Wisconsin players celebrate a goal earlier this season (photo: Tom Lynn).
This weekend, history will be made when Michigan State travels to Wisconsin to decide the regular-season Big Ten championship.
If the Spartans win, the title will be their first since the Big Ten formed. If the Badgers prevail it will be their second B1G regular-season title, marking the first time that any team other than Minnesota captures multiple season championships.
Minnesota has six. The only team other than Michigan State not to have earned this honor so far is Michigan. Everyone else has one.
That the title comes down to the last weekend of the season has been common enough in the Big Ten. That these two teams, specifically, are competing for it is certainly something to note.
The Spartans finished the 2022-23 season tied for fifth place in the Big Ten with Penn State, and Wisconsin was last season’s last-place team. At the start of this campaign, B1G coaches had Michigan State finishing third and Wisconsin fifth.
Heading into the final series before conference playoffs, not only are Wisconsin and Michigan State top-10 teams in the USCHO.com Poll, but the Badgers and Spartans are high in the PairWise Rankings, Wisconsin tied for third and Michigan State in fifth. There is the potential for each to be a top seed in an NCAA regional.
How did the Spartans and Badgers play their way for the opportunity to capture the regular-season B1G title and first-round playoff bye? Each team’s coach points to a single series that shaped everything that came afterward.
For Michigan State, it was being on the wrong end of a road sweep against Boston College Oct. 26-27. The Spartans followed up those losses with a 14-game span in which they went 10-1-3, the only blemish an overtime loss to Minnesota Nov. 26.
Adam Nightingale brought up the weekend against BC after Michigan State beat Michigan in the annual Duel in the D game in Little Caesar’s Arena Feb. 10. He brought it up again in his press conference this week, noting that the losses to Boston College changed the Spartans’ “approach” to the remainder of the season.
“It was like, it’s simple,” said Nightingale. “We’ve got to get better. They’re better than us. We didn’t lose again until we lost to Michigan in regulation here and got beat good, and then [look at] our response after that.”
That loss to Michigan was Jan. 19, 7-1 and in front of the Munn Arena faithful. The following night, the Spartans overcame a three-goal deficit to beat the Wolverines 7-5 in Yost Arena.
Nightingale points to “the character in the room, the buy-in to” improvement.
“I think that moment was pretty telling of this group,” said Nightingale, whose Spartans are the youngest team in college hockey. “They understood that, hey, we’re not perfect. We’ve got to keep working and getting better.”
The Badgers learned a similar lesson in the first half of the season after being swept by none other than Michigan State.
The Spartans and Badgers first met Nov. 17-18, when Wisconsin was enjoying a 9-1-0 start to the season and a six-game win streak, their most recent being sweeps of Michigan and Minnesota. They lost 4-2 and 3-2 on the road to Michigan State, held to two or fewer goals for the first time since their only previous loss, when North Dakota beat them 2-0 in the Ice Breaker Tournament.
“I remember the games very well,” said Mike Hastings. “They put us on our heels. They pressured us when we had [the puck], they pressured us when they had it, and it was one of the first teams that I thought really kind of put it to us a bit, and we learned and we grew from that.”
The Badgers extended their losing streak to three games with a 1-0 loss to Alaska Anchorage the following weekend but went on to rack up 10 wins in a row after that in an 11-game (10-0-1) unbeaten streak that ended with a 5-1 loss to Michigan Jan. 26. The Badgers rebounded the next night to beat the Wolverines 6-5.
In his weekly press conference, Hastings said that the games against the Spartans were close and that he expects the same this weekend, adding that Michigan State has depth and confidence and that they’re very well coached.
“That series was one we grew from, a negative experience of not being able to get points on the road, said Hastings, “so now I think we’re a different team, but I think State is also.
“Both teams have grown. Some of their drivers are young players, new players, and the longer that those players can play in the spots that they are, they play with a little more confidence. I think both teams are at that spot and you want to have this opportunity at this time of the year. When you play a team like Michigan State, they exposed our weaknesses and I know that they’re going to try to do that again, so we’ll have to be on point.”
Last weekend, the Badgers took five of six points on the road from Penn State and Hastings said he’s “really happy” with how Wisconsin responded to a road sweep against Ohio State the week before. The chance to play for a conference title is new to this squad, though, and much remains to be seen.
“This is our first go-around as a group in this situation, but it’s one we’ve tried to build from [last] summer until right now, to try and be prepared for it,” said Hastings. “All you can do is stay on that and stay on the dailies and just try and maintain consistency, which the group’s done a pretty good job of.”
Nightingale said that high-stakes games like these are what college hockey is all about. “You come to Michigan State, you want to play in games like this. For our guys, we played in the GLI, the championship game there and it didn’t go our way [but] we played really good.
“The Duel in the D is another one. It’s a similar-type feel where it’s a loud crowd, so our guys have had some experience with that. The guys that were in World Juniors have played in those environments, so I think it’s super exciting. This is what you want and now we’ve got to take advantage of it.”
Michigan State has 49 points. Wisconsin has 47. One win outright will give the Spartans the crown. The Badgers need five points total this weekend to capture the title for themselves alone. If the teams tie for points, they’ll share the title but the Spartans will earn the first-round bye in the Big Ten playoffs.
“The opportunity that we have this weekend, that Michigan State has this weekend, those are potentially forever moments,” said Hastings. “They don’t go away. You hang a banner. You become brothers a little bit deeper than just the idea of going out and competing. It’s history.
“So you’d better enjoy it, because I’ve been on the other side of it. That’s not real fun.”
Canisius’ Cody Schiavon chases down RIT’s Christian Catalano during the game last Saturday night (photo: Evie Linantud).
When the dust settled on the 2023-24 Atlantic Hockey regular season, just one tiebreaker was necessary in determining the final standings/seedings.
The result:
1. Rochester Institute of Technology
2. Holy Cross
3. Sacred Heart
4. Air Force
5. American International
6. Bentley
7. Niagara
8. Canisius
9. Mercyhurst
10. Army West Point
11. Robert Morris
A tiebreaker was necessary to seed Bentley and Niagara, as they each finished with 41 points. Bentley is the higher seed thanks to a sweep of Niagara on Nov. 10-11.
That means the 2024 Atlantic Hockey tournament looks like this:
First Round
Single elimination
March 2
#11 Robert Morris at #6 Bentley
#10 Army West Point at #7 Niagara
#9 Mercyhurst at #8 Canisius
Quarterfinal Round
Best-of-three series
March 8-10
Lowest surviving seed at No. 1 RIT
Second lost surviving seed at No. 2 Holy Cross
Third lowest surviving seed at No. 3 Sacred Heart
No. 5 AIC at No. 4 Air Force
Semifinal Round
Best-of-three series
March 15-17
Lowest surviving seed at highest surviving seed
Second-lowest surviving seed at second-highest surviving seed
Championship
Single elimination
March 23
Lowest surviving seed at highest surviving seed
Predictions vs. reality
It’s been a yearly tradition here to take a look at how the coaches and yours truly picked the final standings at the start of the season. The coaches vote in a preseason poll, and I vote in a poll of one to determine USCHO’s picks.
Observations:
Last season, Air Force was the consensus third-place pick; the Falcons ended up 10th. This season, Air Force was picked to finish eighth and ended up fourth.
The largest discrepancy this time was Bentley. Picked by the coaches and myself to finish 11th, the Falcons ended up sixth and a point out of a first-round bye.
Previewing the First Round
Anything can happen in a single-elimination game, and one or more upsets in this round wouldn’t be shocking.
No. 11 Robert Morris at No. 6 Bentley
On paper, Bentley holds the advantage, coming into the postseason with the lowest goals allowed per game (2.29) in the conference. The Colonials’ offense is last in the league, averaging 2.47 goals per game.
It may come down to which goalie plays better. RMU has veteran Chad Veltri, who recently passed the 3,500 career save mark, moving into third all-time in the AHA behind Ben Meisner with 3,684 and Holy Cross’ Matt Ginn (3,587). Francis Boisvert has also seen action down the stretch for the Colonials.
Bentley counters with the tandem of Conner Hasley and Nicholas Grabko, who are second and fourth, respectively in the league in goals allowed.
The teams split in their only two meetings this season.
No. 10 Army West Point at No. 7 Niagara
The Black Knights have allowed the second-most goals in men’s Division I hockey this season but have also turned in some quality defensive efforts.
The magic number for Army is three goals allowed. The Black Knights are 10-2-2 when allowing three goals or less, and 0-19 when allowing more than three.
This mirrors Niagara, which is 12-0-2 when scoring four goals or more.
The Purple Eagles can point to a three-game season sweep of archival Canisius as a success story from this season but would like to add a long playoff run as well.
This is the first-ever postseason meeting between the schools. The teams split their two-game series in the regular season.
No. 9 Mercyhurst at No. 8 Canisius
This is the 109th meeting between the schools. The Lakers come into the postseason with the knowledge that they can beat the top teams in the conference, chalking up wins against RIT, Sacred Heart, and Air Force. Mercyhurst has seen better results as of late after a miserable 0-9 stretch from January to early February.
Canisius, the defending champion, has quality wins as well, posting victories against Holy Cross, AIC, and Air Force (2x) but has struggled to keep the puck out of the net at times. The Golden Griffins are scoring at about the same rate as last season (2.76 goals per game) but have allowed 0.7 goals more per game this season. Canisius’ main defensive weapon from last season’s championship run, goaltender Jacob Barczewski , transferred to Michigan at the end of last season.
Like the other two first-round games, the combatants split their single series this season.
Norm Bazin recently collected his 300th win as an NCAA head coach (photo: UMass Lowell Athletics).
Given his success and longevity, few were surprised to hear that UMass Lowell’s Norm Bazin was the latest member of the college hockey coaching ranks to reach the 300-win milestone.
Except, maybe, Bazin himself.
“I wasn’t aware of it until someone mentioned it,” said Bazin in a recent interview with USCHO. “It’s going to be a nice milestone to look back on when I’m no longer doing this. But for now, it was (on to) the next game.”
Bazin, in his 13th season with Lowell, hit the milestone when the River Hawks notched a 4-2 win at home vs. Northeastern on Feb. 16. His 300 wins as a coach date back to the 2008-09 season at Division III Hamilton College in Clinton, N.Y. He currently sports a 262-164-43 career record with Lowell.
The ever-gracious Bazin said that while he’s honored to reach the 300-win mark, he sees it as less of an individual accomplishment and more of a collective effort.
“I treat it like a team award — without good athletes and good assistant coaches, you never achieve those milestones,” he said. “It’s not something I categorize, I guess. Especially when you’ve had a challenging season. You’re just looking for the next positive around the corner. You hope that it comes sooner rather than later.”
The River Hawks have struggled this season. Picked to finish seventh in the Hockey East preseason coaches poll, Lowell currently sits in last place with a 4-13-3 record (8-19-4 overall). Lowell has been beset by injuries all season, but Bazin was happy to say his team is close to 100 percent entering the final two weekends.
