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Renewed effort was expected from Rensselaer; rivalry wins were a bonus

Rensselaer broke out of a scoring drought with a 6-1 win over Union last Friday (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Breaking a five-game losing streak with a sweep of the defending national champions is a big deal for any school — never mind when that team is your fiercest rival.

That’s what transpired last weekend, as Rensselaer opened conference play with a 6-1 win over Union on Friday, followed by a 2-1 overtime win Saturday. The Engineers had scored only six goals on the season entering Friday’s game.

“I don’t know if I expected wins, but I expected them to respond with this type of effort,” RPI coach Seth Appert said following Saturday’s game. “I didn’t know if that would win this weekend, but long term that [effort] wins.”

It’s the first time since the 2003-04 season that the Engineers swept Union in conference play. It was also the third win in a row for RPI against the Dutchmen, a stretch preceded by a 10-game losing streak dating to 2011.

On Friday, the Engineers offense was led by sophomore Riley Bourbonnais, who scored his first three career goals after appearing in only nine games last season. He’s the first RPI player to record a hat trick against the Dutchmen since Matt Murley did it on Jan. 16, 2002.

The six-goal outburst came on RPI’s annual Black Friday game, a tradition in place since 2003 that marks the school’s first conference game of the year. The Engineers wore custom black jerseys with the names of every player who has played at Rensselaer.

 

“Wearing a jersey with every player’s name on it in the history of our program means a lot,” Appert said. “Our guys went out and played like it meant a lot.”

While the offensive production was improved — something Appert credited to RPI’s ability to not overcomplicate things — it was also a solid weekend for goalie Jason Kasdorf, who finished with 58 saves and has a .924 save percentage this year after missing much of last season due to an injury.

“It seems that when we’re scrambling Jason does a really good job of feeling that and finding a way to get a whistle so that we can get a line change and get tired guys off the ice,” Appert said.

Last week, Appert said he wasn’t panicking despite RPI’s five-game losing streak. Last weekend might not have solved everything, but it did show the Engineers’ ability to rebound following a rough stretch.

“You learn what you have in your leadership,” Appert said about the weekend. “Early in the season, it’s important not to be overbearing as a coach and let your seniors take some ownership and handle things. I did that and I just couldn’t be happier with the job that [captain] Curtis Leonard and his classmates did in making sure our response was what it needed to be.”

Rivalry, part II

RPI and Union weren’t the only rivals to play last weekend. Clarkson and St. Lawrence met in a pair of nonconference games, with the teams tying Friday in Canton and the Saints blanking the Golden Knights 4-0 the next night in Potsdam.

The series-opening 2-2 tie Friday had no penalties called, the first time that’s happened in a game between the Golden Knights and Saints since the 1963 ECAC consolation game. Clarkson won that game 7-5.

“The refs decided not to call any penalties and that was just fine with me,” St. Lawrence coach Greg Carvel told SaintsAthletics.com. “They let the guys play and the players on both sides responded with a nice, clean game.”

Saturday’s win was the second shutout of the season for St. Lawrence freshman Kyle Hayton, who has started every game for the Saints and leads the nation in minutes played and is tied for second behind Colgate’s Charlie Finn with two shutouts.

Mitch Gillam made 38 saves in Cornell’s 1-1 tie with Omaha last Friday (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

New goalies, same Big Red

Former Cornell goalie Andy Iles might have not been the biggest or flashiest goalie in the league, but the Ithaca native was steady during his four seasons with the Big Red.

That consistency is something Mike Schafer is hoping carries over into this year, be it with freshman Hayden Stewart or sophomore Mitch Gillam.

“The biggest challenge for those two guys is to find out who is going to be the most consistent,” Schafer said. “If it’s two guys, it’s two guys. If it’s one guy, it’s one guy.”

Each goalie got a chance last weekend against high-scoring Omaha. Gillam made 38 saves in a 1-1 tie in the Big Red’s season opener Friday, while Stewart stopped 21 shots in a 2-1 loss Saturday.

While Cornell has typically had one player carry the load (Iles started all but one game the last three years), Schafer has platooned his goalies before.

As a freshman, Iles split time with Mike Garman in 2010-11 after the graduation of Ben Scrivens, who split time with Troy Davenport during the 2006-07 season.

Around the league

• Yale opened its season by winning the Liberty Hockey Invitational held in Newark, N.J. The Bulldogs beat in-state rivals Connecticut 2-1 in the championship Sunday, moving their record to 11-0 all-time against the Huskies. Yale tied Princeton and new coach Ron Fogarty 2-2 Friday before advancing on freshman Ryan Hitchcock’s shootout goal. Bulldogs sophomore Alex Lyon stopped 67 of 70 shots on the weekend and was named tournament MVP.

• Union has received 20 points from its freshman class, tied for second-most in the country. Quinnipiac’s freshman class has accounted for 17 points thus far, which is tied for fourth.

• Harvard defenseman Patrick McNally had two goals in the Crimson’s 3-3 season-opening tie against Dartmouth. The senior had one goal each of the last two seasons after scoring six as a freshman. However, he missed much of his sophomore year after reportedly being dismissed as part of a school-wide academic scandal.

• The ECAC announced its monthly and weekly award winners. Union forward Mike Vecchione was named the player of the month, while Colgate’s Charlie Finn was the goalie of the month and St. Lawrence goalie Kyle Hayton was the rookie of the month. RPI’s Riley Bourbonnais (player) and Jason Kasdorf (goalie) each earned weekly honors from the league. Quinnipiac’s Landon Smith was named the rookie of the week.

• Former Union forward Josh Jooris scored twice Calgary’s 6-2 win over Montreal on Sunday. The rookie has three goals in six NHL games.

Ho-hum start for Ohio State, but Buckeyes are building toward conference schedule

Ohio State collected a 4-1 win at Canisius last Saturday (photo: Omar Phillips).

Like many other teams, Ohio State’s start to the season has been ho-hum.

The Buckeyes are 2-3-1 after their first three series. After winning their first game against Providence, they dropped the next three before going 1-0-1 in a two-game set with Canisius last weekend.

“Obviously you’re never satisfied, that’s for sure,” Ohio State second-year coach Steve Rohlik said. “As you see that parity in college hockey across the board, I think every night it’s difficult to win at this level. Certainly, you want to continue to get better. And do we wish we were better than 2-3-1? Absolutely.”

Aside from one lopsided loss to Miami, the Buckeyes could easily be a team that everyone is talking about if a couple bounces had gone their way. Ohio State’s other two losses have been by one goal.

“We’ve played three overtime games out of the first six,” Rohlik said. “Everything’s been pretty tight. It’s tough to win at this level.”

The Buckeyes will play Omaha and Bowling Green before opening up Big Ten play with Michigan State. Three of those four games will be played at home.

“We know we’re playing two very good opponents and certainly it doesn’t get any easier,” Rohlik said. “We’d love to go into each game and, hopefully, be prepared and know that we’ve got to be at our best to win. We just want to continue to get better and let the results happen.”

As is typical for most Big Ten teams, Ohio State will play only one conference series in the first half of the season. Rohlik said that he hoped that playing all the nonconference games during the beginning of the season would mean that his team would be firing on all cylinders when league points were up for grabs.

“The second half just happens to be mostly conference games,” Rohlik said. “You want to be playing your best hockey [then], so hopefully this prepares us for that.”

Rohlik said that, like every other coach, he would like to see the team playing its best at the end of the season. That is even more important in the Big Ten considering three postseason wins are enough to get a team into the NCAA tournament.

So far this year Rohlik has split playing time pretty evenly between Matt Tomkins and Christian Frey. Tomkins has a 2.18 GAA and 1-2-1 record. Frey has won and lost one game and owns a 3.96 GAA.

“I’m pretty confident in my goaltenders; they’re two pretty good goalies,” Rohlik said. “They compete every day in practice and they both bring elements to the game. They’re both proven themselves. If I could have two guys that were going well, I’d take that every day.”

Rohlik said that he envisioned giving both netminders opportunities until, “maybe one guy just grabs it and runs with it.”

Rolling with two netminders is an improvement for Rohlik over his first year as head coach, when he almost had to put up “help wanted” posters to find a goaltender. Frey enrolled early halfway through the season after injuries and untimely departures left the Buckeyes thin between the pipes.

“It was a pretty unique situation, knock on wood,” Rohlik said with a chuckle. “To have six different goalies last year, it was a pretty surreal situation.

“But I enjoy all three of our goalies,” he added, talking about those on the roster this season. “Logan Davis, who came in and played well for us last year, he brings it every day as well. It’s nice to have three choices. It’s a situation that, again knock on wood, hopefully we can maintain.”

Ryan Dzingel and Max McCormick were two high-profile departures from last year’s Ohio State team. As a result, the Buckeyes’ offensive numbers are near the middle of the pack so far this year.

“We lost quite a bit of our percentage of scoring,” Rohlik said. “For us, every year you have to find an identity of what your team is. We certainly want to play good and sound defensively and build from the goaltenders out. We’re going to have to score by committee, and that’s what you’re going to see from our team.”

Rohlik said that the recipe for success for OSU this year would be balanced scoring, solid five-on-five play and opportunistic play on special teams. Ohio State is 5-for-24 with the power play.

“If you win the special teams you’ve probably given yourself a pretty good chance to win a hockey game,” Rohlik said. “That’s probably true for everybody, but certainly for us it’s been an emphasis.”

Ohio State is not the only team that has struggled so far this season. That just shows how competitive college hockey has become. The record doesn’t have Rohlik or his team fazed, however.

“We’ve lost a few nonconference games and that’s just how the cycle goes sometime,” he said. “You have to be prepared every weekend, and our league is no different than any other league: You have to go out and play your best if you expect to win.”

Minnesota is unbeaten in its last 15 home games (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Gophers are golden at home

After dropping its first game of the season last Friday at St. Cloud State, Minnesota responded with a win in the second leg of the home-and-home series.

Victories at Mariucci Arena have become the norm for both the Gophers and their fans. Minnesota owns the longest active home unbeaten streak in the nation at 15 games in a row. An outdoor victory across the street from Mariucci at TCF Bank Stadium is included in the streak. The Gophers inherited the title after Union and Ferris State dropped home games this season.

Minnesota’s last home loss came near the end of November last year when Minnesota-Duluth downed the Gophers 6-2.

Minnesota been known to use Mariucci’s large Olympic-sized ice sheet to its advantage over the years. The extra room on the ice allows faster players more space to skate around defenders.

“They can throw the puck around, they’re skilled and they’re fast,” Bemidji State coach Tom Serratore said after a game between the Gophers and Beavers earlier this season. “They know how to utilize this big sheet, there’s no question.”

The Gophers host Notre Dame on Friday and Sunday.

Three stars of the week

First star — Michigan State junior goaltender Jake Hildebrand: Hildebrand gave a solid performance in Michigan State’s split with Ferris State last weekend. He had a 1.01 GAA and stopped 35 of the 37 shots he faced. The junior netminder has held opponents to two goals or fewer in his last four games. This is his fifth career Big Ten weekly award.

Second star — Minnesota sophomore forward Justin Kloos: Kloos provided much of the offensive spark in the Gophers’ 4-3 victory against St. Cloud State last Saturday. He netted a hat trick and had the game-winning goal in overtime. Kloos is tied for the Big Ten lead in goals. This is his third career Big Ten weekly award.

Third star — Ohio State sophomore goaltender Matt Tomkins: Tomkins saw playing time in both of Ohio State’s games against Canisius last weekend. He came off the bench in Friday’s game and stopped 26 of 27 shots, which helped Ohio State tie the Golden Griffins 3-3. On Saturday, he got the start and saved 20 shots in the Buckeyes’ 4-1 victory. This is his first Big Ten weekly award.

B1G in the poll

No. 1 Minnesota is the only Big Ten team in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll. Michigan, Penn State and Ohio State received votes.

My ballot

1. Minnesota
2. North Dakota
3. Boston University
4. Boston College
5. Colgate
6. Providence
7. St. Cloud State
8. Miami
9. Massachusetts-Lowell
10. Denver
11. Michigan Tech
12. Union
13. Minnesota State
14. Ferris State
15. Vermont
16. Minnesota-Duluth
17. Notre Dame
18. Michigan
19. Nebraska-Omaha
20. Bowling Green

This week’s games

Notre Dame at Minnesota (Friday and Sunday, Mariucci Arena)

North Dakota at Wisconsin (Friday and Saturday, Kohl Center)

Nebraska-Omaha at Ohio State (Friday and Saturday, Value City Arena)

Michigan State at New Hampshire (Friday and Saturday, Whittemore Center)

Wednesday Women: Win one, lose one

Brittany Zuback of Vermont (Brian Jenkins)
Brittany Zuback of Vermont has produced well so far (Brian Jenkins).

Arlan: I was hoping that the games of the last week would start to solidify how teams compare relative to others at a similar level; it didn’t happen. Instead, I feel like the picture got even fuzzier.

Take Cornell, for example. We knew that Jillian Saulnier would be absent, but I hoped that the opening weekend rust would be gone, and the Big Red would start to perform more like the contender most expect them to be. Instead, Brianne Jenner wasn’t available either, opponents continued to score at a regular clip, and through four games, Cornell looks nothing like an elite team. Given it lost to Princeton as well, did Quinnipiac actually get its first measuring-stick game versus Cornell?

Then there’s St. Lawrence. The Saints lost on the road at Clarkson, as you predicted. They beat Yale with relative ease, but then turned around and lost by three goals to Brown. Obviously, that can partly be attributed to trying to get a backup goaltender some work, but Carmen MacDonald was hardly lights out once she entered in relief. By the time she recorded a save after allowing two goals, the game was over. So how good is SLU, and, by extension, what does that say about some of its opponents, such as Yale?

That confusion propagates beyond the ECAC to Hockey East. Consider Boston College. I know that you love the Eagles, and I’ll agree that they are a great team. But how great? They swept Providence, in what was essentially a split-squad game on the back half, with a junior who came into the game with three career goals netting a pair. However, Providence hasn’t beaten anyone since January. With losing weeks for both SLU and Cornell, supposedly the best teams that BC has played to date, some of the luster is gone from those results. The Eagles have yet to play anyone whose RPI is above .500, whereas Wisconsin has already had 10 games against such opponents. How do we know if BC winning at Providence minus five stars is more impressive than the Badgers winning at North Dakota without four of its top forwards?

Can you clear any of this up for me?

Candace: I don’t really think you can compare the results between Wisconsin and Boston College. BC is deep enough to beat the team expected to perhaps finish last in its conference, even with five stars gone. Wisconsin took on North Dakota and came out ahead in impressive fashion on Saturday, one night after Wisconsin tied North Dakota. Wisconsin was missing Blayre Turnbull and Emily Clark for both games, and North Dakota was missing Halli Krzyzaniak for both games, since Canada had its players report at the start of the weekend.

