Home Blog Page 72

TMQ: College hockey playoffs in full swing, so what can we expect going forward during this fun time of the season?

AIC and Air Force battled in two intense games last weekend in Colorado Springs (photo: Air Force 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.

Paula: Oh, Dan, this is absolutely my favorite time of the hockey season – conference playoffs. When I first started covering college hockey decades ago, Bob Daniels told me that the conference championship is an achievement to be cherished on its own, that it should never be seen only as a play-in to the NCAA tournament.

There’s pride, Daniels said, in besting everyone else you’ve battled for half a year and pride in raising that conference banner at the start of the following season.

Daniels also told me that it’s hard to end another team’s season. That is a lesson that Wisconsin learned Sunday evening.

What an upset. Last-place Ohio State took a best-of-three quarterfinal series against Wisconsin – the second seed in the Big Ten tournament, the then-No. 5 team in the country, a top-10 PairWise team and the home team as well – with wins Friday and Sunday.

And Sunday wasn’t even close. The Buckeyes led the entire game and the Badgers looked outplayed for most of the contest. Experience was a big factor in the series. Even though Ohio State had four B1G wins this season, there are a lot of players on this team that went to the NCAA tournament last year. That can’t be underestimated.

But Ohio State wasn’t the only team to pull an upset in playoff action. In the ECAC, last-place Rensselaer – with six conference wins in the regular season – beat fifth-place Clarkson in a single-elimination, pre-quarterfinal playoff round.

With Hockey East and the NCHC having concluded their regular seasons last weekend, everyone’s in playoff mode now.

What do you take away from the first weekend of playoff hockey? What are you looking for this coming weekend?

Dan: I’ve made the comment several times that single-elimination playoffs are significantly more unpredictable than the best-of-three series, and sure enough, for the second week in a row, a last-place seed knocked off the best available opponent when RPI defeated Clarkson to advance to the second round of the ECAC postseason.

I’m probably going to hate myself for saying this, but even as the ECAC beat writer, I never saw that one coming, and I spent time last week talking with good friend Ken Schott about if RPI coach Dave Smith faced any employment troubles because facing a last-place finish was such a rarity for the program. As much as I hate having that discussion and that I have no insight into a school’s hiring or firing process, I couldn’t disagree that the season struggled behind a really poor special teams showing that included a penalty kill well below 70 percent – behind an expansion Stonehill team when the game dropped the puck last week as No. 64 out of 64.

On the other hand, Clarkson was probably the best ECAC team behind Quinnipiac and Cornell, and I personally thought the Golden Knights belonged in fourth place despite Dartmouth’s ability to avoid losing games in regulation. That said, the Engineers built a 3-0 lead and held onto win through a third period where the Golden Knights outshot them 22-3! That penalty kill, by the way, didn’t allow a goal despite giving four power play attempts when it was running once-every-three-attempts with a goal allowed.

Then again, that’s playoff hockey for you, and that’s what makes the single-elimination format so enthralling. I personally like the best-of-three format better because it forces teams to do more than have the right game in the right place, but the drama would’ve gotten much shorter if RPI had an extra game or two to pick up that second win. I felt the same way when Bentley-Robert Morris went to overtime during the Atlantic Hockey first round, and I was equally crushed when Bentley lost, though I was pretty happy to see good friend Derek Schooley advance to the second round.

Coming back to the playoffs for a bit, RPI’s advancement opens the door for a prickly situation in ECAC because Quinnipiac now draws a team playing with house money in the second round. Crazy at it sounds, a Quinnipiac team situated around No. 8 or No. 9 in the Pairwise Rankings absolutely cannot lose a game in this series without tumbling a bit because RPI sits down around No. 54. Doing some quick math, one loss – even without factoring in games by Michigan or Colorado College or Omaha or Western Michigan – would drop the defending champs down to around the No. 12 spot. Another loss – particularly at home and in a sweep format – would knock them entirely out of the Pairwise.

ECAC is in danger of only having one bid to the tournament anyways, but this is probably my biggest underpinning storyline, especially after watching Wisconsin drop to Quinnipiac’s location after losing twice to Ohio State.

How volatile are some of these spots for you, and which teams should definitely be worried about their postseason lives in the conference tournament?

Paula: That is an excellent question.

In the Big Ten right now, there are four teams in the tournament – Michigan State, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. Ohio State is No. 28 in the PWR, so a loss to the Buckeyes for the remaining teams in the B1G playoff field would certainly drop them, but I honestly don’t see a scenario that has any of these teams dropping out of NCAA tournament range even if the Buckeyes win.

Michigan State, fifth in the PWR, wouldn’t drop enough to be out with a loss to Ohio State next weekend. The winner of the OSU-MSU game plays the winner of the Michigan-Minnesota semifinal. Minnesota’s in sixth place, so if the Gophers win and then lose to the Buckeyes in the title game, Minnesota won’t take enough of a hit to drop out.

If Michigan and Ohio State both advance to the Big Ten title game – a dream matchup for so many earnest, hate-filled (I say that with love) fans – the No. 10 Wolverines would already have beaten a team higher in the PWR to get to the title game, so a loss to Ohio State shouldn’t drop them out of contention, either.

I know there are lots of other mathematical possibilities here and many other scenarios in play, but I don’t see the Big Ten without four teams in the NCAA tournament – five in the unlikely event that the Buckeyes win out.

An aside: I say “unlikely” because Ohio State has had difficulty putting together back-to-back wins this season. They do have a three-game B1G win streak from when they swept Wisconsin and then took their first game against Michigan State a couple of weeks ago. As you’ve said, anything can happen in single-elimination hockey.

Getting back to the conference playoffs themselves, though, I see really exciting things in every league. This four-team field in the Big Ten has such a sweet old-school CCHA feel to it that warms my heart.

Look at the Hockey East playoffs. Single elimination all the way through, with a bunch of teams that will advance from Wednesday’s opening round that can do a little PWR damage themselves against quarterfinal opponents – not in any way that would knock Boston College, Boston University or Maine out of the NCAA tournament, but BC or BU could potentially lose a top regional seed spot with a loss in quarterfinal play.

And then there’s Providence and Massachusetts, two PWR bubble teams that meet in Saturday’s quarterfinal round.

In the NCHC, there are four teams that can either play their way into or out of the NCAA tournament: Colorado College (11), Omaha (11), Western Michigan (13), St. Cloud State (15). North Dakota and Denver are high enough to be safe, but those are potential top seeds in regionals, too.

I have to admit that the conference playoffs that interest me the most right now are Atlantic Hockey and the CCHA. I circle around again to the point I made at the start of this column, that conference championships themselves are something to fight for. Yes, the winner gets an autobid, but that doesn’t undercut the importance of the conference title itself – especially in conferences where the battle has been so intense.

Look at the AHA. At the end of the season, there were five points separating second-place Holy Cross and seventh-place Niagara. It’s exactly the same in the CCHA, with five points between second-place and seventh-place Lake Superior State. Fortunes will be made and lost in the AHA and CCHA playoff semifinal games.

While we’re talking about who’s in and how far they can go, my mind also turns to who’s out and who’s about to be out. With 24 wins on the season, Arizona State is out. At least one Atlantic Hockey team with 20 or more wins will be out, too. You mention the possibility of the ECAC sending just one team to the NCAA tournament.

These realities strike me as unfair – even as part of my brain screams, “Win more games!” Is this a byproduct of how good college hockey has become, or are there other factors at play here, Dan?

Dan: I wish there was a clear-cut reason that I could point you in the right direction, but it’s way more complicated than just a simple reason. No one year dictates where the proverbial Delorean lands when it hits 88 mph, but no season is an indicator of where things are going. If that were the case, Boston College would’ve never finished eighth in back-to-back seasons, and it likewise would’ve never rebounded to become the No. 1 team in the first place.

I think there are a number of reasons why leagues rise and fall on an annual basis. Coaches and players, cultures, buy-in, chemistry, it all counts for a good chunk of the pie, but team-building is more than just recruiting a kid to a top-notch program or school nowadays.

The portal and NIL are here, and I don’t quite know the degree of its impact on an ever-evolving world. I’d love to sit down and draw connections between programs with more robust NIL and the general size of their programs’ successes. I’m sure, for example, that the Big Ten knows how to get kids involved with NIL, but Atlantic Hockey schools would be lucky to have a staff member who understands the landscape. I’m not quite sure how to measure that, though, and I don’t want to start pointing fingers before I get too deep.

That said, I think there is, at least, an ongoing conversation about facilities, even if it’s not the only discussion nowadays.

In light of that, Maine announced a $320 million facilities renovation! I actually thought it was a typo, but after looking up several sources, it’s true (and extends beyond just one area). Robert Morris, meanwhile, is reportedly looking into grant-funding that would get a new arena built for that program.

Beyond the general impact, is there a place you’ve visited that you think deserves a facelift? Out east, I think about Hockey East and ECAC, and I personally would love to see a couple of changes to some places. Not that there’s anything wrong with the buildings in question, but I would love to see what Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell or Conte Forum at BC could do with a couple of different changes or updates. Two great places to watch games and be part of the action, it’s worth noting.