This year’s downturn aside, the River Hawks have been one of college hockey’s most solidly performing programs for the bulk of Bazin’s tenure. He is 149-97-30 all time in Hockey East regular-season play, which ranks first among the conference’s active coaches and second all-time behind only Boston College’s Jerry York. In Hockey East tournament action, Bazin sports a 25-14-0 record.
The program’s peak under Bazin (so far) came in 2012-13, when Lowell went 28-11-2, won the Hockey East regular-season and tournament championships and earned its first appearance in the Frozen Four. Bazin earned Hockey East Coach of the Year honors for the second straight year, and earned the Spencer Penrose Award for Division I men’s coach of the year.
“It’s great respect for the program — that’s first and foremost,” Bazin said when asked about the outpouring of well wishes he has received since reaching win No. 300. “I appreciate that. I can see that they do realize that the program’s been highly successful in the past. This year has been a glitch in the screen. We hope to get back there. But it’s nice to hear back from a lot of people.”
Bazin has coached at least 30 players who have gone on to play in the NHL, including Connor Hellebuyck of the Winnepeg Jets, who won the Vezina Trophy as the league’s top goaltender in 2020.
“The biggest bonus of hitting any milestone is, you hear back from players you’ve coached,” Bazin said. “They mention how the program has impacted their lives. It’s really a phenomenal thing to hear about, how they’re doing in life, and the culture and the impact the program had on them.”
The River Hawks have a pair of home-and-home series remaining to close out the regular season — intra-state rivals Massachusetts this weekend and New Hampshire the next. Bazin said Lowell is hoping to end the season on a high note, and perhaps make some noise in the upcoming Hockey East tournament.
“For us, it’s going to be putting 60 minutes together of intense hockey,” Bazin said. “I like our chances. (We) have four games to certainly sharpen up our game and play meaningful hockey heading into the postseason. We’re looking forward to it.”
The Kohl Center will soon shrink its ice dimensions to NHL-sized dimensions (photo: Tom Lynn).
The Wisconsin State Building Commission has officially approved the reduction of the size of the Kohl Center ice sheet that will get underway this spring and be ready for the 2024-25 season.
The original Olympic-sized rink was designed to be 200 feet long by 97 feet wide and will now undergo construction and be reduced to NHL dimensions of 200-by-85 feet.
“The Kohl Center is moving into a new era as to what’s available here,” Badgers coach Mike Hastings said in a news release. “Our young men come to the University of Wisconsin to get a degree and progress themselves as people and this this is an unbelievable opportunity for us to continue to evolve. With our nutrition center, a new academic center and weight room, and now an NHL-sized ice sheet, this adds another layer to help them prepare for life and for one of their goals of playing professionally and in the NHL.”
The Kohl Center is currently one of just five NCAA Division I men’s hockey home arenas with rink sizes larger than 200-by-92 feet.
The change in the width of the rink will also present exciting new premium seating opportunities in the 100 level for men’s hockey located on the glass. Details on those changes are still being designed.
An artist’s rendering of the new home rink for Union men’s and women’s hockey (photo: Schenectady Metroplex Development Authority).
An agreement has been finalized for a public-private partnership to build a new arena at Mohawk Harbor, the latest investment in ongoing revitalization efforts in Schenectady, N.Y.
The rink will be the new home of the Union men’s and women’s college hockey teams.
The 97,178-square foot area will be built at Mohawk Harbor. The site is very close to the Union campus and to other amenities that will support Union hockey players, coaches and fans, including two hotels, restaurants and more.
Officials plan to break ground in the spring. The arena is scheduled to be completed in time for the Union teams to play in their new home for the 2025-26 season. The teams currently play on campus in the Frank L. Messa Rink at Achilles Center, which opened in 1975.
“This arena represents the start of an exciting new chapter in the storied history of Union hockey,” said Union College President David R. Harris in a statement. “Just as importantly, the facility will be a tremendous community asset that will strengthen Schenectady and the region for decades to come.”
“We truly appreciate the support of Governor Hochul, Speaker Heastie, Assemblyman Santabarbara, the Schenectady County Legislature, Mayor Gary McCarthy and the city council as well as private donors led by Neil Golub,” added David M. Buicko, CEO of the Galesi Group. “This shows that when Schenectady stands together nothing can stand in our way. This is another milestone in this community’s amazing comeback story as we build on the success of Mohawk Harbor by building a new sports venue and events center that will be another major attraction for visitors and a resource for local residents.”
The $50 million project features a 2,200-seat ice hockey rink with capacity expanding to 3,600 for other sporting events, trade shows, special events and conventions.
Union has negotiated a long-term lease with the developer, West Yard Properties, LLC, a member of the Galesi Group of companies, to be the primary tenant for the arena. The college will contribute $20 million over 25 years for the arena to host the school’s Division I men’s and women’s hockey programs.
State Assemblyman Angelo Santabarbara worked with Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and Governor Hochul to secure $10 million from the state. The Schenectady County Legislature contributed $5 million and the Schenectady City Council $2.5 million. Neil Golub, retired Price Chopper CEO, has pledged $1 million toward the project.
“The arena at Mohawk Harbor is a great addition to the Schenectady community,” said Heastie. “Thanks to the hard work of Assemblymember Santabarbara, Union’s hockey team and their fans will have a new home rink, and Schenectady will become a new destination for special events in the area.”
“I’m pleased to see the culmination of our collective efforts in bringing this project to fruition,” stated Santabarbara. “What started with securing $10 million in the state budget to committing an additional $1 million from my office, this endeavor underscores my commitment to enhancing quality of life and fostering growth in Schenectady as a tourist destination. I believe this groundbreaking project will usher in a new era for Schenectady, not only providing a new home for Union College hockey, but a state-of-the-art multi-purpose arena at Mohawk Harbor that is a significant investment in our community’s future. It brings with it the potential to attract exciting new events to Schenectady, including NCAA tournaments, big names in entertainment, and new economic development opportunities. It’s also been inspiring to see the outpouring of support at every level of government. I applaud all stakeholders for their collaborative efforts in making this transformative project a reality.”
“Over the last 20 years we have worked to bring new investment and development to the County, supporting projects that will have a lasting impact,” said Gary Hughes, chair of the Schenectady County Legislature. “This new arena will create jobs and bring new visitors to our community, further bolstering our economy and enhancing the transformation of Mohawk Harbor.”
McCarthy added, saying, “The team that came together to get the puck in the net will stay together and continue to make Schenectady a leading regional destination and a shining example of a community that knows how to keep winning.”
St. Cloud State players gather after a recent win (photo: Jason Soria).
Last week was the Bracketologist’s dream.
All of the 16 teams fit nicely in a perfect bracket without any sort of conference matchups in the opening round and, even geographically all of the teams insured that attendance would be strong.
This week, not so much.
We mentioned a number of weeks back that UMass qualifying for the tournament as the host in Springfield could create some issues for seeding, particularly if the Minutemen are a No. 4 seed, which sitting at 13th in the currently PairWise is exactly what we have. We can’t place another Hockey East team in the region as a No. 1 seed or you’d have an interconference matchup in the opening round, something the committee tries to avoid like the plague.
When we had three of the four No. 1 seeds from Hockey East – at the time Boston College, Boston University and Maine – I basically called the interconference game unavoidable. Technically you could move one of those teams to Sioux Falls and send North Dakota east, but that would destroy the attendance in the Sioux Falls regional.
But today, we have just two Hockey East teams as No. 1 seeds – BC and BU – and I’m ready to ship the lower of those teams west.
Let’s first do the simple and bracket the tournament, 1 through 16.
Boston College
Boston University
North Dakota
Wisconsin
Michigan State
Denver
Quinnipiac
Minnesota
Maine
Providence
St. Cloud State
Western Michigan
Massachusetts
Michigan
RIT (placeholder for AHA champion)
Bemidji State (placeholder for CCHA champion)
Bracketing these teams, 1 vs. 16, 2 vs. 15, etc., we get:
1. Boston College
8. Minnesota
9. Maine
16. Bemidji State
2. Boston University
7. Quinnipiac
10. Providence
15. RIT
3. North Dakota
6. Denver
11. St. Cloud
14. Michigan
4. Wisconsin
5. Michigan State
12. Western Michigan
13. Massachusetts
Let’s first look for interconference matchups and we have one – Denver and St. Cloud. If we swap Denver and Quinnipiac, we’d do the least damage to the bracket integrity (swapping 6 for 7) and avoid that conflict.
1. Boston College
8. Minnesota
9. Maine
16. Bemidji State
2. Boston University
6. Denver
10. Providence
15. RIT
3. North Dakota
7. Quinnipiac
11. St. Cloud State
14. Michigan
4. Wisconsin
5. Michigan State
12. Western Michigan
13. Massachusetts
Okay, now let’s assign regions, remembering that UMass must play in Springfield, Mass., as the host.
Providence, R.I.
1. Boston College
8. Minnesota
9. Maine
16. Bemidji State
Maryland Heights, Mo.
2. Boston University
6. Denver
10. Providence
15. RIT
Sioux Falls, S.D.
3. North Dakota
7. Quinnipiac
11. St. Cloud State
14. Michigan
Springfield, Mass.
4. Wisconsin
5. Michigan State
12. Western Michigan
13. Massachusetts
This is hardly ideal for attendance, but I think the committee would have to stay with a version of this – particularly when it comes to assigning where each #1 seed plays.
As it is, Sioux Falls will be sold out and Providence with Boston College and Maine should have good crowds. UMass should help the Springfield Region significantly (though the Michigan State-Western Michigan game might be a small crowd as would the final if UMass loses). And Maryland Height is such a small building that an ambitious RIT following could fill most of it.
Is there another change to consider? Yes. Swapping the Minnesota-Maine matchup with the Denver-Providence matchup. That would put Providence closer to home (they are not the host in Providence, Brown is) while Minnesota, one of the closest teams to Maryland Heights, would move there.
Right now, though, I don’t want to do that as it further crumbles the bracket integrity. So I’ll stick with my final bracket:
Providence, R.I.
1. Boston College
8. Minnesota
9. Maine
16. Bemidji State
Maryland Heights, Mo.
2. Boston University
6. Denver
10. Providence
15. RIT
Sioux Falls, S.D.
3. North Dakota
7. Quinnipiac
11. St. Cloud State
14. Michigan
Springfield, Mass.
4. Wisconsin
5. Michigan State
12. Western Michigan
13. Massachusetts
College hockey analyst Dave Starman joins hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger to talk about the NCHC playoff race, as well as general topics like the discussion of CHL eligibility and fighting in college hockey.
This episode is sponsored by the NCAA Division I Men’s Frozen Four, April 11 and 13 in St. Paul, Minnesota. Visit ncaa.com/mfrozenfour
It’s been half his life since Omaha coach Mike Gabinet played for the Mavericks under current UNO executive associate athletic director Mike Kemp.
The dynamics of their relationship have changed over the resulting couple of decades, but Gabinet’s respect for Kemp has only grown. This Tuesday, after it was announced last week that Kemp will be retiring from UNO effective this May, Gabinet praised someone who has been a continuous fixture on that campus for the last 28 years.