You mentioned Cornell. I had picked Quinnipiac to win Saturday, as I knew the Bobcats would have top scorer Taylar Cianfarano and that the Big Red would be sans Saulnier. On Friday, however, the Big Red were defeated by Princeton, a very surprising result. Even without Saulnier and Brianne Jenner, losing 5-4 to Princeton shows that the Big Red have problems defensively. Princeton is a team the Big Red should beat, at least on paper, and they came up short. Goaltender Paula Voorheis gave up four goals on eight shots before being replaced by Amelia Boughn, who gave up one goal on eight shots. Voorheis was back in net the next night, and gave up three to Quinnipiac, which fired 30 shots on net in the game. Three goals is the fewest Cornell has given up in four games, so the Big Red need to find their defense.

While there were a lot of puzzling results, such as St. Lawrence losing to Brown, 7-4, after defeating Yale, the elephant in the college hockey room is in your state. How do you explain Minnesota losing and tying Bemidji State (and losing the shootout). Losing on Saturday isn’t perhaps quite as surprising. The Beavers have been pretty good defensively, and the Gophers were without several of their best players due to the Four Nations Cup.

Friday, however, the Gophers had a complete line-up, including Hannah Brandt, and were close to losing in regulation before Dani Cameranesi scored an extra-attacker, power-play goal at 18:42 of the third to tie it.

Is it panic time in Minneapolis?

Arlan: No. The Gophers struggled a number of times in the early part of last season, but we tend to remember how they looked in the second half when they featured three forward lines that were all essentially top-line caliber. They had close calls on the road early versus teams like Colgate, Bemidji State, and St. Cloud State that they managed to pull out, and it wasn’t until they lost to North Dakota that the Gophers started to solidify line combinations and get rolling. Through this October, they have been carried offensively primarily by Brandt, Cameranesi, and the power play. No other player has more than two even-strength goals. Minnesota should develop more depth up front over time, but I doubt that it will approach what it had the previous two years from that standpoint.

The other thing to consider is who Minnesota has played. Nine of its first 10 games have been versus teams ranked No. 11 or higher in Michael Rutter’s rankings. The exception is Penn State, a team Minnesota defeated, 8-0, but the Nittany Lions have proven to be a thorn versus more highly regarded teams. In the nine games it has left in 2014, I look for Minnesota to have some more favorable matchups, and the forwards who have scuffled to this point will start to have some success.

Rather than an elephant, I think those that watched the series in Minneapolis saw Beavers, and lots of them. Bemidji State has always been a gritty, hard-working team that features players selling out on defense and often spectacular goaltending. Brittni Mowat had to battle through illness as a freshman, but she was on top of her game this weekend, stopping 83 of 85 shots. Brad Frost was asked about the challenge of getting his team up to play a lesser team, and his response was that he doesn’t consider BSU to be a lesser team. Under new coach Jim Scanlan, it’s playing a more aggressive style. It played Wisconsin and Minnesota on back-to-back weekends and was within a goal in all four games, including the win and the tie. I doubt that there are more than a dozen teams in the country, if that many, capable of matching that.

I got my first look Sunday at Vermont, one of the squads that fell to Bemidji State earlier. The Catamounts were missing Amanda Pelkey, but they played an impressive game in skating by Connecticut, 6-0, their third straight shutout win. Have you had a chance to see UVM, and could it help fill that partial vacuum that looks to be forming behind Boston College and Boston University in Hockey East with Northeastern’s slow start?

Candace: I haven’t had a chance to see the Catamounts yet, but I would agree that Vermont could fill that vacuum behind the Boston squads. So far, it looks like Vermont has been getting scoring from people besides Pelkey, who averages a point a game. Dayna Colang and Brittany Zuback have both played well. The goaltending was an unknown headed into the season, but sophomore Madison Litchfield has a 1.49 goals-against and a 9.39 save percentage.

I was on the fence earlier about the Catamounts. They opened with an impressive 3-1 win over North Dakota in Grand Forks, but the 4-0 loss to Bemidji State made me pause. Given the Beavers’ play over the last two weeks, I think we can agree that Bemidji is much better than we thought earlier. However, though the Catamounts have won three shutouts in a row and scored 14 goals in those three games, I do want to see how they do over the next few weeks when they take on Boston College, Syracuse, Northeastern, and Maine. Vermont was a little inconsistent a few weeks ago, tying Rensselaer and losing 2-0 to RIT, but a sweep of Union and a win over Connecticut aren’t surprising results given the talent level in Burlington. We’ll know more about where they stand in a month. Vermont will be missing Pelkey for the BC game, but the Eagles are without five players, so it could be an interesting test of both teams’ depth.

Speaking of RIT, heading into this past weekend I had thought the Tigers might be looking up after tying Northeastern and beating Vermont. I even thought they might be ready to challenge Mercyhurst for the CHA crown. However, a tie and a 3-1 loss to Lindenwood is not the way to establish readiness for a title surge. Yes, Nicole Hensley was brilliant again in net, making 34 saves in the tie and 39 in the win, but the Tigers have been struggling with offense this year. Do you see RIT getting untracked, or is this weekend more an indication that the Tigers will have a tough time establishing consistent results?

Arlan: I think this weekend is an indication that teams in general struggle to score consistently. After allowing the empty-net goal to Lindenwood, that is the first time all year that RIT has yielded three goals, but in its three losses and two ties, it has scored an average of one goal. Three times the Tigers have managed to win despite only scoring twice, and that looks to be what they’ll have to do, because through 10 games, they’ve scored exactly 20 goals.

RIT isn’t alone in terms of being offensively challenged. Providence and Union average less than a goal a game, and Minnesota State is last with five goals total after seven games. Coaches preach, “Pucks to the net, bodies to the net, take away the goalie’s eyes, score greasy goals,” but a team as young as the Mavericks can have trouble just getting to the net. Those hours training off ice matter.

Some days, the puck hits a stick or body and goes into the net. More often, it will skitter harmlessly into the corner. Then, instead of matching that two-goal scoring average, a team is left with one goal, or none at all. Good luck winning then.

Even at the top of the scoring stats, it isn’t all that encouraging for fans of offense. BC scores a lot of goals on shots and tap-ins into nets where the goaltender has been drawn out of position, so they are able to produce more consistently and average more than five goals a game. Dartmouth is above four goals scored on average after three games, but given the Big Green were below two goals a game last year, I doubt that they’ll stay anywhere near there. Harvard is scoring four and a half times a game, and while it may dip a bit when it faces tougher opponents, I expect the Crimson to remain closer to that neighborhood than the sub-three mark they averaged last season. Clarkson, Minnesota, and Wisconsin should all eventually settle into that range near four goals a game, maybe a little above or a little below, given that personnel losses have impacted their current averages. We came into the season expecting Cornell to be there as well, but right now, who knows. The Big Red have had personnel absences, to be sure, but they’ve also staggered out of the gate. BU will trend down rather than up if Marie-Philip Poulin stays out. That’s about it. Even Quinnipiac, which is quickly establishing itself as an elite team, only scores three times a contest.

So the extremely long answer to your question is that RIT, and most of the country, is going to struggle to find enough offense to win. There will be few easy games for the Tigers or anyone else. One of the exceptions was BC, the new No. 1 team, throttling Providence, the team that ranks dead last in scoring margin and has the worst record outside of a still-winless Cornell. What did you take away from the Eagles/Friars mismatch?

Candace: There’s not a lot to take away if you are looking at BC, honestly, except that even with some of their best players gone, BC is still a deep and dangerous team. Meghan Grieves got the Eagles a two-goal lead in the second game by scoring a pair in the first period, and the Eagles got a couple more in the third from Tori Sullivan and Andie Anastos. In the first game, Emily Field finally started to produce, getting a pair of goals. Having Field produce will be good for BC in the long run.

The Friars are 0-9-1, and in those 10 games, have kept their opponents under three goals twice. Ironically, the one tie was a three-goal affair with Syracuse. I’m starting to wonder if Providence will win a game in the first half. The best chance for the Friars might be Friday, when they travel to Union, or Sunday, when they host Connecticut.

Regardless, Providence is not looking like a team that will escape the Hockey East cellar. Haley Frade leads in scoring, but is averaging half a point per game. Three goalies have seen time, but none has done particularly well. That could be due to the defense. In the 8-0 rout, Field got her first goal on a rebound down low on a power play. On the second, two Providence defenders were back, but Field got the rebound in the slot. On many of the other goals, defenders were not getting back or not challenging the shooter. Providence looks to have a long road ahead this season.

There was a surprise out of Rhode Island this weekend, however, as Brown scored seven goals and beat St. Lawrence, 7-4. This was one night after the Bears got hammered by Clarkson, 5-1. The Bears now have a trio of home games against Hockey East squads, with one against Connecticut and two against Maine. Might Saturday’s result promise more for another team that has struggled to score, or is it a one-off?

Arlan: My guess is that the seven goals is due in large part to facing a freshman goalie, Brooke Wolejko, making just her second start. After allowing a goal on 11 shots in the opening period, she let in three goals on just seven shots after that, and was pulled after Brown took a lasting lead with under 10 minutes to play. Carmen MacDonald comes on in relief, doesn’t see a shot for nearly five minutes, and then gets beat on two successive shots 14 seconds apart. Brown adds an empty-net goal and presto, seven tallies for the Bears.

The positive sign for Brown is that it wasn’t shut out in any of its three previous games versus RIT and Clarkson, two good defensive teams, after being blanked in three of its final four games in February. Rookie Sam Donovan has three goals after four games; Janice Yang led in that department with seven all of last year. For her part, Yang has five points so far, and 14 points by Sarah Robson led last year’s club. Most of the top producers are back with another year of seasoning, so I think it is realistic to expect some growth in the scoring output, just not seven goals on a regular basis.

Last week, we discussed the possibility of Yale moving up in the ECAC; the Bulldogs got off to a rocky start in that regard, getting swept at home by St. Lawrence and Clarkson. The first loss was more troubling, because Yale was never able to mount a charge after the Saints went up 2-0 in the first period, and they look to be a team that Yale will battle in the standings. I suppose SLU’s loss to Brown helps in that regard. The loss to Clarkson was more encouraging. Yale took a lead late in the first period on a five-on-three power play, but was unable to hold it after committing a penalty of its own after intermission. Another power-play goal by rookie Savannah Harmon for the Golden Knights in the third period proved decisive. Did we expect too much of the Bulldogs, given they needed a two-skater advantage to score their lone goal on the weekend, or does a young offense just need more time?

Candace: I’m inclined to think it’s more of the latter. Yale got 28 shots on Carmen MacDonald in the 3-0 loss, and one of St. Lawrence’s goals was an empty-netter. Yale’s one goal in the 2-1 loss to Clarkson was scored by Stephanie Mock and assisted by Phoebe Staenz and Taylor Marchin, who are among the point leaders for the Bulldogs.

Yale started 3-0, but opened with D-I in name only Sacred Heart and Providence, whose struggles we’ve already chronicled. The goals came in bunches in those games, and perhaps the Bulldogs underestimated how much of a jump in intensity Clarkson and St. Lawrence were. Yale’s schedule doesn’t get any easier, as the Bulldogs host Boston University this weekend. The Terriers will most likely be sans Marie-Philip Poulin, who was originally supposed to be playing for Canada in the Four Nations, but the injury she suffered 10 days ago against Maine still has her sidelined. Jenner replaced her on the Team Canada roster. Regardless, the Terriers will be a stout test. Also on the docket this month are Cornell, Boston College, and Quinnipiac. If they can get a few wins in there, I’ll be more sanguine about Yale’s chances of moving up the ECAC ladder.

We’ve talked about teams struggling to establish consistency, and I think we see that in the WCHA. Right now, only two teams, Wisconsin and Minnesota, have winning records in conference. Bemidji had the hiccup in getting swept by Ohio State a couple of weeks ago. The Buckeyes just split with St. Cloud. Minnesota-Duluth and North Dakota are both 3-4-1. To me, it almost looks any one of five teams could end up getting the three and four spots, and home ice, for the WCHA playoffs.

You’re close to that conference, as you are based in Minnesota. What do you see the rest of the year presenting for the WCHA?

Arlan: The four teams that are currently first through fourth — Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Minnesota-Duluth — have completed their games against each other for the first half. The bottom half of the league has games in hand on all of those teams, but they’ll have to be able to take points from the leaders to make up the ground. Minnesota State looks to be the most likely place to earn points, and the Buckeyes and Beavers have yet to play MSU. Considering the standings combined with the remaining schedule, I’d say Bemidji State has a slight edge over the other teams in the bottom half, but it also is at a bit of a disadvantage compared to UMD and UND.

I’ve seen four of the five teams that you noted as contending for third and fourth place, but I won’t get a look at Ohio State for a while. St. Cloud State is scoring more than in recent years, but the challenge will be to keep it up when the schedule toughens. I don’t think the Huskies have the horses to stay in the race for home ice, but I’m sure they have evolved a lot under a new staff since I watched them in their opening weekend. The Buckeyes’ new goaltender appears to have stepped in just fine, but they need to score more in conference and avoid those bad losses to teams that figure to finish below them, such as SCSU, if they are going to claim home ice. Minnesota-Duluth has a lot of new players that I’m sure will start to gel as the weeks progress, so from that aspect, the Bulldogs have a lot of upside. Their negative is that I’d give both North Dakota and Bemidji State an edge in terms of consistency of goaltending. BSU may be more consistent overall than UND from game to game, but if UND gets it together, it has the high-end players like Krzyzaniak, Meghan Dufault, and Becca Kohler that Bemidji State lacks. My best guess is that the battle for the final home ice spot will come down to North Dakota and Bemidji State, with UND coming out on top. A tighter race will likely be a battle for fifth between Bemidji State and Ohio State. That is the only thing I’d change right now from my preseason projections, where I had the Buckeyes finishing ahead of the Beavers for fifth.

Looking at the CHA, Mercyhurst was able to finally get that elusive sweep over Paul Colontino and Robert Morris. With neither Syracuse nor RIT able to sweep series on their own rinks, is it safe to say that after one week of CHA play the Lakers have once again established themselves as the heavy favorite in the season race in that conference?

Candace: It certainly seems that way, doesn’t it? Lindenwood is currently second in the CHA, and while I don’t see that lasting, it does point out how volatile that conference is. It almost seems like the Lakers are the favorite by default.

Mercyhurst hasn’t gotten a lot of notice, but the Lakers keep winning. They are currently 8-1-1, with their lone loss being to a very up-and-down Northeastern squad. The tie was against a Maine squad that I am beginning to think is better than first assumed.

There’s an old saw about how you can only beat who is front of you. Some might ding the Lakers for the supposed ease of their schedule, which has had two games against Providence and two against Minnesota State, but the Lakers keep winning. CHA play continues this weekend with a two-game set against Syracuse, which seems to always be the bridesmaid in its games with the Lakers.

When I look at the Lakers’ schedule, I just don’t see a lot of threats. They play Ohio State next week, which could be big for possible PairWise implications, and travel to Cornell on Dec. 1. Perhaps the Big Red will have gotten it together by then, but they are currently a hot mess.