As I kick this over to you, is there a place in mind?

Paula: The Big Ten venues are all way beyond adequate. The renovations to one of the best old barns in the game, Munn Ice Arena, have made it a stunning facility. Its capacity is just right for college hockey and the improvements are as stylish as they are state-of-the-art.

Wisconsin gets its ice whittled down to NHL size next season, so there’s that.

Everyone familiar with Ohio State hockey knows that the Buckeyes need a hockey-only facility for both the men’s and women’s programs, one with a more reasonable capacity for ice hockey, one that is updated a little.

That having been said, that Ohio State’s facility – with its 17,500-seat capacity and excellent amenities for all tenants – is arguably the “worst” barn in the league says a lot about the inequity in college hockey.

I fear that programs without the budgets and, quite frankly, the revenue streams of Big Ten schools (and their equivalent in other conferences) will always be on the short end of the recruiting stick – and, therefore, always on the out.

The CCHA and Atlantic Hockey need the autobid to place one team each into the NCAA tournament. No independents had the means, in reality, to play their way in. The inequity creates a glaring landscape in which the haves will always be advantaged over the have nots.

I don’t know how to address this. I don’t know what can be done, realistically. There are way bigger brains than mine among the people who influence and steer men’s D-I hockey and I know that this is concerning to many of them as well, but I simply don’t know how it can be overcome.

There is excellent hockey being played in the AHA and the CCHA and among the independent teams, and I cannot imagine how discouraging this reality is.

And to answer your question, no I don’t have a specific arena in mind that needs a facelift. I think the entire structure of men’s D-I hockey needs a facelift.

Dan: I suppose the one that that will always permeate is naturally the fans. Despite it all, I think whatever we have or don’t have in college hockey, whatever we need to do or not need to do, it all comes down to the fans. We’ve said it repeatedly, but the passion they have transcends facilities, NIL, scholarships, recruiting, transfers, locker rooms, steam rooms, video boards, TV productions, and the bad behavior that somehow has a tendency to always go viral.

You give me 300 of the loudest, most passionate fans and I’ll give you a place anyone wants to play.

Six players from five teams make up 2023-24 ECAC Hockey men’s all-rookie team

CJ Foley had a successful rookie season for Dartmouth (photo: William Rondeau).

ECAC Hockey has announced the selection of six student-athletes to its 2023-24 men’s hockey all-rookie team.

ECAC All-Rookie Team
Mason Marcellus,* F, Quinnipiac, Fr.
Jonathan Castagna, F, Cornell, Fr.
Jake Schneider, F, Colgate, Fr.
CJ Foley,* D, Dartmouth, Fr.
Ben Robertson, D, Cornell, Fr.
Jack Stark, G, Yale, Fr.
*Denotes unanimous selection

Longtime Minnesota State women’s hockey assistant Dickerman takes over as new head coach for Mavericks

Shari Dickerman filled in as acting head coach for the Minnesota State women’s team (photo: Minnesota State Athletics).

Shari Dickerman has been named the fifth head coach in Minnesota State women’s hockey history.

Dickerman has been a member of the coaching staff since 2009 and served as acting head coach earlier this season during head coach John Harrington’s medical leave of absence.

Dickerman takes the mantle from Harrington, who amassed 85 wins over nine seasons as head coach. Harrington, who will fully retire from the university on June 30, stepped away from the bench at the conclusion of the 2023-24 season, and will serve the remainder of his term as a special assistant to the athletic director.

A former Minnesota State All-American goaltender (2000-04), Dickerman is uniquely positioned to take on her new role, having played with or coached 174 Minnesota State women’s hockey current and former student-athletes (82-percent) since the program’s inception in 1998-99.

“As we transition to new leadership, Shari checked a lot of boxes in what we were seeking from that position,” said Minnesota State director of athletics Kevin Buisman. “She is a hard-working, highly committed alum who enjoyed an All-American and Hall of Fame career during her time with the program. That type of past personal success resonates well with others and helps to establish immediate credibility. Her experience playing with Team USA and now coaching at that level is another calling card that will help attract top talent. Shari inherits a strong foundation to build upon, but will quickly put her own stamp on it, as she continues to move Maverick hockey forward in a positive direction.”

“It is an honor to be named head coach at Minnesota State and I want to thank President Inch and Kevin Buisman for this opportunity,” Dickerman said. “There is a strong foundation in place, and we are excited about the future of Maverick women’s hockey. I am looking forward to leading this incredible group of young women as we write the next chapter together.”

Dickerman served as assistant coach for six seasons under head coach Eric Means and nine under Harrington, having been promoted to associate head coach this season.

She served as an assistant coach for the United States Women’s National team in 2023 and 2024 in the Rivalry Series against Team Canada.

Dickerman was also on the bench for Team USA’s World Championship last spring in Brampton, Ont. Dickerman and the team won the gold medal at the 2023 IIHF World Championships in April 2023, defeating Canada in the final 6-3.

Dickerman spent one year as an assistant coach with the girls Prep 19U team at Shattuck-St. Mary’s in Faribault, Minn., before making the journey back to Mankato in 2009. She has also been a lead instructor in southern Minnesota for the Goalie Club since 2003 and was an assistant coach for Mankato West High School in 2004-05.

Her collegiate career spanned from 2000 to 2004 and she set both program and WCHA records for career saves and earned Minnesota State’s Female Athlete of the Year award in 2003-04. She went on to win the silver medal as a member of the United States National Team at the 2006 Four Nations Cup in Kitchener, Ont.

Named to the 2004 Jofa Division I All-American Second Team, Dickerman is also a two-time All-WCHA first team selection. She was a finalist for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award in 2004 as the top women’s college hockey player in the nation.

Dickerman holds a bachelor’s degree in physical education (2004) and a master’s in exercise science (2008) from Minnesota State.

Dickerman helped the Mavericks win their first postseason game in nearly seven years in 2021-22. This year’s squad played Minnesota in the first round of the WCHA playoffs and pushed the No. 4 Gophers to three games with a 5-4 victory on March 1.

Minnesota State women’s hockey coach Harrington steps down after nine seasons, announces retirement effective June 30

John Harrington spent nine seasons behind the bench of the Minnesota State women’s team (photo: Jeff Lawler/MGA).

With the 2023-24 season recently concluded, Minnesota State women’s hockey head coach John Harrington has announced he will step away from his head coaching duties and take on another role as special assistant to the athletic director before his full retirement from the university on June 30.

He served nine seasons as head coach of the program.

“We are profoundly indebted to Coach Harrington for his many years of outstanding and dedicated service to Maverick women’s hockey,” said Minnesota State athletics director Kevin Buisman in a statement. “John is an iconic figure in the game of hockey and will long be remembered for his role as a member of the 1980 ‘Miracle on Ice’ Olympic gold medal team. I believe that experience helped inspire his desire to give back to the sport. We are fortunate that he was so deeply invested in sharing that passion with others. We will miss having him on the bench in the years ahead, but we wish John, Mary and his family nothing but the best in his retirement years.”

“I am thankful for the opportunity given to me to coach the women’s hockey team at Minnesota State University for the past nine seasons,” Harrington added. “Coaching extremely talented student-athletes was a rewarding experience for me. I hope they were able to learn lifetime skills as well as hockey skills. I know I learned things every year that were new, different, and beneficial to me. Thank you also to Minnesota State University, the athletic department, my assistant coaches and staff, and most importantly, the student-athletes for their efforts and commitment to our program.

As the fourth head coach in Minnesota State women’s hockey history, Harrington finished with an 85-198-25 overall record, second in all-time wins. Three former Mavericks under Harrington are currently playing in the PWHL for Minnesota (Claire Butorac, Brooke Bryant, Brittyn Fleming). In his tenure, he has also coached one Olympian (Rebekah Kolstad, 2017-19), one WCHA rookie of the year (Jamie Nelson, 2020-21), four All-WCHA selections, and six All-WCHA rookies.

Hired as head coach in May 2015, Harrington helped the Mavericks tie eighth-ranked North Dakota in his first season. In his second year, Harrington’s Mavericks more than doubled the team’s win total, including a victory over then-No. 3-ranked Minnesota Duluth.

The Mavericks won an exhibition game against the South Korean National team in 2018 and defeated No. 5-ranked Ohio State during the regular season.

The program continued to improve the following year, as Harrington’s squad finished 9-19-7, 3-16-5 WCHA, which represented the most wins in a season since the 2013-14 campaign. The Mavericks also shut out three straight opponents for the first time in program history, including a 3-0 score over the No. 6 Ohio State Buckeyes in Mankato.

In his fifth season behind the bench, Harrington oversaw an 11-20-6 overall mark, 4-16-4 WCHA as the Mavericks picked up a road sweep over St. Cloud State, their first sweep of a WCHA opponent since 2014. Harrington also captured his first victory over Wisconsin by defeating the then-No. 1 Badgers 3-1 at Mayo Clinic Health System Event Center.