“There’s that good relationship you have to have between a coach and a player, and a player and a coach, but as you become an adult and get older and still have those people with you, it’s different,” Gabinet said.
“Some things about our working relationship are the same, and we’ll always have that respect for each other, but you get to talk about different experiences now, and I’m able to lean on him as a mentor to help with certain situations, and that’s been awesome.”
Kemp’s association with UNO goes back further than when he was hired in 1996 to lead the Mavericks’ first varsity hockey program. He previously coached the school’s club team, which had been considered for varsity status in the 1970s but couldn’t command the required funding.
Kemp later spent 20 years in assistant coaching spells at Wisconsin, Illinois-Chicago and Gustavus Adolphus before returning to Omaha. He led the Mavericks for 12 years and was then elevated into the first of a series of administrative titles.
Kemp later spent five years serving on the NCAA Division I Men’s Ice Hockey Committee, chairing it from 2020-22. In 2020, he managed the NCHC Pod, with all eight of the conference’s teams beginning their pandemic-affected season at Omaha’s Baxter Arena.
Omaha, let alone the wider world, is a much different place than it was when Gabinet finished his UNO playing days in 2004. He always kept in touch with Kemp, though, before returning in 2016.
“I would come back to Omaha sometimes to train in the summer while I was still playing professionally, so I’d always see him around, and when I started coaching, we connected that way and I always kept track of how the team was doing here,” Gabinet said.
“He was a big reason I came back. People like that are a big reason why Omaha is what Omaha is.”
And now, Gabinet is enhancing what Kemp had started.
“With some things, you never really know until you know as a head coach,” Gabinet started. “You think you know as an observer, but you don’t know until you’re in the chair just what that takes, what bandwidth that requires on a day-to-day basis and all the responsibilities you have.
“When you get to live in that same seat that he held, you have a lot of respect for what he went through in building this program, and what he continues to do to help the program. Being the head coach myself now, I think it speaks volumes to just how much he continues to support the program. He’s just as passionate now about helping the program have success, and I always have admired that about him.”
Kemp’s presence will unquestionably be missed. His legacy will be carried forth, however, by someone who hopes to be able to claim a similar longevity.
“He has always treated people respectfully and is a team player who has done a good job building rapport with people he has been around,” Gabinet said. “He conducts himself with a classy and businesslike approach to things, and I think that’s reflected in his career, and the tenure he has had in one spot is very impressive.
“He’s a builder for the program, and a huge pillar of it. We wouldn’t have what we have today without his time and dedication to hockey in Omaha.”
Cortland has had some big goals to celebrate in February and is hoping for a few more in Saturday’s SUNYAC championship game against Plattsburgh (Photo by Dani Zehr Photography)
Following a 9-2-0 start to the season, Cortland came out of the semester break and struggled with some inconsistency to open the second half. Since the start of February that strong 200-foot game has returned along with the strong play of their leading players to reflect a four-game win streak that has them playing for a SUNYAC championship for the first time in eighteen years.
“We started out really strong,” said head coach Joe Cardarelli. “We usually have a great start to the second-half where we have won a number of holiday tournaments over the past four or five years to get us going but this year for whatever reason we struggled with inconsistency in January. Our game is to play a 200-foot game and be aggressive and I think we got away from that a bit in January but we have found it in February along with our big players coming out of their lull and getting back to producing on the scoresheet regularly – that was missing in January as well.”
Cortland’s top five guys in points account for 55% of the teams 103 goals on the season. Senior Nate Berke (14G – 19A – 33 Pts; +15), Colby Seitz (11G – 17A – 28 Pts; +16), Domenic Settimo (8G – 18A – 26 Pts; +12), Sutter Donegan (14G – 5A – 19Pts; +7) and Stephen Kyrkostas (10G-11A – 21 Pts; +10) have been the backbone of the team’s offensive production with Berke leading the team in goals and assists while Seitz leads in power play and game-winning goals.
“Nate and Colby have been dynamic upfront for us this season,” noted Cardarelli. “Colby had such a strong freshman season that you might have expected him to drop off this year but he continues to sharpen his game and has been a good fit playing with Nate both as a passer and a finisher.”
After closing out the regular season with a huge overtime win against Oswego, the Red Dragons entered the SUNYAC playoffs as the No. 4 seed and continued their strong play with a 5-1 win over Brockport in the quarterfinal round before stunning top seed Geneseo on Saturday, 3-2 to earn their spot in the SUNYAC championship game against the defending champions from Plattsburgh.
“You play a couple of important games on a Wednesday to Saturday and the adrenaline is certainly flowing,” stated Cardarelli. “What I like about our game in the last few weeks is no matter what the score we continue to play our style of hockey and pressure. Even with a 5-1 lead against Brockport, we kept the pressure on them and that carried over to a great 60-minute effort at Geneseo on Saturday. Now we have to try to make this as normal a week as possible in getting ready for Saturday and I think this team is ready to play another strong game against a tough opponent.”
Cortland as an institution has enjoyed some significant athletic success in this academic year as the football team won their conference and carried that through to a national championship. With the coaching staffs and players for hockey and football being close, coach Cardarelli is hoping the championship pedigree will rub off on his hockey guys and that they can find a way to emulate their football brethren.
“The football guys are some of our biggest fans,” said Cardarelli. “It was tough when they came back from winning the national championship that not a lot of the students were around so when we played Anna Maria at the end of January, we had the football captains do the ceremonial puck drop and recognized the team on their huge achievement. I think we will have that level of support when we travel to play Plattsburgh for our conference championship and a chance to play more hockey. I know our guys are ready and excited about the challenge.”
Plattsburgh won the season series against Cortland by 6-1 and 5-4 scores but as the Cardinals and Red Dragons demonstrated last weekend, it is difficult to beat the same opponent three times in a row.
“I don’t think it matters where we play the game,” stated Cardarelli. “We will be ready to go, and I think they have more pressure on them than we do on Saturday night. We have been playing good and consistent hockey in February and hope that can extend into March.”
Jackson Jutting celebrates a recent goal for Bemidji State (photo: Brent Cizek).
When everything is said and done, Jackson Jutting’s game-winning goal on Friday might turn out to be the most consequential one of Bemidji State’s season.
The Beavers came into last weekend knowing every single point matters in the race for the MacNaughton Cup. So despite allowing the game-tying goal with 30 seconds to go against fellow MacNaughton contender St. Thomas, the Beavers weren’t about to let another valuable point in the standings slip away.
A little more than two minutes into the 3-on-3 overtime period on Friday, Jutting took matters into his own hands. He picked up a loose puck at his own blue line, glided down the right side of the ice and then when he got into the Tommies zone cut into the slot and took a wrist shot that zinged past St. Thomas goaltender Aaron Trotter, bar down and into the net.
“We had to have a short memory,” Jutting said after that game, referring to the team’s mindset going into the overtime period. “We realized that two points are massive at this point of the season. We knew what was at stake, we knew we had a thin lead at the top of the standings, and we know next weekend that that extra point is going to mean a whole lot more.”
Jutting’s assessment was spot-on. The Beavers (15-15-2, 13-7-2 CCHA) went on to beat St. Thomas in regulation 3-1 on Saturday, taking five out of six points from the series and remaining atop the CCHA standings entering the last weekend of play. And because BSU got some help from results elsewhere around the league, their math for clinching the MacNaughton this weekend is pretty simple: A win, either in regulation or overtime, gives the Beavers the title outright.
Their opponents–and standing in their way–are their old nemesis, the Minnesota State Mavericks.
The script writers couldn’t have done any better: The first-place Beavers (with 42 points) host the second-place Mavericks (16-12-4, 12-8-2 CCHA, with 38 points) at the Sanford Center in Bemidji for an instate rivalry series that will be even more intense than normal. The Beavers will be looking for their first MacNaughton Cup since 2016-17, when they won the WCHA title by 10 points. That 2016-17 season also happens to be the last time a team other than Minnesota State took home the MacNaughton — they have won the Cup six seasons in a row, straddling the old WCHA and the CCHA.
“They’ve been the model program in our league,” BSU coach Tom Serratore said in a phone interview earlier this week. “And (MSU head coach Luke Strand) has done a great job this year. It wasn’t easy for them, with them losing so many guys and having the coaching staff go to Wisconsin, but Luke’s done a great job. And right now, they’re still the keepers of the cup. It’s their cup right now, so it’s a testament to their players and that coaching staff that they’re in this position again.”
Strand, the Mavericks’ first-year head coach, said on Tuesday that his players are aware of MSU’s track record and want to keep up their run.
“I think our newer players, they have a ton of pride in what’s happened before they got here,” Strand said. “And I think the guys that have been here, they know they’ve got a lot to uphold as far as what happened prior to this team this year.”
Neither the Beavers nor the Mavericks were considered favorites for the MacNaughton at the start of the year. Michigan Tech was the consensus pick from both the media and the coaches for the league title. Everyone thought the Mavericks would struggle with a new coach in Strand, who took over when Mike Hastings left for Wisconsin and took with him a number of players and most of his coaching staff. The Mavericks fought for respectability all season and took some time to gel under Strand.
But since being swept by Michigan Tech at home back in November, MSU has taken points from every league series, playing consistently hockey and not letting themselves get too far behind the league leaders (MSU, BSU and St. Thomas have been exchanging the lead in the standings since Christmas). Most recently, the Mavs rallied from a 4-3 loss at home to Lake Superior State on Friday to notch a comeback 4-3 win on Saturday to stay alive for a chance at the CCHA title.
“It feels like every game has been so close for us all year,” Strand said. “We’ve had a lot of time playing in close games and now you want to come out on the right side of those kinds of games. To do that, you have to be prepared to go through the whole grind. And the closer we get to playing an entire 60 minutes, we like our chances.”
The Beavers also weren’t picked to finish anywhere near the top, with most thinking they’d finish somewhere in the fourth-and-fifth place range, fighting for home ice. They started the season slowly, too, with a number of key injuries (Jutting missed a good chunk of the season, as did senior captain Kyle Looft and goaltender Mattias Sholl) and absences (star freshman defenseman missed six games in December and January while playing for Team USA in the World Juniors).
However, they, too, have overcome that early-season adversity–since being swept in a home-and-home with rivals St. Cloud State, the Beavers have gotten at least two points from every series since. They’ve taken 15 points of 18 points from their last six league games.
“Everybody goes through tough times during the year, and the season is, what, 20 weeks long. There’s a lot of adversity that goes on during the year, and there’s times that you’re struggling, you’re trying to figure yourself out, and there’s times you know, things are going pretty well for you,” Serratore said. “We’re excited to be playing in a big game at this point in the season, and I think a lot of it’s a testament to the players. Over the course of the last month, we’re playing pretty solid hockey. We’ve got 17 points out of our last possible 21. So, that’s the one thing in a tight league like this, is that if you can go on a little bit of a run in a two- or three-week span, you can put yourself in a pretty good position, and we were fortunate enough to do that.”
The Beavers and the Mavericks met once already this season, with the teams splitting their series in Mankato. But both teams are in much different places now–and most importantly, both teams should be healthy for this regular-season heavyweight finale.
