Parker, Sr., F Ray Zeek, Sr., F Robert McCormick, Sr., F Colin Reilly, So., D Geoff Sullivan, So.
Key newcomers: F Phil Klitorinos, Kent School, F Mario Benicky, Westminster School, F Mike Rudolf, South Kent School, F Cam MacDonald Westford Academy, D Dan Dupont, South Kent School, G Emerson Verrier. Trinity College School.
Key departures: F Ben Chwick, F Nick Lanza, D Brendan Cosgrove.
Noteworthy: MacDonald recruited heavily from U.S. prep schools for this year’s incoming class.
Connecticut College
Last Year’s Record: 9-14-2, 8-9-1
Coach: Jim Ward, 12th yr. (86-159-23)
Key Returning Players: F J.C. Cangelosi, Sr., D Greg Liataud.
Key newcomers: NA.
Key departures: F Mike Sinsigalli
Noteworthy: The Camels, seeded seventh, reached the NESCAC playoffs for the first time since 2009.
Hamilton
Last Year’s Record: 5-15-3, 4-12-2
Coach: Rob Haberbusch, 4th yr. (19-45-9)
Key Returning Players: F Pat Curtis, Sr., F Kenny Matheson, Jr., F Robbie Murden, So.
Key newcomers: F Tyler Bruneteau, Rio Grande Valley NAHL.
Key departures: F Evan Haney, F Mike DiMare.
Noteworthy: DiMare was an NESCAC conference Honorable Mention.
Middlebury
Last Year’s Record: 11-11-3, 9-7-2
Coach: Bill Beaney, 35th yr. (506-172-48)
Key Returning Players: F Derek Pimentel, F Jake Charles.
Key newcomers: NA
Key departures: D Louis Belisle, D Ben Wiggins, D Robbie Donohoe.
Noteworthy: The Panthers lose their top three blueliners.
Trinity
Last Year’s Record: 21-5-0, 15-3-0
Coach: Matthew Greason, 4th yr. (45-25-5)
Key Returning Players: F Jackson Brewer, F John Hawkrigg, F Ryan Cole, F Sean Orlando.
Key newcomers: NA
Key departure: G Benjamin Coulthard.
Noteworthy: Bantams were the top four league scorers, beginning with Brewer (7-33-40).
Tufts
Last Year’s Record: 4-19-1, 2-15-1
Coach: Brian Murphy, 17th yr. (149-211-24)
Key Returning Players: D Blake Edwards, Sr., D Brian Ouellette, Jr., D Sean Kavanagh, So., D Shawn Power, Sr., F Tyler Voigt, Sr., F Keith Campbell, Jr., F Conal Lynch, So., F Stewart Bell, Jr., F Andrew White, Sr.
Key newcomers: F Brian Brown, F Chad Goldberg, F Oliver Takacsi-Nagy, F J.J. Ganss, D Zack MacQueen, D Dan Kelly G Ryan McConnell, G Ross Bendetson, G Mason Pulde
Key departures: F Kyle Gallegos.
Noteworthy: Tufts features 13 new players, including three goalies.
Wesleyan
Last Year’s Record: 11-12-2, 6-11-1
Coach: Chris Potter, 12th yr. (93-141-31)
Key Returning Players: F Elliott Vorel, F James Kline.
Key newcomers: NA
Key departures: F Keith Buehler, F Tommy Hartnett.
Noteworthy: Weslyan will be looking to improve its penalty killing, which had a mere 67.9 percent (55 of 81) success rate.
Williams
Last Year’s Record: 15-8-3, 10-5-3
Coach: Bill Kangas, 26th yr. (335-229-56)
Key Returning Players: F Craig Kitto, F George Hunkele, G Sean Dougherty.
Key newcomers: NA
Key departures: F Nick Anderson, D Paul Steinig.
Noteworthy: All-league goalie Dougherty led the NESCAC with spectacular 1.78, .938 numbers.