The Mavericks finished 7-12-1 in the pandemic abbreviated 2020-21 season. The following year, Minnesota State went 15-19-1, 10-17-1 WCHA as the Mavericks pushed No. 5 Minnesota Duluth to overtime in game three of the WCHA quarterfinals. MSU won its first WCHA postseason game in nearly seven years.

Last winter, Harrington’s Mavericks went 15-20-1, 9-18-1 WCHA. MSU closed with a winning season at home, but the team fell to No. 6 Wisconsin in the WCHA quarterfinals.

This year, the Mavericks began the season with a 9-0 victory over Sacred Heart in Fairfield, Conn. The team closed the campaign 13-25-0 overall and defeated No. 4 Minnesota in the first game of the WCHA quarterfinals at Ridder Arena.

“I look forward to staying connected and being a fan of Minnesota State University athletics,” Harrington said. “I will continue to be supportive of Maverick women’s hockey and cheering on the team’s accomplishments. After 33 years of college coaching along with seven years of professional coaching and scouting, it is time to experience other things in life with my wife Mary and enjoy watching our grandchildren in their school events and sports. I am certain I will be coaching from the seats and the sidelines.”

Prior to his time in Mankato, Harrington was the head men’s hockey coach at St. Johns from 1993 to 2008 and led the Johnnies to a 241-142-31 record with five regular-season titles and five NCAA tournament appearances. He also spent four years serving as an amateur scout for the NHL’s Colorado Avalanche, was the head coach of Asiago in the Italian National League from 2009 to 2011 and head coach for Ambri-Piotta in the Swiss National League in 2008.

Harrington served a stint as associate head coach with the men’s program at St. Cloud State from 1990 to 1993 and as assistant coach at Denver from 1984 to 1990.

Harrington’s legendary playing career included four seasons at Minnesota Duluth (1975-79). He was a member of the 1980 United States Olympic National Team, which captured the gold medal in Lake Placid, N.Y. Harrington assisted on Mike Eruzione’s game-winning goal in the semifinals against the Russians.

CCHA announces pair of all-conference teams, all-rookie team for 2023-24 college hockey season

Sam Morton wears the ‘C’ this season for Minnesota State (photo: Perry Laskaris).

The CCHA has announced its two all-conference teams and one all-rookie team for the 2023-24 season.

ALL-CCHA FIRST TEAM
Forward: Sam Morton, Sr., Minnesota State
Forward: Lleyton Roed, So., Bemidji State
Forward: Jared Westcott, Sr., Lake Superior State
Defenseman: Kyle Looft, 5th, Bemidji State
Defenseman: Eric Pohlkamp, Fr., Bemidji State
Goaltender: Mattias Sholl, Jr., Bemidji State

ALL-CCHA SECOND TEAM
Forward: Isaac Gordon, Fr., Michigan Tech
Forward: Connor Milburn, So., Lake Superior State
Forward: Lucas Wahlin, So., St. Thomas
Defenseman: Evan Murr, Fr., Minnesota State
Defenseman: Josh Zinger, So., Northern Michigan
Goaltender: Blake Pietila, Sr., Michigan Tech

CCHA ALL-ROOKIE TEAM
Forward: Luigi Benincasa, Ferris State
Forward: Isaac Gordon, Michigan Tech
Forward: John Herrington, Lake Superior State
Defenseman: Evan Murr, Minnesota State
Defenseman: Eric Pohlkamp, Bemidji State
Goaltender: Cole Moore, Bowling Green

Boston College stays atop USCHO.com Division I Men’s Hockey Poll as Eagles collect all 50 first-place votes in March 11 rankings

Andre Gasseau celebrates with Cutter Gauthier after a BC goal against Merrimack last weekend (photo: Brody Hannon).

Boston College is again the top-ranked team in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Hockey Poll, getting all 50 first-place votes in this week’s poll.

Boston University stays No. 2, while Denver is up one to No. 3, Michigan State is up two to No. 4, and North Dakota falls two spots to No. 5.

USCHO.com Division I Men’s Hockey Poll – March 11, 2024

Minnesota rises two to sit sixth this week, Quinnipiac stays No. 7. Maine is up one to No. 8, Wisconsin falls four to No. 9, and Colorado College stays at No. 10 this week.

One previously unranked team enters the rankings this week with Bemidji State tying with Arizona State at No. 20.

In addition to the top 20 teams, eight other teams received votes.

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.

Bowling Green parts ways with Eigner after five seasons, begins search for new head coach

Bowling Green has parted ways with Ty Eigner after five seasons as head coach (photo: BGSU Athletics).

Bowling Green announced Monday that it is parting ways with Ty Eigner after five seasons as head coach and nine previous seasons as an assistant with the program.

“The decision to separate from Coach Eigner was made after a thorough review and evaluation of our program over multiple years,” said director of athletics Derek van der Merwe in a statement. “These are never easy decisions to make, especially given Ty’s many years of service to the University.”

Eigner amassed an 84-83-11 record behind the Bowling Green bench, including a 21-13-4 record in the 2019-20 season and 20 wins in the COVID-shortened 2020-21 season. The Falcons have been sub-.500 the last three seasons, including 13-22-1 in the current campaign.

Eigner served as Bowling Green’s captain for the 1992-93 season under former head coach Jerry York, and was a member of the program’s last two NCAA tournament teams prior to BGSU’s last appearance in the 2018-19 season.

Eigner had been placed on administrative leave and three players were suspended in September, 2023, after allegations of hazing, including underage drinking, were received by the Bowling Green athletic department.

Eigner was reinstated a month later after an independent investigation concluded that no member of the BGSU hockey staff had any direct or indirect knowledge of the event.

“We will begin an immediate search for the next head coach to elevate our hockey program to prominence within the CCHA and nationally, and we are committed to working with our stakeholders across the country in creating this new trajectory,” said van der Merwe.

Upsets include Wisconsin bounced from Big Ten tourney, volatility on the PairWise bubble: Weekend Review college hockey podcast Season 6 Episode 22

Hosts Jim Connelly, Derek Schooley, and Ed Trefzger review the games of the weekend and news of the week in this March 11, 2024 edition.

In this episode:

  • Wisconsin is first major casualty of the postseason at the hands of Ohio State
  • Other upsets included RPI over Clarkson, AIC sweeping Air Force, and Niagara sweeping Sacred Heart
  • Omaha’s sweep of North Dakota raises bracketology issues
  • UMass is just below the bubble but could still be a No. 4 seed
  • Would the committee swap BU and North Dakota in regionals?
  • What happened with St. Cloud State
  • Our picks for teams on the bubble to make the NCAA tournament
  • Breaking news of a coaching change at Bowling Green

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

Subscribe to this college hockey podcast on Apple podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Find our podcast archive at USCHO.com/podcasts

Division I Women’s Hockey: Weekend Wrap, March 11, 2024 – Conference semifinals and finals

ECAC

Semifinals

St. Lawrence vs. Clarkson

Haley Winn ripped a shot from the blue line to put Clarkson up 1-0 near the end of the first. Sena Catterall gathered a puck off the back boards to put the Golden Knights up 2-0. Rachel Bjorgan pulled one back for St. Lawrence directly after, but the Saints weren’t able to put any more past Michelle Pasiechnyk and Catterall added an empty-netter to give Clarkson the 3-1 win.

Cornell vs. Colgate

Danielle Serdachny’s power play goal in the waning minutes of the first was the only tally for much of this game until Grace Dwyer tied it up for Cornell six minutes into the third. That seemed to shake up the Raiders, particularly Dara Greig, who scored or assisted on Colgate’s next four goals to give her team a 5-1 win. First Greig put back her own rebound and then scored on the power play to make it 3-1. Ally Simpson extended the lead and Emma Pais’ power play goal in the final two minutes iced the win. 

Finals

Clarkson vs. Colgate

This game was a battle of the goalies for more than 40 minutes as Kayle Osborne had 25 saves through the first two frames and Michelle Pasiechnyk made 26. But Colgate one again found their touch in the final frame as Kaltounková poke-checked a puck from a Clarkson defender and fed Michelle Palumbo, who scored on the breakaway. Elysa Biederman and Emma Pais put in empty-netters to secure the 3-0 win for Colgate. 

Hockey East

Semifinals

New Hampshire vs. Northeastern

These teams were back and forth, neck and neck, for the first two periods on Wednesday, pushing each other and looking for a chance to break through. Peyton Anderson broke the stalemate in the opening minutes of the third. Chavonne Truter continued her strong postseason and tied the game with about six minutes left in regulation. Lily Shannon’s goal with a second left in a late power play proved to be pivotal. UNH pulled Sedona Blair and the Huskies added two empty-net goals, one each from Skylar Irving and Shannon, to take the 4-1 win. 

Boston College vs. Connecticut

Jada Habisch scored less than two minutes into the game on a long distance pass and that was the only tally for the next forty minutes as the teams fought back and forth for their postseason lives. Gaby Roy tied the game for BC in the beginning of the third and the teams needed overtime to find a winner. In the extra frame, Megan Woodworth passed the puck from behind the net to Kathryn Stockdale to score the game winner. 