“To their team’s credit, and to Tom’s credit, the adversity they went through, now they’re back on the other side of it,” Strand said of the Beavers. “They’ve won eight out of the last 10 or whatever. They’ve done their part to make sure they didn’t fall out, and at the same time, now they’re playing their best hockey of the season.”
Nicole Haase (@NicoleHaase) and Todd Milewski (@ToddMilewski) recap the first weekend of the postseason in some of the conferences and the final weekend of the regular season in others, including an entertaining split between the nation’s top two teams. Ohio State captain Jenn Gardiner joins to talk about the Buckeyes’ season and her five years in Columbus. And we wrap up with a look ahead at this week’s games.
Women’s Ice Hockey: Gustavus Adolphus College Gusties vs. University of Wisconsin-River Falls Falcons. (Ryan Coleman, d3photography.com)
Conference championship weekend is upon us, we’ll get to see what the west has in store for us, will we see upsets? There’re a few intriguing matchups on deck that could shake up things quite a bit. We’ll look at this past weekend and what we have ahead to watch out for this weekend.
MIAC
The MIAC was a rollercoaster last weekend in the semifinals. #2 Gustavus trailed Bethel 1-0 for most of the game, not tying it up until the 3rd period, the Gusties would win it in overtime 2-1.
Saint Mary’s defeated #15 Augsburg 2-1, ending a season where the Auggies finished strong after a rocky first half of the season. The Cardinals are led by first year head coach, former Adrian Head Coach, Chad Davis. He’s got them back in the mix as they’ve put together a strong record of 19-5-2 (12-4-2 conference).
2024 MIAC Women’s D-III hockey playoff bracket. (Graphic via Scott Huston – Contributor: @DIIIHockeyNews)
Gustavus sits currently with a record of 21-4-0 (17-1-0 conference) and they’re the defending national champs looking for a repeat, led by goaltender Katie McCoy who’s broken numerous records this season, program and nationally.
The Gusties are looking to defeat Saint Mary’s for the third time this season as they swept them in the regular season, their lone loss was in overtime to Augsburg, who was the lone team to defeat them in conference last year as well.
This weekend, we’ll be seeing a battle between the veterans and the new kids on the block who haven’t been in this position in quite some time (SMU).
Pairwise Analysis:
Gustavus is in no matter what, they sit at #4, but should be fine considering Saint Mary’s sits #12 in pairwise, they’ll need a win if they want to make the tournament. We could see two teams in the dance from the MIAC, but the Cardinals need to beat Gustavus if we’re going to see that happen. It will help the west if we see four teams make it vs three, so it wouldn’t be the worst thing bracket-wise.
NCHA
#5 Adrian defeated Lake Forest 6-1, St. Norbert defeated Aurora 3-0 to advance to the Slaats Cup Finals, hosted by Adrian once again. Sixth-year Head Coach Shawn Skelly hasn’t seen a season at Adrian where his team didn’t win the regular season title, he’s won the conference title four times, and made the NCAA’s three times, a frontrunner to make it a fourth this year under the Skelly Tenure. Assistant Coach Trevor Coykendall looks to become the first person at Adrian to win a national championship as a player (Adrian Men’s D-III Hockey 2022) and as a coach.
2024 NCHA Women’s D-III hockey playoff bracket. (Graphic via Scott Huston – Contributor: @DIIIHockeyNews)
St. Norbert, much improved under fourth-year Head Coach A.J. Aitken, improving every season, this year compiling a record of 21-6-1. The Green Knights are looking to beat the Bulldogs for the first time this season, they lost the other two matchups 2-1 and 7-1. Will this be the year Norbert finally gets over the hump and takes down Adrian?
Pairwise Analysis:
NCHA will be interesting if Norbert wins the final. Adrian is ranked 5th in pairwise, criminally low for their stellar 26-2 record, but nevertheless, there’s a chance Adrian misses out if Norbert wins and takes the auto-bid.
If Adrian wins, they’re in and the only team in, but there’s a chance the Bulldogs and Green Knights are both in if Norbert defeats Adrian and Cortland loses to Plattsburgh.
It’ll be an interesting weekend at Arrington!
WIAC
The perfect 27-0-0 #1 Falcons of River Falls host #6 UW-Eau Claire who look to leave the lone blemish on River Falls like they did in 2022 when River Falls fell to Gustavus in the quarterfinals, finishing 27-2-0.
2024 WIAC Women’s D-III hockey playoff bracket. (Graphic via Scott Huston – Contributor: @DIIIHockeyNews)
UWRF swept UW-Stevens Point, funny enough, UWSP led through most of the 2nd period 1-0, but the Falcons took over and won 5-1 in game two after winning game one 7-0.
UWEC swept UW-Superior, winning 6-2 & 4-1. These two meet once again and it’ll be fun as always, a great environment in Hunt Arena along with it being the championship game.
If River Falls pulls this out and finishes the season 28-0-0, they’ll be looking to pull off what Middlebury did two years ago and go undefeated and win the national championship, the Panthers went 27-0-0 that season.
Pairwise Analysis:
River Falls is in no matter what happens, they’re the favorites to host the frozen four assuming they win through the quarterfinals. Eau Claire needs to beat River Falls and have the favorites all win, they cannot have upsets occur or they’ll miss out once again by a small amount in pairwise terms. The WIAC lacking an auto-bid means River Falls will take one of four at-large spots, while Eau Claire even with a win, may be on the outside looking in and once again.
A lot needs to happen if we want two WIAC’s in the tournament, but we’ll see one no matter what, the current best team in the country UW-River Falls.
Curry defeats #13 Endicott 1-0 to advance to the CCC finals vs Western New England. (Photo via Curry College Athletics)
It’s conference championship weekend, we’ve got some new faces in the mix, one conference giving us a first timer in the NCAA tournament since both have not been to the dance and they play for the conference title this weekend, you love to see it. We’ll recap briefly this past week and then look ahead at the games we’ve got this weekend to determine the auto-bids and see how the results affect pairwise.
CCC
It’ll be a new face in the NCAA tournament this season coming from the CCC. We’ve got the Golden Bears of Western New England vs the Colonels of Curry. WNE is a 4th year program (three years of playing due to covid year), while Curry is in their 3rd season. Head Coach Katie Zimmerman of WNE and Kelly Rider of Curry have done amazing jobs with the programs considering where they began and what it takes to build programs from nothing.
This past weekend, the Golden Bears defeated Univ. New England 2-1 and Curry shocked #13 Endicott, shutting them out 1-0.
2024 CCC Women’s D-III hockey playoff bracket. (Graphic via Scott Huston – Contributor: @DIIIHockeyNews)
Curry enters the final with a record of 2-0-3 in their last five games, winning three-consecutive shootouts, then shutting out Salve Regina and Endicott for the two wins. It’ll be quite the story if Curry can pull this off, a team that’s played everyone close, but hasn’t gotten the consistency they’ve wanted on a weekly basis. Still though, the Colonels are currently 11-11-5, their best season to date.
Western New England enters this game at 16-7-1, a stellar season for them, best as a program considering how young they are like Curry. WNE earned the #2 seed in the CCC, while Curry holds the #5. Western New England’s Head Coach Katie Zimmerman has worked wonders with this program, she took on a team, like Coach Rider, that was new and had to be built from the ground up. She’s led the Golden Bears to three seasons with records of: 7-15-4, 15-8-3, & now so far, they’re 16-7-1.
WNE has had Endicott’s number on occasion, that was the expected matchup we thought we’d see, but Curry has arrived and is looking to shock the world just like WNE.
Pairwise Analysis:
One team will come out of the CCC, it’s that simple. Endicott was the highest-rated team in PWR, they lost to Curry, that tanked their rating and the auto-bid will be the lone bid. It’ll be between Curry & Western New England.
NEHC
What a shocking weekend we saw in the NEHC… Norwich, the team who seemed to be the frontrunner for the auto-bid, fell to Cinderella Univ. Southern Maine over the weekend, losing 2-1 in overtime. The Huskies will be facing Elmira, the Soaring Eagles defeated William Smith a handily 4-0, sending them to the finals.
2024 NEHC Women’s D-III hockey playoff bracket. (Graphic via Scott Huston – Contributor: @DIIIHockeyNews)
The Huskies of USM have pulled off a historic season for the program for various reasons, led by three-time NEHC goaltender of the year Haley McKim. USM defeated Elmira for the first time ever as a program earlier this season, winning 1-0, now they recently defeated Norwich as mentioned by the score of 2-1 in OT, the first time the Huskies have ever beaten the Cadets in program history as well.
Head Coach John Lauziere has his team rolling, speaking to him early in the season really showed his confidence and optimism in his group. It seems to be paying off for him and it’s nice to see a new face in the final’s vs the usual teams.
Hall of Fame Broadcaster Jim Ward can still be heard yelling from his home:
“HUSKIES WIN!!!!
HUSKIES WIN!!!!
HUSKIES WIN!!!!
THE HUSKIES WIN!!!!
WE’RE ONTO THE SHIP!!!!!!!” (via @JimWard_USMpxp on X (Twitter)).
Pairwise Analysis:
Like the CCC, we’ll see one bid come from the NEHC, Elmira or Univ. Southern Maine. Elmira’s looking to get back to the dance under first-year Head Coach Greg Haney, the program’s third HC in three years.
Norwich wasn’t high enough for an at-large in the first place, but losing to USM dropped them out of the picture completely.
NESCAC
The matchups have been set for the NESCAC semifinals set to be played at Orr Rink in Amherst, MA as it was last season.
The four matchups in the quarterfinals resulted like this:
#3 Amherst 2-0 Bowdoin
#7 Middlebury 4-1 Williams
#8 Hamilton 2-0 #10 Trinity
#12 Colby 3-2 Wesleyan
2024 NESCAC Women’s D-III hockey playoff bracket. (Graphic via Scott Huston – Contributor: @DIIIHockeyNews)
The matchups we’ll see in the semifinals are this:
#8 Hamilton vs #3 Amherst
#10 Colby vs #7 Middlebury
It’ll be an interesting weekend, seeing four top-ten teams in the NESCAC tournament, great competition within the league as always. Hamilton ended Trinity’s hot streak; the Bantams pulled many upsets this season just like Wesleyan who was also eliminated.
Colby is a team that’s been slightly underrated compared to the other NESCAC competition this season, the Mules sit at 17-7-1 (8-7-1 conference), compared to Hamilton who sits at 14-5-6 (6-5-5 conference).
Amherst has dominated once again, currently 21-2-2 (12-2-2 conference) led by sophomore goaltender Natalie Stott, who’s led the Mammoths once again to a top-seeded season within the conference.
Pairwise Analysis:
It’s another season where all teams will be invited to the NESCAC invitational that might be held in UW-River Falls. We may see four teams in the dance, one via auto and three via at-large. If Cortland loses to Plattsburgh, Colby may sneak into the final spot, which many including myself would argue deserve in over others.