Entering this past weekend, I thought perhaps the Colonials had righted the ship and were ready for the task of beating the Lakers, but neither game was particularly close. Robert Morris only got one goal on the weekend. Looking at the rest of the CHA, every other team is having major scoring difficulties. Mercyhurst isn’t exactly lighting the lamp at the frequency of a Boston College or a Wisconsin, but they are scoring, and currently sit at 15th in team offense. RIT is the next-closest CHA team, sitting tied for 20th, but averages more than half a goal less than the Lakers per game. In fact, RIT averages two goals a game, and the rest of the CHA is all under that mark. Simple math would seem to indicate the Lakers are probably well-poised to take the first CHA auto bid.

This coming weekend is light on action due to the Four Nations (and we will be taking a break from this feature next week as a result), but one very interesting clash has Dartmouth traveling to St. Lawrence in a nonconference game. The Big Green have started 3-0; is it possible we underestimated a traditional ECAC power?

Arlan: Possible? Yes. However, I’m not likely to conclude much based on wins over New Hampshire, Union, and RPI. I see that I picked the Big Green ninth behind Colgate, so that much at least looks misguided. As I mentioned above, they are scoring so far. Laura Stacey is the big name at the top of the DC roster, and she has three goals and seven points already. If as a junior she can take her game to new levels, that bodes well. The big question coming into the year was goaltending. So far, so good, as Robyn Chemago has a .931 save percentage, but we’ll learn more on that front through the remainder of 2014. In addition to playing the Saints twice, Dartmouth has a tough slate that includes Clarkson, BU, Harvard, Quinnipiac, Princeton, BC, and Vermont. If after that run we conclude that we sold the Big Green short, then they’ll have a lot to celebrate come Christmas.

Princeton is another team that could head in either direction. After the Tigers opened with a bit of a whoops game at Penn State, they’ve reeled off three straight. They now get a couple of weeks to settle in a bit before their schedule ramps up with SLU, Clarkson, Quinnipiac, Minnesota twice, and Harvard in a six-game string. I would think playing .500 over that stretch would be a great result, but at a minimum, they need to get some points and avoid a long skid that could derail the season. The game with Dartmouth right after that stretch could prove vital for playoff positioning. Sophomore Kelsey Koelzer has opened hot with seven points already, only three short of her freshman total, and Molly Contini is averaging a goal a game. For Princeton to have season-long success, Kimberly Newell will need to clamp down a bit, because her save percentage is hovering around .900.

One more ECAC team to mention is the defending champion. With everyone it graduated, Clarkson had a lot to rebuild, but the pieces seem to have come together quite nicely. Renata Fast is finally healthy and playing, and once Erin Ambrose gets back from her Four Nations stint after a bye week, the Golden Knights should have a full cast available for the first time this year. Given the struggles of an assortment of teams like Cornell, Northeastern, Robert Morris, and North Dakota, do we like Clarkson’s chances of making it back to the NCAA tournament better than we did a month ago?

Candace: Yes, with the caveat that Shea Tiley still needs to show more improvement. Over the last five games, she’s only given up three goals, but those games were against Syracuse, St. Lawrence, Brown, and Yale, not exactly teams that are offensive giants. The last time Tiley was in net against a scoring team, she gave up seven goals in two games to Boston University, which swept the Golden Knights. Tiley is a freshman, so the potential is clearly there.

The good news for Clarkson is that it is getting scoring, something we wondered about with the graduation of Jamie Lee Rattray and a few others, such as Brittany Styner and Carly Mercer. Shannon MacAulay is currently tied with Brandt and Carpenter for the national scoring lead, though she has played more games than the other two. Cayley Mercer and Geneviève Bannon are fourth nationally in scoring, and the Knights have also seen production from freshman Savannah Harmon and senior Christine Lambert.

Clarkson is off this week, then resumes play on Nov. 14 with a home set against travel pair Harvard and Dartmouth. The Knights then travel to Quinnipiac and Princeton the following week. Clarkson should come out of that run at least .500, but winning three or even all four would make me more of a believer.

As for defending their championship, that might be a taller order. Looming in the second half of the season is a pair of games against Wisconsin in Madison. Those games will have huge PairWise implications, which is important since I don’t quite believe yet that the Knights will win the ECAC tournament and the auto bid, so Clarkson needs to qualify as an at-large team. Losing both to Wisconsin would hurt the Knights chances of getting in that way.

American International sees how much of a boost a couple of wins can provide

Coach Gary Wright and American International got a pair of needed victories last weekend (photo: Omar Phillips).

In Atlantic Hockey, fast starts are huge. Getting out to a good start to the season can be the difference later in the year between a first-round series or a first-round bye, a home series versus a road series.

In a season’s infancy, getting wins over conference opponents can rocket a team up the standings and gain it early positioning. While the season still has plenty of life left to breathe, it’s a start, and it’s something that can be built upon for upcoming weeks.

One team seeing that impact is American International. The Yellow Jackets entered last weekend at 0-3-1 in league play, having lost to and tied Holy Cross and been swept by Canisius. Heading west to take on Niagara, it was the start of five in a row on the road. With nonconference games looming in the coming weeks, it was also their last chance to establish some position before stepping away from their league slate.

AIC responded in spades. Beating Niagara 3-1 and 4-2, the Yellow Jackets rocketed from 11th place up to a tie for fourth with Army. It also provided a little bit of room between them and the bottom of the conference as they prepare to play Massachusetts and Michigan.

“It was a good weekend,” said coach Gary Wright. “It’s definitely early in the season, but it’s still nice to win games. We’ve had some good showings even though we haven’t played that many games, but we’ve also certainly made some mistakes along the way. It’s very satisfying, though, to go out and win games and have good weekends because good weekends now can make a big difference.”

Big kudos are well deserved for freshman goalie Alex Murray. He made 40 stops in each game, saving 23 shots in the third period of Friday’s win alone. Alexander MacMillan powered the offense with three goals, and several of the Yellow Jackets players finished well on the plus side of their ice time, including Chris Porter, who was plus-4.

The Yellow Jackets receive a nonconference breather from their Atlantic Hockey slate (more on this later) before taking on Robert Morris on Nov. 22-23.

Holy Cross crusading

The expectations surrounding Holy Cross were decidedly tempered in comparison to previous years. Our preseason finish for 10th place, both Chris Lerch and I figured the Crusaders and their first-year coach, David Berard, would be in rebuilding mode.

While it’s still early in the season, the old guard from the days of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference is proving it’s still very much alive.

The Crusaders have done a tremendous job of not losing tight games, remaining undefeated through their first two conference weekends. After beating and tying AIC earlier in October, they repeated the effort against Sacred Heart last weekend by winning 3-0 on the road on Friday before tying 2-2 at home on Saturday.

“We’re off to a good start,” said Berard. “Every game could really go any way, which is a hallmark of our conference. The games have been really tight, and there’s really been no such thing as a comfortable lead. We had a good weekend against AIC, but at the same time, AIC had some really great players that battled hard on both nights. We were fortunate to come out of that weekend with three points.

“The same thing happened against Sacred Heart,” he continued. “We were solid on the road on Friday, but then [the Pioneers] came out with real purpose on Saturday. They’re a very good team, very well coached, and, like I told my guys, they want to win, too. The back-and-forth kind of game ended the way I felt it should have, with a tie. So we’ve had two solid weekends, but we’ve had to work very hard to get them.”

Berard credited the team’s defense for the early season success. In their first four conference games, the Crusaders allowed only six goals and have one shutout.

“We know we’re not going to have the most prolific offense, so we need our defense in order to win tight, low-scoring games,” Berard said. “That’s not just our goalie or our defense but the forwards, too. All six guys have to be able to work together to create offense.

“Our goal is to be in every game, because whether you win 2-1 or 6-3, it’s the same two points. That’s something our guys are getting a good grasp on, but they know it’s a process that requires a lot of work.”

Niagara falls

One of the surprises to start the season is Niagara’s rough start. The Purple Eagles are 0-8 through the first month of the season, including an 0-4 start in Atlantic Hockey play.

While the coaching staff won’t use it as an excuse, they’ve also had one of the toughest schedules, drawing their first games against Clarkson and St. Lawrence from ECAC Hockey; Robert Morris; Hockey East’s Notre Dame; and AIC.

It’s been a vicious combination for the school, one where it has had trouble both scoring goals and stopping other teams. Through eight games, Niagara has potted 12 goals for itself while giving up 42.

Last weekend, it became particularly prickly as the Purple Eagles outshot AIC on both Friday and Saturday by a combined 85-45 yet lost by 3-1 and 4-2 margins.

We know Niagara won’t stay dormant for too long. This is a team that’s been to the championship weekend two years in a row and last year was in the league’s final game against Robert Morris.

That said, it doesn’t get any easier for the Purple Eagles, who head east of New York for the first time this year when they play Bentley.

Matt Ginn owns the Holy Cross record for career saves (photo: Melissa Wade).

Ginn’s the man

Big congratulations to Matt Ginn of Holy Cross, who became the program’s all-time save record holder last weekend.

Ginn made 53 saves against Sacred Heart, bringing his career total to 2,939. That broke a nearly 30-year record set by Paul Pijanowski, who had 2,915 stops between 1984 and 1987.

In addition, Ginn has appeared in 106 games, best all-time for a goalie in Holy Cross program history.

“Matt is the centerpiece to our team defense,” Berard said. “We know what his effort is going to be each night.”

Remember me?

This coming week will provide some thick story lines as interesting rematches pop up across the AHA landscape.

Bentley will host Niagara a year after the Purple Eagles walked into Ryan Arena and walked out with three points. Holy Cross heads to Rochester Institute of Technology for the teams’ first meeting since last year’s controversial playoff ending.

The most compelling matchup, however, might be the American International-Massachusetts game taking place at the Mullins Center in Amherst, Mass.

Last season, Hunter Leisner made 57 saves and the Yellow Jackets won 3-2. This year, the team with some of the longest travel plans in league play gets to make the short, 35-minute drive to the state’s flagship to take on Hockey East’s Western Massachusetts representation.

“We’re very appreciative of the opportunity to play a program like UMass,” Wright said. “It’ll be really great for our guys to be able to leave campus and get home in about 35 minutes after the game, sleep in their own beds.

“We’ll be looking to keep improving as a team in this game, and it’s always good for the league to be able to go out and play teams from leagues like Hockey East. And this is something that can be great for Western Massachusetts as well. Hopefully this is something we can one day move to the MassMutual Center in Springfield.”

In the more distant future (OK, two weeks) for the Yellow Jackets is a trip to Michigan, a B1G friend to the AHA scheduling gods. The Wolverines have played RIT, Bentley, Niagara and Mercyhurst dating back to the start of the 2010-11 season.

Ranking members

Robert Morris is off to a well-publicized fast start after winning its first conference championship last season. With a 7-0-1 record, however, the Colonials finally garnered national attention when they cracked into the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll at 18th. It’s the first time the team’s been recognized on that level.

The last couple of years have been a real breakout for the program, one we’ve discussed at length over time. The Colonials won the inaugural Three Rivers Classic by scoring an extraordinary win over top-ranked Miami two years ago, something that had them in position for an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament until the season’s final postseason weeks. Last year, they won Atlantic Hockey. This year’s start’s checked another accomplishment off the list.

With a way-too-early look at the PairWise Rankings, Robert Morris is seventh. There will inevitably be some ironing out and shaking down when league play kicks up across the nation. But where Niagara’s fast start two years ago earned it an at-large bid, this type of start has the potential to put RMU in that same category.

Weekly awards

Here’s what the league office released for players of the week. You’ll get no argument from me with one other addition to the list.

Player of the week — American International’s Alexander MacMillan: MacMillan accumulated three goals (including the game winner on both nights) in a sweep of Niagara. He has five goals on the season, good enough to force a three-way tie for second-best in the conference.

Goalie of the week — Holy Cross’ Matt Ginn and Bentley’s Gabe Antoni: In addition to setting the records mentioned earlier, Ginn posted a .964 save percentage last weekend. That’s worthy of being recognized by the league. I’ll add Antoni to the list for a complete yeoman’s effort in defeat. Facing 54 shots, he made 51 saves on Thursday night at Penn State. It was the first 50-save performance since Branden Komm stopped 54 in a tie against Army two years ago.

Rookie of the week — American International’s Alex Murray: It’s always special for a freshman goalie to receive his first collegiate win, and Murray was no different last weekend. He made 82 saves with a .965 save percentage. AIC’s penalty kill unit was also a perfect 5-for-5 over the two games.

Hakstol, Buccigross join us on Nov. 4 USCHO Live!

North Dakota head coach Dave Hakstol, and ESPN’s John Buccigross are our scheduled guests on the Nov. 4, 2014 edition of USCHO Live!

Join us for the conversation and information, Tuesday, Nov. 4, from 8 to 9 p.m. EST at blogtalkradio.com/uscholive. If you can’t listen live, check out the podcast of USCHO Live! available on the player at the right (click through if you’re reading this via RSS.)

Be part of the conversation! Call (657) 383-1910, send your tweets to @USCHO, or your emails to [email protected]. Each episode of USCHO Live! features a look at news around NCAA hockey, a look ahead at upcoming games and events, and conversation with people who coach, administer and play college hockey, and journalists who cover the sport.

About the hosts

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

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

Minnesota loses Skjei, Boyd to lower-body injuries

According to the Star Tribune in Minnesota, Gophers’ junior defenseman Brady Skjei and senior forward Travis Boyd were both injured during last weekend’s games with St. Cloud State.

Skjei will miss “at least a few weeks” with a lower-body injury suffered last Saturday, while Boyd has a lower-body injury from last Friday night that will see him miss “about a month.”

Minnesota coach Don Lucia discussed both injuries on his weekly radio show Monday night on ESPN Radio.

The injuries were also reported in USCHO.com’s game recap from last Saturday night.

TMQ: Sweeps proving hard to come by for ranked teams

David Johnstone leads Michigan Tech with eight points (photo: Candace Horgan).

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

Jim: Last weekend was a tough one for the top 20 in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll. Just two teams ended the weekend with two wins (Massachusetts-Lowell over New Hampshire and Michigan Tech over Michigan) while North Dakota posted a single win over Air Force in the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame Game.

Granted, many top 20 teams were facing one another, but is there an explanation for the lack of sweeps among the nationally ranked?

Todd: I can think of two, the first being that some of those teams won’t be nationally ranked for long. It’s hard to justify a 2-5 Michigan team being considered among the top 20 teams right now. Maybe the Wolverines will end up being a good team, but I like to think the rankings as a combination of performance and potential, especially this early in the year.

The other is that early in the year it seems teams are a lot closer to each other in terms of competitive level. At some point we see the best teams break apart, but now those teams are right in the pack with everyone else as they continue putting the pieces together.

Jim: There are a number of teams that have had starts that are above expectations. Robert Morris (7-0-1), Penn State (5-1-2), Lowell (5-1-1), Vermont (4-1-1), Merrimack (5-1-1), Northern Michigan (5-0-1) and Michigan Tech (6-0). In your estimation, which of these teams will we still be talking about in March and April?

Todd: I look to teams that have at least some experience with the pressure that comes in the second half of the season, and for that I look at Lowell. It’s hard to overlook how young a team that is, but there are enough players that went through the stretch run last season to be a bit of a guide for the newcomers. You see the River Hawks a lot; how are they handling that youth?