Final

Northeastern vs. Connecticut

These two teams fought for more than 79 minutes on Saturday before Megan Woodworth tipped Riley Grimley’s slapshot up and over Gwyn Philips to give Connecticut their first-ever Hockey East Tournament Title and berth into the NCAA Tournament. Philips made 51 saves in the game while UConn’s Tia Chan made 38. 

NEWHA

Finals

Franklin Pierce vs. Stonehill

Alexis Petford forced a turnover and took off on a breakaway late in the first to give Stonehill a 1-0 lead at the first intermission. Alexandra Cistolo deflected a shot from Sydnee Wilson to tie the game 1:40 into the second. Kathryn Karo backhanded a goal a few minutes later to put the Skyhawks up 2-1, but Jenna Ruiz scored on the power play in the final minute of the middle frame to make it a 2-2 game. Stonehill poured on the pressure, outshooting the Ravens 11-2 in the third, but they could not pull ahead and the game went to overtime. Franklin Pierce took a too many skaters penalty and the Skyhawks quickly capitalized to win the game. Bailey Feeney was the game-winner, giving Stonehill their first NEWHA Tournament Championship and NCAA bid in just their second year of existence. 

WCHA

Semifinals

Minnesota Duluth vs. Ohio State

Minnesota vs. Wisconsin

Final

Wisconsin vs. Ohio State

Monday 10: Ohio State eliminates Wisconsin from B1G playoffs, Lake Superior outlasts St. Thomas in CCHA postseason, Omaha sweeps North Dakota to wrap regular season

Bemidji State players celebrate Eric Pohlkamp’s OT winner Friday night (photo: Brent Cizek).

Each week, USCHO.com will pick the top 10 moments from the past weekend in our Monday 10 feature.

1. Ohio State knocks out Wisconsin

In a stunning upset, last-place Ohio State took down Wisconsin on the road in a best-of-three Big Ten quarterfinal series, beating the Badgers 3-1 to advance to single-elimination semifinal play.

It’s the first time in the Big Ten’s relatively short hockey history that a seven seed upset a two seed in playoff action.

Scooter Brickey’s second-period goal put the Buckeyes up 2-0, and that goal held up as the game-winner when the Badgers scored an empty-netter late in the third.

The Buckeyes will play B1G regular season champ Michigan State in a single-elimination semifinal game in Munn Ice Arena Saturday.

Ohio State had four regular-season conference wins, and the Buckeyes’ only chance of playing in the NCAA tournament is to win the Big Ten playoff championship. This win is the 1,000th win in Ohio State hockey history.

While the Badgers will sit out the remainder of the Big Ten tournament, Wisconsin will advance to the NCAA tournament for the first time since 2010.

2. Lake Superior State upsets St. Thomas with six seconds to spare

After winning 4-1 Friday and dropping Saturday’s game 4-2, the Lakers took Sunday’s deciding game against the Tommies 3-2 and move on to play Bemidji State in the CCHA semifinals.

With six seconds remaining in regulation, Dawson Tritt picks up the rebound of Luke Levandowski’s shot.

The Lakers finished in seventh place in the CCHA regular season – but just five points behind the second-place Tommies. Six of the eight CCHA teams had from 34 to 39 points when the regular season ended.

3. Bemidji State continues to roll

With a quarterfinal sweep of Ferris State, Bemidji State extends its unbeaten streak to 10 games (9-0-1).

The Beavers outshot the Bulldogs 51-27 in Friday’s 5-4 overtime win, a game in which BSU had to come back from a two-goal deficit twice. Defenseman Eric Pohlkamp had three goals and two assists on the weekend, including the game winner less than a minute into OT Friday night.

Carter Jones scored the first goal in the Beavers’ 4-0 win Saturday. Mattias Sholl made 48 stops in the two-game set. Saturday’s shutout was the fifth of Sholl’s career.

4. It’s brooms all around in Atlantic Hockey quarterfinal play

All four best-of-three Atlantic Hockey quarterfinal series were concluded in two nights, with the top two seeds prevailing and upsets by No. 5 AIC and No. 6 Niagara.

Top seed RIT pummeled Robert Morris, 7-0 and 5-1. The Tigers ride a four-game win streak into next week’s semifinals, having outscored opponents 24-5 in that span. Tommy Scarfone made 21 saves in the shutout win, the ninth of his career.

It took double overtime Saturday for second seed Holy Cross to complete its sweep of Canisius. Jack Seymour scored at 2:53 in the second OT, just his fifth goal of the season and his first-ever game winner.

At 12:18 in OT Saturday, AIC’s Nico Somerville scored the game-winning goal over Air Force, giving the Yellow Jackets a 3-2 win to complete the upset sweep.

Niagara outscored Sacred Heart 11-4 in a two-game upset sweep. The Purple Eagles eliminated the Pioneers AHA quarterfinal action in 2023, too.

5. Havard, St. Lawrence, Rensselaer, Union move on in ECAC

ECAC quarterfinal action is set after four single-elimination first-round playoff games.

Among the bottom eight teams, three of the four top seeds in this round advance. Friday night, home Harvard beat Princeton 1-0 and St. Lawrence eliminated Yale, 4-2.

For Harvard, Ian Moore’s second goal of the season – fifth of his career – midway through the first period was the game winner as Aku Koskenvuo stopped all 38 shots he faced in his second shutout of the season.

Four different Saints scored and St. Lawrence never trailed in their win. Ben Kraws stopped 37-of-39 in the SLU net.

Saturday saw one upset, with last-place Rensselaer taking out Clarkson on the road, 3-2. The Engineers were up 3-0 by the middle of the third period. The Golden Knights scored twice late in the third. Clarkson outshot RPI 36-17 but couldn’t get more than those two late goals past Jack Watson, who finished the night with 34 saves.

Union handled Brown easily, winning 6-0 and outshooting the Bears 40-22. Kyle Chauvette stopped all 22 in his third shutout of the season.

6. Mavericks sweep Fighting Hawks in historic fashion

No. 16 Omaha swept No. 3 North Dakota in the final regular-season weekend of NCHC hockey, 3-2 and 4-1. It was the first time in program history that the Mavericks took a two-game set from the Fighting Hawks.

Perhaps the Mavs were even more pumped up for Saturday’s senior night game because of their pregame pep talk by the legendary Mike Kemp, the executive associate athletic director at Omaha and head coach of Maverick hockey for the program’s first 12 seasons.

Seven different Mavericks accounted for the scoring in the sweep. Simon Latkoczy had 32 saves in the Omaha net Friday and Seth Eisele stopped 38 for the Mavericks Saturday as North Dakota outshot Omaha 73-48 in the series.

7. Those teams with “Boston” in their names play good hockey

Boston College –No. 1 in the USCHO.com Poll and No. 1 in the PairWise rankings – ended the Hockey East regular season with a 6-4 road win over Merrimack Saturday.

The Eagles came from behind twice in the game. After a scoreless first period, the Warriors led 2-0 midway through the second, but BC answered with two shorthanded goals scored just over a minute apart later in the second – Jamie Armstrong at 15:54 and Will Smith at 17:00 – to tie the game.

After Merrimack took the lead again briefly at 1:06 in the third on Liam Dennison’s goal, the Eagles scored three goals within eight minutes to surge ahead 5-3. The teams exchanged goals in the final minute of play.

Meanwhile, Boston University was at home, dominating Vermont in a 6-1 win. Quinn Hutson earned his second hat trick of the season, scoring the first two goals of the game in the first period and adding a power-play marker with six seconds left in regulation.

8. Third-period heroics lift Black Bears over Minutemen twice

Clutch third-period goals gave Maine a sweep of Massachusetts in the final weekend of Hockey East play, with the Black Bears winning 2-1 and 4-3.

Thomas Freel broke Friday’s 1-1 tie with a power-play goal at 15:43 in the third, his sixth goal of the season, his second career power-play marker and his second career game winner.

On Saturday, Maine capitalized on two power plays to lead 2-0 midway through the first, but Massachusetts scored once in the first, second and third to lead 3-2 with less than 10 minutes remaining in regulation. At 11:22 in the third, Josh Nadeau netted his 16th of the season to tie the game, and at 18:43, Lynden Breen did this.

Maine finishes the season in third place in Hockey East standings, the best showing for the Black Bears since they tied for third in 2009-10. Saturday’s win was the 14th conference win for Maine this season, their best total since 2011-12.

9. Minnesota Duluth ends regular season with sweep of St. Cloud

Entering the weekend with six conference wins, Minnesota Duluth pulled off an upset sweep of third-place St. Cloud State, winning 6-5 in overtime Friday and 4-2 Saturday.

Trailing 5-3 late in the third period Friday, the Bulldogs tied the game on goals by Owen Gallatin and Luke Loheit.

In OT, Ben Steeves’ 24th goal of the season won the game.

Saturday night was a different story. After Connor McMenamin opened the scoring at 8:48 in the second to give Duluth the lead, the teams combined for three goals within the final two minutes of the period to make it 2-2 after two. Aiden Dubinsky’s power-play goal at 8:37 in the third was the game winner and Loheit hit the empty net at 19:59 for his second goal of the weekend.