Current teams projected to make the tournament via Pairwise rank (assuming favorites win):
#3 Amherst (21-2-2) – auto
#6 Middlebury (14-6-4) – at-large
#7 Hamilton (14-5-6) – at-large
#9 Colby (17-7-1) at-large
No one is denying these teams aren’t skilled, but if you’re hardly .500 in your own conference and your overall wins are nearly equal to your ties + losses, then I’m sorry, I’ll take the Blugolds of Eau Claire (21-6-0), Saint Mary’s (19-5-2), or Augsburg (19-7-0).
If the NESCAC is this good where these records are frontrunners, Amherst is the best team in the country and UW-River Falls at 27-0-0 is #2. There’s a strong argument to be made based on these statistics. I don’t believe this, but if these records are considered frontrunners, I don’t know why Amherst isn’t the highest-rated team in the country at 21-2-2?
SUNYAC
The SUNYAC has greatly improved over the years and this season was one of the best. Plattsburgh will face Cortland in the finals, the common finals matchup, but Oswego made great sides this season, only falling 2-1 to Cortland in the semifinals.
Plattsburgh will host Cortland who defeated the Cardinals once this season, winning 3-2, but fell to the Cardinals on two other occasions during league play.
2024 SUNYAC Women’s D-III hockey playoff bracket. (Graphic via Scott Huston – Contributor: @DIIIHockeyNews)
Morrisville made strides, but the Mustangs fell short to Plattsburgh 5-1, not much else was expected, but the Mustangs made great strides under a new coaching staff, first year Head Coach John Briggs and first year assistant Monica Cahill. Briggs, coming over from the Red Dragons coaching tree and Cahill coming in as a former player.
Pairwise Analysis:
The SUNYAC is intriguing… Plattsburgh is in with a win or loss, but Cortland is looking to make the dance after narrowly missing it on multiple occasions in the recent years, most famously missing the final at-large spot by 0.001 or so to Colby.
Cortland may still get in with a loss to Plattsburgh due to the Cardinals being so highly ranked. Colby would need to lose, but if Hamilton loses, they may fall a little as well. If River Falls defeats Eau Claire, Cortland remains above them, but Cortland needs a few things to fall into place if they want in with a loss. Highly possible, but they’d need a few dominos to fall their way if they were to lose to Plattsburgh this weekend.
In short, the SUNYAC will have Plattsburgh no matter whether it’s auto or at-large. They will get two teams in if Cortland defeats Plattsburgh or if the correct teams lose for Cortland’s sake who would be trying to get an at-large.
UCHC
The UCHC comes down to the two common teams we’ve seen as of late, Nazareth & Utica will be battling at it once again in Rochester, NY this weekend for a trip to the NCAA tournament. Utica’s never been, this would be their first-ever appearance in the dance. Nazareth has made it numerous times, most recently the past two seasons they’ve made the tournament after defeating Utica both times in the UCHC final.
2024 UCHC Women’s D-III hockey playoff bracket. (Graphic via Scott Huston – Contributor: @DIIIHockeyNews)
Nazareth sits with a record of 21-5-1, Head Coach Chris Baudo has put up an impressive record with a young program, 115-25-7. Utica sits with a record of 22-3-2, Head Coach Dave Clausen with a career record of 348-213-37.
I’ll turn things over to Scott Kinville, owner of the Central New York Hockey Report (CNYHockeyReport.com) to give a brief preview of this game:
“The number one seed Nazareth Golden Flyers (21-5-1 overall, 19-0-1 UCHC, #13 USCHO) and number two seed Utica Pioneers (22-3-2 overall, 16-2-2 UCHC, #11 USCHO) collide in Rochester this Saturday for the UCHC Championship for the second season in a row. It is a rematch of last season’s thrilling 3-2 double overtime victory by the Golden Flyers, sending them to the NCAA Tournament and ending the Pioneers season. Like last season, the winner of this game will go on to the NCAA Tournament via the UCHC automatic bid, while the loser will most likely have their season ended. Nazareth won both regular season matchups between the teams this season.
The Pioneers are a veteran heavy team, while the Golden Flyers are one of the youngest teams in Division III. Otherwise, the similarities between the squads are striking. They are top two in the conference in goals per game and goals against per game, and top three in the UCHC on the power play and penalty kill. On the other end of the ice, both teams have outstanding goaltending. Utica’s Angela Hawthorne did not play in the regular season games against Nazareth, will be in net on Saturday with her 0.94 GAA. Her counterpart, McKinley Hoff, is second in the UCHC in GAA at 0.96.
Utica Women’s Hockey vs Nazareth. (Photo by Scott Kinville, Owner, CNYHockeyReport.com)
It’s been 11 games since Utica has beaten Nazareth. To advance to the NCAA Tournament, they will have to overcome the Golden Flyers on the ice and the mental obstacle that comes with going that long without a win over that opponent.”
I spoke with Head Coach Dave Clausen of Utica and asked him some questions. His initial thoughts were: “Looking forward to what should be a fantastic hockey game. We have played them five times in the last two years and they’ve all been one goal games.”
I asked Coach Clausen if the mental aspect of this game plays a bigger role than most would think, seeing he has one of the oldest teams in women’s D3 hockey versus one of the youngest in Nazareth. Coach Clausen said:
“The mental part of the game is always important. While the games haven’t gone our way, they’ve all been competitive. We expect it to be tough, but I think we know we can compete.”
Look for another amazing game between these two this weekend.
Pairwise Analysis:
One team will receive a bid, If Utica wins, Nazareth’s PWR will be tanked, if Nazareth wins, Utica isn’t high enough to receive a bid in the first place via at-large. This game determines it all.
Harvard players celebrate a recent victory (photo: Harvard Athletics).
The run-up to ECAC Hockey’s final weekend largely felt formulaic compared to the parity of other leagues.
The thrilling drama associated with an unsure championship hunt didn’t exist, and the top tier of teams seeking byes long differentiated itself before the final points decided which players received a weekend away from competitive hockey. A race for home ice existed in the lower tier of the conference, but the bulk of teams spent weeks understanding they’d either have to survive the first round at home or upend someone with a road trip.
Last year threw most of that on its head. Quinnipiac still ran away with the Cleary Cup as the league’s regular season champion, but the swing spots associated with home ice and first round byes found themselves cluttered with races undecided into the season’s final week. After the league decided to shrink its first round to a single game, the North Country teams at St. Lawrence and Clarkson found themselves battling Colgate for a shot at a first-round bye while Union, Princeton and RPI competed for two home slots.
This year carried similar storylines, but an unprecedented chaos established by a season-long parity has ECAC primed for a final weekend for the ages. Nearly every spot aside from Quinnipiac’s top seed is still up for grabs, and while the Bobcats are being joined by Cornell and Colgate in the second weekend’s best-of-three series, the rest of the spots, including every single home seed, remains undecided.
It’s a precarious slope, but it’s one that will make this weekend one of the most exciting weekends in league history.
“It’s a big opportunity for us,” said Harvard coach Ted Donato. “Playing at home carries a distinct advantage, and in a one-game playoff, where it’s win-or-go-home, it’s a real important ingredient to success. We’ve probably had more ups and downs throughout the season, and we’ve battled through a number of challenges with our health, but we’re really looking forward to having a chance to find our game and hit the playoffs running.”
Playing from a position of power was something that propelled the Crimson to two straight second place finishes and a Whitelaw Cup in 2022 as the league’s postseason champions, but the team that qualified for six NCAA tournaments in the last seven possible years (which excludes the 2020 canceled national tournament and the 2020-2021 season that the Ivy League schools didn’t play) struggled out of the gates with one win in the entire first half of this season.
That lone win was over a top-ranked Cornell team during a weekend that included a come-from-behind tie against Colgate, but the losses piled up after that 1-1-3 start. The trip to the North Country was a complete shutout in a pair of defeats to Clarkson and St. Lawrence, and a return from semester break began with a 5-2 loss to Princeton and a 4-2 non-conference loss to Connecticut.
The season felt like everything was on the verge of derailing, but a 1-0 win at Yale helped Harvard find some stroke before a four-point weekend against RPI and Union. A 6-3 win over Colgate one week later helped generate even more momentum when the Crimson rallied from a two-goal deficit, and after pushing Northeastern to overtime in the Beanpot semifinal, it’s been impossible to find a weekend where the team’s been outright swept.
“It’s felt like all year, we’ve had one player come back into the lineup when one player went back out [with an injury],” Donato admitted, “so it’s been a challenge. I think any coach will tell you that having the full lineup and having pieces into it gives them the best chance of having success, so it’s been a challenge for us. Over the last little while, we’ve really focused on trying to find a team game that gives us the best chance at success, and I think this final weekend is an opportunity to work on that as well because we’ve gotten to a position where we can control our own destiny.”
Ah, yes. The destiny portion. Harvard’s ability to elevate its game and avoid losses is a big reason why a five-win team was able to push its way into eighth place as the final weekend dawns. Even last week, the shootout win over RPI gave the Crimson a second point on a weekend where they lost to Union, and in a world where a two-point swing would’ve created a three-way tie for the final home spot, it instead gave Harvard a one-point advantage while pushing the Engineers into an uphill battle for the No. 10 seed.
That miniscule difference doesn’t seem like much in the grand scheme of the whole season, but the Crimson can clinch home ice and the No. 8 seed as soon as Friday night if they pair a regulation win over Yale with a St. Lawrence regulation win over Princeton. They can also move, with the right results, to within shouting distance of the Saints for seventh place while attempting to chase down Union for sixth because SLU finishes the season against Quinnipiac while the Garnet Chargers have to deal with the Cornell-Colgate road trip.
And while Cornell clinched the Ivy League’s unofficial hockey championship by earning 21 points against Ancient Eight teams heading into this weekend, a sweep and six points would give the Crimson a chance to finish second behind the Big Red while vaulting over both Dartmouth and Princeton.
That’s not a bad deal at all for a team that’s played significantly better as it gelled in the second half of the season, and the system or style of play is starting to develop into something that’s capable of a late-season or postseason run. Sophomore netminder Aku Koskenvuo stopped 35 shots in that official tie against RPI, and when facing Quinnipiac earlier this year, he made 37 saves while only surrendering two goals, a number that’s been replicated in each of his last three outings.
Senior Derek Mullahy, meanwhile, allowed one goal against St. Lawrence before goal numbers jumped a bit against Clarkson and Union.
The skaters, in turn, have improved despite only having 10 players with a full 27 games to their name. Joe Miller’s 22 points lead the team atop the chart as the only 10-goal scorer, but sophomore defenseman Ryan Healey emerged through a six-goal stretch in January to jump to the top of the team sheet. Sophomore forward Casey Severo and junior Alex Gaffney likewise sprinkled seven goals apiece, and 10 different players have more than one goal this year on an offense that averaged close to 2.5 goals per game since that Colgate game in January – a number that jumps a full quarter-goal by excluding the Beanpot consolation game against Boston College.
“We were never negative when the results weren’t there,” Donato said. “The [team] has continued to battle for each other and tried to continually develop. We have a lot of young guys that are in situations and are playing in scenarios that are new to them. They all haven’t ended the way we wanted them to, but [the players] remained resilient. That’s been a key. We’ve gotten solid goaltending, which I think is the bedrock of trying to have success at the end of the season and the playoffs.