Jim: I think that they youth of Lowell is being counteracted by the solid play of the team’s sophomores. Joe Gambardella, Evan Campbell and Chris Maniccia are both scoring at solid clips, while the improvement of blueliner Dylan Zink has meant a lot to the team on both sides of the puck.

There has also been unprecedented balance in scoring, with 16 different players scoring goals through seven games. All of that combined has Lowell playing well from the get-go.

I am surprised that you left Michigan Tech from the equation. True, the team doesn’t have a lot of late-season experience but coach Mel Pearson certainly does, being a former assistant at Michigan. At 6-0, does Tech have what it takes to be championship caliber in your opinion?

Todd: I’m trying to hold judgment on Michigan Tech. I don’t think there’s any question that the program has started to turn a corner with Pearson, but I’m not sure how far around that corner the Huskies are.

Don’t get me wrong: sweeping Michigan in front of two sellout crowds in Houghton last weekend was worthy of all of the attention. The Huskies are deservedly in the top 10. I just think that midseason may be a better time to get a sense of how much mojo this Huskies team has.

Jim: There is another Huskies team that right now is living at the other end of the spectrum. I, personally, am concerned about Northeastern, which dropped to 0-6 with two losses to Quinnipiac last weekend. While it is never too early to panic about a team with high expectations, when does a season become a lost season due to a slow start?

Todd: I think back to the 2008-09 Wisconsin team that started 0-6-1 and managed to finish four games above .500 for a little bit of context here. Maybe Northeastern can rally around getting some goals against Quinnipiac last weekend, even if it wasn’t able to hold a 2-0 lead on Sunday. And maybe the Huskies can look at the Hockey East standings and see that 0-2 isn’t too terrible a hole from which to climb. But that has to happen soon.

Jim: One other team whose start surprises me is Niagara. Just two years removed from an NCAA at-large bid, the Purple Eagles are 0-8 out of the gate. Worse, the team has scored three goals just once and is averaging just over a goal a game. Any other team stand out for its difficult start?

Todd: Lake Superior State was 0-9 under first-year coach Damon Whitten going into last Saturday’s game at Alaska-Anchorage, but the Lakers got in the win column with an overtime victory on Bryce Schmitt’s team-high third goal of the season. Something to build on with a trip to Alabama-Huntsville up next.

Thumbs up

To North Dakota’s comeback effort in last Saturday’s 3-2 overtime win over Air Force. UND trailed 2-0 entering the third period before tying the game with 29 seconds left, setting up this winner from Bryn Chyzyk:

[youtube_sc url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bkpQJxsY1QA]

Thumbs down

To some teams’ power plays. Not counting teams that haven’t yet posted a power-play goal, there are five schools that are net zero for goals on the power play, factoring in short-handed goals allowed: Connecticut, Providence, Michigan State, Colorado College and Alabama-Huntsville. New Hampshire goes one further with one power-play goal scored and two short-handed goals allowed. Then again, the Wildcats also have an equal number of short-handed goals scored and power-play goals allowed, two each.

Coming up

The first meeting of the season between Boston College and Boston University brings together a pair of top-five teams. The third-ranked Eagles host the fifth-ranked Terriers on Friday.

Minnesota, still No. 1 in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll despite its first loss of the season last Friday, hosts No. 15 Notre Dame on Friday and Sunday.

No. 7 St. Cloud State hosts No. 17 Minnesota-Duluth in an NCHC series, and No. 20 Northern Michigan puts its 5-0-1 record on the line against No. 16 Ferris State.

Lake Forest looks to repeat as women’s champs in NCHA

Nina Waidacher of St. Scholastica (Jack Rendulich/(c) Jack Rendulich)
Nina Waidacher of St. Scholastica (Jack Rendulich/(c) Jack Rendulich)

Don’t expect a major shift in the NCHA hierarchy this season. The clubs that featured upbeat offensive talent on their respective rosters are relatively unscathed by graduation. The second tier covets an opportunity to acquire such depth, but it’s not on the immediate horizon.

Consider that four of the highest-scoring teams nationally hailed from the NCHA: Adrian (4.56 points per game) and defending conference champion Lake Forest (4.38) were ranked second and third respectively, behind national champion Plattsburgh. St. Norbert and St. Scholastica both finished in the top seven slots.

Heading into their title defense, the Foresters are seemingly watertight in all facets of the game. Michelle Greeneway, Megan Pope, and Melissa Paluch comprise a trio of scoring punch without peer in the conference. Alex Stensland is the driving force among an assertive back line contingent.

St. Scholastica offensively remains potent, despite not having two of the Waidacher sisters in house. Playmaker Michelle Fischer’s absence needs to be addressed as well.

NCHA finalist St. Norbert arguably graduated the most talent of any contender in the nation. In excess of 100 points and a boatload of valuable big game knowledge slipped away from coach Rob Morgan’s grasp.

Similar to the Green Knights, Adrian stares down some interesting complexities, especially in its ability to adjust to the graduation of Alix Vallee. Up front, however, the Bulldogs should not be hindered in their overall adroitness to play to their strengths, speed, and aggressiveness.

Concordia and Marian are eager to play off their respective improved 2013-14 campaigns, with each club having a trio of legitimate scoring options among the top lines. The best-case scenario for Finlandia would be a melding of newcomers and a sophomore class that experienced a tough road last season.

Lake Forest
2013-14 Record: 17-6-3 overall, 13-3-2 NCHA
2013-14 Postseason: Lost 4-1 to Wisconsin-River Falls in NCAA tournament quarterfinals.
Coach: Carisa Zaban 126-81-32 (10th season)
Key Returners: F Michelle Greeneway (29-11-40), D Alex Stensland (3-18-21), F Morgan Pope (17-13-30), F Melissa Paluch (12-19-31), G Casey Hartfiel (8-3-1, 2.39 goals-against average)
Key Departures: D Sarah Gilbride (1-9-10) G Stacey Dierking (9-3-2, 2.77 GAA)
Outlook: Junior All-American Michelle Greeneway, a natural goal scorer by any standard, leads the team in a collective quest to repeat as NCHA champions. Greeneway has notched 52 goals through her first two seasons. Defensively, the Foresters appear solid given the emergence of Alex Stensland, who nearly tripled her point output from her freshman season while increasing her role in power-play situations. Former Adrian goalie Allie Carter couples with sophomore Casey Hartfiel, who was a bright spot for Lake Forest in her rookie season.

St. Scholastica
2013-14 Record: 15-8-3 overall, 12-4-2 NCHA
2013-14 Postseason: Lost 3-2 to St. Norbert in NCHA semifinals.
Coach: Jackie MacMillan (49-43-14, fifth season)
Key Returners: F Nina Waidacher (22-15-37), F Nikki Logergren (10-3-13), D Alex Blair (1-20-21), D Kaitlin Johnson (5-5-10), G Lindsey Hartfiel (11-7-2, 2.09 GAA)
Key Departures: F Isabel Waidacher (15-23-38), F Michelle Fischer (4-23-27), F Monika Waidacher (9-5-14)
Outlook: Swiss Olympian Nina Waidacher’s assault on the Saints’ record book continues without siblings Isabel and Monika on board. Waidacher is surrounded by emerging offensive talent however, and the high-scoring squad that tailed off somewhat down the stretch will certainly be productive again. Alex Blair is among the top defenseman in the country, and goalie Lindsey Hartfiel is capable of going deep into the postseason.

St. Norbert
2013-14 Record:19-7-2 overall, 12-5-1 NCHA
2013-14 Postseason: Lost 3-2 to Lake Forest in NCHA final,
Coach: Rob Morgan 62-42-8 (fifth season)
Key Returners: F Ali Parker (17-13-30), D Katie Conlon (2-5-7), F Jillian Kosteck (5-5-10), D Myranda Hayes (6-8-14), F Lauren Roethlisberger (11-12-23)
Key Departures: F Zoe Kurth (10-20-30), F Andrea Senne (8-17-25), D Laurel Hill (4-20-24), F Henriette Ostergaard (10-11-21), F Stephanie Slinde (9-10-19), G Kaley Gibson (11-7-1, 1.94 GAA), G Katie Alvia (8-0-1, 1.54 GAA)
Outlook: Look for Ali Parker to take the pivotal role in the Green Knights’ attack following the departure of top playmaker Zoe Kurth. Defensively, co-captains Katie Conlon and Myranda Hayes, along with sophomore Megan Crandall, are the new face of the Green Knights’ defensive corps with Laurel Hill out of the picture. Leigh Grall and Brianna Kelly comprise an all-freshman goaltending tandem

Adrian
2013-14 Record: 19-7-1 overall, 11-6-1 NCHA
2013-14 Postseason: Lost 2-1 to Lake Forest in NCHA semifinals.
Coach: Chad Davis 55-23-4 (fourth season)
Key Returners: F Kelsey Kusch (22-25-47), F Kristin Lewicki (14-13-27), D Lexie Tzafaroglou (3-8-11), F Hannah McGowan (14-21-35), F Devyn Fitzhenny (10-12-22), F Courtney Millar (4-12-16)
Key Departures: F Danielle Smith (9-15-24), D Alix Vallee (4-27-31)
Outlook: Alix Vallee exited campus as the most prolific defenseman in program history. Undoubtedly, her absence in the line-up requires a retooling in the Bulldogs’ own end. Lexie Tzafaroglou takes on a larger roll in that regard following a highly impressive debut. Offensively, Adrian remains in good stead with the nation’s leading scorer in tow in Kelsey Kusch. Davis has the luxury of trotting out three lines that have the ability to put the puck in the net.

Concordia (Wis.)
2013-14 Record: 8-16-2 overall, 6-10-2 NCHA
2013-14 Postseason: Lost 6-5 to Adrian in NCHA first round.
Coach: Steve Fabiilli 0-0-0 (first season)
Key Returners: F Veronika Metanova (9-11-20), D Emily Heckendorf (6-13-19), F Brandi Mueller (7-8-15), F Alexis Machuga (8-3-11), F Samantha Reiter (6-4-10)
Key Departures: F Maxine Blohowiak (4-5-9)
Outlook: Coach Fabiili hits the ground running with a majority of last season’s contributors back to the grind. Nine of the top 10 scorers from the 2013-14 campaign have re-upped. In all, the freshman class accounted for 46 percent of the team’s goal output and half of all power-play successes. With the experienced gained, the Falcons’ offense should experience an uptick. Senior Emily Heckendorf will direct the show defensively, having posted season bests across the board last season.

Marian
2013-14 Record: 5-20-1 overall, 4-14-0 NCHA
2013-14 Postseason: Lost 7-0 to St. Norbert in NCHA first round.
Coach: Jamie Kiui 8-40-3 (3rd season)
Key Returners: F Amanda Waigand (18-7-25), F Nina Laurie (8-12-20), D Rian Lennon (4-3-7)
Key Departures: D Sophie Schieldt (1-3-4)
Outlook: The Sabres have improved in small increments since the inception of the program in 2009. Last season, a pair of milestones transpired. Coach Kiui’s club garnered its first playoff appearance while achieving four victories in the NCHA. The hoped-for move forward, particularly offensively in 2014-15, will hinge on senior forwards Amanda Waigand, Nina Laurie, and two-way performer Sarah Bier. Rian Lennon is an important factor in the developing defensive scheme that seeks consistency from senior Kaitlyn Johnson and sophomores Amanda Siiro and Paige Picard.

Finlandia
2013-14 Record: 1-21-0 overall, 1-17-0 NCHA
2013-14 Postseason: none
Coach: Danielle Syrowik 1-45-0 (third season)
Key Returners: F Alena Fiala (2-3-5), F Lindsey Jackman (2-5-7), D Sommer O’Shaughnessy (1-5-6)
Key Departures: Siera Hache (5-2-7)
Outlook: The Lions enter with the knowledge that nine rookie starters from 2013-14 have a year of experience to draw upon. How quickly said group can get up to speed offensively is paramount to being more competitive. The Lions were overwhelmed in all phases of the game last season. A string of close outings would serve as a good beginning for reversing the trend of disastrous blowouts.

MASCAC could be two-horse race with Plymouth State, Salem State as top pair

If Plymouth State is to compete in the MASCAC, Andrew Wigg will need to be consistent on a nightly basis (photo: Dan Hickling).

Framingham State’s T.J. Brown thinks so.

John Rolli, an institution at Massachusetts-Dartmouth, does too.

It is the opinion many, including those two MASCAC bench bosses, that conference title chase will boil down to two squads, Salem State and Plymouth State.

Just like last year when they shared the regular-season crown.

“I think the league should be very strong this year,” said Brown, “with Salem and Plymouth being the teams to beat.”

Rolli, the second winningest Division III coach of all-time (only Middlebury’s Bill Beaney has racked up more D-3 ‘Ws), was, likewise, to the point.

“Salem and Plymouth should be the top two teams in the division,” he said.

Craig Russell, Plymouth’s fifth-year coach, on the other hand, is not so sure.

“Salem [is] the clear team to beat,” Russell said. “They didn’t lose much to graduation and seem to have brought in some experienced guys from juniors around the U.S. and Canada.”

Certainly, there is a lot to like about Salem.

Although top scorer Eric Defelice has graduated and is trying his hand in the pros with Knoxville (SPHL), there is still an abundance of scoring left in the cupboard.

Forwards Alex Minter (11-14-25) and John Needham (8-11-19) were slotted second and third on the scoring list, and they are still just sophomores, while junior forward Chris Mastropietro fired in 10 goals to go with five helpers.

Defenseman Cameron Banwell (3-11-14) proved to be a strong puck mover and power play distributor. He also chipped in a pair of power-play goals.

Asked for his take on players to watch in the MASCAC, Russell said, “Minter (and) Mastropietro.”

Russell, on the other hand, has plenty of assets of his own.

Ian McGilvrey (12-19-31) led all Panthers in points and assists last year as a freshman and Josh Woody, now a junior, returns having led Plymouth in goals with 13.

Then there is junior goalie Gordon Caesar, the Panthers’ human eraser.
Caesar seized the Plymouth net and racked up eye-popping numbers (1.68, .943). Caesar spun four shutout performances, with all of them coming in MASCAC play.

“I expect us to be challenging for the MASCAC title again this year,” Russell said. “I do expect us to undergo a little transition period early on since we’re still young, but it shouldn’t take as long as last year.”

 

Fitchburg State

Last Year’s Record: 11-14-1 (Overall), 8-9-1 (MASCAC)

Coach: Dean Fuller, 31st yr. (485-270-46)

Key Returning Players: F John Celli, Jr., F Max Lorenzen, Jr., G Ryan Wysocki, Sr., D Craig Halpin, Sr.

Key newcomers: F Stephen Carlette, G Brian Robbins U Mass-Lowell, D Daniel Robbins.

Key departures: D Shawn Bradley

Noteworthy: Nine of last year’s top scorers were underclassmen.

 

Framingham State

Last Year’s Record: 11-11-4, 8-7-3

Coach: T.J. Brown, 6th yr. (25-83-14)

Key Returning Players: F Brendan McCarron, Sr., F Ryan McDonald, Sr., D Dylan Cosford, Sr., D Vaughn Guetens, So.