10. The season’s over for two very good teams

In spite of a final record of 24-8-6, Arizona State’s season is over. Sitting tied at No. 19 in the PairWise Rankings, the Sun Devils are an extraordinarily talented, successful team that could not play its way into the NCAA tournament.

Like Arizona State, fellow independent Alaska (17-14-3) sees a very good season-long effort amount to just that – a very good season-long effort. The Nanooks are No. 27 in the PWR.

Rankings roundup: How the top 20 NCAA hockey teams fared, March 8-10

Omaha players celebrate the Mavericks’ sweep of North Dakota on home ice over the weekend (photo: Mark Kuhlmann).

Here is a rundown of how the top 20 teams in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Hockey Poll of March 4 fared in games over the weekend of March 8-10.

No. 1 Boston College (28-5-1)
03/09/2024 – No. 1 Boston College 6 at Merrimack 4

No. 2 Boston University (24-8-2)
03/07/2024 – No. 2 Boston University 4 at No. 11 Providence 2
03/09/2024 – Vermont 1 at No. 2 Boston University 6

No. 3 North Dakota (24-10-2)
03/08/2024 – No. 3 North Dakota 2 at No. 16 Omaha 3
03/09/2024 – No. 3 North Dakota 1 at No. 16 Omaha 4

No. 4 Denver (24-9-3)
03/08/2024 – No. 4 Denver 3 at No. 10 Colorado College 4
03/09/2024 – No. 10 Colorado College 3 at No. 4 Denver 4

No. 5 Wisconsin (26-11-2)
03/08/2024 – Ohio State 3 at No. 5 Wisconsin 1 (Big Ten quarterfinal Game 1)
03/09/2024 – Ohio State 2 at No. 5 Wisconsin 4 (Big Ten quarterfinal Game 2)
03/10/2024 – Ohio State 3 at No. 5 Wisconsin 1 (Big Ten quarterfinal Game 3)

No. 6 Michigan State (22-9-3)
Did not play.

No. 7 Quinnipiac (24-8-2)
Did not play.

No. 8 Minnesota (22-9-5)
03/08/2024 – RV Penn State 1 at No. 8 Minnesota 5 (Big Ten quarterfinal Game 1)
03/09/2024 – RV Penn State 2 at No. 8 Minnesota 3 (Big Ten quarterfinal Game 2)

No. 9 Maine (22-10-2)
03/08/2024 – No. 12 Massachusetts 1 at No. 9 Maine 2
03/09/2024 – No. 12 Massachusetts 3 at No. 9 Maine 4

No. 10 Colorado College (20-11-3)
03/08/2024 – No. 4 Denver 3 at No. 10 Colorado College 4
03/09/2024 – No. 10 Colorado College 3 at No. 4 Denver 4

No. 11 Providence (18-12-4)
03/07/2024 – No. 2 Boston University 4 at No. 11 Providence 2
03/09/2024 – RV Northeastern 3 at No. 11 Providence 3 (OT)

No. 12 Massachusetts (19-12-3)
03/08/2024 – No. 12 Massachusetts 1 at No. 9 Maine 2
03/09/2024 – No. 12 Massachusetts 3 at No. 9 Maine 4

No. 13 Cornell (17-6-6)
Did not play.

No. 14 Michigan (20-13-3)
03/08/2024 – RV Notre Dame 4 at No. 14 Michigan 5 (Big Ten quarterfinal Game 1)
03/09/2024 – RV Notre Dame 3 at No. 14 Michigan 4 (Big Ten quarterfinal Game 2)

No. 15 Western Michigan (20-13-1)
03/08/2024 – Miami 2 at No. 15 Western Michigan 3
03/09/2024 – Miami 1 at No. 15 Western Michigan 6

No. 16 Omaha (20-10-4)
03/08/2024 – No. 3 North Dakota 2 at No. 16 Omaha 3
03/09/2024 – No. 3 North Dakota 1 at No. 16 Omaha 4

No. 17 St. Cloud State (15-14-5)
03/08/2024 – No. 17 St. Cloud State 5 at Minnesota Duluth 6 (OT)
03/09/2024 – No. 17 St. Cloud State 2 at Minnesota Duluth 4

No. 18 New Hampshire (19-14-1)
03/08/2024 – No. 18 New Hampshire 4 at UMass Lowell 0
03/09/2024 – UMass Lowell 0 at No. 18 New Hampshire 4

No. 19 RIT (24-10-2)
03/08/2024 – Robert Morris 0 at No. 19 RIT 7 (AHA quarterfinal Game 1)
03/09/2024 – Robert Morris 1 at No. 19 RIT 5 (AHA quarterfinal Game 2)

No. 20 Arizona State (24-8-6)
03/08/2024 – No. 20 Arizona State 3 at Alaska Anchorage 4
03/09/2024 – No. 20 Arizona State 5 at Alaska Anchorage 2

RV = Received votes

Women’s hockey national rookie of year award being renamed to recognize former Harvard standout, U.S. Olympic veteran Chu

Julie Chu had a legendary career at Harvard (photo: Harvard Athletics).

The Women’s Hockey Commissioners Association has announced that the annual national rookie of the year award is being named for Harvard and U.S. Olympic icon Julie Chu.

Chu has enjoyed a unique level of success in a hockey career that covers two decades and is still flourishing.

A member of the Harvard class of 2007, Chu came to the Crimson after prep success at both Choate Rosemary Hall and the Northwood School. She immediately established herself as a force at Harvard with a phenomenal freshman season in which she recorded 42 goals and 51 assists for 93 points enroute to a four-year mark of 284 points. Her 196 career assists and those 284 points were NCAA records at the time of her graduation.

She received the Patty Kazmaier Award in 2007 as the nation’s best female ice hockey player.

“On behalf of my fellow commissioners, we are delighted to name the women’s national rookie of the year award after Julie Chu,” said Hockey East commissioner Steve Metcalf, president of the HCA. “Julie was incredibly productive as a player and was respected throughout her distinguished career for her character and leadership.”

On the international scene, the Fairfield, Conn., native’s star was equally bright. She participated in the Olympic Games four times (2002, 2006, 2010 and 2014) and became just the second U.S. hockey player to serve as flag bearer. She also won gold medals at five IIHF World Championships.

Chu played professional hockey for a decade, beginning in 2007. She has played for the Minnesota Whitecaps, the Montreal Stars and Les Canadiennes de Montreal. Alongside her professional playing career, Chu launched a coaching career as well. As an assistant coach in 2008, she helped lead Minnesota Duluth to an NCAA title and then joined the staff of Union from 2010 to 2013.

Currently, she is the head coach of the Concordia (Montreal) Stingers. Starting as an assistant in 2014, Chu became head coach in 2016 and this past year, led the Stingers to the league championship, going 25-0-0 in the regular season and 29-2-0 overall.

Finalists for this year’s Julie Chu Award will be announced on March 11 and the winner will be announced during the NCAA Frozen Four in Durham, N.H.

HCA hands out February men’s national awards to Boston College teammates Gauthier, Leonard, Colorado College goalie Mbereko

From left, Cutter Gauthier, Ryan Leonard, Kaidan Mbereko (photos: Boston College Athletics, Colorado College Athletics).

The Hockey Commissioners Association has announced its national men’s players of the month for February.

Boston College sophomore Cutter Gauthier is player of the month, BC freshman forward Ryan Leonard is rookie of the month, and Colorado College sophomore Kaidan Mbereko is the goaltender of the month.

Gauthier led the NCAA goals (10), points (16), GWGs (3) and shots (49) in February. In helping the Eagles to a 7-1-0 month, Gauthier amassed his offensive stats without taking a single penalty all month.

Leonard matched Gauthier for NCAA bests of 10 goals and 16 points in February. He had at least one point in all eight games and his 36 shots on goal were second in the NCAA behind Gauthier’s 49.

Mbereko’s .939 save percentage and 1.79 GAA came in a 3-2-1 month where all six opponents were nationally ranked. Top highlight: a career high 43 saves in a 6-2 win over North Dakota.

Ohio State’s Buglioni, LIU’s Wallner, Wisconsin’s McNaughton, Minnesota Duluth’s MacLeod named women’s HCA national honorees for February

From left, Jenna Buglioni, Jeannie Wallner, Ava McNaughton, Hailey MacLeod (photos: Ohio State Athletics, LIU Athletics, Wisconsin Athletics, Minnesota Duluth Athletics).

The Hockey Commissioners Association has announced its national women’s players of the month for February.

Ohio State junior Jenna Buglioni and LIU junior Jeannie Wallner are co-players of the month, Wisconsin freshman goalie Ava McNaughton is rookie of the month, and Minnesota Duluth sophomore Hailey MacLeod is the goaltender of the month.

Buglioni led the Buckeyes with 13 points (7-6-13) in eight February games. She tallied her first career hat trick against Bemidji State and tied her career high of four points in the game.

Wallner had a goal per game with a 9-5-14 line in nine games played. She was also plus-13 for the month.