“There’s a lot of excitement from our guys that we can elevate our game and try to have some success here at the end.”
Michigan State’s Daniel Russell scores on Ohio State goalie Kristoffer Eberly last Saturday night (photo: Michigan State Athletics).
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.
Dan: Good morning and happy Tuesday, where temperatures are looking a lot like springtime in the great Commonwealth of Massachusetts. I had sunny skies and a 50-degree day on Monday, and it looks like more of the same for Tuesday and Wednesday this week. Not sure if that means I’ll need to dig up the golf clubs, but it does tell me that I at least need to locate their whereabouts…
Speaking of golf clubs, we’re getting near the end of the season, which means teams and players are going to start summer vacations as early as this upcoming weekend. We’ll get to what that means in a little bit, but I want to start with you, Paula, about what happened this past weekend in Fairbanks.
I don’t think it needs much introduction, but for those who didn’t watch the viral highlight, Alaska and Arizona State’s first game ended with under 12 seconds remaining in the third period because of a line brawl that produced 200-something penalty minutes. Two players left their respective penalty boxes to throw hands, and the highlight reel made the rounds on Saturday, Sunday, and Monday as we await further word of what’s going to happen…though I’m guessing both players involved won’t be playing much hockey before their respective seasons end.
Fighting is always a hot button topic in hockey, so I guess we can start with your overall impression of what happened. From there, I do want to dive into the topic a bit and see how our opinions compare.
Paula: All I have to go on is the box score and the viral video, and I am absolutely flabbergasted by that evidence alone, Dan.
The video circulating shows Arizona State’s Tucker Ness and Alaska’s Dawson Bruneski each leaving their respective penalty boxes to brawl at center ice while officials are trying to sort out general chaos of the big fight along the boards that broke out 11 seconds before the end of the third period.
I know people are laughing at this, but I gasped the first time I saw these two helmetless players engage in seriously reckless behavior. I was covering the WCHA Final Five in 2016 when referee Butch Mousseaux lost his footing pre-game and fell, hitting his unprotected head on the ice, an injury that led to his death the following week.
Mousseaux’s fall was a simple slip. I watched it in real time. His feet came out from beneath him and the fall alone was enough to end his life. Ness and Bruneski added force to contact with the ice. They’re both very, very lucky. I can say without hyperbole that Ness and Bruneski endangered their lives.
I know that young folks think they’re immortal, but what an irresponsible thing to do.
That Ness and Bruneski left penalty boxes knowing full well that officials were engaged elsewhere should merit enormous suspensions. I can’t recall having seen that in nearly 30 years of covering college hockey.
And that box score? I don’t recall ever having seen one “persisting in misconduct” call let alone seven. There are 247 minutes of penalties, with players leaving the bench to participate. It’s crazy.
None of that would have happened if either of those teams had a conference home. At this point in the season, if either team were looking forward to playoff hockey and a shot at the NCAA tournament, there would have been many second thoughts about engaging in behavior that would prevent participation in postseason play.
What a mess.
And there’s no place in hockey for this nonsense. I’m not saying that as any kind of scold or hockey purist. I know the fans loved it. Such fighting – on that scale and in that manner – endangers players and officials.
Going into the weekend, I thought the most newsworthy thing that might happen would be an upset or two in the Big Ten, Hockey East and the NCHC.
Dan: I’m not going to lie, I’ve flipped so many times on fighting in hockey that I’d probably make a great politician for either political party, and even after watching the highlight a billion times, I’m still not really sure where I stand. That said, I want to outline the positives and negatives in a way that hopefully shows the struggle within my brain.
First, the negatives, which were pretty easy to determine. Hockey as a sport has been legislating against fighting to the degree that we wonder aloud if the NHL is going to outlaw it in the near future. Pugilists are a thing of the past, and the roughest players from the hardest era dealt with brain trauma that eventually caused severe health issues. Wayne Gretzky has spoken out against fighting, and he often played with a bodyguard in Marty McSorley, a player who nearly recorded 400 PIMs during the Los Angeles Kings’ run to the 1993 Stanley Cup Final.
It’s never had a place in college hockey, and I’m particularly sensitive to watching players roll around and fall on the ice without helmets since I grew up watching Marc Savard’s career end due to concussions and head hits. That it happened in that forum was particularly outlandish, but it emphasized the insanity, stupidity, and nonsensical nature of the play. I don’t think I’ll ever understand why players would ever leave a penalty box to fight each other at center ice when everyone knows that you just don’t do that. I don’t know who shoulders more blame there, and when the fracas unraveled, I can’t even blame the officials for failing to keep order when the players decided to go all Lord of the Flies.
But here’s the thing about fighting. It’s so difficult for me to legislate fighting out of the game entirely because fighting has been in hockey forever. It’s an acknowledged tradition, and dropping the gloves seems like a way for players to settle differences in a game that’s honored the ability to do just that. Plenty of college hockey players made careers in the NHL by becoming enforcers or fighters, and there’s always been an etiquette to how players drop the gloves.
The unwritten code that exists in hockey is old and outdated at times, but it keeps fighters in a class by themselves to the degree that they tangle with one another because they respect each other and won’t – or at least try not to – fight guys that aren’t known as fighters. It’s almost like it’s a piece of sportsmanship in hockey, and Rule 615 of USA Hockey’s rule book specifically assesses a game misconduct for a player that doesn’t wear a helmet or facemask “as designed and the helmet/facemask is removed during an altercation.”
None of this – and I mean NONE of this – was illustrated by any of the parties involved in Alaska. The code, the NHL, the deep-rooted nature of the fight game – none of it existed. Those guys did something reckless and are going to be summarily punished for it. It’s not a debate. It shouldn’t have happened, and even though it went viral, I’d rather someone go viral for a goal celebration or a stick flip or something that makes a fundamental play look like it came straight out of a video game. And yes, I did have a good laugh and smile at the video, but that was largely because it was so over the top. I doubt we’ll see something like that again.
Also, there’s no debate here. Fighting isn’t going to be magically added to college hockey when hockey is trying to legislate it out of the game as frequently as possible.
Moving on, the viral nature of the play did make me wonder out loud about how we’ve seen some magnificent individual efforts over this season. We’re seeing The Michigan, sure, but we’re also seeing breakaway dekes and dangles between the legs. Puck movement, saucer passes, one-touch one-timers – we’re seeing them all, and they’re all going viral on the Internet.
Moving away from the fighting aspect, I’d like to kind of think about the fundamentals of what we’re seeing because Twitter/X/Instagram/TikTok exists. I’ve been lucky enough to have a couple of broadcast calls make it to those accounts. How much, from that end, do you enjoy seeing what these players – both men and women! – are doing?
Paula: You know what else has been in hockey forever? Racism, misogyny and homophobia. I’ve never found any arguments around tradition to be particularly compelling, so you and I, my friend, will agree to disagree about the weight of that element in determining the worth of anything.
As for social media, it’s been a boon for entertainment in general and sports specifically, and it’s been especially great for hockey. The speed of hockey makes it the perfect product for nearly every social medium, the motion of the game is visually appealing, and the collegiate players themselves – as well as younger pros – have pretty much always known it.
The immediacy with which in-game highlights are delivered is kind of crazy to an old like me – and most welcome. The availability of in-game hockey content can only heighten the sport.
Also, there’s a whole generation driving non-game content that we’re seeing online. Players answer quick questions about something insubstantial but amusing – potential Halloween costumes, who would play them in a movie – as well as sit for slicker, more produced off-ice content.
Then there’s the slow walk into the arena or still photos of players in suits. That’s become common. I detest that kind of objectification and with college students, it feels exploitive to me.
That’s one downside of social media: players become commodities. Yes, I know that’s an objectively true thing in professional sports, but even if the players themselves don’t mind, I see it as further exploitation of student-athletes.
Also, the workload of sports information directors for teams that use social media well has at least doubled in the past few years. I also dislike that kind of job creep exploitation of workers.
Good for the game? Yes. Good for the bottom line? Yes. Bad for actual humans? I can’t say for sure.
But you know what I do know, Dan? I know that Ohio State split a weekend with Michigan State after sweep Wisconsin one week prior, and that makes the impending final regular-season weekend of B1G hockey far more interesting than it was even a week ago, with the first-place Spartans traveling to play the second-place Badgers and just two points now between them.
As we stare down the end of the regular season, Dan, what do you know?
Dan: I know that Boston College is probably going to be our No. 1 overall seed in the national tournament, and unless something strange happens to UMass in the next couple of weeks, Boston University probably has to book plane tickets for a flight to either St. Louis or Sioux Falls while a team from the west – Michigan State or Wisconsin, most likely – is going to be playing its regional as the No. 1 seed in a Massachusetts-based bracket.
Outside of that, I’m very excited for the prospect of a wild postseason. I can’t remember a time when some of these leagues were packed, and I’m especially excited to see how teams respond to the challenge of playing with their seasons and hockey-playing lives on the line. We got a taste of it a bit this past week in Atlantic Hockey when things got excitingly weird during the third period of games that decided seeding and first round byes, and I’m especially excited for the chance to see a home playoff game at Bentley for the first time since the pre-COVID year.
It’s hard to believe that I haven’t been in a building to broadcast a postseason game since my Falcons knocked off Canisius before the world went to hell, but missing the postseason game against Air Force during the 2021 postseason only fed a hunger that intensified when the team missed the postseason last season.
Atlantic Hockey’s four-weekend format is one of the more intriguing lines for me, but I suppose I’m just ready for overtime to settle a game the old-fashioned way. I have one major gripe about the regular season, and it’s that a shootout did, in Bentley’s case, determine the final seed. I understand there’s an argument about “well if you won a game in October, you wouldn’t be in this situation” and “all games play a vital role,” and I totally agree.
Dialectically, I also agree that a season-long quest to determine a bye or a playoff seed shouldn’t ever come down to a skills competition. I know the shootout is part of the game now, and it’s not going anywhere. It’s not. I have to live with that. It’s also hard to deny the atmosphere of watching the shootout drama explode a building in the playoff-based delirium that I witnessed, and it’s not just goofs and fun to the players. It’s part of the game, and my goodness, it was awesome to watch that last goal go through the net to see a home crowd go nuts.
I’m just glad that we’re heading into a situation where elimination hockey can go deep into the night. I love it. It’s what we wait for all year.
Back to you here to wrap it up. With the last week of the season, there are still races to determine champions. Most conferences are still wide open, but for me, the big money is in the Big Ten after Ohio State beat Michigan State this past weekend and opened a door for Wisconsin to win the regular season championship. Let’s talk that league and the fact that I think, pound for pound, it probably has the most exciting and competitive race this weekend. Seven very good hockey teams are going to battle for all seven spots. At the risk of ignoring some other conferences, let’s hone there for a second. Who takes it home: Sparty or Bucky? Also apologies to Ohio State fans…pretty sure I called Brutus “Bucky” this past week at some point.
Paula: While I don’t think that the race for the regular-season title in the Big Ten is any more exciting than it’s been in Hockey East or the NCHC, I will admit to thinking that the Big Ten is pretty amazing this year in terms of depth and talent.