Key newcomers: G Allesio Muggli, F Tyler Colacchio, D Chase Nichols

Key departures: D Bo Driscoll, G Nick Cafrelli, F Eric Ward.

Noteworthy: McCarron was the league’s leading goal-getter (14).

 

Massachusetts-Dartmouth

Last Year’s Record: 5-18-2, 5-13-0

Coach: John Rolli, 31st yr. (562-193-36)

Key Returning Players: F Shaun Walters, Sr., F Mike Restuccia, Jr., F John Sartell, Jr., D Mike Grassi, Jr., G J.J. Solloway, Sr.

Key newcomers: F Jaret Babych, Coquitlam BCHL, F Casey Shea, Middlesex USPHL, D Jerry Laakso, Ilves FEL, F Mike Kelly, Norwich ECACE, D Shayne Bailey, Boston EHL, F Matt Baldino, Boston EHL.

Key departures: F Dmitry Antipin, D Nate Dupere, G Ben Vandervies.

Noteworthy: Walters and Restuccia tied for second in MASCAC scoring (24 points).

 

Plymouth State

Last Year’s Record: 14-11-2, 11-5-2

Coach: Craig Russell, 6th yr. (65-31-11)

Key Returning Players: F Michael Freitag, Sr., D Zach Sarig, Sr., G Gordon Ceasar, Jr., F Ian McGilvrey, So., F Andrew Wigg, Jr.

Key newcomers: F Chris Zuccaro, Northern Cyclones EHL, F Dylan Giberson, Kemptville CCHL

Key departures: D David Walters, F Phil Arnone.

Noteworthy: McGilvrey (9-18-27) led all MASCAC scorers

 

Salem State

Last Year’s Record: 16-10-2, 11-5-2

Coach: Bill O’Neill, 34th yr. (532-333-57)

Key Returning Players: F Alex Minter, F John Needham

Key newcomers: NA

Key departures: F Eric DeFelice

Noteworthy: Salem led the conference in team offense (3.85 gpg) and was second in team defense (2.75).

 

Westfield State

Last Year’s Record: 12-14-1, 10-7-1

Coach: Bob Miele, 6th yr. (52-66-14)

Key Returning Players: F Jackson Leef, So., F Dalton Jay, Jr.

Key newcomers: F Roman Pfennings, Connecticut EHL, Josh Finkelstein, Toronto Canadiens OJHL.

Key departures: F Vince Perreault, G Eddie Davey.

Noteworthy: Perreault has turned pro with Knoxville (SPHL).

 

Worcester State

Last Year’s Record: 9-15-1, 5-12-1

Coach: Shayne Toporowski, 1st Yr. (NR)

Key Returning Players: F Nathan Stanley, Sr., F Andrew Bates, Sr., F Stephen Rock, Sr., F Alex DeWitz, So.

Key newcomers: F Shawn Haltam, Ogden WSHL, F Alex Pommerville, Salt Lake WSHL.

Key departures: D Curtis Martin, F Derek Soborn.

Noteworthy: Toporowski, who played three games in the NHL (Toronto), moves across town after one season as an assistant at Holy Cross.

Nichols the team to beat in the ECAC Northeast

 

Sean Fleming should again be a pivotal part of the Nichols offense in 2014-15 (photo: Dan Hickling).

Still young, still hungry, and until proven otherwise, the best of the bunch in the ECAC Northeast.

Such as it is for Nichols, which won both the regular-season and conference tournament titles last year on the way to their second-ever NCAA appearance.

The Bison did so with a cast of talented novices – including sniping sophomores Sean Fleming and Tyler Beasley – who grew up in a hurry as the Bison’s fortunes gained a head of steam.

And even a loss in the NCAA quarterfinals to SUNYAC champion Geneseo couldn’t sully the accomplishment.

“After a great season last year, our expectations are high,” said third-year Nichols coach Kevin Swallow. “We want to win another championship. Period.

“For us, it truly is a championship or bust. We have the personnel to get the job done, we just need to get every single guy on board and buying into what we are doing.”

Nichols, whose only other league titles and NCAA appearance came in 2009, may be well positioned to repeat.

The lone scoring loss to graduation was forward Greg Strootman, who chipped in nine goals and 10 assists to a squad that generated 3.65 goals per game, tied for tops (with Johnson and Wales) in the league.

That means that the likes of Fleming (13-21-34), Beasley (13-30-33) and senior Brett Jackson (9-6-15) will all be back to lead the Nichols attack, while junior goalie Alex Larson (2.77, .922) takes care of business in the back end.

That, said Swallow, should give the Bison a fighting chance of fending off other contenders.

“We are going to have a target on our backs and a lot of teams are nipping at our heals,” he said. “The league is going to be very tight, I honestly think there are a handful of teams that have legitimate chance at winning the league this year. Looking at a lot of the rosters around the league, I think everyone is going to be better. Ivthink a lot of the teams in our league can compete with just about anyone in thevEast.”

While the Bison may be the clear-cut favorite to repeat on top, the rest of the pack presents a more muddied picture.

Salve Regina, Curry, and J & W, are all hopeful of making gains within the conference.

“I think every team in our league probably has the same goals,” said Johnson and Wales coach Eric Noack. “Home ice in the playoffs, a first-round bye, to win the ECAC tournament and go to the NCAAs. For us, we want to be consistently hard to play against and stay out of the box.”

Salve Regina coach Andy Boschetto echoed the feeling.

“I think that the league again is up for grabs and will come down to who is playing the best hockey in February and March,” said Boschetto. “You cannot take nights off because as proven in the past, anyone can beat anyone. With that said, Nichols is the team to beat until someone knocks them off after having a great year last year, they are the champs.”

 

Becker

Last Year’s Record: 3-18-3 (overall), 2-9-3 (ECACNE)

Coach: Steve Hoar, 17th yr., 9th at Becker (216-180-26, 69-105-15)

Key Returning Players: F Nick McKee, So., F Tyler Auricchio, Jr., D Frank Musick, Jr., G Greg Hussey, Jr.

Key newcomers: F Corey Sherman, Syracuse EHL, F James Wallace, Philadelphia EHL, F Mac Howey, New Jersey USPHL.

Key departures: G Shaun Millerick.

Noteworthy: Millerick played just six games, but was lauded by Hoar for his leadership.

 

Curry

Last Year’s Record: 11-14-2, 6-8-0

Coach: T.J. Manastersky, 3rd yr. (22-25-6)

Key Returning Players: G Derek Mohney, Sr., F Jordan Reed, Sr., D Chris Mason, Sr., F Tyler Vankleef, So.

Key newcomers: F Robert Cammalleri, Pickering OJHL, F Adam DiBrina, Aurora OJHL, F Shane Tracy, Valley EHL.

Key departures: F Mike Lopez

Noteworthy: Mohney put up sparkling, 2.16, .932 numbers last season.

 

Johnson and Wales

Last Year’s Record: 18-8-1, 7-6-1

Coach: Eric Noack, 12th yr. (116-156-16)

Key Returning Players: G Joey Ballmer, So., F Josh Obregon, Jr., F Cody Sarmiento, Jr. F Stefan Brucato, So., D Mike Mazzotta, So., D Matt Lanzillotti, So. (4-9-13).

Key newcomers: D Luke Veitch, New Jersey USPHL , F Alan Boozer, Boston EHL .

Key departures: F Eddy Patterson, F Justin Decowski.

Noteworthy: Seahawks return their top six scorers.

 

Nichols

Last Year’s Record: 18-7-3, 9-3-2

Coach: Kevin Swallow, 3rd yr. (34-16-4)

Key Returning Players: G Alex Larson, Jr., F Tyler Beasley, Jr., F Sean Fleming, Jr., D Kyle Shapiro, Sr.

Key newcomers: F Scott Cuthrell, Soo NAHL , D Mike Parnell, Fairbanks NAHL.

Key departures: F Greg Strootman, D Josh DeLoach.

Noteworthy: Nichols made the NCAAs for the second time in school history, falling in the first round to Geneseo.

 

Salve Regina

Last Year’s Record: 11-15-0, 9-5-0

Coach: Andrew Boschetto, 5th yr. (29-65-5)

Key Returning Players: F Peter Gintoli, F Marc Biggs, Jr., D Lucas Sousa, Jr., G Jake Williams, Sr, G David Ciokadze, Jr.

Key newcomers: F Ty Gradwell, Bay State USPHL, F Zane Popilock, Philadelpia USPHL, D Brandon Yee, Boston EHL.

Key departures: D Chad Hollenshade, F William Gomolinski.

Noteworthy: Chiokadze led all conference goalies in save percentage (.945) and GAA (1.79)

 

Suffolk

Last Year’s Record: 9-15-1, 6-7-1

Coach: Chris Glionna, 11th yr. (76-149-21)

Key Returning Players: F Tim Sprague, Sr., F Simon Leahy, So., F Tim Benedetto, Sr., G Brandon Smolarek, Jr..

Key newcomers: Jack Jenkins, Northern Cyclones EHL, Danyil Medvedev, Springfield USPHL, Justin Selep, Northwood Prep, Brett Lawson, St. Mark’s NEPSAC.

Key departures: D Jon Stauffer, F Charlie McGinnis, F Carmen Mastrangelo.

Noteworthy: Leahy was the ECACNE Rookie of the Year.

 

Wentworth

Last Year’s Record: 12-13-2, 9-5-0.

Coach: Jay Pecora, 1st yr. (NR)

Key Returning Players: F Mike Domsodi, Jr. , F Sean Mclaughlin, Sr., D Beau Burgau, Sr., G Alex Peck, Sr..

Key newcomers: F Brian Farkas, Weyburn SJHL, D Christian Black, South Shore USPHL.

Key departures: F Andrew Yarber, D Lawton McCracken.

Noteworthy: Job No. 1, according to Pecora, is “for the players to buy into a new system.”

 

Western New England

Last Year’s Record: 10-14-1, 4-9-1.

Coach: Greg Heffernan, 6th yr. (46-79-4)

Key Returning Players: F Brandon Stroud, Sr., F Joe Budnick, Sr., G Tim Carr, Sr.

Key newcomers: F David DiSchiavi, Oakville OJHL, D Will Norris, Northern Cyclones EHL, G Scott Brown, Cleveland Barons.

Key departures: F Brian Prost, F John Kelly, F Cam Napolitan, F Alan Martin

Noteworthy: Martin led the conference in power-play goals (4).

ECAC East more than just a race between Norwich and Babson

Norwich’s blue line will be anchored this season by Corey Hale (photo: Dan Hickling).

Babson and Norwich. Norwich and Babson.

It’s been that way in the ECAC East for just about forever, or so it seems.

Between them, the two powers have captured a whopping 13 of the last 15 conference tournament titles, with Norwich going on to win the national title three times (2000, 2003, 2010).

What’s more, the Cadets have won or shared the regular-season crown in each of the last 16 seasons, including last year, when they finished tied for first with, yep, you guessed it, Babson.

Norwich won both regular-season meetings – one goal victories, both – but the Beavers went on to take a 2-1 win in the ECACE tourney final.

Both earned trips to the NCAAs, but neither advanced to the Frozen Four, which for Norwich, snapped a string of four straight FroFour appearances.

So, are we in for more of the same this year?

Could be.

“We are looking for a solid season all around from goalie to defense to forwards,” said veteran bench boss Mike McShane, the architect of all that Norwich success. “We will compete for a league championship, and see how our young players develop.”

The Cadets did lose all three of last year’s top point-getters – Travis Janke, Shane Gorman, and Chris Duszynski – to graduation.

However, a strong supporting class of underclassmen – including puck-moving defenseman Ryan Whitell – returns a year wiser and stronger, and will likely mix well with another of McShane’s strong recruting classes.

“We are mostly a freshman-sophomore team, with a lot of guys competing for spots throughout the year,” McShane said. “See the jump that the freshman from last year will make as sophomore this year and how they will look to improve and contribute.”

The sentiment emanating from Babson is much the same.

“We (hope) to play to our potential,” said Beavers’ coach Jamie Rice, “and integrate our newcomers into our program and help them grow and develop. We hope to be a difficult team to play against.”

Most nettlesome for opponents is the challenge of getting pucks past junior goalie Jamie Murray, no small task indeed.

Murray ranked second in the nation in save percentage (.948), fourth in goals against (1.50 gpg), and was a major reason why Babson was the third most difficult team in the country to score on.

Even so, don’t expect the rest of the league to roll over and let the “Big Two” fight it out at the top.

Massachusetts-Boston, third-place finishers a year ago, could pose the biggest problem for both titans, especially as the league gets stronger from top to bottom.

“The league is getting tougher and tougher each year,” said Castleton coach Steve Moffat. “With two teams making it to the NCAA tournament last year, and UMass-Boston with only six losses all year, I feel that says a lot about the strength of the league. Every night is a battle.”

Babson

Last Year’s Record: 22-5-2 (overall), 13-3-2 (ECACE)

Coach: Jamie Rice, 11th yr. (159-96-24)

Key Returning Players: F Mike Driscoll, Sr., F Andrew Bonazza, Sr., D Joe DiPietro, Sr., G Jamie Murray, Jr., D Mike Vollmin, Jr., F Max Franklin, Jr., F Mike Phillips, So.

Key newcomers: F Charlie Ackerman, South Shore USPHL, F Bobby Hall, Kimball Union Prep.

Key departures: D Ryan Heavey, D Matt Furey, D Shayne Anderson, D Ben Kravitz, F Troy Starrett, F Nik Tasipoulos.

Noteworthy: Established in 1965, the Beavers won their second league championship last year. The first was in 1990.

 

Castleton

Last Year’s Record: 13-11-3, 8-7-3

Coach: Steve Moffat, 2nd yr. (13-11-3)

Key Returning Players: D Brian Greene, Sr., G Thomas Shelley, Sr., F Ryan Frost, Jr.

Key newcomers: G Ryan Mulder, Nepean CCHL, G Brody Wagner, Abitibi NOJHL, F Braedan Moffatt, Kanata CCHL, D Ryan O’Malley, Philadelphia EHL.

Key departures: F Ross Herzog, F Colin Murray, D Ryan Delorme, G Erick Cinotti.

Noteworthy: The youthful Castleton roster boasts 20 freshmen and sophomores.

 

Massachusetts-Boston

Last Year’s Record: 17-6-4, 9-5-4

Coach: Peter Belisle, 9th yr. (100-96-16)

Key Returning Players: F Peter MacIntyre, Jr., F Nathan Milam, Sr., F Frankie DeAugustine, Jr., G Zach Andrews, Jr., D Tyler Bishop, So.

Key newcomers: F Stephen Buco, UMass-Lowell, F Josh Haverstrom, Wichita Falls NAHL, F Shayne Younglaus, U. New England ECACE.

Key departures: F Travis Daniel, F Michael Kuhn.

Noteworthy: UMB features four transfers from D-I programs, including Buco, a senior.

 

New England College

Last Year’s Record: 14-10-1, 10-8-0

Coach: Tom Carroll, 13th yr. (174-124-25)

Key Returning Players: F Cheyne Matheson,Jr., F Garrett Brazzier, Jr., F Kyle Manlow, Jr., G Sebastian Andersson, Sr., D Sho Kawachi, Jr.