McNaughton went 4-0 with two shutouts and her 1.00 GAA and .955 save percentage were hard earned. Three of her four opponents on the month were nationally ranked teams St. Cloud (10th), Minnesota (fourth) and Ohio State (first).

What a month for MacLeod as she had a GAA of 0.49 and a save percentage of .981 to go with a perfect 4-0-0 with two shutouts. Among the highlights: a 39-save 1-0 shutout of No. 10 SCSU and 26 saves in a 1-1 OT tie at Minnesota.

D-III West Hockey NCAA Tournament Wrap-up

The Adrian Bulldogs defeated UW-Stevens Point in the NCAA tournament.

One round of hockey is complete in the NCAA Division III tournament and two teams remain from the west region.

Adrian and St. Norbert both took care of business in the opening round and now the NCHA rivals face off against each other next weekend for the right to go to the Frozen Four. 

Here’s a look back at how the Bulldogs and Green Knights advanced in the postseason.

Bulldogs roll past Pointers

It was a matchup between two of the nation’s best programs. No.3 Adrian up against No. 6 UW-Stevens Point in a win-or-go-home moment.

The Bulldogs proved to be the better team, setting the tone with two first-period goals and rolling from there in a 4-0 victory, ending the Pointers’ eight-game unbeaten streak.

Dershawn Stewart shined as one of the storylines of the night. He made 28 saves, which is impressive in its own right, but it’s something made even more impressive by the fact that it’s the first time the Pointers have been kept off the scoreboard since 2021.

This is the second consecutive year where Adrian has beaten UW-Stevens Point, but this time it didn’t take overtime get the job done.

Jaden Shields scored the first goal of the game and Casey Gerstein made it 2-0 Bulldogs after one.

A power play goal by Jacob Suede in the second stretched the Adrian lead to 3-0. An empty net goal by Riley Murphy finished out the game.

Adrian (23-6-1) has won six of seven and has scored four or more goals in each of those wins during that stretch. The Bulldogs have scored 138 goals as a team this season, with seven players tallying 10 or more, including Mathew Rehding, who has scored a team-best 16 goals.

The Pointers (21-6-2) were making their 17th trip to the tournament and finish with 20 or more wins in a season for the eighth time in the last 10 years. Alex Proctor made 28 saves. 

Green Knights take down Oles

St. Norbert saved its best for last. The fifth-ranked Green Knights broke open a tight game against St. Olaf in the third period to secure a 5-2 win over the Oles.

It’s the second time in three seasons St. Norbert (23-6) has beaten St. Olaf (14-12-3) in the tournament.

Just over six minutes into the third period, the Green Knights started to take the hold of the momentum. Calvin Hanson connected on a goal at the 6:07 mark as St. Norbert went ahead 3-2 in a power play situation and never looked back. 

T.J. Koufis pushed the lead to 4-2 with under four minutes to play in the game before Mark Snarr closed out the scoring with an empty-netter.

Neither team scored in the opening period. Carter Hottmann ended the scoreless tie a little over a minute into the second period. Hottmann added a a second goal six minutes later to extend the St. Norbert advantage to 2-0.

Jonathan Panisa cut the Oles’ deficit to 2-1 before the midway point of the period, scoring off the power play and Jonathan young scored with under two minutes to play in the second to tie the game at 2-2.

Will Stromp played a big role for St. Norbert in the win, dishing out three assists. Koufis added an assist to his stat line.

The Green Knights held a 36-20 advantage in shots while Hunter Garvey came through with 18 saves. Thomas Lalonde tallied 31 saves for the Oles, who were making their third tourney appearance in program history.

St. Olaf had won three straight road games heading into Saturday, allowing only one goal in that time. The Oles conclude a season where they won the MIAC title for the second time in three years and also made it to the NCAA tournament for the second time in the last three years.

St. Norbert has now won 34 games in NCAA tournament history, putting it in a tie with Middlebury for No. 1 all time in tourney victories. The Green Knights have won 25 of their last 31 tournament games.

They are playing their best hockey at the moment as well, winning eight consecutive games. Included in that streak is a 3-1 win over Adrian in the NCHA championship game earlier this month.

NCAA unveils 11-team bracket for 2024 National Collegiate women’s hockey tournament

Ohio State and Wisconsin got the top two seeds for the 2024 NCAA tournament after playing for the WCHA championship. The Badgers defeated the Buckeyes on Saturday (photo: Nicole Haase).

Ohio State, defending champion Wisconsin, Colgate and Clarkson earned hosting spots for the opening rounds of the 2024 NCAA National Collegiate women’s hockey tournament when the bracket was unveiled on Sunday.

The NCAA committee didn’t make any adjustments from bracket integrity, as determined by the PairWise Rankings, in assembling the first- and second-round matchups.

See the NCAA tournament bracket here.

Wisconsin (WCHA), Colgate (ECAC Hockey), UConn (Hockey East), Penn State (CHA) and Stonehill (NEWHA) earned automatic bids to the tournament by winning conference tournament championships.

The six at-large selections were Ohio State, Clarkson, Minnesota, Cornell, St. Lawrence and Minnesota Duluth.

Minnesota Duluth will play UConn at 7 p.m. ET on Thursday in Columbus, Ohio, with the winner playing Ohio State at 4 p.m. ET on Saturday.

Cornell and Stonehill meet in the first round at 7 p.m. ET on Thursday in Hamilton, N.Y. The winner plays Colgate at 3 p.m. ET on Saturday.

St. Lawrence and Penn State play in the first round at 7 p.m. CT on Thursday in Madison, Wis., and the winner plays Wisconsin at 2 p.m. CT on Saturday.

Clarkson vs. Minnesota in Potsdam, N.Y., is the only second-round game already on the books. They’ll play at 3 p.m. on Saturday.

The regional winners advance to the Frozen Four in Durham, N.H., on March 22-24. The winner of the Ohio State regional and the Clarkson regional will play in one semifinal, with winners of the Wisconsin and Colgate regionals meeting in the other.

NCAA D-III East Men’s Hockey, First Round Wrap-up: March 10, 2024

Three third period goals and celebrations led to Plymouth State’s 5-2 win over Cortland on Saturday – PSU’s first ever NCAA tournament game victory (Photo by PSU Athletics)

Five first round games were played, with three in the East featuring some mild upsets as Curry, Elmira, and Plymouth State all advanced to the quarterfinal round with impressive wins. Curry downing Geneseo was the Colonels first ever road win in the national tournament while Plymouth State earned their first ever win on the national stage with their victory over SUNYAC champion Cortland. Elmira returned to the quarterfinals for the first time in several years with a win over CCC champion Endicott, who was a Frozen Four team just one season ago. With the games out West setting up a NCHA title game re-match between St. Norbert and Adrian, the East features the three bye teams excited to get back to the ice against Saturday’s victors. Here is the recap of the action that now leaves us with just six teams remaining in the East:

NCAA First Round

(12) Curry v. (7) Geneseo

As might be expected from two teams that hadn’t played in a couple of weeks, the game began slowly with both teams feeling the opponent out and getting their game legs going. Curry found some early zone pressure and became the beneficiary of a couple of power plays that turned on the offense just before the ten-minute mark of the period. During a 5-on-3 advantage, Tao Ishizuka delivered the game’s first goal on a wonderfully executed slap shot to the top right corner of the goal off a pass from defenseman Matt Connor for a 1-0 Colonel lead.

The CCC Goaltender of the Year, Shane Soderwall was on his game as he stopped 17 Knight shots in the opening period and preserved the 1-0 lead with thirteen more saves in the second period.

Curry locked the potent Knights attack down in the third period limiting Geneseo to just five shots on goal and adding Jess Galassi’s insurance goal with less than nine minutes remaining in regulation for a more comfortable cushion. Gage Dill closed out the upset win with an empty net goal for a 3-0 final score and Soderwall finished the game stopping all 35 shots he faced to earn the shutout win which was the first road win in the national tournament for Curry ever.

“I was really happy with the way we were able to play a complete game,” noted Curry head coach Peter Roundy. “We had all four lines going, all seven defensemen, and Shano was playing great in net tonight. We needed everybody tonight, they are a really deep team, and we got contributions from everybody up and down the lineup. I am really proud of this group.”

Curry’s Eelis Laaksonen was dominant in the face-off circle to help Curry knock off Geneseo, 3-0 for their first NCAA road win (Photo by Geneseo Athletics)

Curry advances to face the No. 1 seed Hobart on Saturday, March 16 in NCAA quarterfinal action.

(14) Endicott v. (10) Elmira

The Soaring Eagles took full advantage of playing at home as Janis Vizbelis scored just past the thirteen-minute mark of the first period for a 1-0 advantage at the intermission. Just 24 seconds into the second period it was Vizbelis again who scored quickly to give Elmira a 2-0 advantage. Ryan Reifler scored his first of the contest for a 3-0 lead, but Endicott fought back with a Jimmy McIssac goal to make the game 3-1 at the end of the second period.