The door has been open for Wisconsin to capture the regular-season B1G title nearly all season long – but never was it more open than two weekends ago, when the Spartans had a bye week and the Badgers travelled to last-place Ohio State with two games in hand and got swept. First place was within reach for Wisconsin, and Wisconsin didn’t take care of business.
That’s what I find most interesting heading into the final weekend of B1G play. Notre Dame has a last-weekend bye and will finish in fifth place. They’re waiting to see if they travel to Michigan or Minnesota, as the Wolverines and Golden Gophers square off this weekend and are separated by just three points. Fourth place hosts fifth place.
Ohio State and Penn State are separated by six points at the bottom of the standings, and the Buckeyes host the Nittany Lions. OSU needs to sweep outright to finish in sixth – and not last – place.
At the top, Michigan State needs one win in Wisconsin this weekend to capture the regular-season title, and I think the Spartans will do it. I mean no disrespect to the Badgers, and I can certainly see Wisconsin sweeping. The Spartans haven’t been swept in conference play this season, and I just don’t think it’ll happen now.
Robert Morris is looking to build a new $28 million on-campus arena and is seeking $10 million from the state to help fund the project, according to TribLive.com.
The new rink, which would boast seating for 2,500 spectators, would house both the Colonials’ men’s and women’s hockey programs. According to a grant application submitted by RMU to the state Department of Community and Economic Development, the new building would hold twice as many spectators as the current RMU Island Sports Center in nearby Neville Island.
In response to an inquiry about the application from TribLive.com, the university released a statement from RMU VP and Director of Athletics Chris King, confirming that the school is “actively exploring” the arena project.
“This strategic initiative represents a blending of our pursuit of competitive excellence with our ongoing commitment to serving the needs of the greater community,” the statement reads. “The new arena would serve as a vital source of revenue, crucial for the long-term sustainability of our Division I ice hockey programs, whose resurgence has been fueled by fundraising support. “
Another segment reads that “it would significantly expand local access to top-tier ice facilities for youth and women’s hockey programs in our region in combination with our existing facilities at the RMU Island Sports Center.”
If approved, the new arena would be ready for the start of the 2027-28 season.
Boston College has won 10 straight Hockey East games (photo: Meg Kelly).
For the second straight week, Boston College has collected all 50 first-place votes to sit as the top-ranked team in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Hockey Poll.
Boston University is again No. 2, North Dakota is up one to No. 3, Wisconsin is up two to No. 4, and Denver slides down two spots to No. 5 this week.
Michigan State is down two to No. 6, Quinnipiac remains seventh, as does Minnesota at No. 7 and Maine at No. 9, while Providence is back in the top 10, up two spots from No. 12 in last week’s rankings.
Colorado College falls out of the top 10, going from No. 10 to No. 11 this week.
No new teams enter this week’s rankings.
In addition to the top 20 teams, six other teams received votes in this week’s poll.
The USCHO.com Division I Men’s Hockey Poll is compiled weekly and consists of 50 voters, including coaches and media professionals from across the country. Media outlets may republish this poll as long as USCHO.com is credited.
The two teams showed they could not be more even on Friday night as they each put 27 shots on goal and could not find a winner after 65 minutes of play. Minnesota had more shots on goal to start the game, but UMD took a 1-0 lead into the first intermission thanks to a snipe from Clara Van Wieren. The Gophers equalized near the midpoint of the game when Abbey Murphy snapped the UMD penalty kill streak at 19 straight with an extra-attacker goal. It was her nation-leading 30th goal of the season and 50th point. Minnesota also took the additional conference point by winning the shootout as Ella Huber was the only player to score in the six tries. On Saturday, the Gophers took a 2-0 lead into the final frame thanks to a power play goal from Madison Kaiser and a quick shot from Payton Hemp. Manon McMahon cut the lead in half just more than a minute into the third and UMD ramped up the pressure as the period progressed, but Emma Kreisz scored the Gophers’ third power play goal of the weekend to extend the lead to 3-1. The Bulldogs closed the gap one more time with 1:15 to go thanks to a goal from Mary Kate O’Brien, but Murphy’s empty-netter secured the 4-2 win for Minnesota.
(10) St. Cloud State at Bemidji State
Freshman Greta Henderson tallied a hat trick while Katie Kaufman and Emma Gentry each added a goal and an assist to lead the Huskies to a 5-1 win on Friday. Shelby Breiland was the goal-scorer for the Beavers. On Saturday, Sofianna Sundelin scored late in the first first, but Bemidji State opened the second with goals from Talya Hendrickson and Olivia Dronen to take a 2-1 lead. SCSU regained the lead with two goals in the waning minutes of the second from Taylor Larson and Gentry. In the third, Annick, Gentry and Kaufman each scored as St. Cloud State took a 6-2 win and the weekend sweep. Grace Bowlby also had three assists in the win.
(11) Connecticut vs. Boston University
Connecticut earned their first-ever Hockey East regular season title with a 4-0 win on Friday. Kyla Josifovic, Brianna Ware, Jada Habisch and Megan Woodworth each scored in the win. On Saturday, Camryn Wong’s power play goal was the only tally as the Huskies took a 1-0 win and weekend sweep.
Vermont vs. (12) Northeastern
Jessie McPherson made 29 saves while Lily Humphrey scored on the power play and Kaylee Lewis added an empty-netter to give Vermont a 2-0 victory on Friday. On Saturday, the teams were scoreless until midway through the third when Megan Carter scored on the power play to put Northeastern up 1-0. But Humphrey scored her second of the weekend, also on the player advantage, to tie the game and force overtime. The extra frame wasn’t enough to find a winner. In the shootout, Krista Parkkonen scored the only goal to give Vermont the win and extra point.
CHA Tournament
RIT vs. (15) Penn State
Mya Vaslet and Maggie MacEachern each scored in the second for Penn State to give them a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. Lindsay Maloney scored in the final minute of regulation, but RIT ran out of time and the Nittany Lions took a 2-1 win. On Saturday, Tessa Janecke became the fastest skater in program history to 100 career points when she scored what would serve as the game winner to open the game. Julie Gough, Lyndie Lobdell and Maddie Christian also added goals to lead Penn State to the 4-0 win and sweep, which sends them to the CHA title game.
Robert Morris vs. Mercyhurst
The Colonials came out firing on Friday, rocketing past Mercyhurst with a 5-0 win. Shailynn Snow, Jersey Phillips, Courtney Hall, Alaina Giampietro and Laura Eustace each scored for Robert Morris in the win. In the second game, Mercyhurst took a 2-0 lead in the first with goals from Thea Johansson and Sara Boucher, but RMU pushed back in the second, tying it on goals from Giampietro and Lindsey Smolen. Vanessa Upson put her team ahead for good midway through the third and she and Johansson each added empty netters to give their team a 5-2 win. The Lakers did not leave anything up for discussion in the deciding game, earning a 6-1 win thanks to two goals from Chantal Ste-Croix. Kylee Mahoney, Sofia Nuutinen, Johansson, Snow and Upson all scored in the victory. Mercyhurst will face Penn State for the CHA Championship.
NEWHA Tournament
Franklin Pierce vs. Sacred Heart
In game one, Sacred Heart outshot the Ravens 39-25, but Jill Hertl made 38 saves while Anna Caumo, Claire Casey and Emilie Prive each scored to lift Franklin Pierce over the home team. Paige McNeil scored for Sacred Heart in the 3-1 loss. The Ravens won the series on Saturday thanks to Grace Schuck’s goal in the final minute of the first. Caumo added an insurance goal late to give Franklin Pierce the 2-0 win.
Assumption vs. Stonehill
Bailey Feeney’s goal midway through the game on Friday had Stonehill up 1-0, but an active third period tested the Skyhawks. Lily Geist extended the lead to 2-0 42 seconds into the frame, but Assumption immediately pushed back. Sheridan Terrazzano scored 36 seconds later to cut the lead in half and then Teagan Vaughan added a power play tally three minutes later to tie the game 2-2. Alexis Petford won the game for Stonehill with a power play tally of her own to give her team the 3-2 victory. Maddison Achtyl and Petford scored in the first and that was enough to power Stonehill to the win and weekend sweep. Ava McGaffigan got a power play goal for Assumption in the second, but Feeney’s empty-netter ensured the 3-1 win.
Post vs. Saint Anselm
The Hawks eked out a 2-1 win in the first game thanks to a goal in the final minute by Abigail Blair. Brooklyn Schneiderhan had Saint Anselm up 1-0, but Post responded with a power play goal by Macy Peterson in the second to tie it 1-1. In the second game, Tristan Currie and Tymmarie Grom scored for Post and Hannah Saunders made a staggering 62 saves to power Post to the 2-1 win. The Hawks found their scoring in the final game with a 6-1 win that sent them to the NEWHA semifinals where they’ll face Stonehill. Saint Anselm put 163 shots on net in the three game series.
St. Michael’s vs LIU
Ryane Kearns had LIU up 1-0 early, but Mikaela Langbacka responded quickly for St. Michael’s to tie the game 1-1. Late in the second, Ashley Morrow and Jeannie Wallner scored 2 minutes, 23 seconds apart to push LIU ahead 3-2. Alizée LeBlanc cut the lead to 3-2 midway through the third, but St. Michael’s couldn’t find the equalizer and LIU took the win. On Saturday, Jeannie Wallner scored twice and Mary Rachel Lenaeus also lit the lamp to carry LIU to a 3-0 win that sent them to the NEWHA semifinals, where they’ll face Franklin Pierce.
ECAC Tournament
Union at (14) Yale
Anna Bargman and Naomi Boucher each scored twice and Elle Hartje broke the Yale record for career points with an assist on the first goal while also scoring herself later in the game as the Bulldogs took a 5-2 win to advance to the quarterfinals. Meredith Killian and Maddie Keaney scored for Union in the loss. Yale will travel to St. Lawrence to face the Saints in the conference quarterfinals.
Dartmouth at (13) Princeton
Sarah Fillier netted her third hat trick of the season to power Princeton past Dartmouth in a 5-1 win. Sarah Paul and Emma Kee each scored for the Tigers in the win, as well. Hamilton Doster scored for the Big Green. Princeton will face Clarkson in a best of three series next weekend.
Harvard at (9) Quinnipiac
Alexa Hoskin had two goals and an assist, Kahlen Lamarche had a goal and two assists, Zoe Uens had three assists and Madison Chantler had two goals to lead the Bobcats to a decisive 9-0 win over Harvard. They will face Cornell in the ECAC quarterfinals.
RPI at Brown
A hard-fought and close game was decided nearly ten minutes into overtime when Jess Ciarrocchi’s goal gave Brown the 1-0 win. The goal was reviewed and eventually called good, sending the Bears to the tournament quarterfinals where they’ll face Colgate.
Quinnipiac celebrates its fourth straight Cleary Cup over the weekend (photo: Quinnipiac Athletics).
Each week, USCHO.com will pick the top 10 moments from the past weekend in our Monday 10 feature.