Key newcomers: NA

Key departures: F Samuli Turunen, F Matt Abbott, D Freddie Bystrom, F Jesse Ostring, F Ben MacLaughlin.

Noteworthy: Manlow’s six power play goals tied him for the lead league.

 

Norwich

Last Year’s Record: 20-7-3, 13-3-2

Coach: Mike McShane, 34th yr., 20th at Norwich (653-328-61, 409-110-30)

Key Returning Players: D Bryce Currier, Sr., D Alec Thieda, Sr., D Corey Hale, Sr..

Key newcomers: G Braeden Ostepchuk, Selkirk MJHL, G Ty Reichenbach, American Intl. AHA, F Kevin Salvucci, Bay State USPHL Prem., D Alec Brandrup, Melville SJHL, F Justin Charbonneau, Ottawa CCHL, F Mitch Byrne, Ft. McMurray AJHL, D Andrew Sullivan, Tilton USHS, D Connor Evangelista, New England AEHL, F Peyton Baldillez, New Hampshire EHL.

Key departures: F Travis Janke, F Shane Gorman, F Chris Duszynski, G Chris Czarnota.

Noteworthy: Norwich will have to replace its entire top line – Janke, Gorman, and Duszynski – which combined last year for 43 goals and 98 points.

 

St. Anselm

Last Year’s Record: 10-12-4, 6-8-4

Coach: Ed Seney, 27th yr., 13th at St. Anselm (336-313-48, 17-126-28)

Key Returning Players: F Johnny Daniels, Sr., F Brian Sullivan, Jr., D Matt Buckley, Sr., D Peter Sikalis, So..

Key newcomers: F Nick Gorski, Phillips Andover Prep., F C.J. Blaszka, Walpole EHL.

Key departures: F Joe Tebano, D Greg Merrill, F Kevin Vanous, G Nick Dries.

Noteworthy: With a strong year, Seney will reach the 350 wins milestone. Seney previously coached at Potsdam.

 

St. Michael’s

Last Year’s Record: 7-17-3, 3-12-3

Coach: Damian DiGulian, 3rd yr., (15-34-3)

Key Returning Players: F Kevin Atiphor, F A.J. Pieprzak, D Danny Davis, G Dave Donzanti

Key newcomers: F Sam Finkelstein, Rice Mem. Prep., F Eric Salzillo, Boston EHL.

Key departures: D Kevin Lampron, F Ryan Arsenault, F Tim McAuliffe

Noteworthy: The Purple Knights will return each of their top 10 scorers from last year.

Skidmore

Last Year’s Record: 7-12-7, 3-9-6

Coach: Neil Sinclair, 11th yr., 10th at Skidmore (112-126-26, 90-121-024)

Key Returning Players: F Marc Cibelli, So., F Anthony Bird, So., F David Limoges, Sr., F Ondrej Krajnak, Jr..

Key newcomers: D Jack Sloan, Springfield NAHL, F Connor Pelkey, Rio Grande NAHL.

Key departures: D Brad Schuler , F Vlad Gavrik, F Aaron Beck.

Noteworthy: Schuler has moved on to the pros, skating for Hunstville of the SPHL.

 

Southern Maine

Last Year’s Record: 6-15-5, 5-11-2

Coach: Jeff Beaney 28th yr. (259-371-50)

Key Returning Players: D Cole Klippenstein, So., F Todd Bannerman, So., F Sam Guimond, Sr.

Key newcomers: F Trevor Hunt, Williston St. NJCAA, G Kyle Shapiro, Walpole, F Dario Torres, Williston St. NJCAA, D Danny Carter, South Muskoka GMHL, F Brett Norman, Ontario WSHL.

Key departures: F Ryan Seward, G Dylan Wells, F Kelby Lorenz.

Noteworthy: The Huskies will have to replace top scorers Seward and Lorenz, both of whom departed with eligibility remaining.

 

University of New England

Last Year’s Record: 10-15-1, 7-11-0

Coach: Brad Holt, 6th yr. (29-92-5)

Key Returning Players: F Jared Melman, Sr., F Zeth Zielinski, Sr., F Trevor Fleurent, So. , G Colby Drost.

Key newcomers: D Kyle Williams, D Ian Rodden, Middlesex USPHL.

Key departures: F Zach Lokey

Noteworthy: Melman led the league in goals last season with 13.

Three things: Nov. 3, 2014

Three Things from this past weekend in Atlantic Hockey:

Live by the comeback….

On October 25,  Air Force staged a terrific comeback to earn a home-ice split with Rochester Institute of Technology. The Falcons scored an extra-attacker goal with 1:33 left in regulation to tie and got the game-winner at 3:50 of overtime.

But the roles reversed this past Saturday, with Air Force less than a minute away from upsetting No. 3 North Dakota at Engelstad Arena.

Trailing 2-1 in the closing seconds, North Dakota was able to even things up at 19:31 of the third, and then scored an improbable shorthanded game-winner with 6.4 seconds left in overtime.

Bryn Chyzk got the GWG off a feed from Michael Parks. Here’s the video.

It was a tough loss for Frank Serratore’s team, who was pressing for the win on the power play. The Falcons top unit has four forwards and only one defenseman.

“This one we will take to the grave,” Serratore said after the game. “This was the best effort we have had all season by a country mile. All I can say is, we have no regrets. Our kids gave all they had. We had our best guys out there and UND got it done. We put our best power-play unit out there at the end because we play to win. We could have put another defenseman out there, but we don’t play to tie. The Air Force Academy does not play to tie, we play to win. We put our best foot forward tonight, but this one stings.”

Streaks continue

A pair of streaks continued this past weekend, one good and one not so good.

Robert Morris stayed unbeaten (7-0-1) with a home sweep sweep of Rochester Institute of Technology, taking Friday’s game 6-3 and winning 4-2 on Saturday.

In the first game, RMU got goals from freshman (two by Spencer Dorowicz and one from Brady Ferguson) as well as the first career goal from senior David Rigatti, playing in his 86th game.

On Saturday, Ferguson scored again but most of the damage was done by the Colonials top line of Cody Wydo, Zac Lynch and Scott Jacklin.

Saturday’s win was the 150th career victory for RMU coach Derek Schooley, whose team is off this coming weekend.

“I almost want to keep playing and keep this rolling,” said Schooley after the game. “But we can rest some guys and work on some things. There’s always things to work on, even when you’re winning.”

On the other side of the coin, Niagara’s woes continue after being swept at home by American International, 3-1 and 4-2. The Purple Eagles remain winless (0-8).

Niagara Goaltender Jackson Teichroeb was able to make his first two starts after suffering an injury in a pre-season scrimmage, but it wasn’t enough to put his team into the win column. The Purps outshot the Yellow Jackets handily in each game (43-21 on Friday and 42-24 on Saturday) but AIC rookie goaltender Alex Murry stopped all but three shots he faced for the victories.

Win big

Mercyhurst split at No. 4 Colgate, defeating the Raiders 2-1 on Saturday after falling 4-0 the previous evening. Saturday’s win featured a 39-save performance from Laker goaltender Jimmy Sarjeant, and was touted by the school as the “Best D-I win in school history.”

I would have gone with the Lakers’ MAAC championship game victory in 2001 or 2003, as well as an Atlantic Hockey title win in 2005.  But in terms of defeating a highly-ranked opponent, Saturday’s win gets the nod. Here’s the  Mercyhurst video recap. 

Ivies in, top teams down, numbers up

Well now … where do we begin?

Union, Colgate humbled at home

Perhaps the nation’s biggest headline from last weekend (OK, among headlines regarding college hockey) was No. 2 Union’s slip, stumble, and splat at the feet of Rensselaer in the Route 7 Rivalry series. The defending national champions were swept by an 8-2 aggregate score in the home-and-home affair, running their losing streak to three games — their longest since the end of the 2010-11 season and the Dutchmen’s longest regular-season slide since Janurary 2010. RPI scored six goals against Colin Stevens on 45 shots this weekend, and two more against Alex Sakellaropoulos on six shots on Friday night; the wins elevate the Engineers to the top of the ECAC Hockey standings at 2-0. Union has had the significant advantage in the series’ recent history: Rensselaer had not beaten Union on consecutive nights since January 2004.

In Hamilton, the fourth-ranked Raiders beat Mercyhurst 4-0 on Friday but were unable to carry the momentum over to Saturday, falling 2-1 for their first home loss — and indeed, first home goals-against — of the season. Colgate out-shot the visiting Lakers 40-21, but goalie Jimmy Sarjeant was up to the task with 39 saves to earn Mercyhurst its biggest win in program history.

Ivies hit the ice

The six Ivy League programs took to the ice last weekend for their first regular-season games of the season. The only ECAC Hockey action between them took place on Saturday, where Harvard defender Patrick McNally scored twice — including the game-tying goal midway through the third period — to salvage a 3-3 draw against visiting Dartmouth.

Elsewhere, Yale “beat” Princeton 2-2 (winning the shootout) in the late semifinal of the Liberty Hockey Invitational in Newark, N.J.; Yale edged Connecticut for the tournament title on Sunday while Princeton was manhandled by Merrimack in the consolation contest. Brown edged Army 4-2 in the Bears’ only game so far, while Cornell tied and lost at home to unranked Nebraska-Omaha.

Mssrs. October

With November upon us, the early leaders for postseason acclaim are working hard to stay ahead of the pack.

Union’s Mike Vecchione and Colgate’s Kyle Baun are tied atop the goal-scoring leaderboard with five goals in eight games apiece; Vecchione scored once this weekend, while Baun was held off the scoresheet.

Last year’s Rookie of the Year — Quinnipiac’s Sam Anas — has tallied six of his eight overall points on the power play, and he added two more helpers (including one on the advantage) in Sunday’s non-conference win over Northeastern. Teammate and early contender for ROTY Landon Smith has four goals and eight points through six games to lead all freshmen; playing with Anas and Matthew Peca hasn’t hurt, though he is making a name for himself on the second line now as well.

Finally, netminders Charlie Finn (Colgate) and Colin Stevens (Union) are holding down the fort, and then some. Finn boasts three shutouts already and a 1.26 GAA, to go with a .947 save percentage. Stevens is running the same path, holding a 1.84 GAA and .939 save rate along with one clean sheet.

Gallery: Sights of the Liberty Hockey Invitational

Yale beat Connecticut 2-1 on Sunday for the championship at the Liberty Hockey Invitational in Newark, N.J. Merrimack beat Princeton 6-1 for third place. Here are photos from the tournament, which started Friday with semifinal games.

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ECAC West has experienced coaches, experienced players ready to win

Elmira’s Jarryd ten Vaanholt was an offensive catalyst in 2013-14 and should be a key player in the ECAC West again this year (photo: Dan Hickling).

The team to beat in the ECAC West is … Elmira.

That notion wouldn’t have put you out on a limb not too many seasons ago.

For half a decade, from 2008 to 2012, the Soaring Eagles owned the spot at the top of the league at the end of the regular season.

Each of those seasons – and six in a span of seven – found Elmira clutching an invite to the NCAA tournament, with a pair of third-place finishes to its credit.

Now, after an absence of two seasons, the Eagles are tabbed early on to regain their lofty perch.

“Elmira will be very good,” said Gary Heenan, who has directed Utica to the last two ECACW regular-season titles. “The league seems to cycle with experience. We were old the last two years, now we are the youngest. We have our work cut out for us.”

The Eagles did lose Jesper Strale, the league’s leading scorer (9-14-23), but return Michael Collins (8-12-20) and Jarryd ten Vaanholt (7-12-19), both of whom landed among the league’s top five point-getters.

Only Manhattanville senior Luc Van Natter interrupted Elmira’s domination at the top of the scoring list.

“I think Elmira would be the team to beat coming into the season,” said Nazareth coach George Roll. “That being said, the league as a whole had a very good recruiting year, so I would suspect that it will be tight at the top.”

Hobart – with stellar goalie Lino Chimienti and sniping forward Mac Olson leading the way – could provide Elmira with its toughest competition.

At least Elmira coach Aaron Saul thinks so.

“The West will again be very tough,” he said. “Hobart is the team to beat in the league with strong consideration for Neumann (ranked third in the preseason poll).”

Since the six-team ECACW does not receive an automatic NCAA bid, Elmira hopes a national title would hinge on another at-large invitation.

To bolster those, the Eagles have scheduled out-of-conference clashes with Babson, Oswego and Amherst.

“We want to start strong, continuing on our success from the second half of (last) season,” said Saul.

Elmira

Last Year’s Record: 16-10-1, 9-5-1

Coach: Aaron Saul, 8th yr., 6th at Elmira (96-76-18 overall, 77-51-9 at Elmira)

Key Returning Players: F Mike Collins, Jr. (13-17-30), F Jarryd ten Vaanholt, Jr. (12-17-29), F Greg Whittle, Jr. (5-14-19), F Tommy Sumi, Jr. (2-14-16), F Brian Depp, Jr. (11-7-18), D Eric David, Sr. (4-11-15), G Ryan deMelo, Sr. (3.31, .916).

Key newcomers: F Emil Blomqvist, Valley EHL (12-21-33), F Jeremy Marginsky, Rochester USPHL (11-33-44), D Mike Martin, Ottawa CCHL (2-11-13), F Brett Mackell, South Shore USPHL (0-2-2).

Key departures: F Josh Burnell, (15-19-34), F Jesper Starle (11-20-31).

Noteworthy: deMelo was named Most Oustanding Player in the ECACW league tournament.

 

Hobart

Last Year’s Record: 14-9-4, 7-5-3

Coach: Mark Taylor, 15th yr. (208-130-36 all at Hobart)

Key Returning Players: G Lino Chimienti, Jr. (2.58, .912), D Ryan Michel, Sr. (1-18-19), D Terrence O’Neill, Jr. (3-10-13), D Bronson Kovacs, Sr. (6-8-14), D Peter Ryan, Sr. (2-2-4), D Carl Belizario, So. (5-11-16), D Jon Neal, So. (2-6-8), D Mitch Beyer, So. (5-5-10), D Conor Simon, So. (0-2-2), F Mac Olson, Jr. (15-12-27), F Ben Gamache, Jr. (10-15-25), F Bo Webster, Jr. (6-17-23), F Robert Sovik, Sr. (7-5-12), F Tomasso Traversa, Sr. (3-9-12), F Brad McBride, Sr. (5-9-14), F Nick Bingaman, So. (6-4-10), F Bobby Sokol, So. (3-5-8).

Key newcomers: F Brad Robbins, Bemidji State WCHA (1-1-2), F Kevin Lopatto, Springfield USPHL (19-59-78), F Jordan Haskell, Portland USPHL (10-25-35), F Tyler Wolf, Rochester USPHL (16-25-41), G Frank Oplinger, Minnesota NAHL (2.04, .925).

Key departures: F Tommy Fiorentino (8-6-14).

Noteworthy: O’Neill will miss the start of the season due to injury.