Just like the fast start in the second period, Elmira’s Reifler netted his second goal just over a minute into the third period for a 4-1 lead. McIssac doubled his goal total for the game with a shorthanded beauty to give the Gulls some hope in the final four minutes, but Nicholas Domitrovic iced the contest with an empty-net goal for the final 5-2 score and win for the Soaring Eagles.

Vizbelis and Reifler each finished with two goals for Elmira while Domitrovic chipped in with a goal and two assists and Shawn Kennedy added a pair of helpers to lead the offense. Kyle Curtin stopped 26 of 28 shots including twelve saves in the third period to earn the win in goal as Elmira’s team defense blocked a season-high 23 shots to support their netminder.

Elmira celebrates a 5-2 win over Endicott on Saturday and will now travel to face Trinity in the quarterfinals of the NCAA tournament (Photo by Elmira Athletics)

Elmira advances to the quarterfinal round where they will face Trinity on Saturday, March 16 with the winner advancing to the Frozen Four.

(13) Cortland v. (9) Plymouth State

The Panthers hosted the Red Dragons seeking their first ever NCAA tournament win and started the game aggressively controlling the opening five minutes of play before Cortland found their skating game. Neither team could score as goaltenders Kalle Andersson (PSU) and Jack Riedell (Cortland) were solid in the scoreless opening period.

In the second period, David Matousek scored his first of the game for a 1-0 lead, but the visitors answered with Nate Berke answering with a rebound goal off an odd-man rush to tie the score at 1-1. In the final minute of play in the second period, PSU’s Will Redick caused a turnover and fired a shot past Riedell’s glove for a 2-1 lead at the second intermission.

In the third period, Cortland pressured the Panthers early and were rewarded with Colby Seitz’s tying goal off a 2-on-1 break where he and the goaltender collided at the post and dislodged the goal. The goal was upheld, and the game was tied at 2-2. Cortland could not score on an ensuing power play opportunity, but the Panthers took advantage of their opportunity later in the period as Connor Tait scored on a backhand shot off a feed from Redick for a 3-2 lead. With the goaltender pulled for the extra attacker, Tait picked up a rebound off a missed shot by Redick and deposited it into the empty net for a 4-2 lead. Matousek, who opened the scoring for the Panthers, had the final goal of the game with just 30 seconds remaining to help Plymouth State close out an impressive 5-2 win.

Tait and Matousek each scored two goals while Redick scored one goal and added two assists. Andersson was stellar in goal making 32 saves while Riedell stopped 40 shots for Cortland and picked up an assist on Seitz’s goal in the loss.

Plymouth State advances to the quarterfinal round where they will face Utica on Saturday, March 16.

So, no one should be surprised that there were “surprises” in the opening round of the tournament – but were they really surprises? Quarterfinal round is on deck with spots in the Frozen Four on the line. Surely, the teams with byes were paying close attention to the results and now prepare in earnest for Saturday’s crucial action – “Drop the Puck!”

Thanks to Russell Jaslow for coverage and press conference material from the Curry v Geneseo game on Saturday – always appreciate Jaz chipping in!

SATURDAY ROUNDUP: Atlantic Hockey teams complete playoff sweeps, No. 16 Omaha finishes off sweep of No. 3 North Dakota, No. 5 Wisconsin-Ohio State, Lake Superior State-St. Thomas going to Game 3s, No. 1 BC, No. 2 BU gain wins to cap regular season

Michigan Tech players celebrate one of their six goals Saturday night en route to sweeping Bowling Green out of the CCHA playoffs (photo: Michigan Tech Athletics).

The conference playoffs for Atlantic Hockey, Big Ten, CCHA and ECAC Hockey teams continued Saturday night, while the last weekend of the regular season for Hockey East and NCHC teams came to a close.

SCOREBOARD | POLL | PAIRWISE

ATLANTIC HOCKEY (Game 2s, best of three)

No. 19 RIT 5, Robert Morris 1
Tyler Fukakusa notched a goal and two assists and Christian Catalano added a goal and an assist to lead the Tigers to a 5-1 victory and series sweep over Robert Morris from the Gene Polisseni Center in Rochester, N.Y.

Holy Cross 2, Canisius 1 (OT)
Jack Seymour’s goal 2:53 into overtime gave Holy Cross the 2-1 win and series sweep over Canisius from the Hart Recreation Center in Worcester, Mass.

Niagara 5, Sacred Heart 1
Jay Ahearn scored two goals with an assist and Carter Randklev went for a goal and two assists as Niagara took the series sweep with a 5-1 win over Sacred Heart from the Martire Family Arena in Fairfield, Conn.

AIC 3, Air Force 2 (OT)
Nico Somerville scored the overtime winner 12:18 into extra time as the Yellow Jackets bounced Air Force with a 3-2 win Saturday night from Cadet Ice Arena in Colorado Springs, Colo.

BIG TEN (Game 2s, best of three)

No. 5 Wisconsin 4, Ohio State 2
Power-play goals by Christian Fitzgerald and Anthony Kehrer lifted Wisconsin past Ohio State 4-2 on Saturday night at the Kohl Center in Madison, Wis. In front of a Big Ten tournament-record crowd of 10,837, the victory helped the Badgers force a third and deciding game in their Big Ten quarterfinal series scheduled for 5 p.m. CDT on Sunday.

No. 8 Minnesota 3, Penn State 2
Justen Close’s 46-save effort backstopped the Golden Gophers to a 3-2 win over Penn State. Jaxon Nelson scored twice and Aaron Huglen tallied the game winner with 1:08 remaining in regulation to complete the series sweep Saturday afternoon inside 3M Arena at Mariucci in Minneapolis, Minn.

No. 14 Michigan 4, Notre Dame 3
Michigan battled back to sweep Notre Dame with a 4-3 win on Saturday night at Yost Ice Arena from Ann Arbor, Mich. The Wolverines held a 2-1 lead after the first period, but the game was deadlocked at 3-3 headed into the final frame. Gavin Brindley scored the game-winning goal at 3:54 of the third period when he finished off a rush for his team-leading 23rd goal of the season.

CCHA (Game 2s, best of three)

St. Thomas 4, Lake Superior State 2
Liam Malmquist and Lucas Wahlin each had a goal and an assist as St. Thomas doubled up Lake Superior State 4-2 Saturday night at St. Thomas Ice Arena in Mendota Heights, Minn., to force a deciding Game 3 Sunday at 6:07 p.m. CDT.

Minnesota State 6, Northern Michigan 1
Mavericks Sam Morton scored twice Saturday night to help Minnesota State sweep Northern Michigan with a 6-1 win at Mayo Clinic Health System Event Center in Mankato, Minn. The Mavericks ended NMU’s season for the fourth straight year in the conference tournament.

Bemidji State 4, Ferris State 0
Bemidji State completed the sweep over Ferris State with a 4-0 win Saturday night at Sanford Center in Bemidji, Minn. Goaltender Mattias Sholl stopped all 25 shots he faced and Eric Pohlkamp scored two power-play goals for the Beavers.

Michigan Tech 6, Bowling Green 5
Michigan Tech advanced to the CCHA semifinal for the third year in a row after sweeping Bowling Green Saturday night with a 6-5 win at the John MacInnes Student Ice Arena in Houghton, Mich. Ryland Mosley scored twice for the Huskies and Brett Pfoh netted two goals for Bowling Green.

ECAC HOCKEY (single elimination)

Union 6, Brown 0
Ben Tupker and Caden Villegas scored two goals apiece to lead Union past Brown 6-0 from Messa Rink in Schenectady, N.Y. Kyle Chauvette stopped all 22 shots he faced in goal for his third shutout of the season.

Rensselaer 3, Clarkson 2
Rensselaer scored the first three goals of the game and then held on as Clarkson scored the last two in a 3-2 win for the Engineers from Cheel Arena in Potsdam, N.Y.

No. 1 Boston College 6, Merrimack 4

Boston College came from behind for a 5-3 win over Merrimack at Lawler Arena on Saturday night in North Andover, Mass. Colby Ambrosio came through with the game-winning goal at 7:56 of the third period.

Jamie Armstrong and Will Smith scored short-handed goals on the same penalty late in the second period for BC, while Jan Korec made 28 saves for the win in net.

For the Warriors, four different players scored and Hugo Ollas finished with 29 saves between the pipes.

No. 2 Boston University 6, Vermont 1

Quinn Hutson recorded his second hat trick of the season to help Boston University to a 6-1 victory over Vermont on Saturday nght at Boston’s Agganis Arena.

Macklin Celebrini notched three points by assisting on two of Hutson’s strikes and scoring his 29th goal of the season in the third period.

Mathieu Caron made 18 saves in 54:21 of work before senior Henry Graham made his official Terrier debut, playing 5:16 and stopping both shots that he faced. Nick Howard then took over for Graham and played the final six seconds in his NCAA Division I debut.

Simon Jellus scored for Vermont and Axel Mangbo made 33 saves in goal.

No. 3 Denver 4, No. 10 Colorado College 3

Jared Wright’s goal at 11:44 of the third period snapped a 3-all tie and Denver split the series with a 4-3 win Saturday night from Magness Arena in Denver, Colo.