1) I’m gonna fight ‘em off. A seven nation army couldn’t hold me back. – The White Stripes
It’s rare to make the biggest story of the college hockey weekend about a game that didn’t include teams fighting for postseason content on either a national or conference level. It’s even rarer to look at teams playing well after the majority of college hockey fans were fast asleep, and it’s rarer still that the programs from Arizona State and Alaska would produce the story as the result of an intense rivalry forged by frequently playing one another as Division I independents. Yet here we are, looking at the biggest stories of the week, and starting things off with the last 16 seconds of Friday night’s game between the Nanooks and Sun Devils.
What had been a scoreless game through two periods erupted for four goals in the third, but after Chase Dafoe and Anton Rubtsov twice gave Fairbanks a one-goal lead by sandwiching goals around Brandon Tabakin. Tabakin later took a two-minute cross-checking penalty with about two minutes remaining that was upgraded to a five-minute major five-minute major, and after Dafoe scored to give the Nanooks a two-goal lead, tensions that had been building over the course of the night exploded into full-on line brawls, the largest of which occurred after a face-off sent a puck into the corner to the right of Arizona State’s net.
The players themselves skirmished and broke into customary scrums that involved further facemasking before Arizona State’s Tucker Ness and Alaska’s Dawson Bruneski, who had previously been assessed penalties for roughing, left their respective penalty boxes to trade fists at center ice. Over two dozen additional calls were assessed, after which officials determined to end the game with 11.1 seconds remaining on the clock.
The final number resulted in 131 penalty minutes for the Nanooks with 116 minutes assessed to the Sun Devils, but while the 247 minutes were the most in a game in almost 20 years, the teams skated to an entertaining and intense overtime game on Saturday with Arizona State gaining a 4-3 win after eradicating a two-goal deficit. The lingering conversation, though, remained on the result of the disqualifications and misconducts from Friday night – and about any and all fallout expected to remain in place through the week.
2) I love that dirty water. Boston, you’re my home.
Boston College is, at this point, the team to beat in college hockey. The undisputed No. 1 team in the nation shouldn’t lose any first place-votes when the weekly top-20 poll is released later today, and the 22-5-1 record that’s approximately three games clear of Boston University and North Dakota adds space for the Eagles to even slip over the next couple of weeks before heading into the Hockey East postseason with an assumed No. 1 seed in the national tournament.
This past weekend did nothing to dispel any opinions of the Eagles, who swept Vermont with a blowout win on Friday and a harder-fought, 4-2 victory on Saturday that marked the team’s 10th straight victory. That last loss was against BU in the Beanpot semifinals but fell after two straight wins over the Terriers, and BC hasn’t lost a Hockey East game since dropping a 4-3 decision at Providence in mid-January. Moving even further back, the Eagles haven’t lost at home since a 5-3 loss to Northeastern on Dec. 1. Three games remain, two of which are on the road with a home-and-home against New Hampshire preceding a single-game season finale at Merrimack, making it all the more likely that BC will enter the playoffs with a chance to assure itself of the No. 1 overall seed.
3) I can see Cleary now, the rain has gone
College hockey handed out its first two sets of regular season hardware this weekend with the first coming during Quinnipiac’s lone weekend game against Brown. Having played Yale in a conference game during the CT Ice Tournament, the Bobcats traveled to Providence before scoring four first period goals against the Bears in a game that clinched the team’s No. 1 seed in the ECAC postseason after Cornell lost to Clarkson in overtime.
Riding home with the Cleary Cup is nothing new to Quinnipiac, which became the first team in ECAC history to win four straight outright regular-season championships with its eighth overall title in the last 12 seasons, but beating Brown built some space for the Bobcats’ hunt to a No. 2 seed in the national tournament. Minnesota – the No. 8 team in the tournament – stood idle while the seventh-seeded Bobcats avoided a loss to a team situated in the bottom 10 of the Pairwise, and losses by Maine, Colorado College, Western Michigan and others avoided pressure building from teams other than Providence.
4) Bob-ba oo-mau-mau
Quinnipiac was technically the second team to clinch a regular-season championship after RIT, the leading Atlantic Hockey team, earned its sixth conference championship and second consecutive crown when Bentley defeated Holy Cross on Thursday. The Tigers moved through their weekend by sweeping Canisius with a 9-2 win on Friday and a 3-2 win on Saturday, but the Falcons’ win allowed the team to hoist the Bobby Degregorio Trophy in front of its home crowd at the Gene Polisseni Center.
Clinching the No. 1 seed in the Atlantic Hockey postseason additionally means the Tigers won’t ever have to leave their home ice, and though last year ended with a three-game loss to Holy Cross during the semifinal round, RIT enters this season needing to win five games at home to clinch a championship against an expanded postseason format that includes all 11 teams.
5) Fly, Falcon, fly. Up up to the sky!
Expanding the postseason to an 11-team format means Atlantic Hockey wrapped up its regular season this week to move into a four-weekend postseason across the entire month of March. Almost every spot remained up for grabs through at least Friday, and even Saturday began with eight of the 11 seeds undecided when nearly everyone stepped on the ice.
Some of the drama was vacuumed out of the day when AIC dispatched Army to clinch a first-round bye, but the logjam involving Bentley, Niagara and Air Force failed to produce which teams were going to which location until the night ended with the Massachusetts-based Falcons clinching a come-from-behind shootout win over Sacred Heart. Having earlier trailed by two after the Pioneers scored two goals, a Robert Morris goal in Colorado kept the western Falcons in flux while the Purple Eagles scrounged for a shot at fifth place.
The end result sent AIC to Air Force after the Falcons rallied past the Colonials, and Bentley’s shootout win sent Robert Morris to the Boston area next week for the single-elimination game while Army, which placed 10th, heads to Niagara Falls. By also coming back, Sacred Heart was denied a shot at second place, which in the on-campus format means that Holy Cross is the next-highest team if RIT falls in the quarterfinals.
6) They DO play hockey out west, ya know
And they’re pretty good at it.
The Pairwise Rankings will show that Colorado College is on the verge of missing the national tournament after gaining a single tie from its two-game series at Omaha, but it’s hard to avoid the conversation about the Tigers’ chances when St. Cloud, a team arguably behind them in the national poll, remains ahead in the Pairwise. Sandwiched between the two is Western Michigan, which split with the Huskies and established a logjam around the drop from a No. 3 seed to the Broncos’ current holding in the No. 4 spot.
All conversation surrounding the No. 4 seeds will inevitably involve UMass because of the Minutemen’s host site status, but seeing two NCHC teams and an elevated performance out of Michigan, the No. 14 team in the Pairwise, means there’s plenty of stiff competition for spots in both Sioux Falls and St. Louis. The games between St. Cloud and Western, in particular, showcased some of the best in the West after the Broncos rallied from two separate two-goal deficits to tie the game in the third period before winning in overtime on Friday, to which the Huskies responded on Saturday with a 3-0 shutout.
7) The cream of the crop
The pressure of watching those teams battle for seeding isn’t lost on anyone with a pulse on college hockey because, frankly, there are some really good hockey teams scrapping for even a slot in the national tournament. North Dakota was No. 4 in last week’s voted-on poll, but the Fighting Hawks overcame Minnesota Duluth for two wins at home to remain third in the Pairwise Rankings.
Denver, meanwhile, blew past Miami on Saturday after misfiring a 3-3 tie on Friday. The Pioneers still gained five-of-six points by winning the shootout, but the two-goal rally by the Redhawks left the 2022 national champions in sixth place after Michigan State’s split with Ohio State. The razor-thin margin between the teams further included Wisconsin, to which less than two one-thousands of an RPI point separated third from sixth. Of the four teams, two are likely going to travel as No. 2 seeds, and with UMass sitting as a possible fourth-seeded wildcard, it likely means one or more of those teams could be moving east to play in Massachusetts.
8) Lost opportunities
None of those teams want to lose points in key late-season matchups, which is why Ohio State’s 6-2, Friday night win at Munn Arena rang so deeply through the Big Ten ranks. The Buckeyes that were once winless in conference play picked up their third straight win by winning their first conference game on the road, and after ending a seven-game losing streak by sweeping Wisconsin last weekend, Bucky won its first road game since a 4-2 victory over Bowling Green on January 6.
More importantly, the streak – though broken by Michigan State’s win on Saturday – had the unintended effect of seeing the Big Ten race tighten at both ends of its standings. Removing three possible points from Michigan State brought Wisconsin within a regulation win of moving ahead of the Spartans with the season finale this weekend, while the last two games of Ohio State’s season represent a way to pull ahead of Penn State with the Nittany Lions coming to Columbus this weekend.
The battle for third place remains wide open between Minnesota, Michigan, and, to a lesser extent, Notre Dame, so the possibility for a chaotic finish is creaking at an open door as the season draws to its final games.
9) Rut roh
Michigan State’s slip-up could ultimately cost the Spartans a shot at the Big Ten’s bye spot or a No. 1 seed in the national tournament, but another misstep, this time by Cornell in the ECAC, significantly damaged the Big Red’s chances at playing in the NCAA Tournament altogether.
The conference standings will show that the Big Red gained three points and all but assured themselves of the No. 2 seed in the ECAC postseason, but losing to Clarkson in overtime moved Cornell down the Pairwise after it sat in the precarious No. 13 spot when the weekend began. A tie against St. Lawrence further damaged those odds as the tradewinds swirled, and while they gained the extra point with the shootout win, the Big Red are now in 16th spot, which ultimately means they might have to win their way into the NCAA Tournament by claiming the Whitelaw Cup.
10) Who’s in? Who’s out?
Jimmy Connelly will have an updated Bracketology this week, but the regular season’s final stretch makes it worthwhile to check in on the different conferences and where their respective teams sit in the race for clinching NCAA Tournament berths. This is a conversation that’s really picked up steam, so we’ll more or less look at some key players who are floating around some key areas.
Cornell’s drop came as Colorado College fell into a statistical tie with the Big Red, but moving both to No. 15 and splitting it between No. 15 or No. 16 moves both away from the national tournament with the Atlantic Hockey and CCHA champions each coming from outside the top rankings. The highest ranked AHA team is RIT at No. 22, while the CCHA-leading Minnesota State Mavericks are in the No. 30 spot.
The Mavericks still don’t lead the CCHA standings, but first place Bemidji State is No. 35.
Aside from those teams, Hockey East’s continued stranglehold gives the conference two of the top-four seeds with BC at No. 1 and BU at No. 2. Further back, Maine’s recent slip and a loss to Northeastern on Saturday means the Black Bears, a one-time No. 1 seed, is on the cusp of falling into the No. 3 block as the ninth-place Pairwise team. Providence and UMass were once afterthoughts to the powerhouse in Northern New England, but each are now breathing down the Black Bears’ neck in the conference standings with the Friars additionally sitting in 10th.
Sitting outside the Pairwise Rankings, New Hampshire has a golden opportunity to jump into the top-14 if it produces a good result against Boston College this weekend, and Omaha’s recent three-game unbeaten streak gives the Mavericks an opportunity with a series against North Dakota looming in two weeks – provided they don’t slip against Miami this weekend.