 

Manhattanville

Last Year’s Record: 13-12-2, 5-8-2

Coach: Arlen Marshall, 3rd yr. (28-22-5 all at Manhattanville)

Key Returning Players: D Anton Racklin, Sr. (7-19-26), F Jake Mooney, Sr. (12-16-28), F Matt Coleman, Jr. (6-9-15), G Brian Fleming, Sr (3.18, .900).

Key newcomers: G Kyle Redmond, Northfield Mt. Hermon USHS (.943), D Anthony Ragone, Springfield USPHL (15-29-44), D Fabian Andark, Vaxjo SEL (0-7-7), D Thimmy Garbenius, Sodertalje SEL (2-9-11), F Stephen Gaul, Springfield USPHL (39-27-66), F Matt Smethurst, NY Apple Core EHL (11-15-26).

Key departures: G Alex Scola (2.65, .904), D Adam Young (5-2-7), F Lou Balzano (5-11-16), F Luc Van Natter (15-17-32), F Craig Simchuk (7-15-22), F Mark Rivera (11-16-27).

Noteworthy: The departed Van Natter was second in league scoring last year.

 

Nazareth

Last Year’s Record: 8-16-2, 4-9-2

Coach: George Roll, 17th yr., 3rd at Nazareth ( 250-239-50, 14-35-3 at Nazareth)

Key Returning Players: D Scott Dawson, Jr. (2-13-15), F Ben Blasko, So. (11-15-26), F Julius Tamasy, Sr. (3-3-47), G Ed Zdolshek, (3.11, .908).

Key newcomers: F Dom Gabaj, Idaho WSHL (45-61-102), D Marcus Moles, Valley EHL (0-2-2), F Matt Manzella, Jr. Bruins USPHL, Prem. (1-3-4)

Key departures: D Jordan Ciccarello (3-9-12), F Mark Zavorin (7-11-18)

Noteworthy: Blasko led all ECACW rookies in scoring last year.

 

Neumann

Last Year’s Record: 9-12-5, 4-8-3

Coach: Dominick Dawes, 7th yr. (93-53-21 all at Neumann)

Key Returning Players: F Shayne Morrissey, So. (14-9-23), F Ryan Luiten, So. (10-8-18), F Chris Bournazos, Sr. (4-13-17), D Casey Rogers, Jr. (1-12-13).

Key newcomers: F Mike Davis, D Doug Rose, F Liam Board, G Matt Gibney.

Key departure: G Braely Torris (2.84, .922).

Noteworthy: Knights lost just four mainstays to graduation.

 

Utica

Last Year’s Record: 16-7-4, 10-4-1

Coach: Gary Heenan, 14th yr. (181-126-33)

Key Returning Players: D Mike Baird, Sr. (2-13-15), D Kevin Kirisits, So. (4-5-9), F Louis Educate, Sr., (6-12-18).

Key newcomers: 15 new faces.

Key departures: F Trever Hertz (8-17-25), F Jon Gaffney (9-12-21), F Ridge Garbut (12-12-24), D Mike Slowikowski (0-5-5), G Nick Therrien (2.15, .922).

Noteworthy: Big incoming class for Utica, which lost its top four scorers.

Legitimacy, consistency and perfection — or what an early season nonconference schedule can expose

I love the Big Ten schedule and the sheer amount of nonconference play early in the season. Here are three things from this past weekend that stand out to me.

1. Penn State is making a good case for legitimacy.

I have heard many critics poo-poo the early success of the Nittany Lions because of the “lightness” of Penn State’s schedule, but PSU is doing exactly what other teams taken more seriously are supposed to do. The Nittany Lions are defeating opponents that are considered weaker because of their recent histories or the conferences in which they play. Let me say straight up that I have nothing but respect for Atlantic Hockey, and everyone who’s read me regularly knows that I consider the AHA a formidable conference that has arrived; I also believe that there are no gimmes in college hockey. Teams like Holy Cross and Bentley are good barometers for a third-year Division I program with geegobs of resources that teams like Holy Cross and Bentley lack.

This weekend’s sweep of Bentley, especially Friday’s 3-2 win in which the Nittany Lions overcame a 2-0 deficit, is a sign that Penn State is a team that is learning how to succeed. PSU’s stats in the early going are good: tied for third in the country in scoring offense (3.88 goals per game); tied for 11th defensively (2.00); fourth in power play (27.0); a couple of guys scoring goals (Casey Bailey, Eric Scheid); a good goaltender (Matthew Skoff).

Beginning with this weekend’s series against Massachusetts-Lowell, the Nittany Lions will play on the road until Jan. 9. Win, lose or tie, Penn State will be one of the most interesting teams in D-I to watch in the next two months.

2. “We’ve got to be better with the puck and better without the puck. Simple as that.”

No one in college hockey summarizes better than Red Berenson, and that quote is the perfect summation of Michigan’s season thus far. The Wolverines traveled to Houghton, Mich., for the first time since 1983, before Berenson’s tenure, and were swept handily by Michigan Tech, 4-1 and 6-2. Off to a 2-5-0 start, the Wolverines have tons of talent and little consistency, with a team defense that needs an overhaul. The Wolverines are 55th nationally in scoring defense, surrendering nearly four goals per game (3.86).

It’s too early to write off the Wolverines. Their two wins came against quality Hockey East opponents and they have weapons that many teams envy, but if they cannot take lessons learned from this early nonconference play into their Big Ten schedule — which begins Nov. 21 against Penn State — then it will be another frustrating season for Michigan.

Michigan plays the next seven games at home, beginning this coming weekend with two against American International.

3. Nobody’s perfect.

We knew this already, but it took St. Cloud State to remind us that perfection is fleeting. The Huskies split a pair of games with previously undefeated Minnesota, beating the Gophers 4-1 Friday and taking Minnesota into overtime Saturday, a game that the Gophers won 4-3. Minnesota coach Don Lucia said that the Huskies were hungrier Friday night, a game in which the Huskies outshot the Gophers 37-32. Three of SCSU’s goals in that win were on the power play.

The Gophers limited the Huskies’ shots to just 14 in Saturday’s game and led 3-2 until Joey Benik scored for SCSU at 14:34 in the third. Justin Kloos’ third goal of the game was the winner for the Gophers at 1:19 in overtime. It was his first collegiate hat trick.

While the Gophers may not be seeking consistency, they are seeking depth. Minnesota is outscoring opponents 22-15 through the first six games of the season, with nine Gophers having scored a goal so far but only five with more than one. Seven of Minnesota’s goals have come from the power play, so the Gophers are looking for more five-on-five scoring as well.

P.S.

I really like the Spartans this season. They play hard and smart most of the time, they believe in each other and they never quit. They’re also incredibly laid back. Fun team to watch develop, for sure.

SUNYAC favorite a roll of the dice in 2014-15

Oswego’s Matt Galati is back for his sophomore season with the Lakers looking to be an impact player once again (photo: Dan Hickling).

Somebody’s bound to say it.

“Ours is the toughest conference in Division III hockey.”

The thing is, the SUNYAC can make the claim as well as anybody, at least if the gauge is Frozen Four appearances.

Last year’s Frozen Four featured two SUNYAC schools, Geneseo and Oswego, and although they both bowed out in the semifinals, it says a lot about the strength of the conference that both entries made it that far, or that a third contender, racked up 19 wins for the third year in succession and wasn’t even given a tournament invite.

“The SUNYAC,” said longtime Plattsburgh bench boss Bob Emery, who has 15 NCAA appearances and two titles to his credit, “has gotten stronger and stronger every year I have been here. This year will not be any different. There are too many great coaches not to. Any team can beat anyone in this league. There are lots of tough arenas to play in and lots of very emotional games.

“For any team to be successful, they are going to have to manufacture big goals at the right time to be successful.”

Oswego coach Ed Gosek, whose Lakers won the national title in 2007 and have made the Frozen Four in each of the last five years, echoed the thought.

“I think that two teams in the Frozen Four speaks volumes,” Gosek said.

The nine schools that make up the gritty league feature battles royal each weekend.

The heart of the matter, in the opinion of Geneseo coach Chris Schultz, is that while the teams go toe-to-toe every night of the season, the coaches keep up the fight – for recruits – all year round.

“SUNYAC will always be an elite league with this group of coaches that we have,” said Schultz. “We all want to beat each other. We all have recruiting battles. At the end of the day, this group of hard-working coaches make our league extremely competitive.”

The league’s preseason poll puts Oswego – and the returning sophomore Matt Galati, the league’s leading scorer – Geneseo, and Plattsburgh all at the top of the ladder. That’s hardly a surprise.

Each of them is loaded from top to bottom.

What may be an eye-popper is the race for the middle – and for a team that could force its way into that top three.

There, the consensus seems to be that Brockport, Buffalo State and Fredonia, all seem to be ready to take the next step.

Schultz thinks that at the end of the day, Brockport may emerge as the best as the best of the bunch.

“I think that Brockport is trending to make a run with quality recruits,” he said.

Golden Eagles’ coach Brian Dickinson feels that the optimism about his squad is warranted.

“Last year, we ended the regular season on a high note winning our last four to vault into fifth place and a playoff spot,” Dickinson said. “Although the playoff game didn’t go as we would have liked, we’re excited to build off that strong finish to hopefully make that next step in securing a home playoff game this year. We feel that is an attainable goal for our program.”

Then again, everyone in the SUNYAC feels the same way. The key is to grab one of the six available playoff berths.

“I think a sixth-place team can win a SUNYAC final,” said Schultz. “If we expanded to eight teams, I think the eighth team could make a legitimate run.”

Brockport

Last Year’s Record: 10-13-3, 7-8-1. Lost SUNYAC quarterfinal.

Coach: Brian Dickinson, 21st yr., 18th at Brockport (148-313-48, 134-265-42)

Key Returning Players: F Chase Nieuwendyk, Jr. (8-16-24), F Jake Taylor, So. (10-11-21), F Shane Cavalieri, Jr. (6-9-15), D Chris Luker, Jr. (9-13-22), G Aaron Green, Sr. (3.34, .897), G Jared Lockhurst, Jr. (3.39, .903).

Key newcomers: F Dylan Shapiro, Rochester USPHL Elite (18-25-43), F Ryan Kangas, Hartford EHL (9-7-16), D Brian Hurlimann, Trenton OJHL (3-8-11), D Dylan Howatt, Buffalo OJHL (3-14-17).

Key departures: D Matt DeLuca (0-3-3), F Nick Marinac (5-14-19), F Brendon Rothfuss (1-8-9).

Noteworthy: Nieuwendyk is the nephew of Hockey Hall of Famer Joe Nieuwendyk.

 

Buffalo State

Last Year’s Record: 10-12-5, 6-6-4. Lost SUNYAC semifinal.

Coach: Nick Carriere, 10th yr. (97-115-24)

Key Returning Players: D Ben Kramer, Jr. (5-5-10), F Brett Hope, Jr. (5-7-12), F Taylor Price, So. (6-15-21), F Cory Gurski, Jr. (3-2-5), G Mike DeLaVergne (2.16, .889)

Key newcomers: F Marcus Michalski, Niagara Falls GOJHL (14-38-52), F Zach Nieminen, Ancaster GOJHL (36-37-73), F Ryan Hunter, Mississauga OJHL (11-18-29), F Ryan Demyen, North Bay NOJHL (26-27-53), F Jason Zaleski, Trenton OJHL (16-25-41), F Ryan Stayner, St. Catharines GOJHL (8-8-16), Garrett Chardon, Boston Jr. Rangers EHL (5-4-9 ), D Zach Stein, Hartford EHL (3-12-15), D Brody Power, North York OJHL (2-13-15), G Ian Sylves, Caledonia GOJHL (2.00, .926).

Key departures: G Kevin Carr (2.57, .922), F Mike Zannella (7-15-22), F Dan Turgeon (12-15-27),

Noteworthy: Nick Melligan, Buff State’s top scorer two years ago, returns after taking last year off.

 

Cortland

Last Year’s Record: 5-16-3, 4-10-2. Missed playoffs.

Coach: Joe Cardarelli, 1st season (NR)

Key Returning Players: F Nick Zappia, Sr. (11-17-28), F Brant Sherwood, Jr., (5-7-12), F Mike Davie, (5-6-11), D Ryan Wagner, Jr. (3-8-11), F Kevin Antonik, Sr. (2-2-4).

Key newcomers: G Drew Weigman, Northern Cyclones EHL, (2.74, .911), G Kollyn Jones, NY PAL USPHL Prem. (2.85, .936), D Drazen Zack Connecticut EHL (6-27-33), D Cory Lauer, Toronto Patriots OJHL (2-9-11), F Darren McCormick, Buffalo OJHL (26-18-44), F Tommy Nolan, Connecticut EHL (22-20-42), F Dan Broderick, NY PAL EHL (3-5-8), F Andrew McCann, Wellington OJHL (10-16-26).

Key departures: F Adam Bevilacqua (10-10-20), F A.J. Moyer (7-10-17), D Stephen Nardi (3-7-10).

Noteworthy: Cardarelli, an assistant coach last year, is Cortland’s third head coach in as many seasons.

 

Fredonia

Last Year’s Record: 7-13-6, 4-7-5. Lost SUNYAC quarterfinal.

Coach: Jeff Meredith, 27th yr. (359-281-70)

Key Returning Players: F Stephen Castriota (10-10-20), F Jared Wynia (11-5-16), F Brian Doust (2-5-7)

Key newcomers: D Oskar Gerhardson, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton EHL (5-14-19), D Jamie Young, Walpole EHL (4-10-14), F Matt Cessna, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton EHL (15-23-38), G Nick Harper, Baldwinsville HS (NA), D Daniel Martensson, Monroe CC NJCCA (3-17-20), F Marcus Andersson, Malmo SEL (5-10-15), Damien Kulynych, Steinbach MJHL (3-16-19).

Key departures: F Travis Fernley (3-8-11)

 

Geneseo

Last Year’s Record: 23-7-0, 14-2-0. Lost Frozen Four semifinal.

Coach: Chris Schultz, 9th yr. (120-85-7)

Key Returning Players: F Tyler Brickler, Sr. (18-14-32), F Justin Scharfe, Sr. (11-20-31), F David Ripple, Jr. (9-15-24), F Stephen Collins, So. (13-11-24), D Jack Caradonna, Sr. (3-17-20), G Nick Horrigan (2.37, .926).

Key newcomers: F Trevor Hills, St. Lawrence ECAC (0-1-1), F R.J. Burns, Rio Grande NAHL (2-5-7), F Jason Stephanik, Sioux Falls USHL (4-7-11).

Key departures: F Zachary Vit (18-13-31), F Carson Schell (2-2-4), F Jonathan Sucese (6-8-14).

Noteworthy: The Knights reached the Frozen Four for the first time in school history last year.

 

Morrisville

Last Year’s Record: 5-17-2, 2-13-1. Missed playoffs.

Coach: Kevin Krogol, 3rd yr. (9-36-4)

Key Returning Players: F Matt Beer, Sr. (7-5-12), F Jordan Carvhalo, So. (8-12-20), F Joe Santino, So. (5-13-18), F John Doyle, So. (15-6-21).