Sam Harris scored two goals for the Pioneers with Rieger Lorenz collecting the other. Matt Davis finished with 22 saves in goal.

Drew Montgomery, Evan Werner and Ethan Straky scored for CC and goalie Kaidan Mbereko turned aside 34 shots.

No. 9 Maine 4, No. 12 UMass 3

Lynden Breen scored an unassisted game-winning goal with 1:17 remaining in the third period to lift Maine to a 4-3 win over UMass on Saturday night in front of a sold-out crowd at Alfond Arena in Orono, Maine.

The Black Bears jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the game’s opening 10 minutes thanks to two power-play goals from Harrison Scott and Sully Scholle. The Minutemen pulled a goal back before the first intermission on a goal from Lucas Mercuri. It was the first of three straight goals for the visitors to take 3-2 lead after Cole O’Hara and Jack Musa scored.

A Josh Nadeau power-play goal for Maine tied the game at 3-3 before the second break.

With the game seemingly destined for overtime, Breen intercepted a pass and recorded his 100th career point with a far post shot for the 4-3 win.

Albin Boija made 34 saves for the Black Bears and Michael Hrabal finished with 24 for UMass.

No. 16 Omaha 4, No. 3 North Dakota 1

Omaha built a 3-0 lead early in the second period on goals by Zach Urdahl, Matt Miller and Kirby Proctor and never looked back to complete a weekend sweep over North Dakota with a 4-1 win on Saturday night from a sold-out Baxter Arena in Omaha, Neb.

Nolan Sullivan also scored and Seth Eisele made 38 stops in goal.

Jayden Perron scored for the Fighting Hawks and goaltender Ludvig Persson stopped 21 shots.

Women’s Division I College Hockey: WCHA Championship – No. 2 Wisconsin 6, No. 1 Ohio State 3

MINNEAPOLIS — The no. 2 ranked Wisconsin Badgers won their 10th WCHA Conference Tournament Championship Saturday afternoon with a decisive 6-1 victory over no. 1 Ohio State.

After Friday’s WCHA semifinal win, Wisconsin knew they’d be facing Ohio State for the championship and forward Lacey Eden said the Badgers “want it real bad.” They went out and proved it in the title game.

Casey O’Brien said after Wisconsin’s win over Ohio State to end the regular season that her team needed the confidence boost it gave them. Saturday’s win let the Badgers know that win wasn’t a one off.

“Everybody was playing well. Everybody was connecting. I think it was kind of the peak of our performance so far this year, and it was the best time to do it. And I think we’re only going to get better as we go on,” she said.

The teams played back and forth for the opening minutes, but the Badgers got a break just under seven minutes in as Kirsten Simms took a feed from O’Brien and was in alone on OSU goalie Raygan Kirk. The Badgers’ confidence and momentum grew from there and Laila Edwards sniped a shot to the back of the net a few minutes later to extend the lead to 2-0 before the midpoint of the first.

It was the exact start Wisconsin coach Mark Johnson wanted from his team, especially considering they played into overtime in the later semifinal while Ohio State was done earlier in the day.

“It’s nice for the coaches to see that but more importantly, the players understand that when they’re connected and they’re doing things the right way, they can be pretty good. They saw that themselves today and then it’s just a matter of can we be consistent in what we’re trying to do you know, from period to period,” Johnson said.

The Buckeyes pushed back to open the second as Joceyln Amos used her strength to cut towards the net in front of her defender and make it a 2-1 game. But Wisconsin had answers. Four minutes later, Edwards scored again, this time on a wrister through traffic on the power play to extend the lead to 3-1. O’Brien added to her already impressive weekend by scoring from the slot to make it a 4-1 game two minutes after that. She led the Badgers with a goal and an assist in the team’s semifinal win and added two goals and two assists in the championship game. Britta Curl’s shorthanded breakaway in the waning minutes of the second pushed the lead to 5-1.

Ohio State coach Nadine Muzerall was concerned with the mistakes her team made.

“We made some errors that we shouldn’t have. They didn’t change things and neither did we. We just made some mental errors. We had to make some key saves and we did not. We needed to make some key plays and we did not. And they are going to capitalize on that because they’re a good team,” she said. 

O’Brien’s second came on the power play early in the third as her shot through traffic slid through Kirk’s legs.

Ohio State pushed back in the third as Hannah Bilka scored two beautiful goals, first on a tight angle over Ava McNaughton’s shoulder and then on a pretty passing play and cross-ice feed from Makenna Webster.

Buckeye assistant captain Lauren Bernard said the team struggled with Wisconsin’s pressure.

We weren’t as composed as we were in yesterday’s game. We kept forcing pucks up the wall when that’s where they wanted us to go. That was a big problem for us. We fed right into it,” she said. 

Wisconsin earns the WCHA’s autobid to the NCAA Tournament, but it is likely that Ohio State will be the no. 1 overall seed based on their Pairwise total for the year. Wisconsin will likely be no. 2.

For one of these two teams to win a National Championship, they’ll likely meet again. Badger Johnson knows that this loss will motivate the Buckeyes. And he’s right – the first thing Muzerall said in her post-game availability is that she hopes this loss pisses her team off and drives them.

Teams will await the tournament Selection Show on Sunday at 12 pm eastern to learn their fates. The show streams free online and will be broadcast on ESPNews.

 

(This story will be updated.)

After winning first-ever Big Ten regular-season championship, Michigan State rewards coach Nightingale with contract extension

Michigan State coach Adam Nightingale celebrates the Spartans’ Big Ten regular-season title last weekend with MSU players (photo: Michigan State Athletics).

Michigan State hockey coach Adam Nightingale has signed a new contract to stay with the Spartans program.

Nightingale’s five-year rollover contract includes non-performance related compensation of $700,000 in year one. This includes a base salary of $600,000 and supplemental compensation of $100,000 in the first year. Beginning in year two, the supplemental compensation will increase by $25,000 from the previous year. Nightingale is also entitled to a $100,000 retention bonus every two years beginning Sept. 30, 2024 (provided he has served continuously as the head hockey coach for 24 consecutive months immediately preceding Sept. 30 of the calendar year in which the bonus will be paid).

The contract also includes an increased salary pool for assistants and hockey staff.

“In less than two years, Adam Nightingale has sparked a resurgence throughout the Spartan hockey program,” MSU VP and director of athletics Alan Haller said in a statement. “Obviously, everyone will point to our first ever Big Ten regular-season championship, but that’s only one part of the success story. Off the ice, hockey student-athletes are performing at a historic level in the classroom, while also playing an active role in our community. Sellout crowds have returned to Munn Ice Arena, re-establishing it as one of the best home ice advantages in the sport. Equally important, our passionate alumni base is united in support of the program.

“Spartan hockey has a proud history of excellence, and we are currently witnessing the latest chapter of success. A couple months ago, Adam and I started having conversations surrounding him and his staff and how best to continue the resurgence of the program. With the new contract, we’re taking steps to ensure stability and the opportunity for success for many years to come.”

Under Nightingale’s guidance, Michigan State has put together one of the most remarkable turnarounds in college hockey. This year, the Spartans captured the program’s first-ever Big Ten regular-season crown and their first regular-season conference title since 2000-01. With an overall record of 22-9-3 (16-6-2 B1G) the Spartans have won more games than any squad since the 2007-08 team was 25-12-3 overall and advanced to the NCAA Regional Final.

In his first season in 2022-23, the Spartans experienced immediate improvement. MSU won 18 games, bettering the previous year’s total by six games. At the conclusion of that season, Nightingale led his squad to a Big Ten Tournament quarterfinal upset on the road at Notre Dame, marking MSU’s first-ever wins in the postseason event. The turnaround led to him being a finalist for Big Ten coach of the year honors.

In the classroom, the Spartans’ performance has been equally impressive. Last fall, the Spartans posted a 3.3873 cumulative GPA and a 3.4277 semester GPA, establishing program records in both categories.

“Being the head coach of the Spartan hockey program continues to be a great honor – one I do not take lightly,” said Nightingale. “Our staff and players are thankful for the support we receive from the university, community and alumni. The opportunity to represent them is a humbling experience. Although we celebrated a Big Ten championship last weekend, we still have several short-term and long-term goals we will strive to achieve. We appreciate Alan Haller and (deputy AD) Jennifer Smith’s belief in us and look forward to continuing our climb back to the top of college hockey.”

A Spartan alumnus with hockey experience at the international, professional, collegiate and youth levels, Nightingale is the eighth head coach in Michigan State hockey history.

Prior to his arrival in East Lansing, he was head coach for two seasons at the United States National Team Development Program. He also brings four years of NHL experience, with one year in Buffalo and three in Detroit, including the 2019-20 season as a Red Wings assistant. Before joining the pro ranks, Nightingale served as head coach of the Shattuck-St. Mary’s Bantam team in Faribault, Minn., for two seasons (2014-16), as well as two years (2008-10) as the head coach of the Shattuck midget AA squad. Between his stints at Shattuck, Nightingale was the director of hockey operations at Michigan State.

Latest Stories from around USCHO