Key newcomers: G Steven Dombrosky, Pickering OJHL (3.37, .902), F Layne Martin Dells MnJHL (21-48-69), D Max Sund, Richmond MetJHL (2-6-8), F Ty Simmons, So. Maine ECACE (1-1-2).

Key departures: None

Noteworthy: The Mustangs get their three top scorers – all of them now sophomores – back this year.

 

Oswego

Last Year’s Record: 22-7-2, 10-5-1. Lost Frozen Four semifinal.

Coach: Ed Gosek, 12th yr. (234-63-18)

Key Returning Players: F Matt Galati, So. (24-12-36), D Bobby Gertsakis, Sr. (1-26-27), G Matt Zawadzki, So. (2.16, .922).

Key newcomers: F Mitchell Herlihey, Nepean CCHL, (17-28-45), F Trent Durocher, Pembroke CCHL (7-3-10) F David Ferriera, New Jersey USPHL (9-23-32), F Joey Davies, Alaska-Anchorage WCHA (1-2-3), D Alex D’Olivera, Cobourg OJHL (8-40-48), D Sean Federow, American Intl. AHA (1-2-3), G Mackenzie Sawyer, New Jersey USPHL Prem. (2.30, .914).

Key departures: F David Titanic (9-8-17), F Kyle Badham (1-2-3).

Noteworthy: Last year’s outstanding freshman class, led by SUNYAC Rookie of the Year Galati, should be that much better after a trip to the Frozen Four.

 

Plattsburgh

Last Year’s Record: 19-5-2, 12-2-2. Lost SUNYAC semifinal.

Coach: Bob Emery, 26th yr. (542-171-56)

Key Returning Players: D Brandon Beadow, Sr. (0-8-8), F Dillon Fox, Jr. (9-15-24), F Luke Baleshta, Jr. (3-12-15), F Kevin Emmerling, Jr. (6-13-19), F Mark Constantine Sr. (9-11-20).

Key newcomers: F Connor Toomey, Merrimack HEA (2-2-4), D Ayrton Valente, Mississauga OJHL (5-12-17), G
Brady Rouleau, Quinnipiac ECAC (NR), G Spencer Finney, Colgate ECAC (4.97, .857).

Key departures: F Alex Jensen (13-16-29), G Mathieu Cadieux (1.65, .935)

Noteworthy: With the loss of Cadieux, the Plattsburgh cage is wide open for the first time in three annums. The return of Brandon Beadow, the league’s three time defensive dman of the year winner, will help any goalie.

 

Potsdam

Last Year’s Record: 9-14-2, 4-10-2. Missed playoffs.

Coach: Chris Bernard, 9th yr., 6th at Potsdam (58-129-12, 41-77-8)

Key Returning Players: F Billy Pascalli, Jr. (10-9-19), F Kenny Simon, Sr. (5-9-14), D Erick Ware, Sr. (2-11-13).

Key newcomers: None

Key departures: F Mike Arnold (17-6-23), F Adam Place (5-15-20), F Ryan Miller (2-3-5).

Noteworthy: Returnees include 15 upper classmen. Unfortunately, last year’s two top scorers, Arnold and Place, aren’t among them.

Lowell’s mirage and panics at Maine and Northeastern

I think I learned these three things this week.`

1. Massachusetts-Lowell’s ugly loss to Michigan a week ago was only a mirage.

When I watched the River Hawks lose 8-4 to Michigan, I thought it indicated they weren’t as good as their 2-0-1 record to that point had indicated. The early departures to the pros in the offseason had knocked Lowell down a peg after all, as so many of us had expected.

Instead, that game is looking more and more like the anomaly, and the River Hawks are looking more and more like the real deal.

They followed that loss with a win over Michigan State, then this weekend swept New Hampshire in their home-and-home series. They shut out the Wildcats, 2-0, in their own barn, and then spanked them 8-2 at the Tsongas.

They now stand at 5-1-1 overall and a perfect 3-0-0 within Hockey East.

So much for a regression at Lowell.

2. The early panic in Orono appears to have been unfounded.

It didn’t look good when Maine opened the season by traveling to Alaska and coming back with a doughnut. Then when the Black Bears were swept at home by Union, albeit second-ranked Union, the oh-for-the-season began to look ominous.

Since then, however, the Black Bears have gone 3-0-1, including a sweep this weekend over Massachusetts, so the concern has abated. In league play, they’re now one of only three teams with perfect records.

We’ll see if that remains true this next week when Maine travels to Vermont for two in the Catamounts’ barn, but for now, all is well in Orono.

3. Maybe it is time to panic at Northeastern.

We’ve been asking for a few weeks now whether it’s time to panic at Northeastern. In last week’s column, NU coach Jim Madigan explained to Jim Connelly why it wasn’t.

But after getting swept at Quinnipiac this weekend, the Huskies are now 0-6. Yes, Quinnipiac was a nationally ranked team a week ago, and Colgate, which swept the Huskies two weeks ago, is now ranked fourth in the country. And all four of those games were on the road.

Fair enough.

But the other two losses were at home. Vermont smoked the Huskies, 6-2, in the opener, and a team thought to be destined for the lower reaches of the standings, Massachusetts, beat them a week ago.

Next week, Northeastern plays a home-and-home series against Lowell, one of the top teams in the league, if not the country.

If now isn’t the time to panic, when is?

Women’s D-I wrap: Nov. 3

No rest for the weary
Hockey was played every day but Wednesday over the last week, and five teams took to the ice three times: Princeton, Penn State, St. Lawrence, Clarkson, and Northeastern. The Tigers and Golden Knights won all three.

Now a number of teams head into a bye week, while others, particularly in Hockey East and the CHA, play on.

Champs finding their stride
No. 9 Clarkson looks to have its mojo back as it ran its winning streak to five games after starting 3-3. Junior Shannon MacAulay netted a hat trick on home ice in the Golden Knights’ 5-0 win over St. Lawrence on Tuesday. Rookie defenseman Savannah Harmon had a goal and two assists as Clarkson kept it going with a 5-1 win over Brown. Both MacAulay and Harmon scored power-play goals to produce a 2-1 win at Yale’s expense. Shea Tiley stopped 69 of 71 shots for the week to backstop the three victories.

Program history made
Bemidji State won a series from No. 1 Minnesota for the first time in the two clubs’ 16th year of matching up in the WCHA. The Beavers claimed a 2-2 tie and a shootout win on Friday night. The Gophers came back from a third-period deficit for the third time in six games when Dani Cameranesi tipped in a power-play, extra-attacker goal with 78 seconds left. Rachael Kelly and Lauren Miller had scored for BSU to outdo Kelly Pannek’s first collegiate goal. Brittni Mowat foiled any comeback attempts on Saturday, denying all 36 shots she faced in a 1-0 win. Ivana Bilic scored the game’s only tally in the first period.

Bears discover net
Brown defeated St. Lawrence on Saturday, 7-4. The seven goals are the most that the Bears have scored against a full-time D-I opponent since defeating Union, 8-1, back on Dec. 4, 2004. Brown trailed, 3-2, in the third period before exploding for four goals in nine minutes, the final two 14 seconds apart. Brittany Moorehead and Sam Donovan had two goals with an assist, while Janice Yang scored and added three helpers.

Princeton gets it going
Having played on Sunday night, Princeton and Penn State actually played four games in seven days. After dropping that game, its opener, the Tigers bounced back with a 4-1 win on Monday. Four different Tigers accounted for the goals.

Princeton carried that momentum into ECAC play versus No. 8 Cornell, scoring three times in the first three minutes of the second period to grab a 4-1 lead, and held off a late rally for a 5-4 triumph. Once again, the attack was balanced, with five goal scorers and nine with points, topped by Fiona McKenna, Jaimie McDonell, and Kelsey Koelzer with a pair.

The offense kept clicking against Colgate in a 4-2 victory. Molly Contini scored twice. Kimberly Newell earned wins in all three contests.

How the rest of the top 10 fared
No. 2 Boston College kept Providence winless with 8-0 and 4-1 victories. Emily Field, Tori Sullivan, and Alex Carpenter all hit the net twice in Friday’s rout. With five players off to Four Nations on Saturday, Meghan Grieves stepped up with a pair of goals.

Quinnipiac also remained in the unbeaten ranks. The fifth-ranked Bobcats won over Colgate, 4-1, and Cornell, 3-0, and have just allowed three goals total in eight skates. Nicole Connery had two goals and a helper versus the Raiders, while Taylar Cianfarano assisted three times. Emma Woods led with a goal and an assist as Chelsea Laden made it a national-best five shutouts against the Big Red.

No. 3 Wisconsin got a last-minute goal from Brittany Ammerman to salvage a 3-3 tie at No. 10 North Dakota. UND had come back from a two-goal deficit to take a lead on a third-period goal by Becca Kohler, the only shooter to convert in the shootout. The Badgers took the second contest, 3-2. Ammerman and Sarah Nurse scored in both games.

No. 4 Harvard kicked off its campaign by defeating Rensselaer, 4-1, and Union, 5-2. Miye D’Oench opened and closed the scoring against the Engineers. She added a pair of tallies on Saturday, as the Crimson spotted the Dutchwomen an early goal, then took control with a five-goal second period.

No. 7 Mercyhurst swept Robert Morris, 3-0 and 4-1. Eight different Lakers had a single point in the opener, and Amanda Makela notched her fourth shutout of the season. Mikaela Lowalter gave the Colonials the lead on Saturday, but Emily Janiga answered and sealed the win into an empty net.

Boston University defeated Northeastern and New Hampshire by 3-2 and 4-2 scores, respectively. Rebecca Russo broke a 2-2 tie midway through the second period for the No. 6 Terriers versus the Huskies with her second goal of the game. Rebecca Leslie had helpers on both. BU entered a wild third period leading UNH, 1-0, but Amy Schlagel and Nicoline Jensen connected three minutes apart to reverse the advantage. Sarah Lefort tied it up and then hit an empty net after Russo scored another game-winner.

No. 10 Minnesota-Duluth handled Minnesota State, 3-0 and 6-3. In the opener, 59 saves by Erin Krichiver weren’t enough for the Mavericks, who were outshot 28-0 over the final 20 minutes. Kayla Black pitched the shutout, and Jenna McParland tallied twice. MSU rallied to take a 3-2, third-period lead on Sunday, but the Bulldogs closed it out with four straight goals. Ashleigh Brykaliuk had two goals and two assists, while Katerina Mrázová assisted four times.

Other results
Northeastern blanked UNH, 2-0, with Chloé Desjardins saving all 28 shots and Hayley Scamurra and Kendall Coyne assisting on each other’s goals. The Huskies were whitewashed in turn by Maine when Mariah Fujimagari turned away all 20 shots they mustered and Kristin Gilmour scored the game’s only marker.

St. Cloud State split at Ohio State, fighting back for a 4-2 win Friday but unable to mount a charge in a 3-0 loss. Molly Illikainen scored twice in the SCSU victory as Julie Friend made 43 saves. Sara Schmitt had two of the goals on Saturday when Kassidy Sauve recorded her third shutout.

Lindenwood traveled to RIT and tied, 1-1, before securing a 3-1 win. Nicole Hensley stayed busy with 73 saves on the weekend.

Syracuse took a 3-1 decision from Penn State and then settled for a 2-2 tie. Kaillie Goodnough and Stephanie Grossi had two-point games in the win. In the tie, Jessica Sibley had a goal and an assist for the Orange, as did Laura Bowman and Amy Peterson for the Nittany Lions; Hannah Ehresmann made 50 stops for PSU.

Robyn Chemago saved all 13 shots as Dartmouth shut out Union, 3-0. The Big Green backed it up with a 5-2 win over RPI, thanks to two goals from Laura Stacey and three points by Catherine Berghuis; Mariana Walsh scored both tallies for the Engineers.

Carmen MacDonald was perfect on 28 shots as St. Lawrence stifled Yale, 3-0. Jenna Marks had two assists.

Connecticut tied Maine, 3-3, and then fell to Vermont, 6-0. Thirteen Catamounts recorded points in support of Madison Litchfield’s 19-save shutout.

Three things about the WCHA last weekend: Huskies, Beavers and Lakers, oh my!

1. Michigan Tech might be for real.

The Huskies hosted Michigan for the first time since 1983 this past weekend. The end result was a sweep of epic proportions. Tech won 4-1 Friday (in front of the Stanley Cup!) and 6-2 Saturday, giving the Huskies a perfect 6-0-0 record.

Four different Huskies scored goals Friday, and six different players scored Saturday, while Jamie Phillips continued his hot streak and stopped 54 Wolverine shots on the weekend.

It’s exactly the kind of performance Tech head coach Mel Pearson was looking for in his team’s home opener — he said last week he was worried about the potential for a letdown for his team playing at home for such a big series.

Luckily, that didn’t happen, and the Huskies are now 6-0-0 after sweeping away two ranked teams.

Pearson said at the beginning of the season that, on paper, this was the deepest offensive team he’s ever had since taking over the head job in 2011. With weekends like this, he might have a point.

Houghton Daily Mining Gazette sports editor Brandon Veale put it best in a Tweet after game two: “If this is the #mtuhky team we’re getting all season, look the hell out college hockey world.”

2. Bemidji State shows off at home

After upsetting then No. 2 North Dakota in Grand Forks in their season opener (unrelated, but I have a feeling that result is going to be discussed all season, no matter how each teams’ seasons play out), the Beavers lost their next three (the next night at home against UND then at No. 1 Minnesota).

This weekend’s result against No. 16 Alaska showed that the Beavers aren’t just a one-hit wonder. BSU swept the Nanooks in Bemidji, routing Alaska 6-1 Friday before winning 4-3 in overtime Saturday.

Both wins showed BSU’s improved offensive depth and versatility compared to the last few seasons. The Beavers have already scored 21 goals in six games, with 10 players having at least a goal. Four are tied for the team-lead with three, and perhaps most surprising is that none of those are Cory Ward (who did, however, score Saturday’s overtime game-winner).

Ward has just two goals, but guys like fourth-liner Charlie O’Connor (who had two goals in all of last season) has three, as does Markus Gerbrandt, Nate Arentz and Brendan Harms (who happen to share the same line).

The Beavers have a difficult upcoming schedule, taking on Minnesota State, Michigan Tech and Bowling Green back-to-back-to-back. All three teams ahead of them in the standings so far. If they can keep up this kind of scoring, BSU might be a force in the WCHA.

3. Lakers breathe sigh of relief

Lake Superior State won’t start the season 0-10 after all.

The Lakers stole a 3-2 overtime win Saturday night in Anchorage, snapping their nine-game losing streak to start the season.

Bryce Schmitt, the team leader with three goals, scored Friday’s game-winner for the Lakers, who had lost 3-2 the previous night despite outshooting the Seawolves 29-24.

Under new head coach Damon Whitten, the Lakers have been playing nonstop since Oct. 4. Their schedule included trips to Robert Morris, Notre Dame and Anchorage, and they already have five WCHA losses.

So getting their first win before going into this bye week — the Lakers’ first break this season — couldn’t have come at a better time for Whitten, who now has a week to get his players ready for another grueling stretch in November and December that features trips to Huntsville, Grand Forks and Ferris State and home games against strong Alaska and Minnesota State teams.

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